to exist with reference to them. One question the jury would have
to ask themselves is: What was meant by "these individuals" ?
Did they mean the whole League, however extensive it might be,
whether consisting of 100 or 1,000 members; or did they mean 100
men who as the speaker believed constituted the whole League ?
The words complained of appeared in the Age newspaper on 12th
December 1917. Now, it is very material to remember that it was
only readers of that newspaper that could be affected by the
statement. In the issue of the same newspaper of 4th Decem-
ber 1917 there was a report of a speech of the plaintiff himself
in which he said that the League was 1,000 strong. So that eight
days before the alleged libel appeared, the public had been told,
and had been told by the plaintiff himself, that the League consisted
of 1,000 members. To my mind it was perfectly competent for the
jury, representing the general sense of the community, to say that
persons who read the issue of 12th December would have in their
minds the statement in the issue of 4th December, and, having that
statement in their minds, would understand that there were 1,000
members according to that statement. Therefore, when they were
considering what the words " these individuals " in the libel meant,
it was certainly open to the jury to say that, putting all the cireum-
stances together, the public would believe that what was intended
by the words was "about 100" persons. It will be observed that
the words complained of were said by Sergeant Wallish, and it
would not be irrational for the jury to conclude that when he,
being in the military service, said that about 100 men had
been sent back as undesirables, he was more likely to know of 100
being so sent back than to know the number of members of the
League. The jury might conclude that Sergeant Wallish was
wrong in thinking that 100 members constituted the whole League,
and therefore that he did not mean by the words "these indivi-
duals" to include any but about 100. The League is shown to be,
not only in actuality but in the public mind, a very indefinite
creation, and that is an additional fact which the jury might take
into consideration. I am not saying anything now with reference
to the plaintiff's membership of the League but with regard to