DocketNumber: No. 28,042.
Judges: Holt
Filed Date: 10/17/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The action was for a libel contained in a letter written by respondent and mailed to plaintiff. Admittedly the letter libeled plaintiff; but the ground upon which the court vacated the verdict and ordered judgment is that respondent did not publish the libel. *Page 365
The facts as testified to by plaintiff are these: She received the letter by mail, opened and read it, then placed it in a drawer with a letter received the same day from her sister. Her mother was visiting her. Knowing that plaintiff had received a letter from her daughter, the mother desired to know its contents and in searching for it found both that letter and the one from respondent in the drawer; and, as she was unable to read English, she took both to her son and he read respondent's.
We think the learned trial court was right in holding that there was no publication for which respondent can be held responsible. The rule is well stated and fortified with authorities in Rumney v. Worthley,
"Sending a libelous letter through the mail to the person libeled, with no reason to suppose that it will be opened and read by anyone else before he has received and read it, is not a publication which will support a civil action for libel." The same is recognized in Hedgepeth v. Coleman,
In the instant case there is no evidence from which the jury could infer that respondent had reason to suppose that the libelous letter would be opened or read by anyone else before it was read by plaintiff. She knew plaintiff could read it and was a person of mature age and understanding. When plaintiff had acquainted herself with its contents she had the power to prevent any other person from knowledge thereof — a publication — by destroying the letter.
Plaintiff thinks Kramer v. Perkins,
By plaintiff's neglect or omission to destroy the libelous letter when it came into her hands she became instrumental in its first publication and cannot maintain an action for damages against the sender of the letter.
The judgment is affirmed.