Court Opinion

ID: 8262063
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:55:28.884046+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:12.895320
License: Public Domain

Biggs, J.
This is an action of slander. The-petition contains two counts. In the first it is charged that the defendant spoke of and concerning the plaintiff, “she is a common whore.” In the second it is averred that at the same time and place the defendant spoke of and concerning the plaintiff, the further slanderous words, to wit: “She has been in the penitentiary here.” This was followed by the additional averment that the defendant intended by the use of *560these words, “to charge and accuse the plaintiff with having been convicted of some offense punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary.” The cause was submitted to a jury. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove the speaking of the words. There was a verdict on the first count for $300, and on the second for $25. Judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdicts, from which the defendant has appealed.
The respondent obtained from the circuit court, where the suit was pending, a commission to take the deposition of William Runge in the state of Texas. This commission was obtained under section 4448 of the Revised Statues of 1889. The succeeding section (4449) provides that “the commission shall be to such person as the court or judge shall appoint, to be named in the commission, or to some proper officer of the government where the witness may be, commanding such person or officer to examine such witnesses, naming them, upon interrogatories.” The commission directed “E. B. Chestnut, Esqr., Notary Public, Aransas Pass, Texas,” to examine Runge, touching the matters contained in the interrogatories which were annexed. Chestnut took the deposition. Its caption is in the usual form, reciting that Runge appeared before Chestnut as commissioner, and that he was sworn and examined on the part of the plaintiff touching the matters in controversy between her and the defendant. The final certificate is in the usual form, but it was likewise made by Chestnut as commissioner and it was attested by his private seal or scrawl. The defendant moved to suppress the deposition, upon the grounds, among others, that the commission was addressed to Chestnut as notary public; that he did not take the deposition as such, and that his certificate was not authenticated'or proved according to law. The naming of Chestnut as notary public *561in the dedimus was evidently an inadvertence on the part of the clerk. The manifest intention was to appoint him special commissioner, and he so construed the commission. If the contrary had been intended, the commission would have been directed generally to any officer of the government at Aransas Pass, Téxas, who had authority to take depositions. Therefore the words “Notary Public” in the dedimus may be disregarded and treated as words of description merely. This disposes of the first objection.
The second is likewise without merit. The final certificate to the deposition is sufficient under the decisions. (Jolliffe v. Collins, 21 Mo. 338; Moss v. Booth, 34 Mo. 316; Thomas v. Wheeler, 47 Mo. 363.) The certificate was sufficiently authenticated by the private seal or scrawl of Chestnut. We know of no statute requiring additional proof. Chestnut was not a public official, and therefore he had no official seal. The other objections to the deposition are not of sufficient importance to command any notice.
The deposition of a witness was taken in the city of St. Louis. The witness testified in the deposition that she lived in the state of Texas. Appellant insisted at the trial that to entitle the deposition to be read it devolved upon the respondent to first show that since the deposition was taken the witness had departed from this state. The statute provides that a deposition may be read “if the witness resides out of the state,” and that this fact may be established by the testimony of the deposing witness. (R. S. 1889, sec. 4461.) The statute is plain and provides for no exceptions. As counsel cites no authority on the point, and as no good reason suggests itself to us in favor of it, we will overrule the exception.
There are many objections and exceptions to the instructions. We can not notice them all. The most *562serious contention is that by the plaintiff’s instructions the jury was authorized to find substantial damages under the second count, there being no proof of special damages, nor that the persons to whom the words were spoken understood them in a slanderous sense. The answer to this objection is that the words were obviously slanderous and were therefore actionable per se. The defendant said “she (the plaintiff) has been in the penitentiary here.” These words import plainly that the plaintiff had been convicted of a felony and had served a term in the penitentiary. The hearers could not have understood the words in any other sense, hence the innuendo was unnecessary, and the proof of special damages-was likewise unnecessary. Callahan v. Ingram, 122 Mo. 355; Rammell v. Otis, 60 Mo. 365; Lewis v. Humphries, 64 Mo. App. 466; Bridgman v. Armer, 57 Mo. App. 528; Unterberger v. Scharff, 51 Mo. App. 102.
It is argued that the words constitute but one slander, and therefore should have been sued for under one count. The slanders are separate and distinct. The justification of one would not palliate the other. The one involves moral turpitude only; the other goes further and charges the plaintiff with the commission of' a felony.
As to the measure of damages the court instructed the jury that if they found for plaintiff they should allow as compensatory damages fair and reasonable compensation for the injury naturally resulting to the plaintiff from the slander,-and “also for her pain and anxiety of mind caused thereby.” Objection is made to that portion of the instruction in italics. It is"insisted that the recovery in cases of slander is confined to plaintiff’s actual or implied pecuniary loss. We do not think that the authorities cited sustain counsel in this.
The objections to the verdict are without merit. *563The court submitted to the jury two forms in the event the findings were for the plaintiff. In the one the jury was directed that the findings as to each count must be separate, and if punitive damages as to either or both counts were allowed, such damages should be separately stated. The other form merely provided for findings for the plaintiff on either or both counts and the amount of damages assessed. The jury adopted the last form for their verdict. The contention is that the verdict is erroneous, in that it fails to show whether the damages allowed were compensatory or punitive, or both. There can be no doubt that the jury assessed compensatory damages only. If the jury had intended to allow punitive damages, they would have adopted the other form. This exception will likewise be overruled.
We have looked into the other exceptions. Their discussion would be unprofitable, as the result would be the same. The judgment will be affirmed.
All concur.