155 Iowa 290 | Iowa | 1912
Thb petition was in two counts. The first count charged the publication, on June 25, 1910, of the following.
Laura Walton Asks Divorce.
Charges Cruel and Inhuman Treatment and Unfaithfulness.
A petition for a divorce has been filed in the district court by Laura Walton against B. F. Walton. The plaintiff alleges cruel and inhuman treatment, drunkenness and nonsupport as grounds for the action.' The statement is also made that the defendant has been intimate with a woman named Nellie Flues and that the defendant spends much of his time with her. The plaintiff prays for the custody of the two children born of her marriage with the defendant, and for permanent alimony in the sum of twelve dollars a week.
In the second count, the plaintiff charged the defendant with the publication, on June 24, 1910, of the following:
The Neighbors Were Not Able to Sleep.
Hence B. F. Walton and Nellie Flues were arrested. Using too much scattered language. ■ B. F. Walton, alias
The defendant is a corporation, engaged in publishing a daily newspaper. Both of the articles complained of were written by its regular reporters and purported to be a report of judicial proceedings.
The circumstances which resulted in judicial proceedings, and which involved the plaintiff and the Waltons (husband and wife), had their origin on and prior to the evening of June 23, 1910. The plaintiff and Mrs. Walton are sisters, and occupied separate apartments in a double house. On the night of June 23, 1910, Mrs. Walton caused her husband and Mrs. Flues, the plaintiff, to be arrested as for disturbing. the peace. The next morning Mrs. Walton' and her daughter appeared in police court against the arrested parties, and both testified to the events of the evening before upon the interrogation of the police judge. Thereupon the proceeding was continued to a later date. The general nature of Mrs. Walton’s charges against her husband and sister is sufficiently indicated by the following quotations from her testimony upon the trial of the present case:
I remember the night of June 23, 1910. ©n that night, I had the plaintiff arrested for calling me names. The difficulty occurred between ten and eleven. My husband was in company with Mrs. Flues at that time. They were sitting on the back' porch, and slurring me and calling me names. She called me a d-d wh-re and d-d bitch. That was in the presence of my husband, and my little daughter. Mrs. Flues and my husband had been together ever since he had his supper, about six o’clock. After supper, he went into her house. He stayed there in
This testimony is fully corroborated by the daughter and by five or six other witnesses, including the policemen and one neighbor. On June 25th she began an action for divorce against her husband. Her petition therefor was first presented by her counsel to Judge Wheeler for an order of allowance of temporary alimony and for an injunction. At the time of this application, counsel for both sides appeared. This appearance before Judge Wheeler appears to have been treated by both sides in the case at bar as the beginning of judicial proceedings in relation to such divorce; and we will so treat it for the purpose of this appeal. At this time, Judge Wheeler ordered temporary alimony and a writ of injunction, and indorsed such order on the back of the petition. It will be observed that the publication complained of in the first count of the petition relates to the divorce proceedings commenced on June 25th; and that complained of in the second count of the petition relates to the police court proceedings had on June 24th.
A charge of “intimacy” with the defendant in a divorce suit, as ground for divorce, can have no other purpose than to impute unchastity, both to the defendant and to the co-respondent. Upon no fair construction could it be said that such a charge did not tend to expose the plaintiff herein to contempt, and to deprive her of the benefits of public confidence and social intercourse. Morse v. Printing Co., 124 Iowa, 707; Charleston v. Russell, 144 Iowa, 38. In order to constitute a libel per se, it is not always necessary to charge the commission of a crime, or even the unchastity of a woman, as in cases of slander per ss. We hold, therefore, that the trial court properly instructed the jury that the publication complained of was libelous per se, if at all.
Appellant complains because the trial court, in these instructions, fixed the time of publication as being the point of time when the paper “went to press.” It is urged by appellee that this was a mere inadvertence of speech, and that it could not have been understood otherwise than as referring to the time of issue or the publishing of the paper. It is also urged by the appellee that the publication, was as a matter of law, complete when the paper “went to press,” because the libelous matter must have been seen by some one in connection with such process. The use of language complained of was probably an inadvertence of speech. It was much emphasized by a special interrogatory, wherein the same language was used. In response to such interrogatory, the jury returned a special finding that the order of Judge Wheeler was not “made before the newspaper in which the article was published went to press.” The language here quoted is contained in the special interrogatory. The evidence upon which this finding is based varied somewhat as to the point of time involved. It is made to appear that the issue of' the paper, wherein the publication appeared went to press from 3:30 to 4:30 p. m. and that nothing was talcen from the reporters after 3:45. The attorney for plaintiff testified that the order of Judge Wheeler was made about “4 o’clock or after.” The attorney for the plaintiff in the divorce case estimated the time somewhat earlier as “around 1 or 2 *
It is urged by appellee that there was no legal record kept of these proceedings; but such omission can not affect the character of the occasion as one of privilege. It must be said, therefore, that it is conclusively established, and without dispute, that the occasion was one of privilege as .a matter of law. Morse v. Times Republican, 124 Iowa, 707; Bodine v. Times Journal Publishing Co., 26 Okl. 135 (110 Pac. 1096, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 147).
It is our conclusion, therefore, that upon the record before it the learned trial court ought to have withdrawn -count 2 from the jury.
Other questions are presented and argued; but they
For the reasons indicated, the judgment entered below must be, and it is, reversed.