Prichard v. Lloyd
Prichard v. Lloyd
Opinion of the Court
Lloyd sued Prichard in an action of slander, alleging that the latter had charged him with the crime of larceny. Plea — not guilty. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below.
The Court instructed the jury as follows: “ If it has been proved to your satisfaction that the defendant spoke of the plaintiff ‘ that the plaintiff and defendant and one Springer’ had sat down to gamble in a house in Greens-burg, Decatur county, Indiana, and, while they were there,
If the foregoing statement is,per se, actionable, it is because it imports a charge of larceny. We do not think it, of itself, does so. It might, from the manner of making it and the circumstances under which it was made, have conveyed such a charge and been so understood by those who heard it, and this should have been left to the jury to determine. If the words used amount absolutely to a charge of stealing, then were Lloyd on trial for the alleged larceny, proof of the facts rehearsed, there being no other evidence, would necessarily convict him; and, in this case, had Prichard put in a plea of justification, alleging that Lloyd did steal the 5 dollar bill, and, in support of it, proved the facts stated in the instruction, they must have been held to establish the charge beyond a reasonable doubt, there being no other conflicting evidence in the case to modify their effect. We do not think such could have been the case.
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.
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