Arnold v. Savings Co.

76 Mo. App. 159
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 76 Mo. App. 159 (Arnold v. Savings Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Savings Co., 76 Mo. App. 159 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bland, P. J.

This action was brought to recover damages for an alleged libel, published by the defendant concerning the plaintiff in the defendant’s newspaper, called “The Star Sayings.” The libel as set out in the petition reads as follows: “Prank Arnold, a lineman, who is wanted in Evansville.

Statement. “The authorities of Evansville, Indiana, have requested Chief Harrigan to locate Prank Arnold, who is wanted in Evansville, on suspicion of larceny. Arnold was formerly in St. Mary’s Hospital in that city, leaving there on October 4th, a few days after the mysterious disappearance of $1,000 belonging to the inmates of the hospital, which had been turned over to the Mother Superior in charge of the institution for ... safe keeping. A,few days previous to this an electric lineman visited the hospital, on the pretext that he had been sent to repair the wires [167]*167supplying the electric current. Immediately after the lineman’s departure the money disappeared. The attaches of the hospital had observed Arnold acting suspiciously about the hospial for some days peering about every corner and nook of the building, and they suspect that he discovered the hiding place where the money was kept and “tipped off” the lineman, who secured the money when he visited the hospital. Arnold came to this city and was employed for a time in the Marine Hospital, but disappeared from there several days ago, and his present whereabouts is unknown.”

The petition contained the other usual averments in actions for libel, and prays judgment for $5,000 actual damages, and $5,000 for punitive or exemplary damages. The answer, after a general denial, pleaded the following special matter: “That the statement which defendant published in said paper, the Star-Sayings, was furnished to defendant in the due course of its business as the publisher of such newspaper by the police authorities of the city of St. Louis, who had been requested by the police authorities of the city of Evansville, Indiana, to locate Frank Arnold. That the publication recited in the petition herein was merely a reproduction of matters communicated to this defendant by the said police authorities of the city of St. Louis as having been communicated to them by the police authorities of Evansville, Indiana. That the statement so communicated to the defendant by the police authorities of St. Louis was published by the defendant in good faith and without either malice or negligence, and without any purpose to injure or damage the plaintiff. Further answering, and in mitigation of damages, defendant says that the statement set forth in the plaintiff’s petition herein, was inserted in the Star-Sayings newspaper by one employed by the [168]*168defendant as a reporter, contrary to the instructions given by the defendant to said reporter and in violation of the duty of said reporter to the defendant, and that the defendant has never approved or ratified the said, act of its said reporter, but, on the contrary, has been ready at all times and is still ready to publish a full retraction of said statement in so far as it imputes to this' plaintiff the commission of any offense or complicity in the commission of any offense, or in so far as it contains any matter calculated to injure his reputation.”

At the trial, and before submission to the jury, the court permitted the defendant in mitigation of damages to add the following amendment to its answer: “Further answering, and in mitigation of damages, the defendant says that on the said 29th day of October, 1894, the same being the day on which the publication was made by the defendant, which is the subject of this action, took place, four other reputable daily newspapers published in the city of St. Louis, namely, the St. Louis Republic, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Westliche Post, and the Anzeiger des Westens, acting independently of each other, and without any concert of action, published of and concerning this plaintiff statements similar to those published by this defendant for which the plaintiff now sues; that thereafter the plaintiff brought actions for libel against the proprietors of each of the said newspapers, which actions were settled by said proprietors by paying to the plaintiff a great sum of money, namely, an aggregated sum of twenty-one hundred dollars ($2,100). Wherefore the defendant says that in so far as the plaintiff has sustained damage in his character and reputation, he has sustained it by all the aforesaid' publications, and this defendant ought not to pay for any damage sustained by the defendant (plaintiff) by [169]*169reason of said publications in said other newspapers. And the defendant pleads these facts for further purpose of showing a common mistake made by the agents and servants of reputable publications, which fact tends to negative the inference of malice.” 1

Reply. A reply was filed by plaintiff. The cause was tried by a jpry, who returned a verdict for plaintiff and assessed his actual damages at $1,000, and assessed punitive damages at $500. Motion for new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed and overruled, and the defendant brought the case here by appeal. .

pifbHclfuon.of At the trial the making of the publication, as set out in the petition, was admitted, and for the purpose of the trial it was stipulated by the parties that at the time of making the publication the defendant’s newspaper, the Star-Sayings, had a circulation in St. Louis, Missouri, and throughout the United States in excess of thirty thousand copies, and that the value of the property owned by the appellant at the date of the trial was in excess of $50,000. It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff, that prior to coming to St. Louis he had worked in St. Mary’s Hospital at Evansville, Indiana; that he knew nothing whatever about the robbery or larceny spoken of in the published article; that at the date of the trial he was a medical student and the superintendent of the hospital of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in St. Louis; that the publication of the libel had not to the knowledge of plaintiff hindered him in his studies or interfered with his progress in his chosen profession; that since the publication he had visited Evansville and found that the people there had learned of the publication; that he' could not tell and did not know to what extent he had been damaged by the publication. The testimony on [170]*170the part of plaintiff’s witnesses showed that plaintiff had come to the Marine Hospital in the city of St. Louis, about the sixteenth or seventeenth of September, 1894, and had remained there continuously for about three and one half months, both day and night. There was no countervailing evidence to any of this testimony. The defendant called James H. Smith, a police detective, who identified the following postal card:

“$1,100 Robbery.
“On October 4th a man came to St. Mary’s Hospital, of this city, claiming to be an electric lineman. Said he was sent to St. Mary’s Hospital to trace the trouble with some of the wires, they being out of order. He got into the Sister Superior’s room and stole $1,100 in money — $800 of which was in paper and $300 in gold. Most all the money belonged to inmates. This man was evidently a professional crook. Description: About thirty-five years old; weight 150 pounds; five feet eight inches high; dark hair; dark mustache; large white teeth; large round eyes; blue shirt with white buttons; dark pants, and dark vest; wore a cap.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Mo. App. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-savings-co-moctapp-1897.