Baldwin v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd.

32 Haw. 87, 1931 Haw. LEXIS 19
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1931
DocketNo. 1988.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 87 (Baldwin v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd., 32 Haw. 87, 1931 Haw. LEXIS 19 (haw 1931).

Opinion

*88 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

This is the second time this case has come here for review. The first time it was brought by the plaintiff on exception to the action of the court below in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. The exception was sustained and the case was remanded for further proceedings. Baldwin v. Tribune-Herald,, 30 Haw. 610. The trial of the case below on its merits resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,650. It is now here on the defendant’s exceptions.

The first exception is to the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant. This exception is based on the claim that the truth of the matter contained in the publication was proven by the uncontradieted *89 evidence. It has too long been the law to be now questioned that the truth of a publication is a defense to an action for libel predicated upon it. Waterhouse v. Sprockets, 5 Haw. 246; Gomes v. Haw’n Gazette Co., 10 Haw. 108; 36 C. J. 1231, § 192. This rule, however, has the following qualifications: “The truth, when relied on, must, to constitute a complete defense, be as broad as the defamatory accusation.” 36 C. J. 1233, § 194. The publication upon which this action is based is quoted in full in Baldwin v. Tribune-Herald, supra, 'and need not be repeated. By innuendo the plaintiff ascribed to it the following meaning: “Therein and thereby saying and falsely and maliciously designing to have it so understood and believed by the readers of said publication and by the public, that the Baldwins (meaning this plaintiff, Grove Baldwin, referred to as ‘Doc,’ and his wife, Mrs. Grove Baldwin) gave at their home on the night of November 3, 1927, a drinking and feasting party, which lasted until midnight or later, at which the writer of the published composition above set out was present as a guest; that the said party was wild and boisterous and that the noise of breaking glass harmonized with the noises made there in crunching and devouring crab meat and the noises made by partakers in telling and singing anything that they had heard; that the participants in said boisterous midnight party, which was presided over by plaintiff’s wife at his home, became so irresponsibly excited and hilarious from intoxication that it was difficult to remember the next day much of what transpired that night, but that certain sketches stood out in the memory of the author of the composition the following day, namely: that the plaintiff had berated the Hilo Tribune-Herald and said that the Merry-Go-Round was a lotta krat; that the plaintiff demonstrated that he was a good ‘mixer,’ and for the entertainment of his guests *90 sang bad poetry and sung it badly; that he has a harsh, irritating voice, is too fat, and appeared before his guests in purple pajamas; that members of the said party given at the home of plaintiff and his wife were entertained with ‘nice clean parlor jokes’ by Jazz Belknap, who is by said publication said to have been publicly designated a bum, a liar and a thief, and members of the party became so drunk and roisterous that they adopted the pastime of house wrecking, which they continued until 2 o’clock in the morning;'that the plaintiff is a ‘medicine man’ (meaning to describe plaintiff in his profession as a physician) and that in considering this fact the author of the composition shudders in disgust at the thought of doctors, meaning physicians; that, with particular reference to plaintiff and his conduct and capability as a doctor, the profession of doctor of medicine does not require any brains and is a despicable business to be ashamed of; and then this plaintiff is therein deliberately, maliciously and vengefully taunted, following the imputation that his calling requires no brains, with the words, ‘Well, how d’yuh like it;’ and is further taunted with the words and characters: ‘(Now suppose you sing to the people! %§|&@??),’ thereby meaning that if this plaintiff does not wish to submit in silent shame and suffering to the false report and spiteful and malicious injury done to him by the publication of the above set out scurrilous statements and expletives he can make his complaint to the court and a jury of the people.”

In commenting on the publication in connection with the innuendo we said in the former .opinion (30 Haw. p. 619) : “Much of the language used in the article is ambiguous. It may be reasonably said that it is susceptible of being understood in two senses,- — -one sense being somewhat crudely humorous and therefore harmless; the other sense being that attributed to it by the innuendo *91 and therefore injurious. If it was intended to charge the plaintiff and his wife with giving at their home the kind of party described in the innuendo and if it was so understood by those reading the article, it is defamatory per se.”

On the issue, therefore, of whether the publication contained a true account of what transpired at the Baldwin home it was necessaiy, in order to justify a directed verdict in its favor, for the defendant to prove, by uncontradicted evidence, that substantially everything occurred which by the innuendo was pointed out as defamatory, provided it could reasonably be inferred from the publication itself. In other words, the truth of the charge as it is alleged in the innuendo to have been intended by the defendant to be understood, and as it was reasonably susceptible of being understood, must be proven.

We think the evidence does not meet this requirement. William J. Belknap, for instance, one of the defendant’s witnesses, speaking of the party itself, testified in substance that about twenty minutes after eleven o’clock on the night mentioned in the publication he, together with three other men, Roberts, White and James, went to the Baldwin home. They found the doors open and entered.' The witness, who was on terms of intimacy with Dr. and Mrs. Baldwin, entered the bedroom and found the doctor and his wife in bed. He sat down on the side of the bed and talked to the Baldwins for a few minutes without any objection on their part. At his suggestion both Dr. and Mrs. Baldwin put on their kimonos and went into the living room where the other three men were waiting. White and James, with whom Dr. Baldwin was not acquainted, were introduced and the entire party sat down and talked for a little while then Dr. Baldwin and the witness went out in the kitchen and alcoholic drinks were prepared and brought into the room where they were *92 served. When asked if this was “a drinking party” or if it was “just simply a few drinks served for the purpose of entertaining the guests,” the witness said: “I wouldn’t say it was a drinking party; just two or three drinks.” After the drinks were brought into the living room there was conversation regarding what the witness and his three companions had been doing before they reached the Baldwin home. The witness danced some and Dr. Baldwin played the piano. Some extemporaneous songs were sung, in which Dr. Baldwin and the witness engaged. The party continued from twenty minutes after eleven until about twenty minutes to twelve, when- the witness and his three companions went away. As they were leaving Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 87, 1931 Haw. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-hilo-tribune-herald-ltd-haw-1931.