—This is the first time in the history of Florida that this court has issued a rule against the editor and reporter of a newspaper to show cause why
It is true that respect to the courts is the voluntary tribute which the people pay to worth, virtue and intelligence and every man who has the honor to occupy judicial position in our government should strive to attain to that standard of judicial purity and efficiency which right thinking people require of their judicial officers; but it is also true that malicious, designing persons m'ay greatly impair the authority and efficiency of our courts by using the powerful arm of the press to scatter abroad suspicion and distrust by unfounded accusations against the intelligence, impartiality, integrity and mental honesty of the judges of our courts of justice.
Such accusations are an insult to the people whose agents the courts are; the injury accomplished is to the institution which the people by their government have established. The author and distributor of such publications therefore is an enemy to his people, a veritable traitor to his government whose protection he enjoys.
Mr. Chief Justice English in the case of State v. Morrill,
In the case of Watson v. Williams,
In the case of State v. Frew and Hart,
For seventy-one years this State has enjoyed the advantages and benefits of Statehood in the government
It was not the purpose of the framers of our constitution nor the people in adopting it to permit any citizen
Our government is one of laws. The exercise of any right secured by the organic law is always subject to the lawful rights of other persons in the premises and especially is the exercise of a right by any person subject to the preservation of the governmental authority of the State as conferred by law.
It is of paramount importance that each department of our government should be protected and preserved against the attempts of designing persons to undermine its authority and destroy 'its efficiency. The Executive branch of our government is charged with the duty of enforcing the law as made by the Legislature and construed by the courts, yet the officers of that branch of the government whose duties are largely, if not entirely, ministerial, are protected by law from interference with the discharge of their duties. The Legislative branch whose acts are subject to the courts’ construction has the power vested in it by constitutional provision to punish
The trust reposed by the people of the State of Florida in the Justices of our Supreme Court is the highest and most sacred of all trusts. The property, the liberties and lives of our citizens are rights which constantly are before this court for adjudication and in any cause pending before this court the exhibition by the justices of ignorance, stubbornness, hostility to any party to the cause or his representatives, unfairness, partiality and partisanship would destroy the efficiency and authority of
The Supreme Court has, independent of statutory authority, inherent power to punish for contempt of court. Coleman v. Roberts,
Publishers of newspapers have the right, but no higher right than others to bring to public notice the conduct of
The conduct of unprincipled men traducing the institutions of a State to the end that their political ambitions may be realized is an unsafe guide for the young man who desires to succeed in the honored field of journalism and is an example too degrading to be imitated and too vicious to be condoned by the self respecting journalist. He can not fan the flames of suspicion and distrust by printing a false article relating to a cause then pending in court, and imputing to that court a lack of
It is the judgment of the court that the writing and publication of the article mentioned and referred to in the rule issued in these proceedings constitute a contempt of court and that the defendants Percy S. Hayes and Bryan Mack are guilty of contempt of this court because of the writing and publication of said article.
The respondents through their counsel interposed a demurrer to the rule issued in this cause which will be treated as a motion to quash. The points presented by the motion are not well taken. The rule is not “process,” nor does it come within the provisions of Section 22 of the Declaration of Rights. See State v. Frew,
Shackleford, J., absent.
