Cobourn v. Moore

148 A. 546, 158 Md. 358, 1930 Md. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1930
Docket[No. 89, October Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 A. 546 (Cobourn v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobourn v. Moore, 148 A. 546, 158 Md. 358, 1930 Md. LEXIS 49 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Oeetjtt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of libel brought by Frederick Lee Cobourn, the appellant, against Leo M. Moore and George T. Pennington, the appellees, in the Circuit Court for Harford County. It grew out of a newspaper controversy concerning the issues and candidates involved in the mayoralty election of the City of Havre de Grace held in 1929.

In his amended declaration, the appellant, after stating that he was an attormey at law in good standing, practicing his profession in the state and federal courts, that for a “'number of years” he had been the city attorney for the *360 City of Havre de Grace, and had resigned that office in April, 1929, and that he enjoyed an unblemished reputation in the community where he resided and practiced his profession as an upright, respectable, law abiding and moral citizen of professional integrity and honesty in the practice of the law, alleged that the appellees falsely and maliciously composed, printed and published in the Democratic Ledger, a weekly newspaper published and circulated throughout the City of Havre de Grace and Harford County of and concerning him, the following “false, untrue, malicious, wicked, defamatory and wanton libel,” to wit:

“To the Citizens of Havre de Grace—
“Recently a number of letters addressed to me and signed by Mr. Robert R. Lawder have appeared in a local paper. These letters were signed by Mr. Lawder, but they were actually prepared and written by Mr. Frederick L. Cobourn. Mr. Oobourn is simply using Mr. Lawder as his mouthpiece. The questions raised in these letters are too ridiculous and so evidently purely political bunk that they do not deserve an answer, but I have answered them as will be shown in the statement given below;. Mr. Oobourn, who wrote Mr. Lawder’s letters, was until recently City Attorney. If during my term any act of mine was wrong it was Mr. Oobourn’s duty to advise me and the City Council about it. He always assured us we were within our rights.
“Here are some facts, not idle conjectures, which Mr. Oobourn’s Lawder has not brought to the people’s attention:
“1st. Mr. Cobourn’s Lawder while a member of the legislature introduced the Lawder amendment to the City Charter raising the tax limit from $1.15 on the hundred dollars to $1.50 on the hundred dollars. Was Mr. Ooboum’s Lawder then looking ahead to the time when he would be Mayor and when he would raise the tax rate to $1.50. Mr. Lawder thought a higher tax rate needed when he introduced his bill and if he is Mayor he will probably stick to his views.
*361 “2nd. Mr. Oobourn’s Lawder did not call to the attention of the voters the fees which Mr. Oobourn has charged and been paid by the city which are as follows according to the city books:
Year 1924.
Jan. 8 — R. L. Cobourn.......... $550.00
Jan. 23 — R. L. Oobourn.......... 46.50
Dee. 1 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 520.00
June 2 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 2,350.00
Year 1925.
Jan. 19 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 25.00
June 1 — R. L. Oobourn.......... 500.00
July 20 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 53.00
Oct. 19 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 500.00
Oct. 5 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 1,000.00
Year 1926.
Jan. 4 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 900.00
July 19 — R. L. Coboum.......... 2,500.00
Sept. 6 — R. L. Oobourn.......... 417.00
Year 1927.
March 7 — R. L. Cobourn.......... 150.00
June 6 — R. L. Coboum.......... 750.00
Sept. 19 — R. L. Oobourn.......... 250.00
Total paid Cobourn in four years, $11,011.50
Average paid Cobourn per year.. 2,752.87
“This is approximately one-third of the total income of the City of Havre de Grace in a single year from taxes, and is nearly sufficient to pay in full the total floating debt of the City which would have been done, except for Mr. Lawder’s Cobourn’s high fees charged to the tax-payers. It is my intention because of these charges to secure a new City Attorney in the event I am re-elected. Mr. Cobourn evidently knew this when he brought out Mr. Lawder for Mayor against me. If Mr. Lawder is elected he will, no doubt, appoint Mr. Cobourn his main backer, as City Attorney, and Mr. Lawder may have need for his $1.50 tax rate to keep the City from going in debt. I shall under no circumstances appoint Mr. Cobourn City Attorney if I am elected. * * *”

*362 He further alleged that these words were in fact understood by the readers of said newspaper to mean, and were-intended by the appellees to be understood as meaning: “That the fees charged by the plaintiff to the City of Havre de Grace were unreasonably high and caused the City of Havre de Grace to have a floating indebtedness which would have been paid were it not for said alleged high charges made by the plaintiff, and meaning and intending to mean thereby,, that the plaintiff, speaking of him individually and as an attorney at law, was a man unfit by reason of said alleged high charges to act as city attorney and thereby intending to bring the plaintiff into public scorn, contumely and disrespect among his neighbors, clients and acquaintances.”

To -that declaration the appellants demurred generally, and specially on the grounds: (1) that the words charged were not actionable per se and that no special damage was alleged,, and (2) that the colloquium did not support the innuendo. The court sustained that demurrer, and the plaintiff declining to further amend, judgment for costs in favor of the defendants was entered, and from that judgment the plaintiff appealed.

The effect of the demurrer was to concede such matters of fact stated in the declaration as were “issuable and well pleaded” (1 Poe, PI. & Pr., sec. 705), and it is apparent from an examination of the declaration that no special damages were alleged, so that the only question presented by the appeal is whether in the absence of such an allegation the facts alleged in the declaration are sufficient to charge an actionable libel. Newbold v. Bradstreet, 57 Md. 38, 53; Flaks v. Clark, 143 Md. 381.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thompson v. Upton
146 A.2d 880 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1971)
Pollitt v. Brush-Moore Newspapers, Inc.
136 A.2d 573 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1957)
Walker v. D'ALESANDRO
129 A.2d 148 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 A. 546, 158 Md. 358, 1930 Md. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobourn-v-moore-md-1930.