Boyle v. State

3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 397
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 397 (Boyle v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. State, 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 397 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

BENTLEY, J.

The plaintiff in error was tried with one Negley D. Cochran upon an indictment charging them with the publication in the Toledo Commercial newspaper of September 6, 1889, of a false and malicious libel upon certain five persons constituting the board of gas trustees of the city of Toledo, appointed under the act of January 22, 1889; it being alleged in the indictment that said libel was published of and concerning said five persons, and each of them, and of them as such trustees.

On the trial the jury acquitted said Cochran, but found said Boyle guilty as charged in the indictment, and his motion for a new trial being denied, he was sentenced to pay a fine and costs, and to suffer a certain term of imprisonment.

A bill of exceptions, embodying all the evidence and rulings of the court on the trial, was duly allowed and made a part of the record, and the same is attached to the petition in error filed by P. C. Boyle in this court, for the purpose of obtaining a reversal of said sentence and the setting aside of the verdict.

Prior to the entering of this plea of not guilty to said indictment, the defendants demurred to the indictment, on the ground that the facts stated therein did not charge them with any offense under the statute of this state. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendants excepted. And the plaintiff in error,. Boyle, alleges error in the overruling of said demurrer. His counsel urges-three grounds of demurrer:

■ 1. That the charge in said indictment is double; that it charges a libel on the gas trustees as individuals, and also libel on the public board which they officially constituted

[399]*3992. That there is no sufficient colloquium alleging that there had been any actual transactions of the trustees, or any handling or dealing with the public funds by them, regarding which the alleged libel charged them with misconduct.

3. That the article as published was not in fact or law libelous, since it showed merely such a criticism of the action of public officers in the discharge of their public duties as would be privileged under the law.

We were furnished with a stenographic report of the opinion of the learned judge of the court of common pleas in overruling the demurrer. It treats the questions involved at length; and, without discussing the matter at large,_ we are content to say that we are satisfied of the correctness of the conclusions reached.

The other errors assigned in the petition in error regard the rulings of the court; the admission of certain evidence offered by the rejection of evidence offered by the defendant below; the overruling of the motion for a new trial, based in part on the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; the charge of the court, and its refusal to charge as requested.

Very few of the exceptions taken on the trial to the action of the court— the admission or rejection of evidence — were pointed out or referred to by counsel; they preferring, doubtless, to treat questions which they regarded as more serious. But we have gone through the entire record, and find about forty exceptions under this head. A large number of these exceptions were entered on the court’s overruling the objections of defendant’s counsel to evidence of Boyle’s connection with the Toledo Commercial after September 6, 1889. Some of this evidence regards admissions of Boyle .made about December 18, 1889, and later, and some of it regarded acts done by him at various times after September 6, 1889, and indeed down to within a few months of the trial, and which admissions and acts tended to show that Mr. Boyle was, at the various times subsequent to September 6, 1889, to -which the evidence related,' the responsible head of the Toledo Commercial. The court of common pleas admitted this evidence, and refused to rule it out on the ground that some testimony had been given tending to show that in July, 1890, Mr. Boyle had been elected president of the Toledo Commercial Co., the owmer and publisher of the paper, and was from that time connected with its management, and that as there was no suggestion of any change, and no evidence tending to show any change in his relations to the paper up to the time to which the latest challenged testimony related, this evidence was admissible in further corroboration of the testimony as to his status on September 6,1889, and in order more clearly to define and show the part he took in the practical management and control of the paper. In the holdings in this regard, we think the court of common pleas did not err, although it must be confessed that some of the evidence regarding the later acts or admissions of the plaintiff in error was rather remote, and in allowing it the court approached the confines of its discretion ,in such cases; especially is this the case where the testimony regarded .conversations of the plaintiff in error long subsequent to the publication of the alleged libel, and where the conversations contained very little that might be regarded as admissions of the plaintiff in error, and very much of certain other circumstances which possibly might have been used on the trial to his disadvantage. But we cannot say that in any of these instances there was error in the rulings of the court. I will go rapidly through some of those objections to the evidence, disposing of them more or .less hurriedly, as it is necessary to do.

The exception on page 54 regards the board's expression, or the expression of the: members of the board of gas trustees, as to the value of tlie gas right in the Skinner tract of land, to which the alleged libel mainly related. The testimony was that the members of the board, standing upon the land while considering its purchase, made expressions of their belief that the price which was asked and which they finally agreed to pay, was a reasonable-price. In view of the rule of law, regarding the competency of testimony upon the trial, upon the part of the trustees, showing or tending to show their actual honesty in the transaction, we think this testimony was rnmoetent. and that its admission was not error.
[400]*400The objections on pages 50 and 60 of the record relate to testimony by which it was sought by the trustees to show their, motives in holding secret sessions of the board, mentioned in the alleged libel; that is, it was proposed by them to show that instead of their motives being improper or wrongful, they were such as lawfully they might entertain, and that the secret sessions thus held were not indications of any dishonesty upon their part, .but the contrary. And we think this class of testimony was fairly and properly admissible.
On page 97 it was sought to be shown who was the city editor or editors of the Toledo •Commercial at this time, in July, or just before this time in July, when the alleged change in its management took place. We think that class of testimony was ais» competent and proper to show the condition just before the time of the change, and at the time that the •change in the management might have occurred, as evidence clearly pointing out such a •change. At least we see no prejudice that would result in showing who the editor was under the former administration of the paper.
On page 126 the question objected to and allowed, was not answered.

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3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-state-ohcirctlucas-1890.