Blake v. Hearst Publications Incorporated

170 P.2d 100, 75 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1197
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1946
DocketCiv. 15133
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 170 P.2d 100 (Blake v. Hearst Publications Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Hearst Publications Incorporated, 170 P.2d 100, 75 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1197 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Plaintiff by the instant action sought damages from defendants in the sum of $160,000 for the publication of alleged libelous matter consisting of a cartoon strip entitled “Betrayal from the East.”

The original complaint alleged that the defendants, Hearst Publications Incorporated, and King Features Syndicate, had *7 libeled the plaintiff by publishing in the Los Angeles Examiner, a newspaper of general circulation of more than half a million readers in the city of and county of Los Angeles, a series of eight separate cartoon strips each entitled “Betrayal from the East,” consisting of a series of pictures expressly identifying the plaintiff by name and depicting him as a “ degenerate, dissolute, disheveled, slovenly and unkempt person, addicted to the use of narcotics and with a physical and facial appearance characteristic of a person addicted to the use of narcotics, and which pictures and each of them, did expose the plaintiff to hatred, contempt, ridicule and obloquy, and which had a tendency to, and still have a tendency to, injure him in his reputation, and in his occupation and profession of acting and lecturing upon the public lecture platform, and which have caused plaintiff to sustain severe shock, strain, great mental anguish, mortification, humiliation and shame . . that such pictures were false and defamatory and did not truly nor correctly represent, depict, portray or picture the plaintiff’s true physical or facial appearance; that at the time defendants published said pictures, they knew that the pictures were false and untrue and did not truly nor correctly depict plaintiff’s true physical or facial appearance.

The trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that the pictures themselves should have been incorporated in said complaint, whereupon plaintiff filed an amended complaint, in practically the same words as the original, and attached thereto by reference the said pictures.

Defendants denied generally and specially all the allegations as to the defamatory character of the publications, and as separate defenses alleged (a) “that to the extent that said pictures purported to depict plaintiff, the same were a truthful portrayal of plaintiff’s appearance during the events narrated in the text which said pictures were designed to illustrate”; (b) “that none of the pictures complained of purported to portray the real A1 Blake, but on the contrary all of them purported to and were understood to portray A1 Blake while he was engaged in acting the part of such depraved and despicable character. ’ ’

During the trial defendants made a motion for a directed verdict, which was by the court denied. Thereafter, the jury returned its verdict for $15,000 in favor of the plaintiff, whereupon the defendants moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which motion was granted. Both of said motions *8 were made on the following grounds: That plaintiff had no case (1) “because the pictures do not convey the defamatory meaning ascribed to them by the pleaded innuendo”; (2) “because the pleaded innuendo is not supported by any pleaded inducement”; (3) “because the pictures are at least susceptible of innocent interpretation and no special damages have been pleaded. ”

This appeal is prosecuted by plaintiff from such judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

In support of the judgment notwithstanding the verdict, respondents urge (1) that the pictures were not defamatory, and hence were not actionable; (2) that even if the pictures be regarded as susceptible of a defamatory meaning, they were also susceptible of an innocent meaning, hence were not libelous per se, and since no special damages are pleaded, they are not actionable.

It appears to be the well-established law of this state that “the power of a trial court to set aside a verdict and enter a contrary judgment is absolutely the same as its power to grant a nonsuit. (Sec. 629, Code Civ. Proc.; Card v. Boms, 210 Cal. 200 [291 P. 190] ; Hunt v. United Bank & Trust Co. of California, 210 Cal. 108 [291 P. 184]; 7 Cal.Jur. 10-Yr. Supp. 268, sec. 65c.) Therefore, a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto may properly be granted ‘when, and only when, disregarding conflicting [adverse] evidence, and giving to plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn from that evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.’ (Card v. Boms, supra, at p. 202.)” Neel v. Mannings, Inc., 19 Cal.2d 647, 649 [122 P.2d 576]. Moreover, the power of the' court in passing upon such a motion is strictly limited. “It has no power to weigh the evidence, but is bound to view it in the most favorable light in support of the verdict. ... In other words, the function of the trial court on a motion for a directed verdict is analogous to and practically the same as that of a reviewing court in determining, on appeal, whether there is evidence in the record of sufficient substance to support a verdict. Although the trial court may weigh the evidence and judge of the credibility of the witnesses on a motion for a new trial, it may not do so on a motion for a directed verdict.” (Collins v. Nelson, 16 Cal.App.2d 535, 538 [61 P.2d 479].)

*9 Appellant took the stand and testified, briefly, as follows: During the early part of 1941, he was approached by a Japanese ex-employee of Charles Chaplin, who inquired if the appellant had not been previously enrolled in the United States Navy, and specifically if he did not then have friends in the Navy. Appellant invented a story of an imaginary friend who he stated was the admiral’s personal yeoman on the U.S.S. Pennsylvania, flagship of the United States Fleet, stationed at Honolulu, and also stated that he (appellant) was desperately in need of money. An appointment was arranged for the following day with a Japanese from Washington, D. C., who offered appellant several thousand dollars if Blake were * ‘willing to play ball with the Japanese. ’ ’ Appellant reported these conferences to the United States Naval Intelligence at Los Angeles, and agreed to accept employment as a counterespionage agent. Part of the plan concocted by Naval Intelligence was to place another secret agent on board the U.S.S. Pennsylvania at Pearl Harbor, who would masquerade as the fictitious friend of the appellant. Thereafter, appellant informed the Japanese that he had contacted his friend on the U.S.S. Pennsylvania, and he was asked to leave for Honolulu immediately in order to secure any naval records which might be of value to the Japanese Imperial Navy.

Appellant arrived in Honolulu, registered at the Royal Hawaian Hotel, contacted his fictitious friend on the U.S.S. Pennsylvania, and secured from him documents prepared by United States Naval Intelligence for transmission to the Japanese which “had it been used by the Japanese would have done them more harm than good.

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Bluebook (online)
170 P.2d 100, 75 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-hearst-publications-incorporated-calctapp-1946.