Crocker v. Hadley

Decision Date23 June 1885
Docket Number11,693
Citation1 N.E. 734,102 Ind. 416
PartiesCrocker v. Hadley
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

From the Wayne Circuit Court.

The judgment is affirmed, with costs.

D. W Comstock and J. H. Kibbey, for appellant.

H. C Fox, W. A. Peelle and J. F. Robbins, for appellee.

OPINION

Howk, J.

This was a suit by the appellee, Hadley, to recover damages from the appellant, Crocker, for his publication of an alleged libel. The cause was put at issue and tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned for the appellee, assessing his damages in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars. Over the appellant's motion for a new trial judgment was rendered against him on the verdict.

Several errors are assigned by appellant in this court, but his counsel has confined his argument chiefly to the alleged error of the court in overruling his motion for a new trial. Counsel say: "It is admitted by the appellant that he wrote and procured the publication of the alleged libellous article." Appellant's counsel claim, however, that the innuendoes in appellee's complaint place a forced and unnatural meaning on the language used in the published article, and, to some extent, this may be true. The published article is too long to be copied in this opinion, but it denounced the appellee as a "hoary-headed filcher," and charged that "John C. Hadley has sold himself Judas-like, for a few pieces of silver, to sell his neighbors out." We need not argue for the purpose of showing that the publication of an article, containing such expressions as those quoted, in a public newspaper, is a libellous publication. It is not necessary that a crime should be charged in accurate or technical language, in a written or printed publication, in order to constitute such publication a libel. Any written or printed publication which holds a person up to scorn or ridicule, or to a stronger feeling of contempt or execration, or which imputes or implies his commission of a crime not directly charged, is a libellous publication. This is the settled law on this subject in this State. Gabe v. McGinnis, 68 Ind. 538, and authorities cited; Bain v. Myrick, 88 Ind. 137; Young v. Clegg, 93 Ind. 371; Hake v. Brames, 95 Ind. 161.

There is evidence in the record which tends to sustain the verdict on every material point. In such case, as has often been decided, this court will not disturb the verdict on what might seem to be the weight of the evidence. City...

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