Enterprise Co. v. Wheat

290 S.W. 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 1300.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 212 (Enterprise Co. v. Wheat) 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. Wheat, 290 S.W. 212 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

‘ This suit was filed by the appellee, Allen WTieat, against appellant, the Enterprise Company, in the district court of Liberty county, to recover damages, both aqtual and exemplary, because of the publication by appellant in its newspaper, the Beaumont Daily Enterprise, an alleged libelous article of and concerning appellee as a man and citizen and public official. Appellee alleged, in substance, that the article complained of tended to injure his reputation and to expose him to public hatred, contempt, and ridicule, and to injure him financially, and to impeach his honesty, integrity, and virtue, both as a private citizen and as a public official. He further alleged, in substance, that the .article complained of was false and was wrongfully and maliciously published by appellant, .with intent to injure him in his reputation and good name, and to expose him to public ridicule and condemnation, and to injure him financially and politically, and that the publication of the article had that effect on him, both as a private citizen and a public official. He laid his actual damages at $35,000, and prayed for exemplary damages for $10,000.

The article published by appellant, which is made the basis of this suit, appeared in *214 the Beaumont Enterprise on the morning of the 24th of February, 1923, and the material portions of the article, including the headlines thereof, as well as the body, were as follows:

“Severed Plead of Slain Woman Placed At Cell Of Defendant Brings Acquittal In Murder Case.
“Sam Boyd Pound Not Guilty After Trial At Liberty.
“Jury Deliberated Only 25 Minutes after Hear- ' ing of Methods Used to Force Admission of Guilt.
“By Gus A. Fiasdick, Staff Correspondent.
“Liberty, Texas, February 23—
“The head of Annie McShane, 21 years old, who was murdered on June 14, severed from her body and placed on a pedestal in front of Sam Boyd’s cell in the county jail here, where he was awaiting trial for the murder, was believed to be responsible for the acquittal today.
“The jury returned a verdict of ‘Not guilty’’ at 9:35 o’clock tonight, after 25 minutes’ deliberation at the'conclusion of a trial lasting two days, during which details of one of the most gruesome murders in the history of east Texas were brought forth. * * *
“Woman’s Head on Pedestal.
“In what is believed to have been an effort to break down Boyd’s will, a pedestal was erected in front of his cell window at the county jail upon which the head of Annie McShane and blood-stained middy blouse, which she wore at the time of the murder, was placed one day early in January. This was made known during the questioning of Sheriff Allen AVheat early this morning. Sheriff AVheat was not permitted to tell why the woman’s head had been placed there and he was asked as to who did it.
“The case went to the -jury at 9:30 p. m., after 26 witnesses had been heard and spirited arguments offered by both counsel for the state and for the .defense. Hearing of testimony was concluded at 5:20 p. m., immediately after which Roy Pitts, county attorney of Polk county, who assisted" in the prosecution in the absence of County Attorney P. C. Mathews, of Liberty, who is ill, addressed the jury.
“Mr. Pitts talked for nearly an hour. He pointed out that the case was not one of ‘an in-between nature,’ and that only acquittal or conviction with the death penalty could be returned.
“Defense Sums Up.
“After Mr. Pitts’ address which consumed 55 minutes, court recessed for supper. At 6:45 the hearing was resumed and F. O. Fuller of Houston, defense counsel, took the floor. Mr. Fuller spoke for 1 hour and 10 minutes and his address was one brilliant oratory. * * ⅜
“Mr. Fuller was followed by District Attorney Chap Cain, who conducted the prosecution.
* * * At 9:30 o’clock Mr. Cain concluded his talk and,the case went to the jury.
“An early verdict was apparently expected. Court attaches as well as spectators remained in their seats, and after 25 minutes a deputy sheriff announced that the jury had reached a verdict.
“Presents Hideous Sight.
“The head represented a hideous sight there before the barred window. It was placed there early one day in January and left standing until a few hours before the trial begun.
“The head was hardly more than a skull. The flesh which had not already fallen away had been scraped off and the bone itself washed. Sheriff AVheat was not asked as to who exhumed the head and placed it before Boyd’s cell, or to what became of it afterwards.”

Other portions of the article than that above quoted are entirely immaterial to-any question before us, and will not be stated.

Though counsel for appellant present in their brief assignments of error challenging the action of the trial court in overruling several special exceptions attacking appellee’s petition, and ordinarily it would' be necessary in disposing of them to let the opinion show the pleading attacked, yet, since we have concluded that the appeal should be disposed of on the merits of the case, we shall not make any statement at length of appellee’s pleading. Suffice it to say that appellee’s petition contains all the usual and necessary allegations for a recovery of damages in a suit of this character. The meaning of the statements in the published article complained of, the petition undertakes to explain by innuendo, and this will sufficiently appear in our discussion of the questions involved.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, a number of special exceptions, general and special denial of each and all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, and then alleged that the publication complained of was privileged, in that the same was the report of a trial being had in the administration of justice in a court of justice, in which the general public 'was interested, and touching matters concerning the acts of a public officer; that the published article was a matter of public concern, published for general information, and that same was a reasonable and fair comment or criticism of the official acts of appellee, as sheriff of Liberty county; that all of the matters contained in the publication ’complained of were true, and that if not true, they were believed by appellant to be true at the time of the publication, and that, if not fully privileged, all of the article was conditionally or qualifiedly privileged, and it was not maliciously publish- • ed, or made with malice, wrongful intent, or with any intent whatever to injure ap-pellee, either personally or in his reputation as sheriff.

The case was tried with a jury and was submitted u-pon special issues. The trial court, after1 defining libel as defined by our statute, in so far as applicable to the facts *215

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enterprise-co-v-wheat-texapp-1926.