Walker v. Hoeffner

54 Mo. App. 554, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 Mo. App. 554 (Walker v. Hoeffner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Hoeffner, 54 Mo. App. 554, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Biggs, J.

— Action for slander. The petition contains two counts. The cause of action stated in the first count was that the defendant, in the presence of others, called the plaintiff “a slut, a bitch and a whore.” In the second count the alleged defamatory matter was stated as follows: “ ‘You,’ meaning plaintiff, ‘are a street walker,’ ‘and that you,’ meaning the plaintiff, ‘fooled with the roomers to support Mr. Walters,’ meaning the plaintiff’s husband, and that ‘the $10 a week you,’ meaning the plaintiff, ‘paid while Mr. Walters,’ meaning plaintiff’s husband, ‘was at the hospital was made in a dishonest way,’ intending and meaning to accuse the plaintiff of adultery, by means of which the plaintiff has been, and is, greatly injured in her good name,” etc.

The answer contained a general denial.

On a trial before a jury the verdict was for $250 on each count, and judgment was entered for the total amount. The defendant has appealed.

I. The plaintiff was permitted by the court to read in evidence the testimony of a deceased witness, as preserved in a bill of exceptions which was filed on a former trial of the cause. In this it is claimed the court committed error, for the reason that there was no independent evidence that the testimony of the deceased witness, as contained in the bill, was correct or substantially so.

[557]*557The rule of evidence, which has been heretofore recognized and followed in this state (Jaccard v. Anderson, 37 Mo. 95; State v. Able, 65 Mo. 357; Scoville v. Railroad, 94 Mo. 87) is that, before the testimony of a deceased witness as preserved in a bill of exceptions filed on a former trial can be read, a proper foundation for its admission must, be established — that' is, it must be shown by other independent evidence that the testimony as offered is substantially the same as the deceased witness testified to. But it may be very well questioned whether this rule should longer prevail in this state in view of the recent enactments providing for the appointment of official stenographers, who are required to keep full stenographic notes of the oral evidence offered at the trial of every cause. This question, however, we need not discuss or decide, for the reason that the objection to the introduction of the evidence was too general, and for this reason alone the assignment ought to be overruled. The colloquy between the court and the defendant’s counsel will best explain the nature of the objection. Mr. O’Connor: “I object to the reading of the testimony of John J. Kenney, as found in the bill of exceptions, because there has been ño legal or proper foundation laid for it.” The Court: “What do you mean by this?” Mr. O’Connor: “I simply say that there is no proper foundation laid for it; that is all.” The Court: “Do you mean to' say they have not shown that it is his testimony at the former trial?” Mr. O’Connor: “It is in this bill of exceptions, but there has been no evidence showing that they are entitled to read that evidence.”

The rules of practice require the grounds of an objection to the admission of testimony to be stated as fully as the nature of the objection will admit of. Ordinary fairness to the court and the opposing litigant requires this. That the rule is a just and wise one is [558]*558exemplified in this case. If the question propounded by the court had been answered directly and not evasively, the true nature of the objection, as now urged, would have been disclosed, and in all probability the objection would have been obviated by the introduction of the preliminary proof. Clark v. Conway, 23 Mo. 438.

II. In the second assignment of error the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of the jury on the second count.

It is manifest that the defendant’s counsel entertained the opinion at the trial that there was some evidence to authorize the submission of this branch of the •case to the jury. His own instructions prove this. But as instructions cannot take the place of evidence— that is supply an entire failure of proof — and as one of •the grounds for a new trial was that the finding was -against the evidence, we must review the question. Link v. Harrington, 47 Mo. App. 262; State ex rel. v. Durant, 53 Mo. App. 493.

The plaintiff testified that the defendant, at the dime and place stated in the second count, said to her, in the presence of others: “You better go home and take your crazy husband yourself and tie him to the bedpost; do like you did before; put him,in the hospital, and make the ten dollars a week out of your boarders in a dishonest way. ” This was all the evidence in support of the second count.

There was no proof to show that the words were spoken in the sense stated in the innuendo, and that the hearers so understood them. This we think was necessary. The words of themselves are not necessarily ■defamatory. If the defendant meant to charge that the plaintiff, who was a married woman, had been guilty of acts of adultery with her boarders, and if the hearers so understood them, then a cause of action as ¡stated accrued, “for the slander and damage consist [559]*559not only in speaking the words, but in tbe apprehension of the hearers.” On the other hand, if the •defendant meant to charge that the plaintiff was in some way cheating or defrauding her boarders, and the hearers so understood him, then there could be no recovery under the allegations of the petition. Therefore, there should have been some evidence from which the jury could have rightly inferred that the defendant spoke the words in the sense alleged in the innuendo, and that the hearers so understood him. This view we think finds ample support in the books.

In Dyer v. Morris, 4 Mo. 214, the defendant charged that the plaintiff’s daughter had gone to the “goose-horn at St. Louis.” Judge McG-iuk held that the meaning of the word “goose-horn” should have been averred, and it should have been alleged that the word was used in that sense, and that the hearers so understood it.

In the case of Unterberger v. Scharff, 51 Mo. App. 102, the following words were alleged to have been spoken: “What did you sell the butcher?” To which the plaintiff replied, “Nothing,” and thereupon defendant said to the plaintiff, “You’re a liar; you did, and stuck the money in your pocket.” We held in that case that the words were not actionable in themselves, and that it was necessary for the plaintiff to allege and prove that the words were meant to convey a sense in which they were actionable, and were so understood by the hearers.

So the supreme court in the case of Christal v. Craig, 80 Mo. 367, ruled that, where the words are not necessarily defamatory, it must be alleged and proved that they were spoken in such a sense as to make them actionable.

Mr. Townsend in his work on slander says: ■“When the language is ambiguous and it is doubtful in [560]*560what sense the publisher intended it, the question is in what sense the hearers understood it, for “ the slander and damage consist in the apprehension of the hearers.” Townsend on Slander [4 Ed.] p. 641.

In the case of Binford v. Youny, 115 Ind. 174, the court said: “Charges of unchaste conduct are seldom made in plain words, and it is often necessary to prove what the persons who heard the slanderous words understood the person who uttered them to mean.” To the same effect is Branstetter v. Dorrough, 81 Ind. 527.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Mo. App. 554, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-hoeffner-moctapp-1893.