Sayre v. Sayre

25 N.J.L. 235
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 N.J.L. 235 (Sayre v. Sayre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayre v. Sayre, 25 N.J.L. 235 (N.J. 1855).

Opinion

The Chief Justice.

In an action for slanderous words charging the plaintiff with larceny, the defendant, on the trial, offered in evidence, in mitigation of damages, the general bad character of the plaintiff before and at the time of the alleged slander. The court admitted the evidence, so far as it related to the plaintiff’s character foi honesty and integrity, but rejected evidence of his general bad character. This constitutes the ground oi error.

Two questions are necessarily involved in the determination of the error assigned, viz.: 1. Whether in an action [239]*239of slander, evidence of the plaintiffs general bad character is admissible in mitigation of damages. 2. Whether such evidence, if admissible, is to be restricted to those particular traits of character involved in the slanderous words.

Evidence touching the plaintiffs character, in mitigation of damages, may be offered to show that the defendant merely repeated rumors that were in circulation, and that the slander was not wantonly originated by him; with the view of showing ■ the animus with which the words were spoken, in order to diminish the extent, or to qualify the character of the defendant’s malice, and thereby to diminish the damages. With this view the evidence was offered, and held by this court to be admissible, in Cook v. Barclay, 1 Penn. 169, and, with the same view, it has been frequently admitted in the English courts. Or the evidence may be Offered to show that the plaintiff, being a man of bád character, is therefore entitled to less damages, on the ground that a person of disparaged fame is not entitled to the same measure of damages as one with an unblemished reputation. In this last aspect, the evidence in the present case is offered, viz., to show the value of the thing alleged to be injured.

Regarding it as a mere question of value, aside from technical principle, it is difficult to perceive on what ground the evidence can be excluded. The plaintiff brings his action to recover damages for an injury to his reputation ; to the estimation in which he is held among his neighbors and acquaintances. This is the gravamen of the complaint; for this the jury are to assess damages. Upon what principle are these damages to be assessed; upon what scale are they to be graduated, except in reference to the value of the article injured %

The law assumes a good character to be of equal value to every man. It presumes that every man is “ of good name and fame ” until the contrary is proved. The plaintiff, therefore, is not put upon proof of his good character, [240]*240or of its precise value. But is not the defendant entitled to show that the plaintiff’s character • is not good, that his reputation has sustained but little injury, and that, consequently, he is entitled to but small damages by way of reparation. If, in estimating damages, there be any distinction between the best and the worst character, the jury ought to be furnished with the means of making a proper estimate. To exclude the evidence is either to affirm that in the admeasurement of damages in actions of slander, there is no distinction between the most exalted character and the most debased, or, admitting the distinction, to maintain that the jury must form their estimate of character without evidence.

The defendant cannot, under the general issue, give in evidence the truth of the words spoken, because this is matter of justification, and constitutes a complete defencesto the action. It is excluded, therefore, from being offered in evidence under the general issue by virtue of a technical rule of pleading, which requires matters of justification to be pleaded in bar of the action.

The question, in this aspect, has been much discussed in the American courts, hut seems never to have be'en presented in Westminster hall prior to the year 1813. An examination of the authorities will show that, with few exceptions, the subject has not been viewed in this ‘ light either by the bench or bar of Great Britain. The analogies of the common law in regard to personal rights, seem strongly to favor the entire exclusion of the evidence in this aspect. To things, as the subjects of dominion or property, the law affixes a pecuniary value; but strictly personal rights, the jura joersonarwn, the law measures by no such standard. It has no scale by which it can measure the comparative value of life, liberty, limbs, health, or reputation to different individuals. In an action for false imprisonment, the defendant cannot show that coflnement is a benefit to the plaintiff, or that liberty is of no [241]*241value to him, because be abuses it. In an action for assault and battery, the defendant cannot, by way of mitigating damages, prove that the plaintiff’s physical condition was bad, or show that a limb that was broken was defective in physical strengrh or symmetrical proportion. In actions for injuries to the health, it cannot be shown that the plaintiff’s health was good or bad at the time of committing the injiiry. So in actions for injuries to the reputation, the general averment of the plaintiff’s good name is not traversable. The plaintiff offers no evidence to show its precise standing or value. The law annexes a value irrespective of the comparative standard by which character is ordinarily mersured; and hence the apparent anomaly of the common law principle, that in actions for slander the general character of the plaintiff is not put in issue. It is in issue only so far as it is made so by a special plea of justification. J’ Anson v. Stuart 1 T. R. 748.

Mor would the defendant in an action of slander be permitted to show that the plaintiff’s character was so pure that the voice of slander could not sullly it, or that the defendant was so utterly unworthy of credit that the plaintiff’s reputation was not ■ injured. The truth is, that in this entire class of cases, for all injuries to the jura personaru/n, the ancient common law appears to have regard to the nature and character of the wrong, rather than to the precise degree of injury inflicted in the individual case. And this will explain the otherwise incomprehensible fact, that although the action of slander is of ancient origin and of frequent occurrence, no trace of the evidence of the plaintiff’s character, as a measure of its pecuniary value, either admitted or offered, will be found in the English books before the commencement of the present century.

In Smithies v. Harrison, 1 Ld. Ray,727(13 Will. 3), Lord Holt ruled, that in case for words which imported the committing of adultery with Jane at Stile, the defendant [242]*242in mitigation of damages, might give in evidence that the plaintiff did commit .adultery with Jane at Stile, but not with any other woman. S. C. 12 Viner’s Ab., “Evidence,” I, b.

The same practice was adopted the following year, apparently without question, in Brown v. Gibbons, 2 Ld. Ray. 83l, (1 Anne). These cases merely maintain the doctrine' (long Mince exploded), that the truth may be given in evidence in mitigation of damages.

In Dennis v. Pawling, before Baron Price, in 1716,briefly reported in 12 Viner’s Ab. 159, “ Evidence”I, b,

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Related

Price v. Phillips
218 A.2d 167 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1966)
United States v. Genovese
133 F. Supp. 820 (D. New Jersey, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.J.L. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayre-v-sayre-nj-1855.