Court Opinion

ID: 7100166
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:14:59.514834+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:22.965673
License: Public Domain

Rothrook, J.
I. The court in one of the instructions to the jury directed them that the plaintiff in order to recover must show that defendant did speak of her “one or more of the different forms of words charged in the petition.” It is claimed this instruction is erroneous because slanderous words were charged in the amendment to the petition as well as in the original petition.
We do not think this omission could have misled the jury. The court in other paragraphs of the charge recited the causes of action, including those set forth in the amendment to the petition, and it is very questionable, if this had not been done, whether it was error to omit the word “amendment” from the instruction complained of. In view of the fact that the widest range was taken in the testimony as to the slanderous words spoken, apd this without objection, the jury would naturally be led to conclude that the slanderous words set out in the petition were those contained therein as amended at the time of the trial.
II. The evidence is all before us. The main question upon the trial is whether the words spoken by defendant were true. It is claimed that the verdict is so manifestly against the evidence as to require that it be set aside and a new trial awarded. We have carefully examined this question and have to say that there is a sharp, and it appears to us, irreconcilable, conflict in the evidence, which it was the peculiar province of the jury to determine, and which precludes this court from interfering. We need not set out or review the evidence. It is not our practice to do so where it is claimed a verdict or finding of facts is without support from the evidence.
Affirmed.