Kane v. Boston Mut. Life Ins. Co.

Citation86 N.E. 302,200 Mass. 265
PartiesKANE v. BOSTON MUT. LIFE INS. CO.
Decision Date24 November 1908
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

200 Mass. 265
86 N.E. 302

KANE
v.
BOSTON MUT. LIFE INS. CO.

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Essex.

Nov. 24, 1908.


Exceptions from Superior Court, Essex County; George A. Sanderson, Judge.

Action for slander by James J. Kane against the Boston Mutual Life Insurance Company. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiff excepts. Exceptions overruled.


Sylvester F. Whalen and James [200 Mass. 267]H. Sisk, for plaintiff.

Joseph F. Quinn, Alexander H. Bullock, and John M. Thayer, for defendant.


SHELDON, J.

It may be assumed that the words alleged to have been uttered by the defendant's agents were spoken of the plaintiff in his business of an insurance solicitor, and that they were actionable. Lovejoy v. Whitcomb, 174 Mass. 586, 588, 55 N. E. 322, and cases cited. But the vital question is whether the defendant corporation can be held responsible for them.

It could not be found that any actual authority had been [200 Mass. 268]given by the defendant to its solicitors to make the slanderous statements, or that they were made with its knowledge; nor did anything on the plaintiff's offer of proof tend to show that there had been any ratification of these wrongful acts. The letters of Bradley, the defendant's superintendent of agencies, show no such ratification. They express disapproval of what had been done by the solicitors. The mere inaction of the defendant and Bradley's refusal to do anything for the plaintiff cannot indicate a ratification of what did not appear to have been done in the name or behalf of the defendant, or with the help of its resources or for its advantage. Nor is there any evidence that Bradley had authority to ratify these acts. The facts offered to be proved fall far short of what appeared in Fogg v. Boston & Lowell R. R., 148 Mass. 513, 20 N. E. 109,12 Am. St. Rep. 583, and White v. Apsley Rubber Co., 194 Mass. 97, 80 N. E. 500,8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 484. Nor would the facts that the plaintiff's business was diminished after the alleged slanders, and that a part of the business which he lost went to the defendant, be enough to show a ratification in the absence of evidence that the defendant knew these facts. The defendant did not knowingly receive the benefit of its agents' misconduct, and cannot be held on that ground to have ratified and adopted such misconduct. We find nothing in the cases cited by the plaintiff to support his contention on this point.

The plaintiff contends further that the defendant can be held on the ground that the slanders...

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