Weston v. . Commercial Advertiser Assn.

77 N.E. 660, 184 N.Y. 479, 22 Bedell 479, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1386
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 660 (Weston v. . Commercial Advertiser Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weston v. . Commercial Advertiser Assn., 77 N.E. 660, 184 N.Y. 479, 22 Bedell 479, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1386 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

*481 Hiscock, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for an article alleged to be libelous and to have been published by the defendant of and concerning the plaintiff as a coroner’s physician or deputy coroner of the city of ¡New York.'

The defendant by its demurrer urges the proposition that the article' published by it was not addressed to the plaintiff or to any particular individual, but was addressed to a course of conduct claimed to prevail in a public office; that the alleged defamatory words were written of a certain set or class of men and that plaintiff as an individual cannot maintain this action simply because he belonged to that set. The demurrer and this argument based upon it have thus far been overruled, and, as we think so correctly, that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.

At the time of the' publication of the article there were four coroners in the borough of Manhattan and a qualified physician appointed by each coroner as a coroner’s physician. Plaintiff was one of these .physicians or, as they were sometimes designated, deputy coroners.

On or about February 2, 1905, one Jackson, then being a coroner for said borough, was convicted of the crime of attempt at bribery. Thereafter and upon February 20,1905, the article in question was published' which, stripped of all allegations by way of introduction and innuendo, read in part as follows:

“ Says Graft ¡Rules the Coroners. Former Bureau Official Declares ' System ’ Runs Perfectly ; ‘ Hush Money ’ Abundant; $500 or even $1,000 Paid by Hotels to Keep Suspicious Oases out of Papers; Death Coined into Cash; Men enter Bureau with a ‘Shoe String’ and Leave with Comfortable Fortunes.
“ ‘ The Coroner’s office,’ said a former prominent official of that office, while discussing it to-day in connection with the recent conviction of Dr. Jackson, ‘ is a hot-bed of corruption in .which the system runs more freely than in any other department, not excepting even the Police Department. The *482 ‘ system ’ runs in the coroner’s office with absolute impunity. It pervades the entire office, but I should say that the most of the graft goes, not to the underlings,' but to those higher up.’ ” Then followed a purported statement in detail of the manner in which the corrupt system said to prevail in said office was carried on, including the following : “ ‘ Say a young girl dies suddenly from purely natural causes. The death is reported and the coroner’s physician goes to the house. He looks at the body, examines it, questions the members of the family and becomes convinced that there is nothing suspicious in the death and that a permit for the burial may be issued. But where is he going to come in ? Looking at the anxious -father and mother he shakes his head and says with a note of pity in his voice , I’m afraid the body will have to be removed to the morgue. I’m sorry, but it is evidently a case for an autopsy.’ Can’t anything be done ? Oh, Coroner! ’ or Oh! Doctor,’ the parents exclaim, ‘ can’t anything be done to save us this ? It will break our hearts! And the shame of it! She died a natural death and there is no need of an autopsy. Is there no way of saving us?’ ‘It’s too bad, really, but I •must perform my duty no matter how disagreeable it is,’ replies the coroner or his deputy, in a sympathetic'way, and .with still another note in his voice as he moves towards the door.' Then there is a hurried conversation among the members of the family. The mother disappears, reappears and sidles up to her husband and he in a moinen t is beside the departing official who has not yet reached the door. ‘ I’m very sorry, doctor, that nothing can be done,’ and without a moment’s delay comes the response, Oh, that will be all right,’ and the official is gone.- The poor family have given up a badly needed $5 bill, but, they have saved a loved one’s body from the morgue; the official' quietly chuckles to himself as he makes his way to the street $5 is $5.’ ”

Then followed still further statements of the manner in which this'same system upon a larger scale of payments was' employed in extracting money from proprietors of hotels t where deaths had. occurred liable to attract suspicion or occa *483 sion notoriety and in which specific reference was made to the coroner and his physician as guilty of these iniquitous practices.

Then still further we find : “ ‘ In the coroner’s court,’ added the former official, the same £ long green ’ has a far reaching effect. This is the evidence of the coroner’s physician which may be affected by it and the charge of the coroner to the jury. In fact, there are a hundred and one ways in which money will tell.’ £ But what are you going to do about it ? ’ asked the former official. £ Abolish the coroner’s office ? Mot a bit of good. It would only turn the graft into the pocket of some other person or persons. Official corruption is widespread and every man seems to be out for the £ almighty dollar.’ ’ ”

Proper allegations are employed in the complaint alleging the identity of plaintiff and the relation to him of the various statements in the article.

So far as we are aware there is- no particular controversy about the general principles of law which are applicable to such an alleged libelous article and which distinguish between one relating to a body or a class and one pointing at an individual. The distinction between an article censuring or satirizing an entire class or body of individuals and one which aims defamatory statements at an individual is well settled. The former may not be made the basis of an action for individual damages, and the latter may. As it was expressed in Ryckman v. Delavan (25 Wend. 186), in terms which advantageously may be quoted now : General censure or reproof, satire or invective, whether on moral, theological, or political grounds, cannot ordinarily be prompted by individual malice or intended to produce personal injury. * * The principle upon which the civil remedy is allowed does hot apply here, and the great interests of society require that it should not be made to apply. It is far better for the public welfare that some occasional consequential injury to an individual, arising from general censure of his profession, his party or his sect, should go without remedy, than that free discussion on the great questions of politics, or morals or faith, should *484 be checked by the dread of embittered and boundless litigation. * * * Tet it does not thence follow, because a man is libeled — not by name or title or other specific description of himself,' but under some such description of persons as includes certain other persons, and marks the individuality of each of them as much as if they were all severally named — that, therefore, this is no libel, having a personal application upon which a civil suit can be maintained. The application of the injurious charge to a particular person must be made on the same- principle that the meaning of .the charge itself is explained. Both are to be taken according to the 'common understanding of men and the customary use of language.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 660, 184 N.Y. 479, 22 Bedell 479, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weston-v-commercial-advertiser-assn-ny-1906.