Warnock v. Mitchell

43 F. 428, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1690
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 F. 428 (Warnock v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warnock v. Mitchell, 43 F. 428, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1690 (circtwdtn 1890).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

The two counts of this declaration, to which the demurrer has been limited by the' submission in argument, aver no other publication, either generally or specially, of the alleged libel, than the receipt by the plaintiff of the private letters in which the defamation was contained. It is conceded by the plaintiff’s counsel that this is not a sufficient publication, unless the rule of the common law has been changed by the statute. It will aid us in determining the disputed scope of the statute to consider somewhat the rule of the common law on the subject. The counsel for the defendant has stated correctly, as we find, the reason why the mere delivery of a private letter to the plaintiff is not, in a civil action, a publication of the libel, and yet, in a criminal indictment, amounts to a publication. In the civil action, the law in theory allows no compensation for wounded feelings alone, but ,only when that injury is accompanied with an impairment of one’s reputation. with others; as, in other cases of tort, where there must be some damage to the person .or,property, which may be aggravated by the mental suffering attending the injury. But when the.public,undertakes to [429]*429redress its own wrong in the premises by the criminal proceeding, it punishes not so much for the defamation of the prosecutor as for the somewhat distinct offense of inciting, by the defamation, to a breach of the peace. Perhaps, in strict thought, it may he that it is a misnomer to call the criminal proceeding a prosecution for libel at all, for all authorities are agreed that the indictment or information must allege an intention to break the peace by incitement thereto. Yet it will be found perhaps that, after all, the distinction comes of an extreme solicitude to punish the culprit for mere private defamation, — a solicitude which is not so intense when the public itself becomes, by its indulgence in the liberties of free speech, a sharer in the offense of open defamation, and through its public press, and other organs of public opinion, delights to degrade a man by libel and slander because of his social, religious, or political sins, in their sight, or for the mere barbaric enjoyment of the sensation of seeing a good reputation destroyed, the destroyers hypocritically professing sympathy with the victim meanwhile. Most of the legislation on the subject of libel has been, therefore, in aid of the public freedom in this behalf; hut when it does touch upon the seemingly less venial offense of mere private defamation, it is in the other direction of more severe laws for its suppression. It might be well enough urged, therefore, that the legislature intended by any given statute to enlarge the civil remedy by placing it upon an equality with the criminal proceeding in the matter of publication, and that which it takes to constitute it; for all the cases show that the courts are very astute to lay hold of any circumstance appearing in the case to sustain publication in aid of the civil action in regard to mere private transactions, and in the criminal proceeding do not require it at all. Nevertheless, quite reluctantly, I conclude that the Tennessee legislature had not any intention to enlarge the civil remedy in the statute we have before us.

In the leading case of Sir Baptist Hicks, Hob. 215, Poph. 139, as stated by the last-cited reporter, the reasons for the rule of the criminal law aro somewhat diversely given by the judges; none of .them saying, however, that it was because of a provocation to a breach of the peace, as reported by Hobart, and generally accepted by subsequent cases. One of them said that such a letter as was written in that case concerned public matter, ami was an offense against piety, charity, and justice, because Sir Baptist’s benefactions, which were derided, were given to a church, to a hospital, and to a public building, and the giving of such gifts should not he discouraged, even by private derision. Another said that if the defamatory letter had related to only private concerns, and did not thus affect the public interest, it could not have been punished.' Lord Ooicu curtly said only that he had been instructed as attorney to file an information in such a case, which, however, was not filed, for reasons stated by him, and that it was resolved in Edwards v. Wooton, 12 Coke, 35, to that effect. But Lord Chancellor Bacon said “that the reason why such a private lettershall be punished is because it in a manner enfpreeth the party to whom the letter is directed to publish it to his friends to have their advice, and for fear that the other party would puhlish it, so that [430]*430this compulsory publication shall be deemed a publication in the delinquent.” This reason, it is apparent, applies to make the sending of the letter a publication in the civil action as well as in the criminal prosecution, but it did not seem to take root in the subsequent cases, and they follow the statement in Edwards v. Wooton, supra, that “ for the writing of a private letter to another, without any other publication, the party to whom it is directed cannot have an action upon the case, for this: that no action lies; but that the said infamous letter, which in law is a libel, shall be punished, although it was solely written to the plaintiff without any other publication, for it is an offense to the king, and is a great motive to revenge, and tends to the breaking of the peace and great mischief; and for that reason it was necessary that it should be punished by indictment to prevent such occasions of mischief.” And so one of the very latest eases examined repudiates Lord Chancellor Bacon’s reasoning in a case where the addressee of the letter was illiterate, and had his wife read it co him, which was held not to be a publication by the defendant. State v. Syphrett, 27 S. C. 29, 37, 2 S. E. Rep. 624. All the authorities seem to support this distinction quite uniformly, and to require in the civil action a publication to some third person, though very slight circumstances will be taken to be a publication in support of the suit. Queen v. Adams, 22 Q. B. Div. 66; Wennhak v. Morgan, 20 Q. B. Div. 635, —where it is said: “The uttering of a libel to the party libeled is clearly no publication for the purposes of a civil action.” Phillips v. Jansen, 2 Esp. 624; Barrow v. Lewellin, Hob. 62, and note; Darcy v. Markham, Id. 120a; Wenman v. Ash, 13 C. B. 836; Lyle v. Clason, 1 Caines, 581, and note; Broderick v. James, 3 Daly, 481; McIntosh v. Matherly, 9 B. Mon. 119; Sheffill v. Van Deusen, 13 Gray, 304; Spaits v. Poundstone, 87 Ind. 522; Mielenz v. Quasdorf, 68 Iowa, 726,, 28 N. W. Rep. 41; Add. Torts, 980; Cooley, Torts, 193; Gilb. Ev. 641; Townsh. Sland. & Lib. § 93; 2 Starkie, Sland. & Lib. 13; Odgers, Sland. & Lib. 150, 383; Sesler v. Montgomery, 28 Amer. Law Reg. 276, and note, 413, note. Notwithstanding a seemingly uniform support of this distinction between the civil and the crimina action in the matter of treating the uttering of the libelous or slanderous writing or words to the plaintiff himself only as a publication, so accurate an author as the annotator of Saunders’ Reports, in his note to Lake v. King, 1 Wms. Saund. 132, states the law to the contrary, and says that the sending of a sealed letter to the party himself only is in a civil action a publication, although it had been formerly held otherwise; for which he cites Baldwin v. Elphinston, 2 W. Bl. 1037, and Weatherston v. Hawkins, 1 Term R.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F. 428, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warnock-v-mitchell-circtwdtn-1890.