151 S.W. 574 | Tex. App. | 1912
This is a suit for damages, alleged to have resulted from the publication of certain articles by appellant, instituted by N. G. Orsborn, as next friend of Ida Mae Orsborn, who, after the suit was begun, married R. T. Donaldson, who by amendment joined his wife in the suit. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $500.
In the issue of the Daily Express, a newspaper published in the city of San Antonio, of date July 7, 1910, appeared the following article:
"Patrolmen Henderson and Harrison were sent to the place. They found the girl had been gagged with a towel, but there was no evidence of the use of chloroform, and the only thing missing was a finger ring, which she asserts two Mexicans, her assailants, took from her finger.
"Detectives will be put upon the case this morning."
Following that publication, the succeeding article was published in the Daily Express of July 9, 1910, and also in the semiweekly of the same paper:
"Gagged with a pillow and beaten into unconsciousness with the butt end of a revolver by two men, said to be Mexicans, who later ransacked her room, was the experience of Miss Ida Mae Orsborn at the home of her brother-in-law, J. L. Clapp, 117 North Eda street, early Thursday morning. The police are at work on the case but have made no arrests. Mr. Clapp gives the following account of the assault:
"`My sister-in-law was awakened about midnight just as two men entered her room by the front window. Before she could give the alarm the men caught and gagged her. Then one of the men dragged her by her hair from the bed and attempted to throw her out of the window, but she resisted so vigorously that the man struck her over the head with a pistol, rendering her unconscious, and left her lying right in the open window.
"`My little child about one year old, who was sleeping with my sister, was awakened by the confusion and began to cry. One of the men hit the little child to quiet it and made it cry louder, which awakened my wife and me. We were sleeping in a hallway not far away. The men evidently heard us moving and jumped out of the window. I saw them leap over the front fence as I entered the room. Miss Orsborn was lying unconscious with her body across the window sill. I at once summoned Dr. Edward Calvin and notified the police.'
"Examination showed that the robbers had taken nothing but a finger ring, which was taken off Miss Orsborn's finger. The police have a good description of the men, given them by Miss Orsborn, who is positive she can identify her assailants.
"Miss Orsborn was so overcome by the shock and the blow on her head that she was unable to give a coherent account of the assault until the next day. The physicians say that she is now out of danger. The baby has several bruises where it was struck."
The evidence showed that appellee was attacked in the manner mentioned in the publications, on the night of July 6, 1910, while sleeping in the home of her sister and brother-in-law at 117 North Eda street, in San Antonio, Tex. Appellee and her family are whites, and she was greatly mortified and humiliated by the publication that she was a negress. There was evidence tending to show that Eda street was also called Eda avenue.
The only contention by appellant is that the court should have instructed a verdict for appellant, because it was not shown that the libelous article applied to appellee, and could not so have been construed by the readers of the paper. The two articles were properly considered together; and it then became a question of fact, to be determined by the jury, as to whether the person spoken of in the first publication was the one more minutely and accurately described in the second. That issue was clearly presented to the jury, and was answered in favor of appellee. There was evidence to sustain that finding. It was testified that Eda street was known as Eda avenue; that appellee was attacked and gagged at 117 North Eda street under similar circumstances mentioned in the first publication. There was no evidence of a similar attack having been made on a negress in a negro home on Eda avenue, nor that there was such an avenue in San Antonio. The two articles, when read together, lead inevitably and surely to the conclusion that both refer to the same person. Houston Printing Co. v. Moulden,
As is well said in the case cited: "It was not necessary to make the article published libelous that plaintiff should have been named, if he was pointed out by circumstances. * * * It is only necessary that the words refer to some person ascertainable from the words used." It was not necessary that all the world should understand who the person defamed was. It is sufficient if those who know the plaintiff can discern that she was the person meant. Newell on Slander and Libel, p. 767.
The case of Boone v. Herald News Co.,
The judgment is affirmed. *576