1. Spoken words charging a woman with fornication in the
District of Columbia are not actionable
per se, as the
misconduct they impute, although involving moral turpitude, is not
an indictable offense.
2. In an action for such words, inasmuch as the right to recover
depends solely upon the special loss or injury which the plaintiff
has sustained, it is not sufficient to allege that she "has been
damaged and injured in her name and fame," but such special loss or
injury must be particularly set forth, and if it is not, the
declaration is bad in substance.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Words both false and slanderous, it is alleged, were spoken by
the defendant of the plaintiff, and she sues in an action on the
case for slander to recover damages for the injury to her name and
fame.
Controversies of the kind, in their legal aspect, require pretty
careful examination, and, in view of that consideration, it is
deemed proper to give the entire declaration exhibited in the
transcript, which is as follows:
"That the defendant, on a day named, speaking of the plaintiff,
falsely and maliciously said, spoke, and published of the plaintiff
the words following, 'I saw her in bed with Captain Denty.' That at
another time, to-wit, on the same day, the defendant falsely and
maliciously spoke and published of the plaintiff the words
following, 'I looked over the transom light and saw Mrs. Pollard,'
meaning the plaintiff, 'in bed with Captain Denty,' whereby the
plaintiff has been damaged and injured in her name and fame, and
she claims damages therefor in the sum of ten thousand
dollars."
Whether the plaintiff and defendant are married or single
persons does not appear; nor is it alleged that they are not
husband and wife, nor in what respect the plaintiff has suffered
loss beyond what may be inferred from the general averment that she
had been damaged and injured in her name and fame.
Service was made, and the defendant appeared and pleaded
Page 91 U. S. 226
the general issue, which being joined, the parties went to
trial, and the jury, under the instructions of the court, found a
verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the whole amount claimed in
the declaration. None of the other proceedings in the case at the
special term require any notice, except to say that the defendant
filed a motion in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the words
set forth in the declaration are not actionable, and because the
declaration does not state a cause of action which entitles the
plaintiff to recover; and the record shows that the court ordered
that the motion be heard at general term in the first instance.
Both parties appeared at the general term, and were fully heard,
and the court sustained the motion in arrest of judgment, and
decided that the declaration was bad in substance. Judgment was
subsequently rendered for the defendant, and the plaintiff sued out
the present writ of error.
Definitions of slander will afford very little aid in disposing
of any question involved in this record, or in any other,
ordinarily arising in such a controversy, unless where it becomes
necessary to define the difference between oral and written
defamation, or to prescribe a criterion to determine, in cases
where special damage is claimed, whether the pecuniary injury
alleged naturally flows from the speaking of the words set forth in
the declaration. Different definitions of slander are given by
different commentators upon the subject; but it will be sufficient
to say that oral slander, as a cause of action, may be divided into
five classes, as follows: 1. words falsely spoken of a person which
impute to the party the commission of some criminal offense
involving moral turpitude, for which the party, if the charge is
true, may be indicted and punished; 2. words falsely spoken of a
person which impute that the party is infected with some contagious
disease, where, if the charge is true, it would exclude the party
from society; or 3. defamatory words falsely spoken of a person,
which impute to the party unfitness to perform the duties of an
office or employment of profit, or the want of integrity in the
discharge of the duties of such an office or employment; 4.
defamatory words falsely spoken of a party which prejudice such
party in his or her profession or trade; 5. defamatory words
falsely spoken of a person, which, though not in themselves
actionable, occasion the party special damage.
Page 91 U. S. 227
Two propositions are submitted by the plaintiff to show that the
court below erred in sustaining the motion in arrest of judgment,
and in deciding that the declaration is bad in substance: 1. that
the words set forth in the declaration are in themselves
actionable, and consequently that the plaintiff is entitled to
recover, without averring or proving special damage; 2. that if the
words set forth are not actionable
per se, still the
plaintiff is entitled to recover under the second paragraph of the
declaration, which, as she insists, contains a sufficient
allegation that the words spoken of her by the defendant were, in a
pecuniary sense, injurious to her, and that they did operate to her
special damage.
Certain words, all admit, are in themselves actionable, because
the natural consequence of what they impute to the party is damage,
as if they import a charge that the party has been guilty of a
criminal offense involving moral turpitude, or that the party is
infected with a contagious distemper, or if they are prejudicial in
a pecuniary sense to a person in office or to a person engaged as a
livelihood in a profession or trade; but in all other cases the
party who brings an action for words must show the damage he or she
has suffered by the false speaking of the other party.
Where the words are intrinsically actionable, the inference or
presumption of law is that the false speaking occasions loss to the
plaintiff, and it is not necessary for the plaintiff to aver that
the words alleged amount to the charging of the described offense,
for their actionable quality is a question of law, and not of fact,
and will be collected by the court from the words alleged and
proved, if they warrant such a conclusion.
Unless the words alleged impute the offense of adultery, it can
hardly be contended that they impute any criminal offense for which
the party may be indicted and punished in this district; and the
Court is of the opinion that the words do not impute such an
offense, for the reason that the declaration does not allege that
either the plaintiff or the defendant was married at the time the
words were spoken. Support to that view is derived from what was
shown at the argument, that fornication as well as adultery was
defined as an offense by the provincial statute of the 3d of June,
1715, by which it was enacted that
Page 91 U. S. 228
persons guilty of those offenses, if convicted, should be fined
and punished as therein provided. Kilty's Laws, ch. xxvii., secs.
2, 3.
Beyond all doubt, offenses of the kind involve moral turpitude;
but the second section of the act which defined the offense of
fornication was, on the 8th of March, 1785, repealed by the
legislature of the state. 2 Kilty, ch. xlvii., sec. 4.
Sufficient is remarked to show that the old law of the province
defining such an offense was repealed by the law of the state years
before the territory, included within the limits of the city, was
ceded by the state to the United States; and inasmuch as the court
is not referred to any later law passed by the state, defining such
an offense, nor to any act of Congress to that effect passed since
the cession, our conclusion is that the plaintiff fails to show
that the words alleged impute any criminal offense to the plaintiff
for which she can be indicted and punished.
Suppose that is so, still the plaintiff contends that the words
alleged, even though they do not impute any criminal offense to the
plaintiff, are nevertheless actionable in themselves, because the
misconduct which they do impute is derogatory to her character, and
highly injurious to her social standing.
Actionable words are doubtless such as naturally imply damage to
the party; but it must be borne in mind that there is a marked
distinction between slander and libel, and that many things are
actionable when written or printed and published which would not be
actionable if merely spoken, without averring and proving special
damage.
Clement v. Chivis, 9 Barn. & Cress. 174;
McClurg v. Ross, 5 Binn. 219.
Unwritten words, by all, or nearly all, the modern authorities,
even if they impute immoral conduct to the party, are not
actionable in themselves, unless the misconduct imputed amounts to
a criminal offense, for which the party may be indicted and
punished. Judges as well as commentators, in early times,
experienced much difficulty in extracting any uniform definite rule
from the old decisions in the courts of the parent country to guide
the inquirer in such an investigation; nor is it strange that such
attempts have been attended with so little success, as it is
manifest that the incongruities
Page 91 U. S. 229
are quite material, and, in some respects, irreconcilable. Nor
are the decisions of the courts of that country, even of a later
period, entirely free from that difficulty.
Examples both numerous and striking are found in the reported
decisions of the period last referred to, of which only a few will
be mentioned. Words which of themselves are actionable, said Lord
Holt, must either endanger the party's life, or subject him to
infamous punishment; that it is not enough that the party may be
fined and imprisoned, for a party may be fined and imprisoned for a
common trespass, and none will hold that to say one has committed a
trespass will bear an action; and he added that at least the thing
charged must "in itself be scandalous."
Ogden v. Turner, 6
Mod. 104.
Viewed in any proper light, it is plain that the judge who gave
the opinion in that case meant to decide that words, in order that
they may be actionable in themselves, must impute to the party a
criminal offense affecting the social standing of the party, for
which the party may be indicted and punished.
Somewhat different phraseology is employed by the court in the
next case to which reference will be made.
Onslow v.
Horne, 3 Wil. 186. In that case, De Grey, C.J., said the first
rule to determine whether words spoken are actionable is, that the
words must contain an express imputation of some crime liable to
punishment, some capital offense or other infamous crime or
misdemeanor, and that the charge must be precise. Either the words
themselves, said Lord Kenyon, must be such as can only be
understood in a criminal sense, or it must be shown by a colloquium
in the introductory part that they have that meaning; otherwise
they are not actionable.
Holt v. Scholefield, 6 Term,
694.
Separate opinions were given by the members of the court in that
case; and Mr. Justice Lawrence said that the words must contain an
express imputation of some crime liable to punishment, some capital
offense or other infamous crime or misdemeanor; and he denied that
the meaning of words not actionable in themselves can be extended
by an innuendo. 4 Co. 17
b.
Prior to that, Lord Mansfield and his associates held that words
imputing a crime are actionable, although the words describe
Page 91 U. S. 230
the crime in vulgar language, and not in technical terms; but
the case does not contain an intimation that words which do not
impute a crime, however expressed, can ever be made actionable by a
colloquium or innuendo.
Colman v. Godwin, 3 Doug. 90;
Woolnoth v. Meadows, 5 East 463.
Incongruities, at least in the forms of expression, are
observable in the cases referred to, when compared with each other;
and when those cases, with others not cited, came to be discussed
and applied in the courts of the states, the uncertainty as to the
correct rule of decision was greatly augmented. Suffice it to say
that it was during the period of such uncertainty as to the rule of
decision when a controversy bearing a strong analogy to the case
before the court was presented for decision to the supreme court of
the State of New York, composed, at that period, of some of the
ablest jurists who ever adorned that bench.
Allusion is made, in the opinion given by Judge Spencer, to the
great "uncertainty in the law upon the subject," and, having also
adverted to the necessity that a rule should be adopted to remove
that difficulty, he proceeds, in the name of the court, to say,
"In case the charge, if true, will subject the party, charged to
an indictment for a crime involving moral turpitude, or subject the
party to an infamous punishment, then the words will be in
themselves actionable,"
and that rule has ever since been followed in that state, and
has been very extensively adopted in the courts of other states.
Brooker v. Coffin, 5 Johns. 190; 1 Am.Lead.Cas. (5th ed.)
98.
When he delivered the judgment in that case, he was an associate
justice of the court; Chancellor Kent being the chief justice, and
participating in the decision. Fourteen years later, after he
became chief justice of the court, he had occasion to give his
reasons somewhat more fully for the conclusion then expressed.
Van Ness v. Hamilton, 19 Johns. 367.
On that occasion he remarked, in the outset, that there exists a
decided distinction between words spoken and written slander; and
proceeded to say, in respect to words spoken, that the words must
either have produced a temporal loss to the plaintiff by reason of
special damage sustained from their being spoken, or they must
convey a charge of some act criminal in
Page 91 U. S. 231
itself and indictable as such, and subjecting the party to an
infamous punishment, or they must impute some indictable offense
involving moral turpitude; and, in our judgment, the rule
applicable in such a case is there stated with sufficient fullness,
and with great clearness and entire accuracy.
Controverted cases involving the same question, in great
numbers, besides the one last cited, have been determined in that
state by applying the same rule, which, upon the fullest
consideration, was adopted in the leading case -- that in case the
charge, if true, will subject the party charged to an indictment
for a crime involving moral turpitude, or subject the party to an
infamous punishment, then the words will be in themselves
actionable.
Attempt was made by counsel in the case of
Widrig v.
Oyer, 13 Johns. 124, to induce the court to modify the rule by
changing the word "or" into "and;" but the court refused to adopt
the suggestion, and repeated and followed the rule in another case
reported in the same volume.
Martin v. Stillwell, 13
id. 275.
See also Gibbs v. Dewey, 5 Cowen, 503;
Alexander v. Dewey, 9 Wend. 141;
Young v. Miller,
3 Hill 22; in all of which the same rule is applied.
Other cases equally in point are also to be found in the
reported decisions of the courts of that state, of which one or two
more only will be referred to.
Bissell v. Cornell, 24
Wend. 354. In that case, the words charged were fully proved; and
the defendant moved for a nonsuit, upon the ground that the words
were not in themselves actionable; but the circuit judge overruled
the motion, and the defendant excepted. Both parties were
subsequently heard in the supreme court of the state, Nelson, C.J.,
giving the opinion of the court, in which it was held that the
words were actionable; and the reason assigned for the conclusion
is, that the words impute an indictable offense involving moral
turpitude.
Defamatory words to be actionable
per se, say that
court, must impute a crime involving moral turpitude punishable by
indictment. It is not enough that they impute immorality or moral
dereliction merely, but the offense charged must be also
indictable. At one time, said the judge delivering the opinion, it
was supposed that the charge should be such, as, if true, would
Page 91 U. S. 232
subject the party charged to an infamous punishment; but the
supreme court of the state refused so to hold.
Widrig v.
Oyer, 13 Johns. 124;
Wright v. Page, 3 Keyes 582.
Subject to a few exceptions, it may be stated that the courts of
other states have adopted substantially the same rule, and that
most of the exceptional decisions are founded upon local statutes
defining fornication as a crime, or providing that words imputing
incontinence to an unmarried female shall be construed to impute to
the party actionable misconduct.
Without the averment and proof of special damage, says Shaw,
C.J., the plaintiff, in an action on the case for slander, must
prove that the defendant uttered language the effect of which was
to charge the plaintiff with some crime or offense punishable by
law.
Dunnell v. Fiske, 11 Met. 552.
Speaking of actions of the kind, Parker, C.J., said that words
imputing crime to the party against whom they are spoken, which, if
true, would expose him to disgraceful punishment, or imputing to
him some foul and loathsome disease which would expose him to the
loss of his social pleasures, are actionable, without any special
damage; while words perhaps equally offensive to the individual of
whom they are spoken, but which impute only some defect of moral
character, are not actionable, unless a special damage is averred,
or unless they are referred, by what is called a colloquium, to
some office, business, or trust which would probably be injuriously
affected by the truth of such imputations.
Chaddock v.
Briggs, 13 Mass. 252.
Special reference is made to the case of
Miller v.
Parish, 8 Pick. 385, as authority to support the views of the
plaintiff; but the Court here is of the opinion that it has no such
tendency. What the court in that case decided is, that whenever an
offense is imputed, which, if proved, may subject the party to
punishment, though not ignominious, but which brings disgrace upon
the party falsely accused, such an accusation is actionable; which
is not different in principle from the rule laid down in the
leading case -- that if the charge be such that, if true, it will
subject the party falsely accused to an indictment for a crime
involving moral turpitude, then the words will be in themselves
actionable.
Early in her history, the Legislature of Massachusetts
defined
Page 91 U. S. 233
the act of fornication as a criminal offense, punishable by a
fine, and which may be prosecuted by indictment, and, if the person
convicted does not pay the fine, he or she may be committed to the
common jail or to the house of correction. None of the counts in
that case contained an averment of special damage; but the court
held that, inasmuch as the words alleged imputed a criminal offense
which subjected the party to punishment involving disgrace, the
words were actionable; and it is not doubted that the decision in
correct. Exactly the same question was decided by the same court in
the same way twenty-five years later.
Kenney v. Laughlin,
3 Gray 5; 1 Stat. Mass. 1786, 293. Other state courts, where the
act of fornication is defined by statute as an indictable offense,
have made similar decisions; but such decisions do not affect any
question involved in this investigation.
Vandcrip v. Roe,
23 Penn.St. 182; 1 Am.Lead.Cas. (5th ed.) 103;
Simons v.
Carter, 32 N.H. 459; Sess.Laws (Penn. 1860) 382; Purdon's Dig.
1824, 313.
That the words uttered import the commission of an offense, say
the court, cannot be doubted. It is the charge of a crime
punishable by law, and of a character to degrade and disgrace the
plaintiff, and exclude her from society. Though the imputation of
crime, said Bigelow, J., is a test, whether the words spoken do
amount to legal slander, yet it does not take away their actionable
quality if they are so used as to indicate that the party has
suffered the penalty of the law, and is no longer exposed to the
danger of punishment.
Krebs v. Oliver, 12 Gray 242;
Fowler v. Dowdney, 2 M. & Rob. 119.
Courts affix to words alleged as slanderous their ordinary
meaning: consequently, says Shaw, C.J., when words are set forth as
having been spoken by the defendant of the plaintiff, the first
question is whether they impute a charge of felony or any other
infamous crime punishable by law. If they do, an innuendo,
undertaking to state the same in other words, is useless and
superfluous, and, if they do not, an innuendo cannot aid the
averment, as it is a clear rule of law that an innuendo cannot
introduce a meaning to the words broader than that which the words
naturally bear, unless connected with proper introductory
averments.
Alexander v. Angle, 1 Crompt. & Jer. 143;
Goldstein v. Foss, 2 Younge & Jer. 146;
Carter v.
Andrews, 16 Pick. 5;
Beardsley v. Tappan, 2 Blatch.
588.
Page 91 U. S. 234
Much discussion of the cases decided in the Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania is quite unnecessary, as we have the authority of that
court for saying that the leading cases establish the principle,
that words spoken of a private person are only actionable when they
contain a plain imputation, not merely of some indictable offense,
but one of an infamous character, or subject to an infamous or
disgraceful punishment, and that an innuendo cannot alter, enlarge,
or extend their natural and obvious meaning, but only explain
something already sufficiently averred, or make a more explicit
application of that which might otherwise be considered ambiguous
to the material subject matter properly on the record, by the way
of averment or colloquium.
Gosling v. Morgan, 32 Penn.St.
275;
Shafter v. Kinster, 1 Binn. 537;
McClurg v.
Ross, 5
id. 218;
Andres v. Koppenheafer, 3
S. & R. 255.
State courts have in many instances decided that words are in
themselves actionable whenever a criminal offense is charged,
which, if proved, may subject the party to punishment, though nor
ignominious, and which brings disgrace upon the complaining party;
but most courts agree that no words are actionable
per se
unless they impute to the party some criminal offense which may be
visited by punishment either of an infamous character, or which is
calculated to affect the party injuriously in his or her social
standing.
Buck v. Hersey, 31 Me. 558;
Mills v.
Wimp, 10 B.Mon. 417;
Perdue v. Burnett, Minor 138;
Demarest v. Haring, 6 Cow. 76; Townsend on Slander, sec.
154; 1 Wendell's Stark. on Slander 43;
Redway v. Gray, 31
Vt. 297.
Formulas differing in phraseology have been prescribed by
different courts, but the annotators of the American Leading Cases
say that the supreme court of the State of New York, in the case of
Brooker v. Coffin, appear "to have reached the true
principle applicable to the subject," and we are inclined to concur
in that conclusion, it being understood that words falsely spoken
of another may be actionable
per se when they impute to
the party a criminal offense for which the party may be indicted
and punished, even though the offense is not technically
denominated infamous, if the charge involves moral turpitude, and
is such as will affect injuriously the social standing of the
party. 1 Am.Lead.Cas. (5th ed.) 98.
Page 91 U. S. 235
Decided support to that conclusion is derived from the English
decisions upon the same subject, especially from those of modern
date, many of which have been very satisfactorily collated by a
very able text writer. Addison on Torts (3d ed.) 765. Slander, in
writing or in print, says the commentator, has always been
considered in our law a graver and more serious wrong and injury
than slander by word of the mouth, inasmuch as it is accompanied by
greater coolness and deliberation, indicates greater malice, and is
in general propagated wider and farther than oral slander. Written
slander is punishable in certain cases, both criminally and by
action, when the mere speaking of the words would not be punishable
in either way.
Villiers v. Mousely, 2 Wils. 403;
Saville v. Jardine, 2 H.Bl. 532; Bac.Abr. Slander, B;
Keiler v. Sessford, 2 Cr.C.C. 190.
Examples of the kind are given by the learned commentator, and
he states that verbal reflections upon the chastity of an unmarried
female are not actionable unless they have prevented her from
marrying or have been accompanied by special damage, but if they
are published in a newspaper, they are at once actionable, and
substantial damages are recoverable. 2 Bl.Com. 125, n. 6;
Janson v. Stuart, 1 Term, 784.
Comments are made in respect to verbal slander under several
heads, one of which is entitled defamatory words not actionable
without special damage; and the commentator proceeds to remark that
mere vituperation and abuse by word of mouth, however gross, is not
actionable unless it is spoken of a professional man or tradesman
in the conduct of his profession or business. Instances of a very
striking character are given, every one of which is supported by
the authority of an adjudged case.
Lumby v. Allday, 1
Crompt. & Jer. 301;
Barnet v. Allen, 3 H. & N.
376.
Even the judges holding the highest judicial stations in that
country have felt constrained to decide that to say of a married
female that she was a liar, an infamous wretch, and that she had
been all but seduced by a notorious libertine, was not actionable
without averring and proving special damage.
Lynch v.
Knight, 9 H. of L.Cas. 594.
Finally, the same commentator states that words imputing to a
single woman that she gets her living by imposture and
prostitution,
Page 91 U. S. 236
and that she is a swindler are not actionable, even when special
damage is alleged, unless it is proved, and the proposition is
fully sustained by the cases cited in its support.
Welby v.
Elston, 8 M. G. & S. 142; Addison on Torts (3d ed.), 788;
Townsend on Slander, secs. 172 and note, 516-518.
Words actionable in themselves, without proof of special damage,
are next considered by the same commentator. His principal
proposition under that head is that words imputing an indictable
offense are actionable
per se without proof of any special
damage, giving as a reason for the rule that they render the
accused person liable to the pains and penalties of the criminal
law. Beyond question, the authorities cited by the author support
the proposition and show that such is the rule of decision in all
the courts of that country having jurisdiction in such cases.
Heming v. Power, 10 Mees. & Wels. 570;
Alfred v.
Farlow, 8 Q.B. 854;
Edsall v. Russell, 5 Scott N.R.
801;
Brayne v. Cooper, 5 Mees. & Wels. 250;
Barnet
v. Allen, 3 H. & N. 378;
Davies v. Solomon, 41
Law Jour.Q.B. 11;
Roberts v. Roberts, 5 B. & S. 389;
Perkins v. Scott, 1 Hurlst. & Colt. 158.
Examined in the light of these suggestions and the authorities
cited in their support, it is clear that the proposition of the
plaintiff that the words alleged are in themselves actionable
cannot be sustained.
Concede all that and still the plaintiff suggests that she
alleges in the second paragraph of her declaration that she "has
been damaged and injured in her name and fame," and she contends
that that averment is sufficient, in connection with the words
charged, to entitle her to recover as in an action of slander for
defamatory words with averment of special damage.
Special damage is a term which denotes a claim for the natural
and proximate consequences of a wrongful act, and it is undoubtedly
true that the plaintiff in such a case may recover for defamatory
words spoken of him or her by the defendant, even though the words
are not in themselves actionable, if the declaration sets forth
such a claim in due form and the allegation is sustained by
sufficient evidence; but the claim must be specifically set forth,
in order that the defendant may be duly notified of its nature and
that the court may have
Page 91 U. S. 237
the means to determine whether the alleged special damage is the
natural and proximate consequence of the defamatory words alleged
to have been spoken by the defendant.
Haddan v. Scott, 15
C.B. 429.
Whenever proof of special damage is necessary to maintain an
action of slander, the claim for the same must be set forth in the
declaration, and it must appear that the special damage is the
natural and proximate consequence of the words spoken, else the
allegation will not entitle the plaintiff to recover.
Vicars v.
Wilcox, 8 East, 3;
Knight v. Gibbs, 1 Ad. & Ell.
46;
Ayre v. Craven, 2
id. 8;
Roberts v.
Roberts, 5 B. & S. 389.
When special damage is claimed, the nature of the special loss
or injury must be particularly set forth, to support such an action
for words not in themselves actionable, and if it is not the
defendant may demur. He did demur in the case last cited, and
Cockburn, C.J., remarked that such an action is not maintainable
unless it be shown that the loss of some substantial or material
advantage has resulted from the speaking of the words. Addison on
Torts (3d ed.) 805;
Wilby v. Elston, 8 C.B. 148.
Where the words are not in themselves actionable because the
offense imputed involves neither moral turpitude nor subjects the
offender to an infamous punishment, special damage must be alleged
and proved in order to maintain the action.
Hoag v. Hatch,
23 Conn. 590;
Andres v. Koppenheafer, 3 S. & R. 256;
Buys v. Gillespie, 2 Johns. 117.
In such a case, it is necessary that the declaration should set
forth precisely in what way the special damage resulted from the
speaking of the words. It is not sufficient to allege generally
that the plaintiff has suffered special damages or that the party
has been put to great costs and expenses.
Cook v. Cook,
100 Mass. 194.
By special damage in such a case is meant pecuniary loss, but it
is well settled that the term may also include the loss of
substantial hospitality of friends.
Moore v. Meagher, 1
Taunt. 42;
Williams v. Hill, 19 Wend. 306.
Illustrative examples are given by the text writers in great
numbers, among which are loss of marriage, loss of profitable
employment, or of emoluments, profits, or customers, and it was
Page 91 U. S. 238
very early settled that a charge of incontinence against an
unmarried female
whereby she lost her marriage was
actionable by reason of the special damage alleged and proved.
Davis v. Gardiner, 4 Co. 16
b, pl. 11;
Reston
v. Pomfreicht, Cro.Eliz. 639.
Doubt upon that subject cannot be entertained, but the special
damage must be alleged in the declaration and proved, and it is not
sufficient to allege that the plaintiff "has been damaged and
injured in her name and fame," which is all that is alleged in that
regard in the case before the court.
Hartley v. Herring, 8
Term, 133; Addison on Torts, 805; Hilliard on Remedies (2d ed.),
622;
Beach v. Ranney, 2 Hill, 309.
Tested by these considerations, it is clear that the decision of
the court below that the declaration is bad in substance is
correct.
Judgment affirmed.