The defendant newspaper appeals from a judgment for the plaintiff in a libel suit.
There is no dispute about the facts. Appellee was and is a District of Columbia police detective of good repute. Under a headline “Claims Cop Took $1,225” appellant published a news story that included these statements: “According to Miss Roxie A. Henry * * * she saw Detective Sergeant Irving Lubore take $1,225 from her clothes closet. * * * T was standing less than five feet from the detective when he took four fifty dollar bills, two ten dollar bills, a five dollar bill and a $1,000 bill that I had hidden in a fur-trimmed boot in my closet,’ Miss Henry said.” The court found that “The charge made by Roxie Henry reported in said article was an oral statement made to the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia and was reduced to affidavit form by an Assistant United States Attorney, a copy of 'which affidavit was given to a representative of the defendant newspaper by Curtis P. Mitchell, attorney for the said Roxie Henry.” The court also found that the appellant did not publish the item “with express malice or in reckless or careless indifference to the rights and feelings of the plaintiff.”
Appellant’s news story showed that Roxie Henry had accused appellee of theft. One who repeats another’s defamatory story is legally responsible unless the story is true or the repetition privileged. Appellant did not plead, or attempt to prove, that there was a particle of truth in Roxie Henry’s charge. Appellant claims that its report of the charge was privileged, like a report of judicial proceedings. But as we said in Washington Times Co. v. Bonner,
It is at least arguable that the judgment was right for another reason. Unless the newspaper said or implied that the people to whom Roxie Henry told her story were prosecutors, it did not report the making of a charge to a prosecutor. Cf. Hughes v. Washington Daily News;
Affirmed.
