Alumbaugh v. State

147 S.E. 714, 39 Ga. App. 559, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 9, 1929
Docket19525, 19526
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 714 (Alumbaugh v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alumbaugh v. State, 147 S.E. 714, 39 Ga. App. 559, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 422 (Ga. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Luke, J.

The two records before us present phases of the same case and will be considered together. The record in case No. 19525 questions the correctness of the court’s judgment overruling the demurrer to the indictment, and the record in case No. 19526 questions the right of the lower court to proceed with the trial of the case until this court had determined the validity of said demurrer.

The accusation charges Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh with the offense of misdemeanor, “for that the said Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh, in the County of Chatham, State of Georgia aforesaid, on the 23d day of October, 1928, did unlawfully and maliciously defame, by printing, the honesty, virtue, integrity, and reputation of one who is alive, to wit, N. T. Stafford, of Chatham County, Georgia, and further of another who is alive, to wit, A. E. Winkers, of Chatham County, Georgia, and further of another who is alive, to wit, Thomas F. Walsh, of Chatham County, Georgia, and each of them, and did thereby expose him, the said N. T. Stafford, and him, the said A. E. Winkers, and him, the said Thomas F. Walsh, and each of them, to public hatred, contempt and ridicule, in that the said defendant, the said Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh, did, in the City of Savannah, in the said County of Chatham and State of Georgia, on the 23d day of October, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and twenty-eight, unlawfully, wilfully, and maliciously circulate, distribute, and publish a -certain printed handbill, which printed handbill contains false printed statements and matters of and concerning members of the Knights of. Columbus, a Catholic fraternal order, having a council and an organization in the City of Savannah, within the said County of Chatham and State of Georgia, in that said printed handbill contained, set out, and stated a purported , oath of the said Knights of Columbus, which said purported oath was false and untrue; the said Knights of Columbus then and there being a Catholic fraternal order, as aforesaid, of which the said N. T, Stafford, the said A, E. Winkers, and the [561]*561said Thomas F. Walsh, and each of them, then and there were, and were known to be, members, and residents of the said City of Savannah in said Chatham County, State of-Georgia; and which said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus was then and there in said county and State aforesaid distributed, circulated, and published by the said Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh to one J. W. Eoyal, a resident of said County of Chatham, State of Georgia, and to others whose names are to the solicitor-general of the Eastern Judicial Circuit of Georgia, who prosecutes for the State of Georgia, in the City Court of Savannah, unknown; and the said defendant, the said Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh, then and there gave and delivered to the said J. W. Eoyal a supply of said handbills containing said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus; and the said defendant, the said Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh, did then and there employ and hire the said J. W. Eoyal to distribute, circulate, and publish within said County of Chatham, State of Georgia, said handbills containing said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus, by putting them into automobiles and into houses in said County of Chatham, State of Georgia, so that they might be read by the owners of said automobiles and the persons occupying said houses; and the said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus exposed the said N. T. Stafford, the said A. E. Winkers, and the said Thomas E. Walsh, and each of them, then and there members, and known to be members, of said Knights of Columbus, and the said Knights of Columbus, to public hatred, contempt and ridicule; and said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus, circulated, distributed and published as aforesaid in and by said handbills, tended and tends to blacken the honesty, virtue, integrity, and reputation of the said N. T. Stafford and the said A. E. Winkers and the said Thomas E. Walsh, and each of them, then and there members of the said Knights of Columbus, and the said Knights of Columbus, and thereby exposed them, and each of them, to public hatred, contempt, and ridicule; and said false printed purported oath of said Knights of Columbus, so distributed, published, and circulated by the said defendant, Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh, as aforesaid, being as follows, to wit:” Here follows the alleged false oath of the Knights of Columbus. We shall not copy it, but will content ourselves with saying that any citizen of the United States taking it makes of [562]*562himself a traitor to his government and a potential murderer of the worst sort.

The demurrer to the accusation is in substance as follows: 1. The accusation charges no crime for the following reasons: (a) It alleges that the alleged unlawful and malicious defamation was made of and concerning a Catholic fraternal order, known as Knights of Columbus. (5) It expressly avers that no defamation of the character of Stafford, Winkers, and Walsh was made by the defendant of or concerning them or either of them, (c) “Said accusation expressly shows that any defamation of the character of said Stafford, Winkers, and Walsh, is a conclusion of the pleader, in that they were members of the Knights of Columbus.” (d) “Because said accusation does not aver that said defendant knew at the time of the alleged circulation of the reputed oath of the Knights of Columbus that any such organization existed in the said county of Chatham.”(e) “Because said accusation fails to allege that the said defendant knew that said Stafford, Winkers, and Walsh were members of the Knights of Columbus, or members of any Catholic order.” (f) “Because said accusation does not aver that said defendant knew at the time of the alleged distribution of the oath of the Knights of Columbus that said oath was false and untrue.” (g) “Because said accusation expressly shows, by an attached printed circular and made a part thereof, headed, ‘To Murder Protestants and Destroy American Government/ that the alleged oath of the Knights of Columbus printed and circulated by this defendant is itself printed from the Congressional Record of the United States, for the 62d Congress, 3d Session, Saturday, February 15th, 1913.” (h) “Because the said accusation expressly shows that the alleged defamatory language and charges is. itself a matter of public record, of the Congressional Record, . . and so became and was at the time of the alleged distribution and circulation an absolutely privileged communication.” (i) “Because the said accusation does not aver that said Knights of Columbus is a natural person, or any artificial person, but is merely a fraternal order.” 2. “Defendant specially demurs to said accusation upon the following grounds: (a) In that said accusation does not set out the alleged printed handbill containing the defamatory charges against said Knights of Columbus. (6) Because the printed matter attached by way of exhibit of said accusation shows that such exhibit is a detached [563]*563fragment of some circular or other paper, (c) Because the fragmentary part of the attached circular is so torn and mutilated that it does not show what was the character of the circular distributed by defendant.”

The judgment of the trial court upon the foregoing demurrer was as follows: “The within demurrer is overruled upon each and every ground thereof.” Was this reversible error ?

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 714, 39 Ga. App. 559, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alumbaugh-v-state-gactapp-1929.