tlb wrote:zyffyr wrote:How about reading "Honor wouldn't be able to challenge him" as "Honor wouldn't be able to issue a challenge that anyone would take seriously".
She could issue a new challenge every single day if that makes her feel better, but the ONLY thing that would come of it would be damage to her own reputation.
To be clear, I understand that if Young loses the slander case then Honor could not force a duel; because there is no further societal pressure to apply to him. However, what if he wins? Are we really saying that now Honor is the pariah and cannot ever again issue a challenge?
I am objecting to the idea that a civil case confers immunity like double jeopardy. Does a civil slander case have the result that whoever loses, will also lose whatever standing that they had in society?
I wouldn't think losing a slander case would necessarily wreck all your standing. It'd depend on what the slander was.
In this instance Young would be wrecked by bringing the slander case because otherwise inadmissible evidence would show that he'd acted entirely beyond the pale; and now been caught at it.
But if Young somehow utterly beat all odds and won the slander case I don't think Honor getting hit with some civil penalty for slander would lose all her standing in society. Some standing, temporarily, probably - but it wouldn't be career ending or turn her into a pariah. (Well, her existing enemies would probably harp on it and try to maximize the damage, but still wouldn't ruin her) After all, all that would prove is that in the eyes of the law she knowingly propagated an untruth about someone she despised.
However I do think it would ruin her ability to challenge Young to a dual
on those grounds. If she challenged him based on hiring Denver to kill Paul I don't think Young would lose any societaly standing for refusing to give satisfaction over
a court had ruled wasn't true. I think he could easily refuse by saying she was incorrect and he had no need to defend such a specious claimed offense. I have to believe that society doesn't shun people who blow off truly frivolous or baseless challenges to a duel.
That doesn't block Honor from dueling him at all, but she'd have to do so over some other insult or offense - something that society
would shun Young for failing to face. (And I suspect their previous bad encounters wouldn't meet that standard
now - too much time has passed and claiming challenge over the Saganami Island incident, being stabbed in the back of Basilisk, or even his cowardly behavior that got him Court Marshaled, would (correctly) seem like Honor grasping on a pretext to challenge his when her actual complain was the one dismissed in court. So she'd probably need for him to commit some new and fairly egregious offense against her - so all he has to do to avoid her challenge is ignore her)