Del Rico Co. v. New Mexican, Inc.

246 P.2d 206, 56 N.M. 538
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1952
Docket5364
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 246 P.2d 206 (Del Rico Co. v. New Mexican, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Del Rico Co. v. New Mexican, Inc., 246 P.2d 206, 56 N.M. 538 (N.M. 1952).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The plaintiff as appellant seeks a review of the judgment of the district court of Santa Fe County dismissing its complaint under which damages were sought against the defendants for alleged libels said to have- been published concerning plaintiff and the milk sold at the dairy operated by it. As originally filed Norman Shenk and Genevieve F. Shenk, who own substantially all the stock of plaintiff corporation, appeared as co-plaintiffs but they were dismissed out upon motion from which they prosecute no appeal. Likewise and upon his motion, Dr. S. W. Wiest, City Milk Inspector, was dismissed as a defendant. It is because the trial court also sustained a motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint as later disclosed that the plaintiff, feeling aggrieved, has prosecuted this appeal from the judgment against it.

The complaint whs in two counts, each alleging a separate publication. The first one appeared on December 2, 1946, in Santa Fe New Mexican, a daily newspaper then published by defendant, Santa Fe Publishing Co., controlled through stock ownership by defendant, Frank C. Rand, Jr., but now by the defendant, The New Mexican, Inc., its successor. It read:

“Schedule Milk Hearing Today For 2 Dairies
“The sanitation committee, of the city council was to hold a hearing at 4:30 P. M. today at the office of Dr. Horry Payne, district health officer, at the request of Shenk’s and Brunk’s dairys.
“Dr. S. W. Wiest, city milk inspector, recently reported to the council the two were selling milk from sources not approved by ordinance. At the same time he approved Slade’s dairy milk. The inspector added that the two wanted a hearing to see if some means cannot be devised for them to sell their milk under the present ordinance. .
“Dr. Albert S. Lathrop is chairman of the committee, the other members being Dr. Jose Maldonado and Frank S. Ortiz. Representatives of the state health department also were expected to attend.”

The second count complains of another publication in said newspaper in its issue of December 3, 1946, reading as follows:

“Officials Find No Remedy For Milk Problem
“Watta headache for old Santa Fe and from milk at that.
“Should distributors be allowed to continue to label Grade ‘C’ milk as Grade ‘A’? Or should the city insist on strict compliance with the milk ordinance and risk a shortage?
“Dr. Albert S. Lathrop, chairman of the city council’s sanitation committee, put the questions before a meeting of a score or more of distributors and producers, city, district and state health authorities late Monday afternoon at the county courthouse. At the end of two hours, he stated he had not found a satisfactory answer.
“Santa Fe has 'been getting milk from both approved and unapproved dairies, the physician said. Some of the latter, he added, are in Colorado which does not require the Bang’s test. In the war years, to avert a milk famine, the city eased up on its standards, permitting the Grade ‘A’ labeling of the pasteurized product of all sources. This condition still prevails.
“ ‘The public had no way of telling what kind of milk it is getting,’ said Doctor Lathrop. ‘There should be some means of differentiating between the grades, by the price or in some other way. It may be that the thing to do is to cut off unapproved milk and face a shortage. As yet I don’t know what to do. I wanted help on this particular problem — that’s the purpose of this meeting — and I’m not getting it.’
“Shenk Estimates Shortage.
“Norman Shenk estimated the shortage would be 4000 quarts daily. ‘Grade .“C” labels are not obtainable at this time,’ Shenk said. He thought they might be available in six to eight months.
“Dr. James R. Scott, state health officer, said his department’s only interest in the local situation was to see the milk labelled correctly. The barriers had been down for several years. There had to be án end to this sometime — just when was the city’s problem.
“Shenk, putting himself on record for improving the supply, suggested setting a deadline, for strict enforcement, say next Sept. 1. His distributing plant didn’t require it, he said, but he believed the producers should be allowed a reasonable time to put their dairies in- shape. Just now, he added, they were not. making money; they were dependent upon the grass in the summer to tide them over.
“Shenk suggested revision of the ordinance to bring it ‘up to date and into-conformity with U.S. public health service standards.’ That, Lathrop said, was a matter -of future policy; had no-relevancy to the current problem. The Shenk program calls for a $3000 full-time city milk inspector with a $75 monthly mileage allowance. He would be non-political, accountable jointly to the city council and to the district health -officer.
“An Appeal Board
“There should be an appeal board consisting of the district health officer, state milk sanitarian and medical doctor, preferably an alderman. Any producer or distributor would have the right of appeal from inspector’s decisions.
• “Any violators would have two weeks within which to correct conditions condemned by the inspector.
• “Under Shenk’s set-up, the district and state milk sanitarians and the USPHS specialists would act merely in an advisory capacity to check the inspector’s work.
“At the opening of the meeting, Shenk and Curtis Williams (Brunk’s) kicked the old milkpail around a bit. They felt an injustice has been done them and they had been libeled in Dr. S. W. Wiest’s recently-published report as city milk inspector. The report approved Slade’s dairy; but said that Shenk’s and Brunk’s should not be allowed to use the Grade ‘A’ label ‘if they continue to bring in milk that is not approved by the city ordinance.’
“The report, Shenk said, might lead people to believe ‘We’re just a couple of so-and-sos. He thought his plant and Brunk’s were entitled to a ‘public retraction.’
“Shenk favored the appointment of a committee to go over the records in the district health office ‘to see just who the Grade “A” producers and distributors are.’ That didn’t come within his authority, Lathrop said.
“ T think it is unfair to say that anybody had Grade “A” milk unless the records prove it,’ Shenk said. He '■doubted if all of Slade’s producers were Grade ‘A’.
“Dr. Lathrop picked up William’s charge that the district health officer, Dr. Horry Payne, had not authorized the Wiest report.

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Bluebook (online)
246 P.2d 206, 56 N.M. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-rico-co-v-new-mexican-inc-nm-1952.