Brown v. George Knapp & Co.

112 S.W. 474, 213 Mo. 655, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 474 (Brown v. George Knapp & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. George Knapp & Co., 112 S.W. 474, 213 Mo. 655, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 205 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

The plaintiff, brought this action against the defendant, a corporation, organized under [665]*665the laws of this State with a capital stock of $500,000, and the owner and publisher in the city of St. Louis of a daily newspaper known as the “St. Louis Republic.” It was alleged that the daily edition of this paper exceeds one hundred thousand per day.

The petition states that on February 2, 1904, and prior thereto, there was pending at the city of Albany, New York, before the Governor of the State of New York, a certain proceeding wherein the Governor of the State of Missouri sought to secure the extradition from the State of New York of one William Ziegler, charged by an indictment theretofore returned into the circuit court of Cole county with the crime and offense of bribery alleged in said indictment to haxe been committed in said Cole county, State of Missouri. That on February 3, 1904, the defendant, in said newspaper and in its daily edition thereof of February 3, 1904, having reference to the aforesaid extradition proceeding, did wrongfully, wickedly and with malice, print and publish concerning plaintiff herein the following false, libelous and defamatory words and matter in manner and form as follows, to-wit:

“ZIEGLER DARES NOT LEAVE NEW YORK.
“If he goes to Connecticut home new extradition proceedings may be instituted.
“attack on attorney brown.
“Baking Powder Magnate’s Lawyer, in Ms brief, openly charges Missouri Prosecutor with perjury.
“Republic special. .
“New York, Féb. 2. — William Ziegler’s escape from extradition to Missouri, through the grace of Governor Odell, has left him in a decidedly awkward position. Mr. Ziegler will run a risk, should he leave the jurisdiction of New York State, of being arrested, [666]*666should the Missouri authorities continue their efforts to bring him within the jurisdiction of Missouri.
“Mr. Ziegler has a country home in Connecticut and his attorneys are inclined to the belief that Attorney-General Crow will be prepared to requisition the Governor of the New England State for Mr. Ziegler’s return, should he take up his residence there even temporarily, which he frequently does.
“Mr. Ziegler’s discomfiture, however, is not the only result of the decision handed down by Governor Odell yesterday. The attorneys for the baking powder manufacturer are said to be lying in wait for acting prosecuting attorney Brown of Cole county, should he at any time visit New York. In his brief, Mr. John M. Bowers, one of Mr. Ziegler’s attorneys, openly charges attorney Brown with deliberate and criminal perjury, and Mr. Bowers does hot hesitate to say that, upon his advent into the State, Brown will be instantly arrested and his indictment for perjury sought for.
“charge oe perjury.
“The language used by Mr. Bowers in his brief is clear. He says: ‘This prosecuting attorney of the county of Cole made an affidavit upon which was put in motion the machinery of the Constitution under which Mr. Ziegler’s extradition was sought. It was false as to every allegation as to Mr. Ziegler’s flight. Mr. Ziegler sent a respectful message to the Governor of the State of Missouri, asking that this prosecuting attorney of the county of Cole be produced before your Excellency to repeat the oath he had made by which the machinery of the law as to extradition had been set in motion. He declined to come and on page seventy-six of the stenographer’s minutes of the proceedings before your Excellency, it was openly conceded that he had no knowledge of the matters he swore to in this regard.
[667]*667“ ‘What does this mean? We openly charged before your Excellency, upon the hearing, that an official of the State had committed perjury pure and simple upon which he instituted a procedure of-this nature, committed a crime of the highest grade.’
‘ ‘ KNEW IT WAS UNTRUE.
“ ‘The one fact which the State of Missouri concedes it had to prove to deprive a citizen of the State of New York of his freedom and transport him to Missouri was that he had been present in that State at a certain time. Mr. Brown, the prosecuting attorney who is to try him, made an affidavit of that fact. Mr. Brown knew it was untrue- when he made it. Even if he swore to facts as true of which he had no knowledge, it was perjury.’
“Mr. Bowers’ claim that attorney Brown committed perjury is based on section 101 of the penal code, which says: ‘An unqualified statement of that which one does not know to be true, is equivalent to a statement of that which he knows to- be false. ’
“eurther proceedings.
“There has been talk to-day to the effect that a-civil action might be taken against prosecuting attorney Brown, but it is highly improbable that any such proceedings will be begun.”

That the terms “Brown,” “Attorney Brown,” “Missouri prosecutor,” “Acting Prosecuting Attorney Brown of Cole county,” “prosecuting attorney -of. the county of Cole,” “An official of the State,” “Mr. Brown, the prosecuting attorney,” and “prosecuting attorney Brown,” as used and contained in said libelous and defamatory publication, all have reference to and mean plaintiff. That at the times referred to in the said defamatory publication, the plaintiff was the duly appointed and acting prosecuting attorney of the county of Cole, State aforesaid. That defendant pub-[668]*668listed, sold and circulated said edition of its newspaper, to-wit, the St. Louis Republic, containing said false, libelous and defamatory matter concerning’ plaintiff in Cole county, Missouri, whereby tbe cause of action bas accrued against defendant, and on plaintiff’s behalf in said Cole county, and within tbe jurisdiction of this court, and published and sold and circulated said edition of its newspaper elsewhere in tbe State of Missouri and in tbe States of Arkansas, Texas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Indian Territory and elsewhere. That defendant in tbe manner and by tbe means aforesaid did falsely, maliciously and wickedly publish, circulate and give currency to tbe charge that plaintiff bad committed, among other offenses, tbe atrocious and abominable crime of perjury; that plaintiff by tbe aforesaid wrongful acts of tbe defendant corporation bas been greatly damaged in bis good name and reputation and in bis feelings and estate, and in bis aforesaid relation of attorney at law in tbe courts of this State, in bis official character as prosecuting attorney of Cole county aforesaid, and otherwise in bis business pursuits and vocation. Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment against defendant for actual or compensatory damages in tbe sum of twenty thousand dollars and for punitive and exemplary damages in tbe sum of twenty thousand dollars and for costs.

Tbe defendant answering admitted its existence as a corporation, its ownership of tbe St. Louis Republic, and that it made tbe publication complained of, and denied everything else in tbe petition. And then set up tbe following special defense: “That at tbe time of tbe said publication there bad been pending and had just closed a proceeding before Hon. B. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 474, 213 Mo. 655, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-george-knapp-co-mo-1908.