Court Opinion

ID: 5224274
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:41:06.50183+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:33.946383
License: Public Domain

Miller, J.:
The question involved in this appeal is whether a husband may maintain an action for damages for the physical illness of his wife due to mental anguish caused by the publication of words reflecting upon her character, which were libelous per se. The precise question does not appear to. have been decided in this State.. The appellant relies upon Wilson v. Goit (17 N. Y. 442), which decided that such an action could not be .maintained by the husband where the wolds complained of were not actionable in themselves. That decision was made upon the authority of Terwilliger v. Wands (17 N. Y. 54), which held that mental distress, physical illness and inability to labor, occasioned by spoken words not actionable in themselves, did not give a cause of action, the reason being that they were not the natural and legal consequences of the words complained of, but depended upon the nervous organization and mental peculiarities of the plaintiff. In Wilson v. Goit the court laid stress upon the fact that the words were not actionable per se, and the plain import of the opinion is that,' had the words complained of been actionable in themselves, the decision would have been the other way. We can perceive no reason to distinguish such an action based on a libel from one based on any other tort,- occasioning bodily disability. The question is whether the damages claimed are the natural and proximate consequences of the libel. The reason for excluding mental suffering as an element of damages in the case of words not actionable in themselves does not apply in the case of words' libelous per se. In the former case, mental distress is not the natural and proximate result, whereas in the latter case it is. It necessarily causes mental suffering to hold a person up to public ridicule, disgrace and obloquy, and, although the appellant' contends,. upon the authority of cases which did not decide the point (vide Brooks v. Harison, 91 N. Y. 83) Warner v. Press Publishing Co., *691132 id. 181), that mental anguish may be considered only as an element of exemplary damages in case express malice is shown, it has been squarely decided at least once by the Court of Appeals that, in the case of a publication libelous per se, mental suffering is an element of general damage. (Van Ingen v. Star Co., 1 App. Div. 429; affd. on the opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham below, 157 N. Y. 695.). Physical illness is certainly the natural result of mental anguish. The conclusion that the husband may maintain such an action as this for the damages sustained by him follows logically from the premise that, in a suit by the wife, mental suffering and physical illness are elements of general damages.
The interlocutory judgment should be affirmed, with costs, with leave to the defendant to answer on payment of costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs, with leave to defendant to answer on payment of costs.