367 Pa. 117 | Pa. | 1951
Opinion by
In this action for libel the jury rendered a verdict in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the refusal of the court below to grant him a new trial.
This is the way in which the allegedly libelous article came to be written: — At the American University in Washington a course in English was. conducted by Don M. Wolfe, the students being disabled veterans of World War II. The course consisted, in part, of the writing by the students of essays or stories about their personal experiences in the war; their compositions would be submitted to Dr. Wolfe, who suggested corrections and revisions. Dr. Wolfe conceived the idea of having these stories published in book form, and, after an original publication by another concern, he entered into a contract with defendant, Doubleday & Company, for that purpose. Each student in the class, 53 in all, .contributed. at. least one article. The book was. published under the title “The Purple Testament’’;, and_.it was advertised in.thA jacket as consisting of
O’Connell was a soldier who had been seriously injured during the course of the Normandy invasion and was hospitalized from August to October, 1944, at a station hospital about 12 miles from Lichfield, England, where there was a large replacement depot. In the original draft of the article which he wrote he narrated incidents said to have occurred at the Lichfield camp and which, he testified at the trial, were described to him by individuals who had allegedly witnessed them.- Dr. Wolfe, to whom he submitted the draft several times, stated that he “thought it was interesting, and that it was the first time- he had heard about it”, but twice returned it with the suggestion that O’Connell should use. “more descriptive detail”, that he should.“make it more vivid”, that it- “did not have in it the sights, sounds and bits of. conversation necessary to make the story readable”. The result was that whereas O’Connell had originally written the article in the third person he. now wrote it, in order to “make it more vivid”, in the first person, purporting that the incidents he narrated occurred under his own personal observation and in his own experience.
The story, as it finally appeared in >(The Purple Testament”, may be condensed as follows: — I [O’Connell] and my buddy, while being transferred in an ambulance from' one hospital to another' in England, reached a big army camp néar Lichfield. The camp was dreary and ugly; it reminded me of the.rotten, filthy German prison camps .I had seen in France. As wé. lay-in the ambuJancecwe. heard a.loud voleé'outside shout
It is not questioned that by “Colonel...........”, the “old dictator”, and “the old colonel”, was meant Colonel Kilian, the present plaintiff, who was the commanding officer of the Lichfield camp. At the end of the article as published there was appended a footnote which Dr. Wolfe himself had added and which stated: “On August 29, 1946, the Associated Press reported that Colonel James A. Kilian was convicted ‘of permitting cruel and unusual punishment of American soldiers.’ He was reprimanded by the military court and fined $500. — Editor.” This insertion was obviously intended to give the impression that what was said or implied in the article in regard to Colonel Kilian was corroborated by his conviction, and further: that,- as the author of the article had predicted* he “got off light”.
The fact in regard to ■ plaintiff’s' triál before a military court in 1946 is this: He was charged with authorizing, aiding and abetting • the imposition of -cruel, unusual and unauthorized punishment--upon -prisoners in confinement ah-the- depot'-of which hé was the Com.
It will be noted that O’Connell’s article purported to describe in factual style a series of specific happenings which he professed to have seen or experienced at Lichfield, thereby giving them the verisimilitude naturally to be expected from the author’s statement that he himself witnessed such occurrences, as distinguished from assertions made on the basis of hearsay only. It will further be noted that O’Connell alleges that he saw Colonel Kilian face to face, and describes him as having “mean eyes” and looking like a sadist. There is also. the possible implication in the article, as a jury might find, that the plaintiff’s reprehensible conduct consisted, not merely of neglect properly to supervise the administration of the camp, but, if not of actual participation, in the cruelty practiced on the prisoners, at least of knowledge that it was being inflicted and conscious indifference to its perpetration; otherwise the author would scarcely have said of “the people who ran that prison” (who, as the context shows, were meant by him to include plaintiff) that “the death chair would be too good for them”.
As an affirmative defense.to the action defendant pleaded Justification on the ground.that the publication.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.
Defendant also pleaded as an affirmative defense that the publication was justified on the ground that it was privileged and based upon reasonable or probable cause.
Act of April il, 1901,' P. L. '74,'sec. '2.