Wabash Printing & Publishing Co. v. Crumrine

21 N.E. 904, 123 Ind. 89, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 88
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1889
DocketNo. 13,730
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 904 (Wabash Printing & Publishing Co. v. Crumrine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Printing & Publishing Co. v. Crumrine, 21 N.E. 904, 123 Ind. 89, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 88 (Ind. 1889).

Opinion

Olds, J.

This is an action by the appellee against the appellants for publishing a malicious libel. The complaint charged the defendants, the Wabash Printing and Publishing Company, a corporation duly organized and engaged in printing and publishing a weekly newspaper in the city of Wabash, called the “Wabash Weekly Times,” and the defendants, John C. Eastman and John Whisler, Jr., as editors and managers thereof, with having published in the said “ Wabash Weekly Times,” an article charging the plain[91]*91tiff with the crime of grand larceny, in that he stole ten bacon hams of one Thomas Bowsman.

The defendants answered, admitting the publication, but justifying the publication by alleging the truth of the words, setting forth the facts constituting the larceny.

To this answer the plaintiff filed a reply in denial.

There was a trial by a jury and a verdict for the plaintiff for $90, and over the defendants’ motion for a new trial, judgment was rendered on the verdict. The overruling of the motion for a new trial is assigned as error.

On the night of June 15th, 1885, ten joints of smoked meat enclosed in grain sacks, and hanging from the rafters in the smoke-house of Thomas Bowsman, were stolen. On the morning of the 16th, the appellee, Crumrine, and his brother-in-law, who was residing with him, brought to the city of Wabash seven hams of smoked meat in grain sacks and sold them to Baumbaur Bros. Appellee slaughtered one hog in November, and five in December, 1884, and sold the sides and placed the hams and shoulders in the smokehouse of his father, Jacob Crumrine, to be smoked; after-wards these joints of meat were placed in paper sacks and hung up in the smoke-house of Jacob Crumrine and marked with appellee’s name.

The appellants sought to prove the answer by showing the loss of the meat by Thomas Bowsman on the night of June 15th, 1885, and that it was in grain sacks when taken, and that on the morning of the 16th, the appellee sold to Baumbaur Bros., in the city of Wabash, the same sacks; that appellee slaughtered but five or six hogs the previous fall or early winter, and had the hams of this meat after he had sold the seven hams in Wabash, and that he denied selling the meat to Baumbaur Bros., till he learned it was well known. TheAppellee sought to meet this by showing that he got the meat he sold from his father’s smoke-house the day before he sold it; and the quantity of meat at his father’s smokehouse became important.

[92]*92One Frank Lines, a witness for appellants, testified to having gone to the smoke-house of Jacob Crumrine, appellee’s father, on the morning of June 23d, 1885, and had a talk with Jacob Crumrine, who exhibited the meat in the smokehouse, and pointed out some hanging up in paper sacks with the name of appellee marked on them. During the examination of Lines, appellants asked him to state what was said by-Jacob as to whose meat it was in the smoke-house, and what Jacob said about how many hogs his son, the appellee, had killed the previous fall, and as to whether or not such conversation was communicated to the defendants by him prior to the publication of the article complained of, which evidence was objected to, and the objection sustained ,• and the ruling is complained of as error. This evidence was properly excluded. The appellee was not present at the conversation between Lines and his father, and it could not be given in evidence against him ; besides, his father was a competent witness to testify as to the number of hogs that were killed by his son the previous fall, and the only theory on which it could be at all claimed as competent would be to show what evidence and knowledge the defendants were in possession of and acted upon in publishing the article complained of as tending to rebut the presumption of malice. The question of malice was not material in this case. A person injured by the publication of a libellous article, or the speaking of false and slanderous words, is entitled to compensation for the injury sustained, whether the person speaking the words, or publishing the article, did so maliciously or not, and it is immaterial in assessing compensatory damages whether the person uttering the words, or publishing the article, was induced to do so by reason of malice held by him toward the person of whom the words were spoken, or the article related. It has, however, been the rule to allow the assessment of exemplary, or vindictive, damages, in actions for libel and slander.

Such damages are assessed upon the theory that whoso[93]*93ever maliciously, wantonly, purposely and cruelly, falsely assails the character of another by publishing or speaking libellous or slanderous words of and concerning such person, is guilty of a wrong, for which he should not only be required to compensate the injured person for the damages sustained, but damages should also be assessed as a punishment to him and as an example to others. In such cases it is proper to prove that there was no malice in the speaking of the words or the publishing of the article; that at the time of the uttering or publishing the person believed they were true; that he acted honestly and in good faith, and that he had no hatred or ill-will against the person of whom he spoke, and that he published the article as a matter of news in the ordinary course of business; and to show that such were his motives, and to rebut malice, it is proper to give in evidence and prove what information he was in possession of at the time of uttering the words or publishing the article. This rule, however, does not apply when the offender is liable to punishment by indictment for the wrong complained of.

Ordinarily damages are limited for torts and breaches of contract to full compensation to the injured party. It is just that the wrong-doer should fully compensate the injured party for damages sustained by reason of the wrongful act, but when such injured person has been made whole, he has received all that he is entitled to receive. It has been a long and well-established rule in this State, that for wrongs, the commission of which subjects the wrong-doer to both a criminal prosecution and civil action, exemplary damages can not be assessed. Stewart v. Maddox, 63 Ind. 51; Humphries v. Johnson, 20 Ind. 190; Koerner v. Oberly, 56 Ind. 284; Meyer v. Bohlfing, 44 Ind. 238; Nossaman v. Rickert, 18 Ind. 350; Taber v. Hutson, 5 Ind. 322; Butler v. Mercer, 14 Ind. 479; Struble v. Nodwift, 11 Ind. 64; Johnson v. Vuthrick, 7 Ind. 137.

The wrong complained of in this case was such as sub[94]*94jected the wrong-doer to a criminal prosecution for libel under the statute of this State, and no exemplary damages could be assessed. Austin v. Wilson, 4 Cushing, 273 (50 Am. Dec. 766). Hence the motives which led to the publication were not material.

The question to be determined was the truth of the charge made in the article and affirmed in the answer. If it was true the'plaintiff could recover no damages. If it was false the plaintiff was entitled to be made whole for the injury he sustained by reason of the publication, whether defendants acted honestly, and believed it to be true, and published it as a matter of news, or knew it to be false, and maliciously published it with the view and purpose of injuring the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 904, 123 Ind. 89, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-printing-publishing-co-v-crumrine-ind-1889.