Yavis v. Sullivan

137 Conn. 253
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 14, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 137 Conn. 253 (Yavis v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yavis v. Sullivan, 137 Conn. 253 (Colo. 1950).

Opinion

Inglis, J.

The complaint in this action charges slander in two counts. The plaintiff had a verdict for $4500 on the first count and $6500 on the second. The defendant appeals from the denial of her motion to set the verdict aside and also from the judgment on the grounds of claimed errors in rulings on evidence, in *255 allowing an amendment of the complaint, in the charge and in permitting certain papers attached to the writ and complaint to go to the jury.

The slander stated in the first count as amended was that during the summer of 1941 the defendant spoke in the hearing of sundry persons concerning the plaintiff as follows: “He tried to steal my money.” “The man is nothing but a thief.” “He takes advantage of widows and helpless people.” “He tried to get my gilt-edged securities.” The second count, as amended, alleged that during the summer of 1941 the defendant said to the same persons and to the plaintiff’s wife: “He is no doctor.” “He is rotten.” “He owes everyone in town; he never pays anybody.” “He is a rotten Greek and has no practice.” “He should be honest to get on top.” No special damage was alleged in either count.

The jury might reasonably have found the following facts: The plaintiff was a physician and surgeon bom in Greece and admitted to practice there. He came to the United States in 1921 and, having interned at St. Raphael’s Hospital in New Haven, was admitted to practice in Connecticut in 1923. While an intern he became acquainted with Dr. Jeremiah Sullivan, who was then an assistant surgeon on the staff of the hospital. The two became close friends and remained so until Dr. Sullivan’s death in 1937. In 1933 Dr. Sullivan sold the plaintiff a cottage at West Silver Sands Beach, taking back a mortgage for $3000 as part of the purchase price. The defendant was an unmarried sister of Dr. Sullivan and kept house for him. She was, therefore, well acquainted with the plaintiff. After her brother’s death in 1937, she became the executrix of his will. Included in his estate was the plaintiff’s note and mortgage. In August, 1938, the plaintiff was being pressed by a bank either to reduce or to pledge additional security for several of his obligations to it. He *256 asked the defendant for her help by way of a loan of cash or securities from the estate of Dr. Sullivan. She flatly refused. In the hurricane of September, 1938, the plaintiff’s shore cottage was swept away. A bare lot worth $500 was left as the only security for the unpaid balance of $2600 upon the note held by the defendant as executrix. In February, 1939, she brought suit on the note and attached other real estate of the plaintiff and his bank account. Attorney Anthony Arpaia, one of the persons mentioned in the complaint in this action, represented Dr. Yavis in that suit. Although the plaintiff did not contest his liability on the note, the action lay dormant for a long time and it was not until December 5, 1941, after the commencement of the present suit, that judgment was entered.

Even before she instituted action on the note, the defendant had begun the practice of calling the plaintiff on the telephone and vilifying him. This occurred on an average of once a week, commencing in the summer of 1938 immediately after the plaintiff had requested the loan of the defendant and continuing until the institution of the present action in September, 1941. The calls were made to both the home and the office of the plaintiff and sometimes guests or patients were present. During the same period, the plaintiff learned that the defendant was talking about him in derogatory terms to others, because he was frequently “kidded” about it by other doctors at St. Raphael’s Hospital, where he was an assistant attending surgeon. All of this conduct on the part of the defendant greatly disturbed the plaintiff, embarrassed him and made him nervous and irritable, particularly with his wife and children.

With this general background, we come to the summer of 1941 and the specific slanders charged in the complaint. As bearing on the first count of the com *257 plaint, there were three incidents. Each of them was a conversation between the defendant and Attorney Arpaia, who was then the attorney of record for the present plaintiff in the action brought against him by the present defendant. All three conversations were upon busy streets in New Haven, and the defendant spoke in loud tones and within the hearing of many passers-by. The first occasion was shortly after noon. The defendant accosted Arpaia on his way from lunch to his office and said, among other things, that Dr. Yavis was nothing but a thief, that he tried to steal her securities, that he was rotten, no good and no doctor, that he took advantage of widows and children and that he had no practice. She said, “You have to be honest to get along. He is rotten.” A second occasion was at the corner of Temple and Center Streets in the afternoon. At that time the defendant used substantially the same words as she had before. The third conversation was on Chapel Street between College and High Streets. At that time the defendant told Arpaia that Dr. Yavis was rotten, that he was a dirty Greek, that he had no practice, and that he was a rotten doctor. She again said, “You have to be honest to get along.” She also said that he had tried to steal her money or securities and that he was a thief. Arpaia then had no knowledge that Dr. Yavis had asked Miss Sullivan to loan him either money or securities. He did not really believe these accusations, but he began to wonder about Dr. Yavis and as a result the friendship which then existed between them cooled off. He reported the incidents to Dr. Yavis.

There were also several occasions when the defendant made statements substantially as alleged in the second count. On one of these, the defendant, while on the porch of her bungalow at West Silver Sands Beach, said, concerning Dr. Yavis, to a Mrs. Manning in the *258 presence of Mrs. Yavis, who was on the beach: “He is a rotten Greek; he has no practice at all. You have to be honest to be on top.” This was said in such a loud tone of voice that it was intended to be heard by Mrs. Yavis. At another time, while Mrs. Photine Drakos, then a girl of fifteen years of age, her mother, Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Yavis and her two children were on the beach, the defendant called, apparently to Mrs. Yavis, “Does your friend know that [Dr. Yavis} is no doctor? He couldn’t possibly be, because you have to be honest to have a practice.” She further said that he was a crook and a rotten Greek. On one other occasion at the beach the defendant said, concerning Dr. Yavis, in the hearing of Mrs. Yavis, “He tried to get my gilt-edged securities. No one in the hospital will have anything to do with him. He owes everyone.” Words of the same import and meaning were said frequently by the defendant in the presence of Mrs. Yavis during the summer of 1941. On still another occasion, the defendant, in loud tones, said to Frederick E. Petrelli on a busy street in front of the city hall in New Haven that Dr. Yavis had tried to beat her out of the money he owed her and “Jerry,” that he had tried to take advantage of the gilt-edged bonds or stocks she had and that he was “nothing but a dirty crook ... a dirty Greek crook.” It is to be noted, however, that the words spoken to Mr. Petrelli were not slanderous per se and, therefore, could not in this action form the basis for any recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Conn. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yavis-v-sullivan-conn-1950.