Rodgers v. Kline

56 Miss. 808
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 Miss. 808 (Rodgers v. Kline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodgers v. Kline, 56 Miss. 808 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

George, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The language alleged to be libellous is as follows: “The accident of Miss Chisholm’s death, caused by malpractice, and not by her slight wound, adds tenfold to the deplorable consequences.”

This simple sentence is found in an article of a column in length, published in the Vicksburg Herald in May, 1877. The article is headed, “ Rash Southerners and Philanthropic Northerners,” and contains but one other reference to Miss Chisholm’s death, in which it is stated to have been “accidental, from gangrene.” It is clear, from a perusal of the whole article, that it was no part of the object and purpose of the writer to criticise the treatment, medical or otherwise, which she received in her last illness. No mention is made of the name of any person concerned in the treatment, nor any allusion made to the fact that she had a medical attendant, unless such allusion is made in the language above quoted. The manifest object and purpose of the article, as well as its full scope, was to soften the unfavorable effect produced in the public mind by the transaction then known as the “ Chisholm massacre,” which had been greatly intensified by the death of Miss Chisholm, resulting from the effects of a gunshot wound alleged to have been inflicted by the rioters. To this end, the article alludes to the rash and excitable [815]*815nature of the Southern people in their condemnation and punishment of great crimes which appear to have been deliberately planned and executed.

The writer, whilst condemning the proceedings of the mob, states, as some palliation for its unlawful action, the belief of the people of Kemper County that its intended and premeditated victims were the deliberate murderers of a highly esteemed citizen of that county, and ascribes the death of Miss Chisholm to accident, and not to the deliberate purpose of the actors in the riot; suggesting as a fact, in the language above quoted, that it was caused by malpractice, resulting in gangrene. It is clear, therefore, that the writer had no wish to reflect upon the plaintiff’s professional standing, or to bring him into disrepute.

But the absence of this intent or purpose does not, per se, exonerate the publishers of the article from responsibility, if, in fact, such language was used in it as would inflict an illegal injury on the plaintiff; for the injury to him would be all the same whether it was the result of design on the part of the defendants, or of their carelessness and negligence.

There is no exception taken to the ruling of the court below which holds that the language used is legally capable of such application to the plaintiff as to constitute a libel on him, and we are not, therefore, called on to express any opinion on that subject.

The assignments of error raise several other questions for our determination, which we will now proceed to consider. The court charged the jury, in the third instruction for the plaintiff, that if it were established that the plaintiff was the attending physician on Miss Chisholm, and the defendants published the language above quoted, it was actionable, or constituted a libel on the plaintiff, if not justified by proof of its truth.

The force of the alleged libel seems to consist in the use of the word “ malpractice.” In its technical sense, as applied to prosecutions, either civil or criminal, against a physician [816]*816for unskilful treatment of a patient under his charge, it would be actionable. But there is nothing in the article of which this language is a part, which suggests that the word was used in a technical, rather than a popular, sense. On the contrary, it is clear, from a consideration of the whole article and its nature and character, that it was not used in its technical sense; for it is an undoubted rule, that in writings intended for popular reading, and having no relation to any art or profession, a word which does not itself import that it is used in a technical sense is to have its popular signification. Monongahela Nav. Co. v. Coons, 6 Watts & S. 114.

It was, therefore, error for the court to give this charge, unless the word “ malpractice,” in its ordinary signification, has but one meaning, and that meaning is libellous ; or unless a libellous signification is necessarily affixed to it by the context. We have seen that there was nothing in the context, nothing in the scope and purpose of the article, to give it a libellous meaning; but rather, if the context is to be considered as fixing beyond controversy its meaning, the contrary sense would be implied. Neither has the word “malpractice,” in its ordinary acceptation, necessarily a libellous meaning. It has several meanings: one of them, implying illegal or immoral conduct, is libellous ; and .the others — bad or evil practice, practice which is not good, practice which is contrary to established rules — are not libellous.

When the language used is ambiguous, or a word has two distinct meanings, the sense in which it is used in the alleged-libel must be determined by the jury', and not by the court. In performing this duty, the jury are to consider all the circumstances of the case, — the various ordinary and popular: meanings of the word; the connection in which it is used; and also the object and purpose .of the author''in the writing in which it is found, so far as that object and purpose may be= developed to the reader by a perusal of the whole article. '

. The seventh and eighth charges given at the instance of the plaintiff are also erroneous, for the reason that in them the [817]*817court construed tlie meaning of the word “ malpractice,” instead of leaving its meaning to be ascertained by the jury. These charges assumed that the word ‘ ‘ malpractice ’ ’ meant gross ignorance and unskilfulness, which is only one of its ordinary meanings.

It is settled that words spoken or written of one in his special character as the occupant of an office, or the follower of any profession or trade' from which he derives pecuniary gain, though generally not actionable, become so if they impute to such person such ignorance or incapacity as unfits him for the proper exercise of his calling. Town, on Slander, sect. 194. But it is also settled that it is not actionable to charge such a person with want of skill, or ignorance, or neglect, in a particular transaction, done in his special character, unless the charge be of such gross want of skill or ignorance as would imply a general unfitness for his calling.

In Camp v. Martin, 23 Conn. 56, the slanderous words spoken of a physician were, “ If Dr. C. [the plaintiff] had continued to treat Sarah, she would have been in her grave before this time ; his treatment of her was rascally.”

After verdict, the defendant moved in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the words were not actionable; and the court said: “ To charge a physician merely with mismanagement of a particular case is not of itself actionable. Such a charge implies nothing more than ignorance or unskilfulness in that case, and does not materially affect his reputation as it respects his general competency to practise his profession. The most eminent physician may mistake the -symptoms or treatment of a particular case, without detracting from his professional skill and learning.” And the court sustained the motion to arrest the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Miss. 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-kline-miss-1879.