Poppenheim v. Wilkes
Poppenheim v. Wilkes
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions which have been considered by this Court, as fairly arising out of the trial below, and the grounds of appeal, are as follows:
1. Was it competent for the defendant to prove by a witness present, that another person had imputed to the plaintiff the offence alleged in the words which were the cause of action.
2. Did the proof correspond, in the legal sense, to the words charged in the declaration?
First. The right to offer the testimony rejected on the trial, has been inferred from the proposition affirmed in the case of Beauford and M’Cluney, 1 N. & M’C., 268, to wit: a person may prove in mitigation of damages, such facts and circumstances as show a ground of suspicion, not amounting to actual proof of plaintiff’s guilt. This doctrine will not be questioned on the present occasion, but it is conceived that the mode by which any such fact or circumstance is to be proved, is to be that one, which is recognized by the settled rules of evidence. Now, the effort of the defendant, was to prove a fact or a circumstance by eliciting from a witness, who was sworn, the reply, that he had heard something from one who was not sworn, that is, to repeat an observation made by one who might have been, and we-think should have been, introduced and put under oath to testify the particular matter in view. Otherwise, what would be the result? Not that a fact or circumstance in mitigation had been affirmed to exist, upon the oath of one subject to cross-examination, but merely the fact that a person had made an observation; that is to say, the mitigating circumstance sought to be incorporated into the testimony, would not be any fact or transaction touching the conduct or even the character of the plaintiff, but the irresponsible remark of another, which might be no more than the floating impression of that other, whence derived, the jury could not know nor have the means to determine, from manner, cross-examination and so forth, how much such impression was tinged by lurking malice—how much perverted by the
Suppose the plaintiff had offered no proof at all of the words with respect to which the variance exists; there can be no doubt, that having proved as he did on the trial below, the words which imputed the charge of calf stealing, he would
Again—suppose he had not alleged the words, “and the records of the Court would prove it;” and Truesdell’s testimony had been precisely what it was in relation to such words; it is not supposed that the substantial charge would have been thereby enervated, or that any conflict in sense could be discovered between the words, “he was a calf thief,” and the words, “he has been indicted for calf stealing, and the records of the Court would prove it.” If not, then the variance which is alleged to exist, is, only in relation to words that are to be ranked as of the context, not differing in sense with those that are substantive, said and proved as such, words that may aggravate, mitigate or qualify, according to the judgment of the jury.
That the defendant meant no more than that the plaintiff had been indicted for calf stealing, is negatived by the finding of the jury, for that question was distinctly submitted to them. The question of malice was wholly for the jury; a second time they have assessed damages against him, and we can see no sufficient cause to send the case back.
The motion is therefore dismissed.
Concurring Opinion
I concur as to the rejection of testimony, but I think that the words said differ from the words proved, as a thief differs from a convicted thief, an accusation from proof.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. In this case, I dissent from the opinion delivered by my brother Withers, on the grounds,
1st. That the testimony rejected by the Judge below, was admissible as a ground of suspicion.
2d. The words proved, as they ought to have been under, stood from the whole conversation, meant no more than that the plaintiff had been indicted for calf stealing, and were not actionable; I am therefore in favor of a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.