Sherman v. International Publications, Inc.

214 A.D. 437, 212 N.Y.S. 478, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10544
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 214 A.D. 437 (Sherman v. International Publications, Inc.) 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
Sherman v. International Publications, Inc., 214 A.D. 437, 212 N.Y.S. 478, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10544 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

The action in which these appeals were taken was brought by the plaintiff, a physician, and manufacturer and distributor of [439]*439vaccines, residing at Detroit, in the State of Michigan, to recover of the defendants damages which the plaintiff claims to have sustained through a libelous publication concerning the plaintiff and his business, which appeared in Hearst’s International Magazine ” in December, 1922, and which magazine was owned, managed and controlled by the defendants. The alleged libelous article was entitled Vaccines for Broken Legs — No. 4 of the Series on Doctors and Drug-Mongers,” and the plaintiff, in his complaint, alleges that the defendants therein contriving and wrongfully and maliciously intending to injure, defame and destroy the good name and reputation of the plaintiff as a law abiding and order loving citizen of the State of Michigan and the United States of America, to injure him in his said profession of the practice of medicine, to bring him into public and professional hatred, contempt and ridicule and to injure him in his business reputation and to deprive him of the gains and profits which he had received and would receive from the preparation and sale of prophylactic and therapeutic agents called “ bacterial vaccines,” did wickedly and maliciously compose and publish in the said magazine Hearst’s International,” on or about said date, said false, scandalous and defamatory libel of and concerning the plaintiff, and which article is set forth by photostatic copy in plaintiff’s complaint.

The answer of the defendants set up three defenses: First, justification; second, fair comment and criticism; and, third, mitigation.

The plaintiff made three motions: First, the plaintiff moved, under section 241 of the Civil Practice Act and rule 103 of the Rules of Civil Practice, to strike out from the first separate defense set forth in defendants’ answer some seventy paragraphs on the ground that the allegations therein contained were either evidentiary, repetitious, irrelevant or unnecessary. By a separate motion the plaintiff moved to strike out from the second separate defense set forth and alleged in the answer of the defendants six paragraphs of the second separate defense set forth in said answer as redundant, repetitious, unnecessary or irrelevant. The plaintiff also served a third notice of motion for an order striking out the entire second separate defense contained in the answer on the ground that said defense was insufficient in law. All three motions made "by the plaintiff to strike out were returnable at Special Term on the same day and were heard as one motion. The learned justice presiding at Special Term denied all three motions, and the present appeals are by the plaintiff from the orders of the Special Term denying plaintiff’s said motions.

The plaintiff’s complaint sets forth in extenso and by photostatic [440]*440copy the alleged libelous article appearing in the defendants’ magazine. I am of the opinion that the publication upon its face contained much of and concerning the plaintiff which was libelous per se. In general the article charges the plaintiff with improper and unprofessional conduct, with false and fraudulent advertising, and the exploitation of uninformed and careless doctors, and with the foisting of dangerous remedies upon the public. A direct attack is made in the article upon the efficacy of the remedies prepared by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff is charged with improper commercialization of his remedies, and he is held up to ridicule and charged with the distribution of vaccines of no real or therapeutic value and which are in many instances dangerous to human health and life.

As to the various paragraphs contained in the first separate defense set forth in the answer herein, and which the plaintiff asked to have' stricken from the answer, I think said paragraphs are open to the criticism made by the plaintiff, and that the paragraphs indicated are, as claimed by the plaintiff, many of them, repetitious and unnecessary, and that many of said paragraphs are merely the statement of evidentiary matter, a large part of which could not be established by competent evidence, and that the same should have been stricken out by the court at Special Term. The office of a pleading is defined by section 241 of the Civil Practice Act, which provides that: Every pleading shall contain a plain and concise statement of the material facts, without unnecessary repetition, on which the party pleading relies, but not the evidence by which they are to be proved.”

By rule 103 of the Rules of Civil Practice it is provided that: If any matter, contained in a pleading, be sham, frivolous, irrelevant, redundant, repetitious, unnecessary, impertinent or scandalous or may tend to prejudice, embarrass or delay the fair trial of the action, the court may order such matter stricken out, in which case the pleading will be deemed amended accordingly, or the court may order an amended pleading to be served omitting the objectionable matter.”

I think the paragraphs of the first defense to which our attention is directed by plaintiff’s motions were clearly improper under section 241 of the Civil Practice Act and that the same should have been stricken out under rule 103 of the Rules of Civil Practice. (President & Directors of Manhattan Co. v. Morgan, 199 App. Div. 767; Peabody, Jr. & Co. v. Travelers Ins. Co., 206 id. 206; Winter v. American Aniline Products, Inc., 236 N. Y. 199.) In so far as the allegations mentioned were not repetitious or irrelevant, they were evidentiary and had no proper place in [441]*441the answer. The defendants should have pleaded ultimate facts only and not the evidence to establish such facts. In so far as the defendants have pleaded evidentiary matter the ultimate facts are sufficiently alleged to permit the introduction of proof to establish such facts. I think in every instance where the plaintiff asks that paragraphs be stricken out as pleading evidence the ultimate facts are sufficiently alleged to permit of the introduction of competent evidence in support of the allegation. For example: The plaintiff asks that a long list of named, vaccines dealt in by the plaintiff, and set forth in the 3d paragraph of the first defense, should be stricken from the said answer as being unnecessary and as stating evidence. In the 3d paragraph of the first separate defense the defendants allege that the vaccines made, manufactured, sold and dealt in- by plaintiff have been by him designated with certain numbers, and that the exact number of vaccines made by plaintiff has not always been the same. The plaintiff, as pleading, insists, I think correctly, that such allegation was sufficient to apprise plaintiff of the defense sought to be interposed and that thereunder the defendants may prove the fact alleged. But the defendants then proceed to set forth several pages of the various and varying vaccines dealt in by plaintiff. The setting forth of the long list was quite unnecessary. The next allegation which the plaintiff asks to be stricken from the first separate defense contained in the answer is that part of paragraph 7 setting forth various diseases, likewise as being unnecessary and as stating evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
214 A.D. 437, 212 N.Y.S. 478, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-international-publications-inc-nyappdiv-1925.