
    Minor Grant, Respondent, v. The Herald Company, Appellant.
    
      Libel — a reference in one libelous article to another makes both competent in evidence- —charge as to exemplary damages—declarations of a third person made after the publication. '
    In an action of libel, based upon a newspaper article published by the defendant, which, after referring to an article previously published by the defendant, reciting that a designated person had been charged by a girl under sixteen years of age with the paternity of her illegitimate child, stated that the plaintiff and not the person mentioned in the: previous article was the person charged, both articles, being set out in the eoinplairit, are admissible in evidence.
    In such an action the court may properly charge the jury that if they And that . the article was published with reckless disregard of the rights of the plaintiff, and without making the investigation before publishing it which an article of that serious character would require, they may award exemplary damages.Declarations of the mother of the child concerning its paternity, not shown to have been made before the publication of the article complained of, are not competent evidence on the trial of the action.
    Appeal by the defendant, The Herald Company, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of- the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Cortland on the 20th day of March, 1899, upon the verdict of a jury for $500, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 6th day of March, 1899, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon a case and exceptions.
    
      T. E. Courtney, for the appellant.
    
      Horace L. Bronson, for the respondent.
   Merwin, J. :

It was held in this case by the trial court, properly, we think, that the only question for -the jury was one of damages. The publication of the articles complained of was, partially at least, admitted by the answer, and proof was also made of the publication. There was no proof to the contrary. The defendant did not show that the charge against the plaintiff was true. There was no proof that prior to the publication the charge stated in the articles published had been made against tbe plaintiff. The charge in substance was, that a young woman, under sixteen years of age, had charged the plaintiff with the parentage of her illegitimate child. This was not shown to be true.

The article containing the charge against the plaintiff was published on the 21st of February, 1896. It referred to an article published by the defendant on the seventeenth of February with reference to the same occurrence, and in which the plaintiff was not named, but another person was named as being the person charged by. the girl with the parentage of the child. In the article of the twenty-first it is stated that the person named in the former article was not the man whom the girl charged, but that the plaintiff was. It was not error to admit both articles in evidence. (Van Ingen v. Mail & Express Pub. Co., 156 N. Y. 376.) Both were set out in the complaint. Both were needed, in order to show fully the object and purpose of the defendant in publishing the latter, which was the article upon which the recovery was based.

It is urged that the charge of the court upon the subject of exemplary damages was erroneous, and that the error was so substantial as to entitle the defendant to relief, although no exception was taken.

Punitive damages for libel are not limited to cases of actual malice, but may be awarded for a libel recklessly or carelessly published, as well as one induced by personal ill-will. (Smith v. Matthews, 152 N. Y. 158, and cases cited.)

The court charged that if the jury found that the article was published with reckless disregard of the rights of the plaintiff, and without making the investigation, before publishing the article, which an article of that serious character would require, they might give exemplary damages. Of the charge in this form the defendant has no good ground to complain. Upon the facts it was for the jury to say whether or not the libel was recklessly or carelessly published.

Our attention is called to numerous rulings of the court upon the admission or rejection of evidence, in regard to which the appellant claims that errors were made to its prejudice. These rulings we have examined, but find therein no reversible error. Some of these rulings related to the proof of facts offered by way of mitigation, and it did not appear that they were known to the defendant at the time of the publication. (Hatfield v. Lasher, 81 N. Y. 247; Townsh. Sland. & Lib. § 361.) The declarations of the mother of the child as to its paternity, not shown to have been made before the publication, were not competent.

Nor can we fairly say, upon the record before us, that the verdict was excessive. ;

All concurred, except Putnam, J., not sitting.

Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.  