Briarcliff Lodge Hotel, Inc. v. Citizen-Sentinel Publishers, Inc.

183 N.E. 193, 260 N.Y. 106, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 664
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 183 N.E. 193 (Briarcliff Lodge Hotel, Inc. v. Citizen-Sentinel Publishers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briarcliff Lodge Hotel, Inc. v. Citizen-Sentinel Publishers, Inc., 183 N.E. 193, 260 N.Y. 106, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 664 (N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

Crane, J.

As the first, second and third defenses set up in the answers to these libel actions have been stricken out, as insufficient at law, it is necessary for us to assume their allegations to be true, in considering whether or not they are the proper answers to the allegations in the complaint. The following, then, is the narration of facts according to which the defendants are to be adjudged in libel.

The plaintiff conducted in the village of Briarcliff Manor, Westchester county, a hotel known as Briarcliff Lodge. For more than a year prior to the publication alleged in the complaint it had purchased and used water 1 that it needed for its guests from the Municipal Board of the village of Briarcliff Manor. This Board operated the water supply system of the village and received and collected pay therefor. Bills for water consumed were sent in February, May, August and November for user during the previous three months. Shortly after May 31, 1930, the Municipal Board sent to the plaintiff a bill for $2,134.67 for water consumed by it during the three months ending May 31st, and another bill, August 31, 1930, in the sum of $3,118.22, for the three months ending August 31, 1930, and on November 30, 1930, another bill for $2,268.03 for water used during the three months ending November 30, 1930. At the time of the alleged publication there was due from the plaintiff the total sum of $7,520.92 for water used from March 1, 1930, to November 30, 1930, and the plaintiff still continued to purchase and use water up to the time of the publication. An ordinance of the village of Briarcliff Manor provided in part as follows: “If any charge for water supplied is allowed to remain unpaid for a period of six months from the date of said bill, then and in that *113 event, the Superintendent is authorized to discontinue the use of water to said premises, within ten days after the mailing of notice to that effect to the water consumer of said premises.”

On January 10, 1931, the Municipal Board wrote to the plaintiff demanding payment. On January 12th the plaintiff wrote to Henry H. Law, the Mayor of the village, and asked him if it could not be arranged with the Municipal Board that said water bills be paid in installments. Law communicated by letter with the board, inclosing the plaintiff’s letter. Thereafter, and on February 10, 1931, the Municipal Board held a meeting, discussed the bills, and directed a notice to be sent to the plaintiff, stating that if that portion of said water bills which was more than six months past due was not paid in ten days, the water supply to the plaintiff’s premises would be discontinued, and also directed that the Mayor be advised accordingly.

On February 11th, the President of the Municipal Board sent a letter to Law informing him of this action taken by the Board at its meeting, and stated that if the plaintiff did not comply with the demand, its water supply would be discontinued. Law thereupon notified the plaintiff.

The Board of Trustees of the village at a meeting held on the evening of February 11, 1931 (which must have been after the publication'in the case of Citizen-Sentinel Publishers, Inc.), read and discussed the letter of the Municipal Board to the Mayor and referred the matter to him at his request.

This is the full recital of the facts which we must assume was in the possession of the defendant newspaper at the time of its publication. It thereupon printed the following, which is said to be false and libelous. It must here be written in full, as we are obliged to make comparison between the facts and what the defendant published as the facts, with its comments:

*114 “ Lodge Facing Loss of Water. Owes Big Sum ” “ Bbiabcliff Board Delivers Ultimatum. $2100 Bill Must Be Paid ”
“ Briarcliff Lodge has been using Briarcliff water for six months and hasn’t paid a cent.
“ The Lodge, nationally known for various things, owes the Briarcliff Water Board just $2100, not a large sum of money for that lodge.
“And if the Lodge fails to pay its bill in 10 days the board will peremptorily turn the water off.
“And what will the Lodge do for its guests?
“ That is a thing that isn’t troubling the Municipal Board of Briarcliff at all. In fact, members of the Board aren’t interested in what the Lodge will do. All they want is the $2100.
“ But it may trouble officers of the hostelry when they receive the ultimatum of the Water Board, probably today.
“ The matter goes back to last Fall when the Lodge failed to pay the first bill rendered for the season. The officers ignored a'subsequent bill arid the Water Board ‘ held its peace.
“ But in these times of depression, $2100 is - a lot of money. If the Water Board permitted the Lodge to continue using the water without payment, it will have to collect $5200 by the end of the month, for- another bill will then be six months old. Which is also a lot of money.
“ So the Water Board is eagerly awaiting -a reply, preferably a check.
“ Board members are certain that the situation will be averted, and that the Lodge will pay its long past due bifi.”

Let us make the comparison between the article and. the -facts. The heading is. true. .The statement that. “ Briarcliff Lodge has been using Briarcliff water for six months and hasn’t paid a cent,” is also true. That *115 the lodge is nationally known ” is a puff and not a libel; and the statement “ $2100, not a large sum for that lodge,” is a financial compliment. We then have this statement: “And if the Lodge fails to pay its bill in 10 days the board will peremptorily turn the water off.” This is not a statement of a fact so much as a prophecy of a future event; it is not a comment, but a statement of what the municipal authorities will do in ten days. Was it justified? We must assume that the newspaper had in its possession the ordinance giving the village the power to do this thing within ten days after mailing of notice. The newspaper also had before it the written notice sent the Mayor, and by him sent to the plaintiff. This notice from the Municipal Board to the plaintiff said that if the six months’ water bills, past due, were not paid within ten days, the water supply to the plaintiff’s premises would be discontinued. Here was the notice required by the ordinance and the newspaper was justified in printing what the notice said, or, in other words, to state, “ if the Lodge fails to pay its bills in 10 days the board will peremptorily turn the water off.” This is exactly what the Board did say it would do and the paper was merely publishing the Board’s declaration. Here was action taken by an official body given as news to the public.

Next — “And what will the Lodge do for its guests? ”— a most natural question and fair comment. Then we have this statement: “ That is a thing that isn’t troubling the Municipal Board of Briarcliff at all. In fact, members of the Board aren’t interested in what the Lodge will do.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 N.E. 193, 260 N.Y. 106, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briarcliff-lodge-hotel-inc-v-citizen-sentinel-publishers-inc-ny-1932.