Scott v. Peebles

10 Miss. 546
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Miss. 546 (Scott v. Peebles) 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
Scott v. Peebles, 10 Miss. 546 (Mich. 1844).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice-ShahKey

delivered the'opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by the. defendant in error tore-cover damages for the speaking and publishing certain slanderous and defamatory words by the plaintiff in error, of and concerning the defendant. The jury gave a verdict for five hundred dollars damages, and the plaintiff brought this writ of error. The several questions raised in argument, are presented by the pleadings, as exceptions were taken only on a single point during [556]*556the trial. The merits are fully embraced by the assignment of errors, each of which will be considered.

The first error complained of, is said to have occurred in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration. The demurrer was to the whole declaration, which contains nine counts; and the causes of demurrer are in substance that the words spoken were not actionable at common law, and that they are not so by the statute, because the declaration does not aver that they were spoken to the plaintiff below, or in his presence. It is now contended that the declaration was defective, -because it does not profess to bring the cause of action within the statute, as it should have done, the words not being actionable at common law, and made so only by the statute. This is an important point in the cause, since it is-manifest the right to recover depends upon the statutory provision. It involves two inquiries: first, whether it is necessary that the declaration should aver that the action was given by statute; and second, if this is necessary, whether it has been done with sufficient certainty in this instance. As to the necessity of such averment, the rule is thus laid down in 2 Saunders on Pleading and Evidence, 830. When the action is given by statute, the,offence charged must appear to have been within the statute, and all circumstances necessary to support the action must be alleged, or in effect appear on the face of the declaration. Archbold lays down the rule thus : “ In an action founded upon a statute, the plaintiff must state in his declaration, every fact necessary to inform the court that his case is within the statute.” Arch-bold’s Civil Pleadings, 94, 145. This seems to us to be a case falling within the influence of this rule. The action is given by the statute, and we see no reason for making this an exception to the rule, which is certainly very general. This rule was held to apply to actions founded on this statute; by the decisions referred to in Walker’s Rep. But whilst we are unwilling to reject this rule of law as inapplicable in the present case, still we think the declaration comes sufficiently within it, to protect it from the operation of a demurrer. The language of the statute is, “ All words, which from their usual construction and [557]*557common acceptations, ave considered as insults, and lead to violence and breach of the peace, shall hereafter be actionable, and no plea, exception, or demurrer shall be sustained in any court within this state, to preclude a jury from passing thereon, who are hereby declared to be the sole judges of the damages sustained.” H. & H. Dig. 547, sec. 6. The question is, what must be averred to give the plaintiff the benefit of this statute ? An averment that the words, according to the common acceptation, were insulting, and calculated to lead to violence and breach of the peace, would undoubtedly be sufficient. The averment in the first count, was evidently framed with a view to meet the statutory requirement. It is in this language : “Yet, the said defendant, well knowing the premises, but greatly envying the happy state and condition of the plaintiff, and contriving, contrary to the statute in such cases made and provided, to insult and defame the said plaintiff,"and to lead the said plaintiff to commit a breach of the peace, and to commit violence,” &c., and it concludes by charging the speaking of the slanderous words. Does this averment fully inform the court, as the rule requires, that the case is within the statute? Do the circumstances necessary to sustain the action, “ in effect appear upon the face of the declaration?” We think that these questions must be answered affirmatively. The rule of law has been substantially complied with. The defendant is charged with having spoken the words contrary to the statute, with a view to insult the plaintiff, and to lead him to commit violence and a breach of the peace. This is equivalent to an averment that the words were insulting and tended to a breach of the peace. To bring words spoken of another within the meaning of the statute, only two_ things are necessary; they must be insulting, and calculated to lead to a breach of the peace. - That such was their character, we think, in effect at least, is stated. This is a public statute, and it was not therefore necessary to recite the statute or any part of it. All that the law requires is that it should appear on the face of the declaration, that a right of action has accrued under the statute. The other counts, however, contain no such allegation; — no statement of circumstances by which the [558]*558court could be informed that the action was founded on the statute. It becomes necessary, therefore, to extend the inquiry, and to determine whether the demurrer to the whole declaration was correctly overruled, eight of the counts being faulty, and only one of them good.

It is a well settled rule, perhaps it is without an exception, that on a general demurrer to the whole of a'declaration which contains good and bad counts, when the causes of action counted on may be properly joined, the demurrer must be overruled, and the plaintiff will be entitled to judgment on his good counts, for the court cannot give judgment that such a demurrer is good in part, and bad in part. 6 Bacon’s Abridgment, Title Pleading, 356. I Chitty’s Pleading, 703. Archbold’s Civil Pleading, 309. 1 Henning and Munford, 361. 13 J. Rep. 264, 402. According to this'rule, the demurrer, as it extended to all the counts, was properly overruled, because the first count is good, although the whole of the others may be faulty. But still, it does not follow from this rule, that every judgment on a declá-ration containing good and bad counts, is free from error. The plaintiff, it must be observed, is only entitled to judgment on his good counts. There are cases in which the judgment will be arrested or reversed, although there may be one good count, if the others be bad, and this will lead us to inquire, whether this is a case of that description; for if it be so, the judgment must be reversed, although the demurrer may have been properly overruled. But this is an inquiry which will more properly arise, when we come to consider of the final judgment rendered on the verdict. For the present, we are only to determine whether the demurrer to the declaration was properly overruled, and we think it has been sufficiently shown that it was, for anything contained in the first cause of demurrer.

The second cause of demurfer is, that the words are not actionable under the statute, because it is not averred that they were spoken to the plaintiff, or in his presence. The statute cannot fairly be construed, as giving a right of action only when the words are spoken to, or in presence of the plaintiff. All the evils, both public and private, which the statute intended [559]*559to guard against, are quU@ as likely to arise, when slanderous words are spoken of a person who is not present, as if addressed to him. So that for neither of the causes, could the demurrer have been properly sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Miss. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-peebles-miss-1844.