Mayrant v. Richardson
Mayrant v. Richardson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by.
Notwithstanding the frequent occurrence of actions of slander in our Courts, it does not yet appear to be well settled what words of themselves, in legal contemplation, constitute slander. If spoken of a Pr*vate *Person> holding no office, nor engaged in any profession or trade, they must be such at least, if true, as would subject him to legal punishment; if spoken of any other person, they must be calculated to injure him in his office, profession, or trade. The words in this case do not come within either of those rules. They do not impute any specific crime .or misdemeanor. It is not alleged that the plaintiff held any office, or that the words had any relation to his profession or trade.
The only authority, produced in support of the actionability of such words, is a mere dictum from 2 Salk. 695, How v. Prinn, where it is said, “in offices of profit, words that impute either defect of understanding, of ability, or integrity, are actionable.” But that opinion does not appear to be supported by any other respectable authority, and is contradicted by the case in which it is reported ; for it goes on to state, that “ in those of credit, words that state only want of ability, are not actionable as to say of a justice of the peace, “ he is an ass, and a beetle-headed justice because a man cannot help his want of ability, as he may his want of honesty. Now let it be asked, does not the reason apply as well to the one ease as the other ? Can a man, holding an office of profit, help his want of ability, any more than he who holds an office of credit only ? But it has already been observed, that the plaintiff held no office. And if he had actually *been in the place, to which he was aspiring, he would have been more fortunate than most of those who had gone before him, if he had found it a profitable one.
It is not pretended that those words, spoken of a private individual, would have been actionable. And I am not aware of any principle of law or constitution, by which a person by proclaiming himself a candidate for congress, becomes so far elevated above the common level of man.kind, as to entitle him to any exclusive privileges. On the contrary, when one becomes a candidate for public honors, he makes proferí of himself for public investigation. All his pretensions become proper subjects of inquiry and discussion. He makes himself a species of public property, into the qualities of which every one has a right to inquire, and of the fitness of which, every one has a right to judge, and give his opinions. The ordeal of public scrutiny, is many times a disagreeable and painful operation. But it is the result of that freedom of speech, which is the nécessary attribute of every free government, and is expressly guaranteed to the people of this country by the constitution. The same may be said of the freedom of speech, as of the press: “ That among those principles deemed sacred in America; among those sacred rights considered as forming the bulwark of their liberty, which the government contemplates with awful reverence, and would approach with the most cautious circumspection, there is no one of which the importance is more deeply impressed on the public mind. That this liberty is often carried to excess, that it sometimes degenerates into licentiousness, is see and lamented, but the remedy has not yet been discovered. Perhaps it is an evil inseparable from the good with which it is allied ; perhaps it is a shoot which cannot be stripped from the stalk without wounding vitally the plant from which it is torn.”
But lastly; it is said, the words are actionable, in ^consequence of the special damage which the plaintiff has sustained. I have already occupied so much of the time of the court, that I will not dwell upon this part of the case. I will not stop to inquire, whether the damage, said to be sustained, was such as to furnish the foundation of an action; for even when special damage is the foundation of the action, the words must be of an opprobrious nature, and such as are calculated to lessen the person of whom they are spoken, in the opinion of the community. But where they are perfectly justifiable or innocent, no action will lie, although some injury may have resulted from them. As to say of a lawyer, that he was not witty, by which he lost a fee ; of a clergyman, that he was not eloquent, by which he failed to get a place; or of a woman, that she was not handsome, by which she lost her marriage ; all these are mere matters of opinion, which furnish no standard by which the truth can be determined, and of which every person has a right to judge for himself; and such I have shown the words in the principal case to be. The private character has not been attacked, the moral conduct impeached, nor the sanctuary of domestic tranquillity violated. There has been no imputation calculated to render the plaintiff an object of contempt or ridicule, or to lessen him in the estimation of his fellow-citizens.
The demurrer therefore was properly sustained, and this motion must be discharged.
gave no opinion, having been of counsel for the plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Mayrant v. James B. Richardson
- Status
- Published