In the absence of express malice or excess, publication of
actual facts is not libelous, and in case of mere excess without
express malice, the only liability is for damages attributable to
the excess, and refusal of the trial court to charge to this effect
is error.
Quaere whether attributing to a person conduct that is
lawful can be libelous.
The stricter practice is to note the exceptions before the jury
retires, but if all the exceptions are noted in open court after
jury returns and no wrong is suffered, an exception will not be
sustained on that ground.
4 P.R.F. 383 reversed.
Page 222 U. S. 453
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 456
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action for libels, and comes here upon a bill of
exceptions after a verdict for the plaintiff. The alleged libels
consist of a series of articles in a Porto Rican newspaper,
Page 222 U. S. 457
La Correspondencia. These articles stated that the
plaintiff, Pettingill, while United States Attorney for Porto Rico,
carried on a private practice also, and even acted as a lawyer on
behalf of persons bringing suit against the government of Porto
Rico. It seems that, if the plaintiff had been an officer of the
local government, he would have been forbidden the practice by the
local law, and the articles convey the idea that, if the practice
is not prohibited also by the law for United States officials, it
ought to be, especially as the island is charged with a salary for
the attorney. The conduct of Mr. Pettingill in the above
particulars is described as a monstrous immorality, a scandal,
etc., etc. In the view that we take, it is not necessary to state
the charges here in detail, but it should be observed that, in the
declaration, the plaintiff alleged that, while United States
attorney, he had a large private practice, and implied, as in his
evidence he stated, that a part of this practice consisted of suits
against the local government. So there was no issue on the matter
of fact.
So far as the facts were concerned, the publication of them
alone was not libelous. For, apart from the question whether
attributing to the plaintiff conduct that was lawful, as the
plaintiff says, could be a libel (
Homer v. Engelhardt, 117
Mass. 539), he was a public officer in whose course of action
connected with his office the citizens of Porto Rico had a serious
interest, and anything bearing on such action was a legitimate
subject of statement and comment. It was so, at least, in the
absence of express malice -- a phrase needing further analysis,
although not for the purposes of this case. Therefore, the only
questions open for consideration were the motives of the
publication and whether the comment went beyond reasonable limits,
which, of course, the defendant denied. But, so far as we see from
reading the charge, the judge did not approach the case from this
point of view. For, after saying to the jury
Page 222 U. S. 458
that fair comment upon the actions of public officials was
privileged, he went on:
"But you are instructed that, in this case . . . , [the
articles] are what is known in law as libelous
per se. . .
. Therefore, in any event, you must find for the plaintiff upon
that issue, and give him such damages as you may believe, from all
the facts and circumstances in the case, he is entitled to,"
and after that proceeded to direct them only as to the
conditions for finding punitive damages also. It is at least
doubtful whether this instruction meant that the comments were
excessive as matter of law. It rather would seem from the previous
explanations given to the jury of the independence of United States
officials notwithstanding the source of their salaries, and the
instructions that the plaintiff's acts were lawful, that the
defendant, in order to justify himself, would have to prove that
they were wrong in law, and that his inability to do so might be
considered as aggravation of the damages to be allowed, that the
latter considerations alone were the ground for what we have quoted
from the charge.
However this may be, what we have said is enough to show that
the mind of the jury was not directed to what was the point of the
case. We do not see how, making reasonable allowance for the
somewhat more exuberant expressions of meridional speech, it could
be said as matter of law that the comments set out in the
declaration went beyond the permitted line, and we think it at
least doubtful whether the plaintiff would not have got all if not
more than all that he could ask if he had been allowed to go to the
jury on that issue. In the absence of express malice of excess, the
defendant was not liable at all, and in the case of mere excess
without express malice, the damages, if any, to which he was
entitled were, at most, only such as could be attributed to the
supposed excess. But what really hurt the plaintiff was not the
comment, but the fact. The witnesses for the plaintiff said that
the people of Porto
Page 222 U. S. 459
Rico considered the acts charged immoral, and the statute
referred to showed that such was their conception of public duty.
It was peculiarly necessary, therefore, to instruct the jury that,
so far as the publication of facts disapproved by the community was
concerned, the plaintiff could not recover for it, however
technically lawful his conduct might have been, except as we have
stated above. Instructions were requested on the point, and the
refusal to give them was excepted to, as also was the corresponding
charge. Without nice criticism of the form of the requests, it is
enough to say that they were so nearly correct as to call the
judge's attention to the matter and to require a different
explanation of the defendant's rights.
An exception was taken to the judge's sending the jury out
before the counsel for the defendant had stated all of his
exceptions to the charge. The judge had told the counsel that he
would not instruct the jury otherwise than as he had, and he
allowed all the exceptions to be taken in open court after the jury
had retired. No doubt it is the stricter practice to note the
exceptions before the jury retires (the judge, of course, having
power to prevent counsel from making it an opportunity for a last
word to them).
Phelps v.
Mayer, 15 How. 160. But, in this case, they were
noted at the trial, in open court,
United
States v. Breitling, 20 How. 252, and, in the
circumstances stated, the defendant suffered no wrong, so that we
should not sustain an exception upon this ground.
Judgment reversed.