Remsen v. Bryant

47 A.D. 503, 62 N.Y.S. 434

This text of 47 A.D. 503 (Remsen v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remsen v. Bryant, 47 A.D. 503, 62 N.Y.S. 434 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

An examination of the record convinces us that the judgment and! order appealed from should be reversed and that a new trial should-be granted. The action is for libel. The defendants are the publishers of the Brooklyn Daily Times, and on the 13th day of November, 1897, they published .in their newspaper an article in. -which it was stated that “ When I. B. Remsen, of Jamaica, thn widely known revivalist and! evangelist, left here (the village of St„ James) at the close of last week, he announced that he would return the following Thursday. Many people doubted that he would ever return. He has not, aind thereby hangs a tale. Mr. Remsen is not overpopular in this neighborhood, but he is a brave man, and it takes much to. discourage him. His method of inculcating Christian principles is not appreciated in this community. People do not like being told that unless they immediately become converted to his ideas they will surely be damned. They are, moreover, not too fond of rant and cant. Mr. Remsen has a powerful voice and a vehement vocabulary. The first two nights that he preached here at Liberty’ Hall he had a large audience, who wanted to have a look at the-[505]*505man who had made his name notorious and hated in August three years ago at the neighboring village, Stony Brook. His utterances were so fierce, however, that the people became disgusted, and there were angry remarks made by many. Women kept away from the hall. As the crowds lessened, Remsen’s language and actions became more and more reprehensible, until at last some young men of the village determined to show him that his absence was preferred to his presence. At the close of the week he left the hall, apparently full of anger. As he started to go for his buggy and sorrel horse, a crowd of young men suddenly surrounded him. Yells, hisses, groans, broke the nightly silence. Mr. Rem-sen stood still and wondered what was coming. Bang! bang! went .the crack of many a rifle. This was threatening, yet the revivalist seemed undaunted. Whirr! . Through the air sped some rotten lemons. The evangelist shouted something that could not be heard in the general uproar. Eggs, fresh and stale, began to fly. Several struck the lay preacher. ‘Throw away,’ he cried, undismayed, ‘Throw all the eggs you want. You can’t hurt me,’ he yelled. But he made haste to get into his buggy. He drove away, followed by threats and yells that might have made most men faint, and this is probably the reason why he did not return last Thursday. Before Mr. Remsen closed his meetings, he is said to have stated that he intended holding services in Stony Brook.” Following this was a dispatch from Stony Brook, in which, it was sail! that “ The rumor that Evangelist I. B. Remsen would preach here again is not believed by any one. Public sentiment is too strongly opposed to him here. It was aroused to such a pitch at the time against him that he was warned just in time to make his escape to avoid serious mishandling. He was informed, so it is claimed, that if ever he stepped in this village again it would be at his own risk. He took heed of the warning, and his countenance was not seen here for a long time afterwards. Lately, however,- he has been seen to pass through Stony Brook, but he has not yet dared to remain over night, as far as the public knows.”

Subsequently, one D. Y. Teed, styling himself “ Pastor of the Church at St. James and Lake Grove,” wrote a letter to the Twnes, in which he declared the article above quoted “false in [506]*506every particular,” and made use, among other things, of the following language : “ This mountebank or charlatan who hails from Stony Brook had better secure some of the eggs which he says were thrown at the revivalist, or some others, and set on them, perchance he might hatch -out something having some resemblance to himself, but he would in all probability fail to hatch out any bigger liar than himself.” In response to this chaste “ imagery of a melancholic fancy,” the Times remarked that “ It is only fair to the Brooklyn Times, and to the thousands of Long Island people who place confidence in the reliability of its news service, to state that there are in the Brooklyn Times.office written statements from residents of St. James confirming in all important details the story of the egg-throwing as published in the Times on November 13th. These written statements declare that eggs and a rotten lernon were thrown at Evangelist Remsen after he left Liberty Hall, and one statement declares that the writer saw the eggs and rotten lemon strike the person of Mr. Remsen. The Times is in possession of the names of the persons who threw the missiles. Such being the ease, it will hardly be possible for the reporter of the paper, who wrote the original story, to adopt the novel suggestion made by Pastor Teed,” etc.

This is the foundation of the libel charged, and while it is true^ as remarked by this court upon a former appeal (36 App. Div. 240), that some parts of these articles are not libelous in any sense,” we are of opinion that, taken as a whole, these articles do hold the plaintiff up to ridicule and contempt in the community, and that they are libelous. As was said on the former appeal, There was also evidence to the effect that his general reputation was bad. ■Considering this evidence and the general character of the libel, we think that the court would not have been justified in interfering with the verdict of the jury (for six cents) unless ■ error had been ■committed upon the trial,” and we are persuaded that the judgment in this case is all out of proportion to the demands of justice or considerations of public policy. We are not disposed, however, to argue this point, preferring to determine this appeal upon the questions arising upon the trial of the action.

The defendants were charged with libel, in that they had published, among other things,, that the plaintiff had made his name [507]*507notorious and hated,” and this is, perhaps, the most serious part of the libel. Herbert B. Wells was called as a witness for the defendants, and counsel asked on direct examination, after showing the residence of the witness to be in Jamaica: “Mr. Wells, do you know the general character and reputation of Isaac B. Remsen in Jamaica? ” To this Mr. Wells replied: “ I have heard him spoken of.” At this point the court interrupted and asked: “ Do you know his general reputation ? ” Counsel for the defendants said: ■“ Taking the speecli of people.” The court then asked : “ The speech of people means his general reputation ; you know what it is to say that a man’s reputation in a community is good or bad, do you not, whether he is a good citizen or a bad citizen? ” Witness : “ From the speech of the people, I know; yes, sir.” Court: “ You know what it means to say a man’s reputation in the community in which he lives is bad?” Witness: “Yes.” Court: “That is a •sweeping assertion?” Witness: “Yes, sir.” Court: “Now you know what it is to say he bears a good reputation in the community in which he lives ? ” Witness: “ Yes, sir.” Court: “Now, do you know Remsen’s reputation ; whether it is good or bad in the neighborhood in which he lives ? ” Witness : “ Personally, I do not.” At this point counsel for defendants attempted to resume the examination of the witness, saying : “Now, I will return, with the court’s permission, to the question I asked originally. Do you know, Mr. Wells, what the speech .of people is concerning Isaac B. Remsen in the community in which he lives ?' ” At this point the court again interrupted, saying: “ I will not let yon go any further than he has gone already.

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Related

Remsen v. Bryant
36 A.D. 240 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.D. 503, 62 N.Y.S. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remsen-v-bryant-nyappdiv-1900.