Carlisle v. Fawcett Publications, Inc.

201 Cal. App. 2d 733, 20 Cal. Rptr. 405, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2654, 201 Cal. App. 2d 738
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1962
DocketCiv. 69
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 2d 733 (Carlisle v. Fawcett Publications, Inc.) 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
Carlisle v. Fawcett Publications, Inc., 201 Cal. App. 2d 733, 20 Cal. Rptr. 405, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2654, 201 Cal. App. 2d 738 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

CONLEY, P. J.

Based on an article appearing in the magazine, Motion Picture, the plaintiff sued the defendants, Fawcett Publications, Inc., a corporation, Sehroeder News Company, a corporation, and Janett Helen Morrison, also known as Jeanette H. Morrison, also known as Janet Leigh, in two counts, the first alleging libel and the second invasion of privacy. The defendants filed a general and special demurrer to the complaint; after argument, the trial court sustained the general demurrer as to each and both causes of action without leave to amend; judgment of dismissal was entered and the plaintiff appealed.

The publication complained of is the leading article in the December 1960 issue of Motion Picture. The standard of taste and intelligence exemplified by the magazine is sufficiently indicated by the table of contents, which includes, besides the piece in question, a listing of the following “exclusive stories” concerning moving picture actors and actresses: Sherry Jackson, “ ‘Why I Ditched Elvis Presley’ ”; Susan Kohner, “ ‘When I Think of Marriage, I Think of George’ ”; George Hamilton, “ ‘Trouble Is, I Don’t Want to Get Married’ ”; Troy Donahue, “They Made Me a Criminal”; Tuesday Weld, “The Girl Who’s So Far Out She’s In!”; Nancy and Tommy Sands, “You Are Cordially Invited to the Wed *736 ding”; Glenn Ford, “The Last of the Red Hot Playboys”; Doug McClure, “The Astonished Heart of Doug McClure”; Brad Dillman, “Any Guy Who Stays Single Is a Jerk”; Liz Taylor, “Liz Has a New Love!”; Esther Williams, “ ‘I Didn’t Break Up Fernando’s Marriage!’ ” Some cynic has said: “Widespread literacy is not an unmixed blessing.”

Turning to the article itself on page 19 of the issue, we find the title, “Janet Leigh’s Own Story—‘I Was a Child Bride at 14!’ ”, with the picture of the actress appended. The composition deals with the life story of Miss Leigh, a well-known moving picture actress; it seems clearly intended to improve her rating with moving picture “fans,” as well as to build up the circulation of the magazine; it includes the following excerpts:

“For the small tawny-haired blonde and the lean, dark boy their world was coming to an end that desperate summer. They put their arms around each other in the dark and held tight, afraid.
“The world itself was headed for disaster those warm days in 1941—to Pearl Harbor and World War II, to Hiroshima and the atomic bomb—but the boy and the girl were in love and very frightened.
“That summer in Merced, a small town south of San Francisco with only one motion picture theater, Jeanette Morrison—the girl who was to become Janet Leigh—was 14. The dark boy we’ll call ‘John’ was 18.
‘Never make fun of young love,’ Janet Leigh says today.
‘Never laugh at it.’
“ ‘I might have become a tramp,’ says Janet Leigh.
“Today, she is an April girl, as fresh as a happy morning, a warmly adoring young mother, friendly, clear-eyed, forthright. Sometimes, she seems as innocently wiggly and eager to please as a blonde kitten. But sometimes—sometimes—you look in her eyes and they darken, and she seems far away, and wise, and careful.
“For what seems at first glance to be a smiling story of boy-girl teen-age infatuation, of sex impulses shy and decent and wondering, might have been—and so nearly was—a psychological disaster.
“ ‘I was hurt. I might have become a tramp,’ says Janet. ‘You know what I mean. Or I might have become a frigid woman, afraid of men.’
*737 “This is the story that Janet kept secret so many years, afraid to tell it. Now, she has resolved the deeply psychological effects of young shame and fear. She understands them well. She knows them technically because only a short time after that hurtful marriage she became a brilliant student of psychology in a first-rate college. There, from time to time, in books and lectures, she saw herself in the dark mirror of the subconscious first revealed by Sigmund Freud.
“Today, Janet looks back objectively, almost clinically, to the bewildered, frightened girl she was at 14, as if that little girl was another person, or case history, or someone she read about long ago.
“But she does not laugh.”

The biographical piece states that Miss Morrison was an only child with “bright hair burnished until it shone like a splash of sunlight,” and that she was “the brightest kid in school” at Stockton. Some of the alleged history of her family is then set forth, and more of the characteristics of the actress. Her family moved to Merced from Stockton.

‘ ‘ The complex in Merced began with love and sex. She met the boy, John, in Merced because her parents moved there briefly, from Stockton, when her grandfather died.

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“She was the youngest student in her class, as always, and the brightest, as always. She was too young to have ‘car dates. ’ But the kids were unusually friendly in Merced in 1941. They liked Jeanette and accepted her—not at once, but slowly, as she proved she was ‘regular.’

“She ‘went steady’ with John. He was a tall, handsome fellow and a senior. Jeanette wore his letterman sweater and around her neck was a thin gold chain from which dangled his class ring.

“The precocious 14-year-old girl from out of town, popular but not sure of herself, not yet really one of the gang, had found security and affection in an older boy. Jeanette Morrison fell utterly in love.

“They kissed. And for the first time in her very young life Jeanette knew what a kiss meant.”

The family moved back to Stockton, but another girl asked her back to Merced for a two weeks’ visit in the following summer and “. . . tall John, looking diffident and embarrassed and very eager, ...” was at the station to meet her.

“It was all fun at first—sheer fun and teasing, romping, dating, playing. There were picnics and lunches on the banks *738 of the Joaquin River. There were lazy warm days in the sun, swimming or napping in the shade. Then, as afternoons wore out, they’d race back to town to Merced’s one movie house before five o ’clock, when the prices went up.

“John and Jeanette sat close in the dark, hand-holding, smuggling kisses, watching the glamorous people on the screen, hooting at the comedies and associating themselves with the lovers in love scenes.

“It was a lovely summer time. Then time ran out.

“ ‘Only a couple more days, then you’ll go home and I won’t see you again,’ said John.

“ ‘I know. I’ve got to stay here,’ said Jeanette. ‘What can we do ? ’

“Late at night, she and her girl friend sat up in bed talking about the problem that had no solution: how could 14-year-old Jeanette live in Merced when her parents lived in Stockton ? ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 2d 733, 20 Cal. Rptr. 405, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 2654, 201 Cal. App. 2d 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlisle-v-fawcett-publications-inc-calctapp-1962.