Brodek v. Jones

212 A.D. 247, 208 N.Y.S. 699, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9448
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 212 A.D. 247 (Brodek v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brodek v. Jones, 212 A.D. 247, 208 N.Y.S. 699, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9448 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

The action is to recover damages for an alleged libelous publication by the defendant. Plaintiff in his complaint alleges that he is an attorney and counselor at law of the State of New York of thirty years’ standing, a member of the American Bar Association, of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, and of the New York County Lawyers’ Association, and has served as a member of a number of committees in said last two named associations; that plaintiff is a native of the city of New York, and has resided there during his entire life, and that since his admission to the bar has practiced his profession in said city. Plaintiff further alleges that since his admission to practice as an attorney and counselor at law he has been a director of industrial corporations, of one national bank within the city of New York, and has been the attorney and confidential adviser of numerous corporations, partnerships, individuals and estates, and that his reputation in the city of New York and elsewhere has always been that of a competent, honorable and trustworthy attorney, counselor and adviser and one to whom matters requiring the judgment and advice of an attorney and counselor of integrity could safely be intrusted.

The plaintiff then alleges, in the 6th paragraph of his complaint, that prior to October, 1923, the defendant, Richard Lloyd Jones, and one John H. Perry were jointly interested in a number of newspapers published at various places in the United States, and that the defendant and said Perry were involved in the liabilities of said newspapers or some of them; that prior to October, 1923, the defendant and said Perry were negotiating for a severance of their interests in the said newspapers, and being unable to agree upon the terms and conditions of such a severance, called in a third party, one Courtland Smith, to act as mediator in effecting a peaceful severance of their interests in said newspapers to the end that receivership and a resulting impairment in the value of said newspaper properties might be avoided. Plaintiff further alleges, upon information and belief, that the negotiations between the said owners of said newspapers and said Courtland Smith as [249]*249mediator had reached a point early in October, 1923, when it became necessary to retain an attorney and counselor acceptable to the mediator and the said parties to work out the legal details of the severance of said interests and in the preparation of formal legal documents effectuating the same, and that thereupon, on or about the 8th day of October, 1923, the plaintiff was retained by the defendant, by the said Courtland Smith, and the said John H. Perry as such attorney, and thereafter rendered services for the defendant and said Perry under the direction of said mediator, conferring with all three parties, examined the law, prepared necessary papers incident to the matter, and that there followed a severance of the interests of the defendant and said John H. Perry in said newspapers upon terms and conditions acceptable to both.

Plaintiff further alleges that in December, 1923, he rendered a bill to the said Courtland Smith for account of the defendant and said John H. Perry for the services which he had thus performed, and that thereafter and on the 3d day of January, 1924, the said Courtland Smith sent a telegram to the defendant wherein the said Smith stated that he found it necessary to pay the plaintiff at once and calling attention of the defendant to the fact that he had not answered his letter of some weeks prior thereto in reply to the defendant’s request as to what he could do for the plaintiff and for Smith, and asked that the defendant'wire a reply. Smith’s telegram closed with the suggestion that if it would help defendant he thought he could get plaintiff to accept a note for defendant’s share. Plaintiff further alleges on the day following, to wit, on January 4, 1924, the defendant falsely and maliciously composed and published of and concerning the plaintiff in a telegram sent by the defendant on that day to the said Courtland Smith the following matter, which the plaintiff alleges was false, libelous and defamatory, to wit: 4> 1924.

“ Courtland Smith,
Private American Motion Picture Producers’ Assn.,
“ 522 Fifth Ave.,
“ New York, N. Y.:
“ Against the ipsistence of my attorneys and friends and things that seemed obvious I held fast to my belief in disinterested efforts until your last letter came with its enclosure both of which I shall keep stop Brodek should be paid by the one he effectively served as were you. (Signed) RICHARD LLOYD JONES.”

Plaintiff in his complaint alleges the innuendo with reference to said telegram that the said telegram meant that plaintiff as the [250]*250attorney and counselor at law had been disloyal to the defendant’s interests in the said matters with said John H. Perry, and that plaintiff, as such attorney and counselor, had betrayed defendant in said matters; that plaintiff, as such attorney and counselor, had served said John H. Perry knowingly to the detriment of defendant and at the expense of„defendant’s interests; and that plaintiff had betrayed the trust reposed in him as such attorney and counselor by said defendant, and had been recreant in his duty as such attorney and counselor. Plaintiff further alleges that said telegram was dictated by the defendant and finally was transcribed and delivered to the said Courtland Smith, and that the facts stated in said publication with reference to plaintiff were false, malicious and libelous, and were made by the defendant with the intention to injure plaintiff in his good name, fame, credit and in his profession, and to cause it'to be believed that by reason thereof he had become disloyal and recreant to his duty in his profession and unfit to continue therein, and that by reason of such publication plaintiff’s reputation as an honorable and loyal attorney and counselor at law had been greatly damaged, and that plaintiff had been injured in his good name, fame and credit as an attorney and counselor at law and had been held up to public scorn, ridicule and contempt, and damaged in the sum of $50,000, for which sum judgment was demanded against the defendant.

I am of the opinion that the alleged defamatory matter of which the plaintiff complains was not libelous per se. To support his cause of action the plaintiff alleges various matters of inducement seeking thereby to show that the telegram in question was libelous because of the extrinsic facts set forth in the complaint, none of which facts, however, appear in the telegram itself. The extrinsic facts thus set forth have been hereinbefore adverted to. The complaint, however, contains no allegation of special damage suffered by the plaintiff, the plaintiff claiming only general damages. It is perfectly plain that the language used in the telegram in question was not libelous per se or defamatory upon its face. Even with the innuendo alleged I do not think the jury could spell out a defamatory meaning in the words used in the telegram itself. In any event, the words used in the telegram are libelous only by reason of the extrinsic facts set forth in the complaint, and the telegram in such case is not libelous per se but only by reason of the extrinsic facts alleged. In O’Connell v. Press Pub. Co. (214 N. Y. 352) the Court of Appeals, on appeal from an order of the Appellate Division sustaining the Special Term, which decided that the article complained of was libelous

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Bluebook (online)
212 A.D. 247, 208 N.Y.S. 699, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brodek-v-jones-nyappdiv-1925.