Tracy v. Commonwealth

9 S.W. 822, 87 Ky. 578, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 9 S.W. 822 (Tracy v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tracy v. Commonwealth, 9 S.W. 822, 87 Ky. 578, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 116 (Ky. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

JUDGE PKYOR

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This is an appeal from the judgment below, impost ing a fine on the appellant for an alleged criminal libel, under an indictment of the Fayette Circuit Court, in which the defendant is charged with having willfully and maliciously composed and caused to be printed and published of and concerning W. D. Nicholas, late sheriff of Fayette county, and the jury before whom the value of certain landed property was tried on a writ of ad quod damnum obtained by the Lexington and Big Sandy Eailroad Company against the appellant and others, and of and concerning J. E. Morton, the presiding judge of the Fayette Circuit Court, before whom the case was subsequently tried, “ a certain false, scandalous and malicious libel, one part of which is as follows,” the pleader proceeding to charge such libelous matter in reference to the sheriff as made him, if true, a corrupt official, and then proceeds, “another part whereof is of the tenor following: ‘I am indignant, and forced to say to the public, that the ruling of Judge Morton (meaning the Judge of the Fayette Circuit Court) is unjust and a disgrace to his position. He denied me the right of á trial by jury because he did not want it out of his hands, as he could not decide in favor of the railroad company [580]*580as he has- done.’ ” This libelous matter appearing in the newspapers published in .the city of Lexington, the indictment followed, resulting in a fine of five hundred dollars.

The accused filed a general and a special demurrer to the indictment, the ground of the special demurrer being that the Commonwealth, in one countfof the indictment (and it contains but one), had charged him .with committing two or more public offenses. The demurrers were overruled, and the defendant pleaded not guilty. t

It is evident that the defendant, in publishing the libelous matter in which he maligned the judge and ■misrepresented his official conduct, went beyond the bounds of legitimate criticism, and we shall, therefore, notice only the grounds urged by counsel for a reversal.

. It is insisted that as there are so many ways of printing and publishing written productions, the statements of an indictment should contain the manner in which the printing and publication were made, and in support of this rule of pleading the attention of the court is called to the crime of forgery, where this .court held, in the case of Commonwealth v. Williams, 13 Bush, 267, that as there were so many ways in which that offense can be committed, the indictment must inform the defendant of the particular acts relied on to constitute the offense, and also the acts showing how the paper was uttered; and for a ■ like reason it is urged the manner of printing and publishing the libelous matter complained of should also be stated, as there are so many ways of printing and [581]*581publication. It is difficult, often, to determine what acts constitute forgery, or whether the act said to have been done by the accused amounts to the uttering of the forged paper, and for that reason, under our system of Code pleading, the statements of the indictment are required to be more specific in this class of cases than at common law, section 124 of the Criminal Code providing that the statements of the indictment must be direct and certain “as to the particular circumstances of the offense charged, if they be necessary to constitute a complete offense.” Subsection 2 of section 122 also requires a statement of “the acts constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language, and in such a manner as to enable a person of ordinary understanding to know what is intended.”

The crime of forgery may be committed by signing the name of another without authority, or by causing another to sign the name, 'or by altering a writing already signed, and while the trial judge will know the legal meaning to be given the word forgery, and the acts necessary to constitute the offense, a charge in an indictment that the accused committed forgery by altering a certain instrument of writing, etc., is but the conclusion of the pleader, and fails to inform the accused of the facts necessary to make the offense complete. So one may be guilty of libel, which is simply a malicious defamation of another, but as this may be done in various ways, such as by printing, writing, sign or picture, it becomes necessary to state in the indictment the facts necessary to constitute the offense in such a way as one of ordinary [582]*582understanding may know what charge he has to meet.

It is averred in the indictment before us that the defendant did unlawfully and maliciously compose, write and cause to be printed and published of and concerning, etc. These facts, with the ordinary averments following, as in this case, constituted a complete offense, either at the common law or under the Code, and apprised the defendant of every fact necessary to constitute the offense with which he stood charged. The facts are, that you composed and caused to be printed and published this libelous matter, and any one with ordinary understanding must know what was intended and specifically charged. It is also averred that the accused caused the publication to be made, which in effect was saying that it was published by another by his direction, and if not, we are not disposed to hold that such an averment as that it was printed and published is a mere legal conclusion. It is as much a fact as the statement that it was composed or written by the defendant. The words have a plain common sense meaning, and require no legal interpreter to inform the accused of the offense he is charged with having committed.

It is further argued that the indictment is fatally defective, because two distinct and separate libels are attempted to be charged. The entire printed matter containing the libel is but one writing, signed by the defendant and published in the Lexington papers. In that writing the defendant comments on the conduct of the sheriff and the jury, the tribunal trying the case, upon the inquisition as to value, etc., that trial having no connection with the act of Judge [583]*583Morton in refusing a jury trial, save as a history of the proceeding to condemn the same land, the inquisition being held first by the sheriff, and then finding its way under appellant’s charter to the circuit court. It was not an attempt on the part of the defendant to criticise any single procedure in the circuit court, but an effort to give a history of the attempt on the part of the railroad to condemn defendant’s property, in which he attributes improper and dishonest motives to the judge, sheriff and the jurors, or the most of them, in the trial of his case.

It is argued that as the action of the circuit judge assailed by the defendant was at a different time, and independent of the action of the sheriff, that was also •criticised, the offenses were different, and the special demurrer should have been sustained. Whether these libels can be regarded as independent acts of defamation, and that being so, as many indictments can be maintained as the number of persons he had defamed, is one of some difficulty.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W. 822, 87 Ky. 578, 1888 Ky. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracy-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1888.