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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fletcher v. H. J. & J. Wilson [1885] ScotLR 22_433 (21 February 1885) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0433.html Cite as: [1885] ScotLR 22_433, [1885] SLR 22_433 |
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Page: 433↓
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In an action of damages for slander contained in a newspaper which had erroneously stated that the pursuer had been seven times convicted of theft, the verdict was for the pursuer, damages £50. At the trial the pursuer stated that he “was never convicted of theft, or of any dishonesty.” The defenders subsequently discovered that he had twenty-three years previously, when a boy of fourteen, been twice convicted in the same year of petty theft, and had been sent to a reformatory. They obtained a rule for a new trial, on the ground that the damages were excessive, because the jury had been misled by the pursuer's evidence, and because these two convictions had come to their knowledge, which constituted res noviter, entitling them to an issue in justification. Held that the two convictions would not support an issue in justification, and that the damages were not excessive, and rule discharged.
This was an action of damages for slander at the instance of John Fletcher, against H. J. & J. Wilson, proprietors of the Edinburgh Evening News. The alleged libel was published in the newspaper of 25th September 1884, and was to the following effect:—“ Assault on a Man.— For striking a man several times on the face, in a house at South Richmond Street, on 23d inst., John Fletcher, who had been seven times previously convicted of theft, was sent ten days to jail by Sheriff Baxter, at Edinburgh Sheriff Summary Court this afternoon.”
The defenders admitted that the statement in the paragraph that the pursuer had been previously convicted of theft was erroneous. They explained that the error was merely clerical, and was corrected whenever the defenders became aware of it, by their publishing in the newspaper of 9th October the following paragraph:—“In our report of a case, which came before the Sheriff Summary Court on the 25th ult., it was stated that a man named John Fletcher, who was sent to jail for ten days for assault, had been seven times previously convicted of theft. The previous convictions were for assault, and we regret that by a clerical error it should have been made to appear that Fletcher had been guilty of theft.”
The defenders denied that the pursuer had suffered any damage, and pleaded that they were therefore entitled to absolvitor, but judicially tendered £10, which the pursuer refused, and the case went to trial before a jury on an issue whether the paragraph, which was admittedly of and concerning the pursuer, falsely and calumniously represented him to have been seven times convicted of theft, to his loss and damage. No counter issue was taken.
At the trial the pursuer in his evidence deponed—“It was not true that I had been seven times convicted of theft. I was never convicted of theft, or of any dishonesty.”
The jury returned a verdict for the pursuer, damages £50.
Subsequently to the trial it was discovered by the defenders' agent that the pursuer had been twice convicted of theft in the year 1862. He was then fourteen years of age. The first conviction was on 8th August 1862, when the pursuer pleaded guilty along with two others to the theft of an empty purse, for which they were ordained to find caution for their good behaviour for twelve months. The second conviction was on 20th November 1862, when the pursuer along with two others pleaded guilty to the theft of 20s., for which he was sentenced to be imprisoned for fifteen days, and to be sent to a reformatory for five years.
An affidavit was then lodged, sworn to by the defenders' agent, setting forth these two convictions, and the defenders moved for, and obtained, a rule for a new trial, on the ground of res noviter and excess of damages.
The pursuer thereafter showed cause—It would not have been competent to lay this res noviter before the jury, as there was no counter issue— Paul v. Jackson, January 23, 1884, 11 R. 460. The case simply went to the jury for the assessment of damages. There was no fraud, for the question which had caused this difficulty was put to the pursuer without his being in any way prepared for it. [ Lord President—It was quite an incompetent question, which the'defenders might very well have objected to].
The defenders argued—There was here res noviter, from which it was evident that the jury had been misled. They were entitled to an issue in justification founded on these two previous convictions.
Page: 434↓
The jury would not have given such an amount of damages if they had known of these two convictions. The damages were therefore excessive, and the verdict had been obtained by what almost amounted to fraud and stratagem—Adam on Jury Trials, 278; Ritchie v. Barton, March 16, 1883, 10 R. 813; Craig v. Jex-Blake, July 7, 1871, 9 Macph. 973. The pursuer must show real damage, and he had shown none. At advising—
Now, there can be no doubt about the meaning or import of that statement, for to say that a man has been seven times convicted of theft means nothing less than this, that he is a notorious and habitual thief, and well known to the police and to the public as such.
The question which first occurs to one's mind is whether, according to the defenders' present state of information, they could put upon record a statement in justification? The defenders have discovered that twenty-three years ago, when the pursuer was fourteen years old, he had fallen into bad company, and that twice in the same year, in August and November 1862, he was convicted of petty theft, one theft being of an empty purse, and the other of 20s. in silver. The end of that part of his career was that he was sent to a reformatory and went through a full course of discipline, and from that time down to the present day there has not been ever the slightest imputation on the honesty of the pursuer.
I am of opinion that the defenders could not have justified what was said in the paragraph, and that even if they had put on record the fact of these two convictions they could not have obtained an issue in justification. If therefore they had gone to trial without an issue in justification, they could not have put in evidence these two trifling convictions. The circumstance that they were obtained twenty-three years ago, when the pursuer was so young, would have made it all the more cruel that the pursuer should now be charged as a notorious and habitual thief.
Even if in consequence of an imprudent and incompetent question put to the pursuer by his own counsel the defenders could have introduced two old convictions in cross-examination, I very much doubt whether they would have affected the verdict of the jury. Some jurymen—and I would have been much disposed to agree with them—would have considered that such a raking up of old stories was an aggravation of the libel.
For these reasons I am for discharging the rule, and I may further say that as I do not suppose that the pursuer expected such a question to be put to him, it is not to be assumed that when it was put, without his being in any way prepared for it, the answer which was given was wilfully false. The pursuer has, I daresay, been trying for twenty-three years to forget what had occurred and I should think it very strange if it were thought that the reply amounted to false swearing, and still less to wilful perjury on his part.
I shall merely, in conclusion, follow up what your Lordship has said in regard to the fact that the pursuer having had the question suddenly put to him, I think he may quite honestly have said that he never was convicted of theft or of any dishonesty. Looking to the fact that he was sent to a reformatory on the second of the two occasions, and that he was a mere boy at the time, I think he may very well have had in his mind that fact rather than that he had been previously convicted. I think he may have been well entitled so to forget it. I therefore agree that the rule should be discharged.
Page: 435↓
The Court discharged the rule.
Counsel for Pursuer— Young. Agent— David Forsyth, S.S.C.
Counsel for Defender— Strachan. Agent— W. T. Sutherland, S.S.C.