Wood v. Vernon

12 A. 656, 13 Del. 48, 8 Houston 48, 1887 Del. LEXIS 18
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 A. 656 (Wood v. Vernon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Vernon, 12 A. 656, 13 Del. 48, 8 Houston 48, 1887 Del. LEXIS 18 (Del. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Houston, J.

According to tire act of March 4, 1857, (Rev. Code, 654,) on the trial of an indictment for libel, the truth of the matter charged or alleged in it as libellous may be given in evidence ; and if the jury in any such case shall find that the act was induced by good motives, and with no malicious intent, and the [57]*57matter so charged is true, it shall operate to the acquittal of defendant or defendants. Section 2. That in actions for damages for libel, where the truth is pleaded and given in evidence, if it be found that the same was written or published properly for public information, and with no malicious or misehevious motives, the jury may find for the defendant or defendants.

The second plea to the declaration is that the matters charged as libellous in it are true, and that the same were published properly for public information, and with no malicious or misehevious motive, within the meaning of said statute, and which is a plea of justification of it upon those grounds; and to this plea the plaintiff demurs generally, and assigns the following causes of demurrer: That the plea does not contain or show any particular ground or matter of justification, nor any particular matter of defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action, and is in other respects uncertain, informal, and insufficient.

The third plea to the declaration is that the matters charged as libellous in it were furnished for publication to the defendants by John T. Wood, the husband to the plaintiff, and that the same were published properly for public information, and with no malicious or misehevious motives, within the meaning of the said act of assembly. To this plea the plaintiff also demurs generally, and assigns the following causes of demurrer, to wit: That the said plea averring that the matter charged in the declaration as libellous was furnished to said defendants by John T. Wood, who is alleged in said plea to be the husband of the plaintiff, for publication, raises an irrelevant issue in this action, in that it alleges as a- matter of defense that the defendants published the said libel on the information of the said John T. Wood, whereas the offense charged in the declaration is the publication of said libel by the defendants ; that the said plea is double, and alleges two distinct matters of fact, to wit: (1) That it was published' on the information of one John T. Wood; and (2) that it was published properly for public information, without malice. And that-said plea alleges that the [58]*58said matters charged as libellous in said declaration were published properly for public information, and with no malicious or mischevious motives, within the meaning of the said act of assembly, and does not allege that said matters were true, and that the said plea is in other respects uncertain, insufficient and informal.

The defendants have joined in the demurrers, and in the argument of them have raised the question whether the plaintiff is entitled to an action for the libel alleged in the declaration against the defendants in this case, as it appears on the record before us, and deny that the plaintiff is so entitled, on two grounds: First, because the alleged libel was published on the 23d day of February, in the year of our Lord, 1885, but that the said act of assembly,

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Related

Wolf v. Keagy
136 A. 520 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1927)
Eliason v. Draper
77 A. 572 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A. 656, 13 Del. 48, 8 Houston 48, 1887 Del. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-vernon-delsuperct-1887.