Dugan v. State

34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 463
CourtHamilton Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 463 (Dugan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dugan v. State, 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 463 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

BY THE COURT.

The facts briefly stated are as follows:

On October 31,1914, the Juvenile Protective Association, by its president, Frank H. Nelson, brought an action for injunction and damages in the superior court of Cincinnati against Millard F. Roebling, who at that time was a candidate for the office of judge of the court of domestic relations. The Juvenile Protective Association, whose object is indicated by its name and whose purposes were closely allied with the duties and functions of the court of domestic relations, had endorsed for judge of that court the opponent of Mr. Roebling, and had issued a circular for public distribution, which, while not mentioning the name of the candidate so endorsed by said association, called upon the electors to carefully consider the qualifications and fitness of the respective candidates and cast their ballots for the man best qualified for the position. A very short time after the appearance of said circular or pamphlet, another pamphlet was circulated purporting to be issued by the Juvenile Protective Association, the greater part of which adopted the language of the original circular. This latter circular concluded with the endorsement of Millard F. Roebling for the position of judge of the court of domestic relations.

[464]*464The petition of the Juvenile Protective Association in the case against Roebling above referred to set forth the above facts and charged that said circular representing the Juvenile Protective Association as endorsing Mr. Roebling for judge was a misrepresentation and a fraud wholly unauthorized by said association and intended to place said association in a false and unenviable attitude, etc. That case was partially heard' before one of the judges of the superior court on the day before the election, when it was shown that the spurious or bogus circular was printed at the printing establishment conducted by Mr. Henry S. Rosenthal. And it therefore became important in the conduct of the case and in order to render a correct judgment therein to ascertain who authorized the printing and distribution of said bogus circular. To this end during the progress of the ease Mr. Henry Rosenthal was called as a witness.

It is only necessary, in order to understand the nature of the ease under consideration, to further state that on account of alleged evasive and false answers given by Mr. Rosenthal at said time, and after a lengthy and fruitless examination, the judge presiding found that the witness Rosenthal was concealing the truth and in effect refusing to testify; that his conduct in the presence of the court was an obstruction to the administration of justice and, under the authority of Sec. 12136, G. C., adjudged the witness Rosenthal guilty of contempt of court.

This took place on November 6, 1914. On the same day Rosenthal instituted a suit in habeas corpus in the court of common pleas of Hamilton county, which was heard and finally determined on November 25, 1914.

We deem it necessary to give this short history of the Rosenthal matter in order that the charge against Dugan and the ground of this decision may be fully understood, and we now come to the part that Dugan took in the matter which led to the formal charges of contempt filed against him by a committee of the bar appointed'for that purpose.

It appears that late in December, Dugan as correspondent for a periodical known as the Typographical Journal, which is said to be the official paper of the International Typographical Union of North America, wrote an article to that journal which [465]*465was printed in its January, 1915, number. This article or contribution of Dugan occupied several columns of the journal and consisted of items of news supposed to be of interest to printers. In one of these items Mr. Dugan entered into a lengthy and somewhat animated defense of Mr. Rosenthal, with reference particularly to the trouble which arose in the Printers’ Union No. 3 over the taking away from Rosenthal and his establishment of the union label for the alleged offense of printing the spurious circular above referred to and the use of the label thereon without the number of said label.

It will be borne in mind that at the time of the writing of the article, and a long time before its publication, the contempt proceedings against Rosenthal had ended, and that the habeas corpus proceedings growing out of the adjudication of that case had terminated. It was language used by Dugan at this time which was made the basis of the charge of contempt against him. On page 68 of the Typographical Journal Dugan wrote:

“During the discussion of the case at the last meeting of No. 3 it was plainly shown that a member of No. 3, an officer of the allied council, had visited the homes of members working in the Rosenthal office trying to secure evidence from these members to assist in convicting the president of the Rosenthal plant in an action that was then on in Hamilton county courts. When the proprietor of this shop was on trial this member of No. 3 and an officer of the allied council sat on the bench with the judge prompting him and coaching him as to how to proceed against Mr. Rosenthal. ”

To the charges of contempt Mr. Dugan filed an answer containing three separate defenses:

The first defense was in effect a denial that said article or any part of portion thereof insulted, villified or intimidated the judge, or had a tendency so to do; he denies that it inflamed or had a tendency to inflame the prejudices of the people, etc.

The second defense was briefly stated in the answer and we quote it in full:

“This defendant adopts and makes part hereof all and singular the allegations stated in the first defense, and says that the proceedings referred to in said publication were, at the time the same was written and published in said journal, wholly con-[466]*466eluded and terminated and that neither said article, nor anything therein contained obstructed or tended to obstruct in any manner the administration of justice in the proceeding in which Henry Rosenthal was tried for contempt.”

And in the third defense Dugan states that his only object in writing and publishing said article was to inform the printing craft of the trial of Henry Rosenthal and the charges made against him and the subsequent removing and taking away the union label from the firm of Rosenthal & Co. He further states that in writing and publishing said article he did the same in good faith without any intention, purpose, thought, design or desire to embarrass or obstruct the process of the court in the proceedings against Henry Rosenthal or in the suit of the Juvenile Protective Association v. Roebling, 26 Dec. 219 (18 N. S. 385), and now disclaims any intention or thought of disrespect or imputing corrupt or improper motives to said judge or court or any of its officers, or questioning its integrity or interrupting, embarrassing or in any manner obstructing the administration of justice therein.

A review of the evidence adduced in the court below shows that the defendant utterly failed to prove his first and third defenses. It was shown by the evidence in the ease that the portion of the article quoted above, in which it is stated that someone sat by the judge during the trial and coached him, was absolutely unfounded, and that there was no justification whatever for the publication in anything that Mr. Dugan had seen or heard.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugan-v-state-ohcircthamilton-1915.