Knight v. Foster
Knight v. Foster
Opinion of the Court
Under the general issue in actions of slander, the defendant cannot prove the truth of the words spoken, to rebut malice or mitigate damages; nor can he, for such purpose, prove that the words spoken were but a repetition of a common report; Dame v. Kenney, 25 N. H. 321; not even when stated as such; Mason v. Mason, 4 N. H. 110. The same principles are recognized in Pallett v. Sargent, 36 N. H. 499, since which the law has been regarded as settled in this State. But the ground taken in the case before us is, that the defendant should have been permitted to prove improper acts and conduct of the plaintiff, calculated to invite the remarks charged upon the defendant, and to afford just ground to believe them to be true, although such acts and conduct of the plaintiff* were'not sufficient to prove actual guilt. In Pallett v. Sargent it is already settled that evidence calculated to excite suspicion, but not sufficient to prove the guilt of the plaintiff, is not admissible, under the general issue, to mitigate damages; and this, we think, is the
The only remaining ground on which such proof can be urged, then, is to rebut malice. If admissible on that ground, it is difficult to perceive any sound principle upon which proof of actual guilt should be excluded, inasmuch as the proof of the latter would be quite as effectual to repel malice, as the proof of circumstances calculated to excite suspicions alone. Besides, the line which would determine what would be sufficient to prove actual guilt on the one hand, and only just grounds of suspicion on the other, would be difficult to find, and, from the nature of the case, could only be done by the jury.
The defendant’s counsel contends that the acts and conduct which he proposed to prove, being calculated to mislead him and invite such remarks, were admissible in evidence. Had the offer been accompanied by a proposal to prove that these acts and conduct of the plaintiff were in the presence of the defendant, and done with a view’- to mislead him, and lay the foundation of a suit like the present, a very different question would have arisen. But no such suggestion was made; or that the acts were in the defendant’s presence, or in any way connected with him.
There is nothing, then, to distinguish this from the ordinary ease of an offer to prove circumstances of suspicion, stopping short of the proof of actual guilt, to rebut malice or mitigate damages. If the circumstances relied upon had affected the plaintiff’s general reputation, the defendant, under the general issue, might show it, in mitigation of damages ; but he would not be pennitted to prove specific acts, out of which such general reputation had been established. Nor the one — the matter of general reputation — the plaintiff is supposed to be prepared, but not for the other. Pallett v. Sargent, 499. If such testimony is received, it must necessarily, we think, overthrow the authority of repeated decisions upon this subject.
We are aware that it has heretofore been held, by many learned judges, that malice may be rebutted by proof that the words spoken were but a repetition of a common report and were so stated at the time, but the law is now settled otherwise in New-Hampshire, and upon grounds that must be regarded as including the case before us. Mason v. Mason, 4 N. H. 110; Dame v. Kenney, 25 N. H. 322.
The views we entertain are sanctioned by the Massa.ehusetts courts. In Bodwell v. Swan, 3 Pick. 376, the defendants proposed to prove that the wife had been led, by particular instances known to her, of improper conduct on the part of the plaintiff, in regard to men, both married and unmarried, and by reports, current in the town, of similar improprieties of conduct, to believe that the words spoken were true. The evidence was offered under the general issue, to rebut the idea of malice, and wras rejected by the judge who tried the cause ; and his ruling was fully sustained by the whole court. Watson v. Moore, 2 Cush. 133, is to the same point.
The defendant’s counsel relies much upon a suggestion of the learned Chief Justice Perley, in Pallett v. Sargent, to the effect that where the plaintiff’s conduct had given the defendant just ground to believe that the statements he
In case of actual malice, the jury may award exemplary damages — what the plaintiff' ought to receive, and the defendant ought to pay. Symonds v. Carter, 32 N. H. 466, Fowler, J.; Whipple v. Walpole, 10 N. H. 130, and cases cited; Hopkins v. Atlantic & Lawrence R. R., 36 N. H. 9.
The exceptions are, therefore, overruled, and there must be judgment on the verdict.
Although it is much to be regretted that the views of the able and lamented chief justice who delivered the opinion in that cause, had not earlier been made public, yet we feel constrained to hold that the law must be regarded as settled in this State, in conformity with the decisions in Dame v. Kenney and Pallett v. Sargent. It may be considered, also, that when the case of Dame v. Kenney was decided, which was in 1852, the late Chief Justice Q-ilchrist was still upon the bench, and, considering the nature of that case, it may be safely presumed that the views of the chief justice were fully considered.
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