Enterprise Co. v. Ellis

98 S.W.2d 452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1936
DocketNo. 2903.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 452 (Enterprise Co. v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enterprise Co. v. Ellis, 98 S.W.2d 452 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Suit by appellee against appellant for damages for an alleged libel growing out of a publication appearing in the Beaumont Journal, a daily newspaper published and circulated by appellant on December 18, 1933. Appellee’s petition set out the publication complained of in haec verba, which reads:

“Pet Goose Lost For Two Days Found , In Oven.”
“How a goose was reported lost by its owner for two days then to be found by two Beaumont detectives calmly sitting in an oven of the owner’s stove was officially reported at police Headquarters Sunday.
“Mrs. J. O. Ellis, 1408 Forsythe street, the owner, reported to police that someone had stolen her pet goose from her front yard on December 14. She was very much worried and wanted to know if the police couldn’t do something about it.
“Detective Henry Thomas and Demmie Hayes, two of the city’s expert crime detectors, were assigned to the case.
“They searched high and low and even questioned neighbors about the theft but no goose had apparently disappeared in thin air.
“The officers began search of the house. Pet geese, they said, had a way about them of wobbling into unexpected places.
“One of the officers opened the stove. There sat the goose, and the fowl meekly but with loud squaks, limped from the oven to the floor while the astonished owner looked on in amazement, for on two different occasions fires had been built in the stove and the bird had survived.”

Appellee alleged that at the time said publication was made she was a widow about seventy years of age, highly venerated, respected, honest, upright, and honorable, and enjoyed the esteem and respect of her neighbors, and that by reason of and as a direct and proximate result of the publication and the circulation of same, she was ruined in her good name and her reputation, and that her integrity had been questioned, and that she had become an object of jest and ridicule and her mentality questioned, by reason of all which as the direct and proximate result of said publication she had suffered damages in the sum_ of $10,000. Her petition contained many and repeated allegations as to the falsity of the matter published, excepting only that she was the owner of the goose and that same had been stolen, and that the falsity of said publication was known by appellant, but was purposely and deliberately made, and set out in various ways how and why the matter stated in the publication constituted a libel on her, causing her great anger, shame, humiliation, and loss of respect of her former friends and neighbors, and the holding of her up to public ridicule and shame, and causing her *454 mentality to be questioned, and she a jest to the public, to her great mental suffering and humiliation.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, several special exceptions, a general denial, and set up its good faith in uttering said publication, and specially answered, as evidence of its good faith and lack of ill will towards appellee, that a day or so after the alleged libelous article was published, it published in its said paper in the same character of type as was used in the original publication, the two following articles:

(1) “Negro Is Held In Theft Of Goose Discovered in Oven”
“A Beaumont negro was held by police Tuesday on five charges of chicken theft following his arrest at his residence in the 400 block Crockett street at which time officers found a goose secreted in a cook stove, the fowl having been stolen from Mrs. J. O. Ellis, 1408 Forsythe street.
“Mrs. Ellis reported that the goose had disappeared from her back yard December 14, two days later police arrested the negro and found the goose, alive, in the negro’s stove.
“The goose was not found on the Ellis premises as erroneously reported.
“Charges are to be filed against the negro Tuesday, according to police.”

(2) “A goose stolen from Mrs. J. O. Ellis, 1408 Forsythe street, several days ago was found by Demmie Hayes and Henry Thomas, city detectives, hidden in an unused stove in the 400 block of For-sythe street. It is believed that the goose was stolen by a negro living nearby who was arrested for chicken theft Saturday.”

The cause was tried to a jury 'upon special issues, which were answered in ap-pellee’s favor, and upon which answers judgment was rendered for appellee in the sum of $2,000. Motion for a new trial was overruled, hence this appeal.

The facts are that Mrs. J. O. Ellis, an elderly widow lady sixty-eight years of age, resided at 1408 Forsythe street in the city of Beaumont, and was the. owner of a much prized pet goose. It disappeared about the time mentioned in the alleged libelous publication. She was worried over the loss of her goose, but made no search nor inquiry in her vicinity for the goose. Her daughter, who worked at the city hall in Beaumont, and who in going to work passed the police station, mentioned to the police that the goose had disappeared the night before, and as they were then investigating the theft of some chickens in said vicinity requested that they also watch for the goose. Two members of the city detective force were already investigating the chicken thefts, and in searching for the missing chickens and the person who stole them, they arrested a negro who confessed stealing the chickens and admitted stealing the goose, and showed the officers where he had hidden it. It was in an old cast off stove in a back alley, and when he showed it to the officers they took the goose and returned it to Mrs. Ellis. She had not made any request of the police as to the goose, nor of any one, and was not aware that her daughter had mentioned the matter to the police until afterward. A reporter for the paper prepared the article complained of and it was published. Later, finding that the matters stated in the first publication were not true, other than that Mrs. Ellis owned a goose and that it had been stolen, and restored to her by the city officers, appellant published the last two articles set out above by way of correction. Mrs. Ellis did not at any time communicate with the publishers of the paper, nor did they communicate with her.

Mrs. 'Ellis testified that she had been living in Beaumont and the neighborhood where the' matter occurred for some thirty-two years, and enjoyed the confidence and respect of her neighbors and the general public. That she was greatly angered and suffered great mental anguish and humiliation and shame because of the matters stated in the publication, as it would cause her friends, neighbors, and the general public to lose confidence in her and to think she was untruthful because of the statements she was purported to have made to the police officers, and that she was mentally unbalanced, and that because of such publication she had become the jest of the community and an object of ridicule in the mind of the public, and that she had lost her mind and was crazy, by reason of all of which she suffered injury to her reputation, and great mental worry, shame, and humiliation.

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98 S.W.2d 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enterprise-co-v-ellis-texapp-1936.