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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> A v. B [1898] ScotLR 35_760 (7 June 1898)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1898/35SLR0760.html
Cite as: [1898] SLR 35_760, [1898] ScotLR 35_760

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 760

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Tuesday, June 7. 1898.

[ Lord Kincairney, Ordinary.

35 SLR 760

A

v.

B.

Subject_1Reparation
Subject_2Slander
Subject_3Charge against Members of a Family
Subject_4Disclaimer.
Facts:

In the course of correspondence between two law-agents with reference to a pending litigation between two clients, in which the pursuer sought damages for breach of promise of marriage and seduction, the defender's law-agent in a letter to the pursuer's law-agent, after specifying certain entries in the register of births, deaths, and marriages, wrote with reference to them—“This last entry shows that the writer had been misinformed as to the particular child with which your client was to be credited, but this is not surprising in view of the fecundity of the maidens of this family, and of their matrimonial and other relationships as disclosed by the above and sundry other entries in the registers.”

In an action of damages for slander by an unmarried sister of the pursuer

Page: 761

in the former action against the defender's law-agent, held that the expression “maidens of the family,” naturally referred only to those whose names appeared in the register, and could not be innuendoed as applicable to the pursuer, whose name did not appear there, and of whose existence the defenders disclaimed all knowledge when the letter was written.

Defenders accordingly assoilzied.

Headnote:

This was an action in which the pursuer concluded for payment of the sum of £1000 as damages for slander in the following circumstances.

In 1897 the pursuer's sister had raised an action of declarator of marriage, or alternatively for damages for breach of promise of marriage and seduction. The present defenders were the defender's law-agents.

On 5th March 1897, some months before the summons in that action was signeted, in the course of correspondence with regard to that case, they wrote a letter to the law-agent acting for the present pursuer's sister, which, in so far as of importance for the purposes of this report, was in the following terms—… “You were formerly quite convinced that your client was what we represented her to be, and you so expressed yourself, not only to the writer, but to several of the parties whom you met in this office. Nothing has occurred to justify any change in that conviction, and a perusal of the register of births, &c., would satisfy you that our client's defence is both legally and morally complete, even apart from the conclusive evidence already submitted to you. In justification of this, and in illustration of the liberty which your client and her friends think proper to take with the Registration Acts, we refer you “—[ then followed references to certain entries in the Registers of Births and Deaths]. “This last entry shows that the writer had been misinformed as to the particular child with which your client was to be credited, but this is not surprising in view of the fecundity of the maidens of this family and of their matrimonial and other relationships as disclosed by the above and sundry other entries in the registers.” …

In the present action the pursuer averred that on 5th March 1897 there were living five daughters of the marriage between her father and mother, three of whom were married, and two of whom were unmarried, viz., the pursuer in the former action, and the pursuer in the present action. With regard to the letter complained of, she averred as follows—“(Cond. 4) The said letter contains statements which are of and concerning the pursuer, and are false, calumnious, malicious, and are made without just occasion. Among other statements of and concerning the pursuer in said letter she following are of and concerning her, viz.”—[ then followed the paragraph in the letter complained of beginning “This last entry,” and ending “other entries in the registers,” which is set forth supra]. “These statements were made by the defenders falsely, calumniously, and maliciously, and without probable cause. The said statements were not only untrue, but were made without any just occasion. They imply and represent, and were intended by the defenders to imply and represent, that the pursuer was unchaste, and was a woman of loose and immoral character. The explanations in answer are denied.” She also averred (Cond. 6) that the defenders had not withdrawn and retracted the statements complained of, and that they refused or delayed to do so, although this had been repeatedly required of them.

With reference to the averments in article 4 of the pursuer's condescendence the defenders averred—“(Ans. 4) Denied. None of the statements in said letter are of or concerning the pursuer. When the said letter was written the defenders had never heard of the pursuer and were in ignorance of her existence.” They explained that in the course of their inquiries in reference to the action at the instance of the pursuer's sister they had discovered certain facts regarding members of the pursuer's family other than the present pursuer, and that the statements contained in the letter had reference to these facts, and did not concern the pursuer in the present action.

The defenders had previous to the raising of the action written to the pursuer's law-agents disclaiming all intention of making any charge against the pursuer, and explaining that at the time the letter was written they were not aware of her existence.

Certificates of the entries mentioned in the letter of 5th March 1898 were produced. None of them contained any reference to the present pursuer. They bore upon the matters to which the defenders explained they were referring when writing that letter. It was not alleged that there were any other entries in any register of an incriminating character which concerned the present pursuer.

The defenders pleaded, inter alia— “(1) The pursuer's statements are irrelevant, and insufficient in law to support the conclusions of the summons. (3) The statements complained of not being of or concerning the pursuer the defenders are entitled to absolvitor. (4) The defenders not having slandered the pursuer ought to be assoilzied.”

By interlocutor dated 15th March 1898 the Lord Ordinary ( Kincairney) approved of an issue for the trial of the cause by jury.

The defenders reclaimed, and argued—No issue should be allowed. Immediately upon complain t being made to them, the defenders had disclaimed any intention of referring to the pursuer. They averred that they had never heard of her before, and the pursuer did not allege that this was untrue. No complaint was made of this letter for nearly a year after it was written, and the only publication was to a law-agent to whom it was sent in the course of business. The statement in the letter would not bear the innuendo suggested. The object which the defenders had in making it was to explain and excuse a mistake they had made, and it clearly appeared from the context that the only persons referred to in it were

Page: 762

those members of the family whose names appeared in the registers. It was not alleged that the pursuer came within that description, and none of the entries referred to concerned her. Authorities cited— Caldwell v. Monro, May 21, 1872, 10 Macph. 717; M'Fadyen v. Spencer & Company, January 7, 1892, 19 R. 350; Folkard on Slander and Libel (6th ed.), 823, and in re Lord Ronald Gower and “The Man of the World,” January 12, 1879 (not reported), there referred to.

Argued for the pursuer—An issue should be allowed. The purpose of the letter was to show that the pursuer's whole family were of bad character, and in particular that the maidens belonging to it were loose and immoral. The pursuer in the present action and the pursuer in the former action were the only unmarried women in the family, and the defenders' slanderous statement therefore clearly applied to the present pursuer. It did not matter what the defenders said they meant. They had uttered a slander in terms which were such as to apply to the pursuer, and she was entitled to reparation for that slander. The cases referred to had no bearing on the present.

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—This case is very peculiar. It affords an illustration of the error of writing letters on matters of business which deal in suggestions and innuendo unnecessary to a plain statement of the matter of business in hand. This letter was written with a legitimate occasion. It was the letter of a man of business referring to a particular piece of business. It contained somewhat loose language. The writer found it necessary in one paragraph, being that in which he speaks of the fecundity of the unmarried women to whom he refers, to explain a mistake into which he had fallen by imputing wrongly to a particular woman that she was the mother of a particular illegitimate child. He is referring to certain disclosures which he had made to the agent for the pursuer's sister who had recently made a claim for breach of promise of marriage against a client of his. The disclosures were that certain members of the family of that woman were shown by the registers of births to be women who were not of good character. Now, was that an allegation against the character of all the unmarried women of that family, of which the present pursuer can take hold so as to raise this action of damages for slander? I think it must when read be read as referring to those of the family whose matrimonial and other relationships were disclosed by the register to be of a particular kind. I think that the pursuer does not state a relevant case.

I may add that this does not seem to me a very favourable case for an action. It was a letter, as I have mentioned, by an agent to an agent upon a question between their clients, and when, even at an interval of nine months after the letter, the pursuer complained of it, the defenders who had never heard of her (if their statement be true) disclaimed altogether any intention of referring to her. That confirms me in the view which I have expressed.

Lord Young—I think that the defenders might have excused the error into which they had fallen as to the child of the pursuer's sister without giving any offence to another person. But I agree in thinking that their letter contains no matter for an action at the instance of the present pursuer. I do not believe that she thought it did, and I think that this is not a bona fide action to clear her character or to repair her feelings. The fair meaning of the letter seems to me to be—“If you refer to the registers of births to which I have called your attention, you will see that our mistake was excusable,” and that the only maidens referred to are “those disclosed by the above and sundry other entries in the registers.” I agree with your Lordship that the action should be dismissed.

Lord Trayner— I agree. The letter complained of was written in the ordinary course of business by the defenders to a law agent with reference to a threatened litigation between parties for whom they respectively acted as law-agents. With that litigation the pursuer had no concern, and one would not expect to find the pursuer referred to in connection with it. The letter does, however, refer to “the maidens of this family,” to which the pursuer in the former action belonged, and referred to them as persons who appeared from certain entries in the register of births to be or to have been unchaste. The pursuer says the reference was of and concerning her; the defenders disclaim that, and say they were ignorant of the pursuer's existence when the letter was written. It further appears from the letter itself why the defenders referred to “the maidens” of the family at all. While I think it would have been better to have omitted such a reference altogether, I am of opinion that it does not refer to the pursuer. The reference is exclusively to those maidens of the family whose names appear on the register of births in connection with a child or children borne by her or them. The pursuer was not one of them. If so, then the statement complained of was not of and concerning the pursuer. On that ground, I think the issue proposed by the pursuer should be disallowed, and the defenders assoilzied.

Lord Moncreiff—I own that at first I had some difficulty with regard to this case owing to the loose and reckless nature of the expressions complained of. The writer refers generally to “the maidens of the family,' and also refers to “other entries” in the register of births than those which he specifies, both of which expressions might be held to apply to the pursuer if the context permitted. But I have come to the conclusion that the words will not bear the innuendo suggested. Their fair meaning is that the characters of those maidens of the family whose antecedents are revealed in the specified entries in the

Page: 763

register would not bear investigation. The pursuer does not come within the meaning of the words if so interpreted; and the result is that she has not stated a relevant case.

Counsel for the defenders claimed that as the judgment of the Court was really a judgment on the merits, and involved sustaining the defenders' third and fourth pleas-in-law, the decree should be one of absolvitor.

The Court recalled the interlocutor reclaimed against, and assoilzied the defenders with expenses.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuer and Respondent— Trotter. Agent— Robert Anderson, Solicitor.

Counsel for the Defenders and Reclaimers— Dundas, Q.C.— Cook. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.

1898


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1898/35SLR0760.html