Sullivan v. McCafferty

102 A. 324, 117 Me. 1, 1917 Me. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 27, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 102 A. 324 (Sullivan v. McCafferty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. McCafferty, 102 A. 324, 117 Me. 1, 1917 Me. LEXIS 120 (Me. 1917).

Opinion

King, J.

Action for slander in which the plaintiff recovered a verdict of $1475. The case comes to this court on the defendant’s general motion for a new trial, and on his exceptions to the refusal of certain requested instructions and to the giving of certain other instructions.

The slander complained of is that the defendant said of and concerning the plaintiff “he forged my name to that note,” meaning a certain note for fifty dollars, dated September 12th, 1916, on four months, payable to the order of the Rumford Trust Company, and signed by the defendant and also by Thomas W. Penley and the plaintiff. The defendant pleaded the general issue with a brief statement thereunder in which he stated that at the time of the slander he had forgotten that he signed the note, but that his signature thereto is genuine, “and that any statements he may have made to the plaintiff or others concerning the forging of said note were made in good faith and without malice and with an honest belief in their truth.”

The evidence was not materially conflicting. About a week before the maturity of the note the defendant, having received notice thereof, called at the bank and asked to see the note and it was shown to him. Thereupon, he immediately went to the plaintiff’s store, called him out to the sidewalk, and then and there in a loud voice and angry manner and in the hearing of several persons accused the plaintiff of forging his name to the note. There was evidence that the defendant subsequently said to others that the plaintiff had forged his name to a note. In attempting to explain why he so accused the plaintiff, after he had seen the note at the bank with his signature thereon, the defendant said, “I didn't look particularly at the signature, I looked to see if there was a note there.” And he testified that from an examination of the note four days before the trial he was satisfied at once that his signature thereto was genuine; and he then wrote the plaintiff a letter in which he admitted that fact, and said that he proposed to have the letter published in the Rumford Falls Times. It was not published.

[4]*4The Exceptions.

1. The defendant seasonably requested the following instruction: “If the statements made by the defendant were made with an honest belief in their truth, no actual malice should be inferred, and only such damage as has been actually sustained can be recovered.” To that request the court said: “I decline to give you that instruction, gentlemen, as it is worded, but I do instruct you that if the statements made by the defendant were made in an honest belief in then’ truth, and he used the same degree of care that an ordinary prudent man would use, and should use, before accusing the plaintiff of crime, and he could not discover, by the exercise of that care, that the signature to the note was his signature, then no actual malice can be inferred; but it does not he in the mouth of that man to shut his ej^es to the truth so that he does not see. If the defendant knew, or should have known, that that was his note, then it is no excuse for him that he shut his eyes and would not learn the truth.” The giving of that qualified instruction instead of the specific instruction requested, is the ground of the first exception.

It is to be observed that the last clause of the request, to wit, “and only such damage as has been actually sustained can be recovered,” was not given at all. Two questions, therefore, are open under this exception, first, was it error to omit the last, clause of the request? and, second, has the defendant any reasonable ground of complaint that the first part of the request was given with the qualification as above quoted?

In all actions for libel or slander malice is an essential element of the plaintiff’s case. But where the defamatory words spoken impute the commission of a crime, and they are not justified by proof of their truth, or that they were spoken on a privileged occasion, the law in such case presumes that they were spoken maliciously. The malice so presumed is called malice in law, and is of itself sufficient to support the action. In the case at bar the defamatory words charged the plaintiff with the crime of forgery. It was a false charge, not privileged either absolutely or qualifiedly, and it was libelous per se. Upon that state of facts the plaintiff’s cause of action was conclusively established, and he was entitled to recover some damages. What damages? In this State, two classes of damages may be recovered in actions for libel and slander, to wit, actual or compensa[5]*5tory damages, aiid exemplary or punitive damage. The first class embraces both special and general damages, so called. By special damage is meant compensation for those injuries which are the natural and proximate, but not the necessary, result of the defamation of the plaintiff — the loss or deprivation of some material temporal advantage, which is directly capable of being valued in money. And to entitle a plaintiff' to recover such damages he must both allege and prove them. General damage, however, as applied to such actions, means that damage which the law will presume must naturally, proximalely, and necessarily result to the plaintiff from the utterance of the slander, such as injury to the feelings and injury to the reputation of the plaintiff. Davis v. Starrett, 97 Maine, 568, 575. And such general damages are recoverable without being specially pleaded or proved, and to such an amount as the jury determine will fairly compensate the plaintiff for such injuries necessarily resulting to him from the slander. In the case at bar the plaintiff did not claim special damages; but he did claim, and was entitled to recover, the general damages which he had sustained on account of the slander, that is, such damages as the jury should find would fairly compensate him for the injury to his reputation, to his feelings, and similar injuries, resulting to him from the defendant’s defamatory statements concerning him. And no principle is more clearly established by an entire uniformity of decisions, than that damages in actions for slander may be increased upon proof of actual malice. True v. Plumley, 36 Maine, 466, 484. If the word “proved” had been used in that last clause of the request, instead of “sustained,” then the request would have been entirely wrong as a statement of lawT applicable to the case, for, as we have seen, the plaintiff was entitled to such general damages as resulted to him from the slander, without special proof thereof, and irrespective of whether the defendant had an honest belief in the truth of his statements or not. And we think the requested instruction open to the criticism that as worded it might have been understood by the jury to mean, that if they found that the defendant made the statements with an honest belief in their truth, then they could award the plaintiff only such damages as had been actually proved, an idea of the law of the case wholly erroneous. For that reason we think the omission to give the last clause of the requested instruction should not be held reversible error. And the defendant has not really urged in argument that it should be so held.

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Bluebook (online)
102 A. 324, 117 Me. 1, 1917 Me. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-mccafferty-me-1917.