Cresson v. Louisville Courier-Journal

299 F. 487, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 622, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3077
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1924
DocketNo. 8918
StatusPublished

This text of 299 F. 487 (Cresson v. Louisville Courier-Journal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cresson v. Louisville Courier-Journal, 299 F. 487, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 622, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3077 (6th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

MACK, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, Charles C. Cresson, from a directed verdict in favor of the defendant in a libel suit. The libel is based on matter (reproduced in footnote 1), published by the defendant’s newspaper, purporting to be an account of the majority report of the committee appointed by Congress to investigate the escape of Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, a draft evader. The defense is that the matter complained of is, privileged in that it is a publication made in good faith and without malice, of a fair, impartial and correct report of a document issued by a committee of the House of Representatives of the United States Congress. The defendant also points out in its pleading that it published in the same newspaper article, following in close juxtaposition to the article complained of, the following:

[488]*488“Colonel Hunt was commandant at Governor’s Island, where Bergdoll was imprisoned prior to liis escape. Colonel Cresson was the officer who prosecuted Colonel Hunt in the court-martial proceedings following Bergdoll’s escape.
“ ‘While there are many who participated in the conspiracy leading to Berg-doll’s escape and the acquittal of those who brought it about, there are three who are infinitely more culpable than the rest. Those three are General An-sell, Colonel Hunt and Colonel C. C. Cresson’ the majority declared.”

Plaintiff contends that, on a sound interpretation, the congressional report does not charge him with participation in a conspiracy to aid Bergdoll in his escape to Germany, but only with a failure properly to prosecute Colonel Hunt, one of the defendants charged before a court-martial with neglect of duty resulting in Bergdoll’s escape, and that defendant’s publication, in reporting that he was charged with participation in such conspiracy, failed to give an accurate or even fair report of the document.

There is abundant evidence in the record that Colonel Cresson was very zealous, if not overzealous, in pursuing the prosecution, in and out of the Army, of those concerned in Bergdoll’s escape. But the truth or falsity, the justice or injustice of the committee’s report, in so far as it relates to Colonel Cresson, is not a matter for judicial review; in any event it is not the question before us. The members of the Congressional committee are absolutely privileged, and while this court differs with the committee’s conclusions on the facts recited in its report —and doubtless there are no others else they would have been stated— nevertheless we have no authority in this action to review or revise those findings. Whether'or not the time has come when a sound public policy may be deemed to require some limitation of the absolute privilege, is a matter for legislative and not for judicial consideration.

The sole question before us, therefore, is whether, in the absence of any evidence of .express malice on defendant’s part, it so clearly appears that its article was a fair and impartial account of the Congressional report as to leave no question for submission to the jury.

A careful reading and analysis of defendant’s alleged libel indicate that the exact nature of the conspiracy in which plaintiff, with Hunt and Ansell, is alleged to have played a leading part, and his exact part therein, are not stated; the published article does not allege that they conspired to aid Bergdoll in his escape; it charges only that “Berg-doll was aided in his escape to Germany by a conspiracy in which” they played'the leading parts. A single conspiracy is thereby stated to have been charged in the congressional report, but its scope is not fixed. It might have been limited to .effectuating the escape; it might, however, equally well have been very much broader, including as separate steps, therein the actual escape and the protection against punishment of those participating therein. If, therefore, the committee’s report charged a single conspiracy consisting of a number of successive steps, one of which was directly to aid Bergdoll’s escape, and another the failure diligently to prosecute those charged with dereliction of duty in that respect, and if it further charged Cresson with having played a leading part in any of the stages of the single conspiracy, it necessarily charged him with participation in the single conspiracy, and the directed verdict was in that case proper.

[489]*489An examination of the resolution under which the committee acted, reproduced on the first page of the report, and of the other portions of the report relevant to this inquiry,2 demonstrates that such was the conspiracy and participation charged therein. As the entire report is a part of the pleadings, all portions thereof may be considered even though the trial court permitted only certain parts to be read to the jury. It appears therefrom that the committee was appointed because of a charge that there had been a plot or conspiracy, and was to investigate the persons who “participated in a plot or con[490]*490spiracy to effect or to give aid to said escape or to prevent recapture or were derelict in the performance of any duty devolved or devolving upon them which contributed to making said escape possible, or prevented or hindered recapture or made it more easy for said Bergdoll to elude recapture.”

But a single plot or conspiracy is thus referred toj and the committee adopted this view when it reported that “while there are many who [491]*491participated in the conspiracy leading to Bergdoll’s escape and the acquittal of those who brought it about,” the three who were infinitely more culpable than the rest were General Ans-ell, Colonel Hunt and Colonel Cresson; that “as ugly as are many phases of this whole matter, none is more defenseless than the conduct of Colonel Cresson in his pretended prosecution of Colonel Hunt”; “that to turn those loose who turned Bergdoll loose but adds insult to injury, and Colonel Cresson was the principal one of the instruments through which this latter offense was perpetrated.” The committee further points out that to constitute a conspiracy it is not necessary for the parties to meet together or to enter into a formal agreement or even to have any previous acquaintance or to know the exact part to be performed by each, but any one who, with the knowledge of the facts, concurs in the plans of the original conspirators and comes in to aid their execution, is a co-conspirator.

We cannot avoid the conclusion that the committee charged that there was a single plot and that it comprised plans both for Berg-doll’s escape and for the acquittal of those aiding therein. While Cresson’s name is omitted from some paragraphs and sentences dealing with those directly aiding the escape, we do not believe such omission sufficient to indicate that the committee did not intend, as would otherwise appear, to charge Colonel Cresson with being a party to the plot as a whole. Inasmuch as we find that defendant has accurately summarized the committee’s report, it is unnecessary to consider whether or not or under what circumstances of ambiguity, either of language or of legal construction, a newspaper must, at its peril; correctly determine the exact charge made before it is privileged to publish an honest and otherwise fair summary of a legislative committee report.

Again repeating that we are not passing upon the truth or fairness of the charges but only upon the question of the accuracy of the defendant’s summary of the report, we hold that there was no error in directing a verdict for defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 F. 487, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 622, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cresson-v-louisville-courier-journal-ca6-1924.