Driscoll v. Block

210 N.E.2d 899, 3 Ohio App. 2d 351, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 506, 1965 Ohio App. LEXIS 556
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 1965
Docket5919
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 210 N.E.2d 899 (Driscoll v. Block) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driscoll v. Block, 210 N.E.2d 899, 3 Ohio App. 2d 351, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 506, 1965 Ohio App. LEXIS 556 (Ohio Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

Skeel, J.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law from a judgment entered for the plaintiff on the verdict of a jury in the Court of Common Pleas of Lucas County. The plaintiff, during the time encompassed in his petition, was a Judge of the Municipal Court of the city of Toledo, Ohio, and was then a candidate for election to succeed himself, he having been appointed to fill an un-expired term. The defendant, Toledo Blade Co., an Ohio corporation, was the publisher of two newspapers of general circulation in Toledo and extending beyond the city, it being alleged that it has some international circulation. The defendant, Paul Block, Jr., is President of the Toledo Blade Co. The claims against Paul Block, Jr., will be omitted for the reason that upon motion at the end of plaintiff’s case he was dismissed from the action. The action is one seeking damages for alleged libels published in the newspapers of the defendant, Toledo Blade Co.

The plaintiff’s second amended petition presents three causes of action, each cause of action being based on a separate article or designated advertisement concerning the plaintiff with respect to his conduct as a Municipal Judge. The first cause of action recites the substance of an editorial in the Toledo Times, one of the newspapers published by Toledo Blade Co., dated November 2, 1961, which, after reciting that the Municipal Court of Toledo is the court where most Toledoans get their impression of “American Jurisprudence” and for that reason “* * * Municipal Court judges above all must possess qualities of tolerance and humane understanding as well as a technical knowledge of the law, ’ ’ further states:

“No one can question Judge William D. Driscoll’s fine technical knowledge of the law. He has a deep passion for constitutional rights and a fierce zeal for defending them. But unfortunately his regard for the majesty of the law does not appear to have anything to do with human beings.
“It is difficult to imagine how anyone could stir up so *353 much needless unpleasantness in less than two years' than Judge Driscoll has since his appointment to the bench. Over a flimsy technicality he tried to set aside a practice of seven years standing by which some 1,200 to 1,500 Toledoans a month conveniently could pay off minor traffic fines without going to court. On three occasions he imposed Workhouse sentences when none were provided by law. Once he had arrested, booked and fingerprinted a prospective woman juror who, through a misunderstanding, failed to show up for duty — only to excuse her in the end. Another woman juror was ordered brought to the courtroom from her sickbed, on a stretcher. He once insisted that a juror swear under oath that his father, in fact, had just died. And there was that remarkable period during which Judge Driscoll erroneously concluded that the city ordinance covering drunk driving penalties was unconstitutional, and refused to pass on 45 cases until the Supreme Court overruled him.
“In all of this Judge Driscoll’s legal motives were of the highest. But his methods of executing them were extreme, brutal and unnecessary. For that reason, the Times recommends that Robert R. Foster be elected to the Municipal Court bench in his place.”

This cause of action charges that defendant “intentionally, deliberately, maliciously and with the purpose of defaming the plaintiff published misleading and false statements concerning the plaintiff,” referring to the substance of the foregoing editorial. The balance of the allegations of the first cause of action, the plaintiff improperly pleads evidence to explain and justify his conduct with respect to the matters upon which the editorial was based.

The second cause of action is based on a political advertise^ment dated November 5, 1961, appearing in the Toledo Blade of that date, headed: “The Case of the People Against Judge Driscoll. ’ ’ This advertisement, in part, stated:

“Justice may well have blushed behind her blindfold when Judge William Driscoll mounted the municipal bench.
“For rarely has a man so quickly demonstrated a lack of judicial temperament.
“As The-Blade put it in an editorial: ‘Right from the! start, he pushed aside any pretense of letting compassion or good judgment color his‘approach to meting-out justice, as he sees *354 it. Ignoring helpful suggestions by veteran court officers, to whom he occasionally delivered an impromptu tongue lashing, Judge Driscoll found himself hoisted by his own petard three times within a month. And in each case, where he had stubbornly proceeded to hand down Workhouse sentences where none was called for by law, he had to back down and vacate them.
‘ ‘ Complete
‘ ‘Unreasonableness
“ ‘And last week, he provided two more demonstrations of his complete unreasonableness in his treatment of two prospective women jurors. In one instance, he ordered police to haul one woman into court like a common criminal, only to excuse her from jury duty after she reminded him — as he well knew — that she was leaving on vacation. Three days later, in an even more flagrant example of his mulishness, the judge ordered a woman taken from her bed where she had been confined in traction since an auto accident, helped into his august presence in the courtroom, whereupon he finally released her from jury duty.’
“The cases mentioned by The Blade were not the only examples of his high-handed handling of citizens called as jurors. In another case, he insisted that a man take an oath that his father-in-law had passed away the previous day before he would excuse him from jury duty. Death in the family, said Judge Driscoll, was not sufficient reason to be excused from jury duty.
“Who’s Out op Step?
“And, like the Army rookie who insisted everybody else was out of step, Judge Driscoll decided the city ordinance covering drunk driving cases was unconstitutional. It made no difference to him that his four fellow judges did not agree. While they disposed of cases as in the past, he dismissed some and deferred others. When the State Supreme Court finally set him right nearly a year later, there were 45 of his cases to be cleared up.”

The petition then states that the statements, and particularly the quotations therein, “are slanted, distorted, over emphasized, misleading, false and defamatory.” It is stated that defendant knew that such statements were untrue and pub *355 lished in a spirit of cool, calculated malice with intent to grievously harm the plaintiff and to promote their mercenary interests and by such editorial to show that plaintiff was grossly unfit for judicial office and intending to bring plaintiff into hatred, contempt, ridicule and scorn of the general public, impairing his reputation as a lawyer and judge, causing him embarrassment, humiliation and distress of mind, and causing him loss of income.

The third cause of action is based on an advertisement published in the Toledo Blade, Sunday, November 5, 1961.

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Bluebook (online)
210 N.E.2d 899, 3 Ohio App. 2d 351, 32 Ohio Op. 2d 506, 1965 Ohio App. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-block-ohioctapp-1965.