Commonwealth v. Pascoe
Commonwealth v. Pascoe
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
There was a challenge to the array of petit jurors which the court overruled and this refusal is made the subject of the first assignment of error. The motion was based on the averment that the jury was summoned by the prosecutor, who was the sheriff of the county and who was therefore disqualified to discharge that part of his official duty. The case of Munshower et al. v. Patton, 10 S. & B. 334, is relied on to sustain the position. In that case the sheriff was a brother of one of the parties, and the subject of litigation was a tract of land. The motion to quash was sustained because of the relation of the sheriff to one of the parties. It was held that he might unite with the commissioners in drawing a jury, but that the power to summon the jury gave him an opportunity to select from the panel and for that reason he had an advantage which the other party did not have, which at common law created a disqualification. The rule of the common law is that if the sheriff be a party to the suit or be related by blood or affinity to either of the parties he is not to summon the jury, but the venire shall be directed to the coroner.' If the prosecutor in a criminal case is to be considered a party' within this rule the appellant’s application should have prevailed, but we are not persuaded that the rule applies in such cases. The commonwealth and the defendant are the parties in a criminal proceeding. It was not to the prosecutor’s personal advantage that the defendant be convicted, and the presumption is that his interest was not more than that of any other citizen. The fifth section of the Act of April 20, 1858, P. L. 354, establishing a mode of selecting jurors for the city of Philadelphia, makes it the duty of the sheriff to summon each of the jurors to appear in the court for which he may be drawn to serve as a juror during the ensuing term, of which several notices the sheriff is required to make return under
The defendant was indicted for publishing a malicious and defamatory libel. This offense is committed when any person shall write, print or publish any malicious or defamatory libel tending either to blacken the memory of one who is dead or the reputation of one who is living and thereby expose him to public hatred, contempt and ridicule. This statutory definition only incorporates into the body of the laws of the state a declaration of that which was a misdemeanor at common law. The malice involved in the offense is not necessarily actual ill-
The court having properly charged, as we conclude, that the publication was not privileged, the evidence offered by the plaintiff was irrelevant. If the article were privileged it would have been competent for the defendant to have proved the truth of the charge or that it was published with a reasonable ground for belief in its truth and that he was not animated by malice, but evidence of this character is only admissible by way of defense where the libelous article is privileged and is not admissible where as in this case the constitution and the statute do not permit the claim of privilege. The offers of evidence separately or collectively do not in our opinion present a state of facts which would have justified the submission of the case to the jury on the question of privilege.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Sheriffs — Summoning jury — Disqualification of sheriff — Sheriff as prosecutor. 1. The rule of the common law is that if the sheriff be a party to the suit, or be related by blood or affinity to either of the parties, he is not to summon the jury, but the venire shall be directed to the coroner. If the sheriff is a prosecutor in a criminal case, he is not a party within this rule. The commonwealth and the defendant are the parties in a criminal proceeding. 2. Where the sheriff’s duty in summoning jurors is purely ministerial all presumptions are in favor of the regularity of his conduct. Dibel — Criminal libel — Malice—Inference of malice. 3. The offense of publishing a malicious and defamatory libel is committed whenever any person shall write, print or publish any malicious or defamatory libel tending either to blacken the memory of one who is dead, or the reputation of one who is living, and thereby expose him to public hatred, contempt and ridicule. The malice involved in the offense is not necessarily actual ill will entertained by the accused toward the subject of the libel. The law imputes to one who does such a wrongful act a malicious intent. Every responsible person is presumed to intend the natural consequences of his act and is not permitted to deny that he intended them. If the publication be defamatory an inference of malice arises which it is the duty of the jury to find from the character of the publication. 4. Where the interest of the public to know the facts is of more importance than a possible breach of the peace, and these facts are published with good motive and only for the information of individuals or the public who have a right to be informed, a prosecution for libel cannot be maintained provided the publication speaks the truth or is made upon reasonable grounds of belief in its truth. Only those publications are privileged, however, which are made on proper occasion from a proper motive, in a proper manner and based on reasonable and probable cause. And even where the occasion is proper the privilege may be lost if the manner be improper. 5. A newspaper article is libelous which under the title of “Arnold and Andre” charges the prosecutor with being “A Benedict Arnold to the Twenty-second Ward,” and “ a man distrusted and detested by all parties and all factions;” “a Benedict Arnold to this community.” 6. A publication may be privileged in part and libelous in part, and a conviction may be sustained for publishing the libelous part.