Bigelow v. Brumley

37 N.E.2d 584, 138 Ohio St. 574, 138 Ohio St. (N.S.) 574, 21 Ohio Op. 471, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 528
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1941
Docket28265
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 37 N.E.2d 584 (Bigelow v. Brumley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigelow v. Brumley, 37 N.E.2d 584, 138 Ohio St. 574, 138 Ohio St. (N.S.) 574, 21 Ohio Op. 471, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 528 (Ohio 1941).

Opinions

The solution of the important substantive questions presented in this case has been complicated by the unexplained and unsatisfactory state of the record. Throughout these proceedings the only one of the twelve individuals named as defendants who *Page 577 has apparently taken any action has been the defendant Clement O. Miniger. He alone filed a demurrer to the original and amended petitions in the Court of Common Pleas, and he alone appealed from the decision of the Court of Appeals to this court. The parties and the courts below, however, seem to have treated the case as though the rights of all the defendants were before the court for adjudication. Though nowhere in the record expressly so stated, the trial court with the evident acquiescence of the plaintiff treated the demurrer filed by one defendant as inuring to all defendants, and, after sustaining the demurrer in an oral opinion, ordered that the demurrer to the amended petition be sustained, and expressly stated in the journal entry that the amended petition "is dismissed as to alldefendants at plaintiff's costs, and judgment is hereby rendered accordingly." (Italics ours.) Upon appeal, the Court of Appeals vacated this order and remanded the cause "to the Court of Common Pleas of Lucas county, Ohio, for further proceedings according to law * * *."

Notice of appeal to this court was given by defendant Miniger alone. The motion to certify and the assignments of error filed in this court were both on behalf of Miniger alone. We are accordingly of the opinion that only the rights and liabilities of the defendant Miniger are before us for adjudication.

With respect to the substantive questions of law presented on this appeal, defendant Miniger has filed in this court two specific assignments of error:

"1. The characterization of Herbert S. Bigelow as a 'paid lobbyist for the Single Tax Movement' did not present a question of fact for the jury to determine as to whether such language is libelous.

"2. The alleged defamatory language was absolutely privileged, the language being material and relevant to the argument opposing the Bigelow amendments." *Page 578

In reaching a conclusion adverse to the defendant on these two points, the Court of Appeals dealt with them in the reverse order, and we shall do likewise.

On the question of absolute privilege the Court of Appeals in its opinion stated: "Privilege is accorded such publication because it is in the interest of the public, that there be freedom of discussion of the proposed legislation." The court, however, went on to deny the defendant Miniger's claim of absolute privilege on the ground that the statement made was not relevant. The defendant in this court contends that the statement was relevant "and hence absolutely privileged, the argument containing the alleged defamatory statements having been prepared by persons appointed by the Governor pursuant to Section 1g of Article II of the Ohio Constitution and G. C. 4785-180a and having been circulated by the Secretary of State pursuant to G. C. 4785-180b." In order to determine the correctness of this contention, and to ascertain the extent of the protection such a privilege would afford, it is necessary to examine the underlying reasons for granting or withholding privilege in circumstances such as we have in the case at bar.

The only publication of the statement alleged in the plaintiff's amended petition was the distribution "by the Secretary of State to the various electors of the state of Ohio in accordance with law." This distribution "in accordance with law" is that provided for in Section 1g, Article II of the Ohio Constitution:

"A true copy of all laws or proposed laws or proposed amendments to the Constitution, together with an argument or explanation, or both, for, and also an argument or explanation, or both, against the same, shall be prepared. * * * The person or persons who prepare the argument or explanation, or both, for the law, section or item, submitted to the electors by referendum petition, or against any proposed law submitted by supplementary petition, shall be named by the General *Page 579 Assembly, if in session, and if not in session then by the Governor. The Secretary of State shall cause to be printed the law, or proposed law, or proposed amendment to the Constitution, together with the arguments and explanations, not exceeding a total of three hundred words for each, and also the arguments and explanations, not exceeding a total of three hundred words against each, and shall mail, or otherwise distribute, a copy of such law, or proposed law, or proposed amendment to the Constitution, together with such arguments and explanations for and against the same to each of the electors of the state, as far as may be reasonably possible."

These constitutional provisions are implemented by Sections 4785-180a and 4785-180b, General Code.

Upon certain privileged occasions where there is a great enough public interest in encouraging uninhibited freedom of expression to require the sacrifice of the right of the individual to protect his reputation by civil suit, the law recognizes that false, defamatory matter may be published without civil liability. 1 Cooley on Torts (4 Ed.), 522, Section 151.

Such privileged occasions have by long judicial history been divided into two classes — occasions absolutely privileged and those upon which the privilege is only a qualified one. The distinction between these two classes is that the absolute privilege protects the publisher of a false, defamatory statement even though it is made with actual malice, in bad faith and with knowledge of its falsity; whereas the presence of such circumstances will defeat the assertion of a qualified privilege. Inasmuch as the present amended petition, the sufficiency of which is being tested upon demurrer, contains allegations of express and actual malice, bad faith and known falsity, it is obvious that a qualified privilege here would be insufficient. We must, therefore, consider whether there exists, in the situation *Page 580 set forth by the allegations of the plaintiff's petition, an occasion of absolute privilege.

It has been said by many courts that the occasions of absolute privilege are few and that the tendency is to limit them rather strictly to the following types of occasions: (1) The legislative proceedings of sovereign states; (2) judicial proceedings in established courts of justice; (3) official acts of the chief executive officers of state or nation; and (4) acts done in the exercise of military or naval authority. 1 Cooley on Torts (4 Ed.), 525, Section 151; Mundy v. Hoard,216 Mich. 478, 185 N.W. 872; 33 American Jurisprudence, 123, Section 125. The statement in the case at bar, published in the official argument upon the merits of an amendment to the Ohio Constitution proposed by the initiative process, does not fit with exactness into any of the foregoing classifications. In deciding, therefore, whether the doctrine of absolute privilege is to be applied to an official statement in this relatively new method of governmental action by initiative process, we must consider whether there is real similarity between the occasion here and those occasions in which absolute privilege more commonly obtains, and whether the fundamental reasons underlying all instances of absolute privilege are applicable here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.E.2d 584, 138 Ohio St. 574, 138 Ohio St. (N.S.) 574, 21 Ohio Op. 471, 1941 Ohio LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigelow-v-brumley-ohio-1941.