FAIRBANKS PUBLISHING COMPANY v. Pitka

445 P.2d 685, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 179
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1968
Docket910
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 445 P.2d 685 (FAIRBANKS PUBLISHING COMPANY v. Pitka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FAIRBANKS PUBLISHING COMPANY v. Pitka, 445 P.2d 685, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 179 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

DIMOND, Justice.

This is a libel action arising from certain publications in appellant’s newspaper, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. In 1961 a jury returned a verdict in appellee’s favor for $6,000 compensatory damages, and $19,-’ 000 punitive damages. On appeal we reversed and remanded for a new trial. We held that the trial court had erred in failing to give an instruction on truth as a defense, in giving certain instructions on actual malice and punitive damages, and in stating that a publication made in 1958 was libelous in itself. 1 On remand the parties stipulated to waive a jury and to submit the case to the court on the transcript and evidence from the previous trial. The trial judge made findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment in appellee’s favor, awarding her damages in the amount of $15,000. This second appeal followed.

Appellee was a school teacher at North Pole, Alaska, a small community not far from the City of Fairbanks. In August 1957 she resigned her position, and then a few days later withdrew the resignation with consent of the North Pole School Board. On October 7, 1957, she wrote to the board stating that she wished to resign “effective in thirty days from this date”. The minutes of a board meeting held the next day reflect a controversy regarding the effective date of termination of employment. The board wanted appellee to leave her position forthwith, whereas she insisted on completing the thirty days stated in her written resignation.

Appellee presumably continued teaching for the next ten days. Then on October 18 she received a letter from the board advising her of a meeting held that day at which a motion had been made and seconded “to relieve you of your duties as head teacher and teacher as of October 18, 1957”. 2 Apparently appellee ignored this notice of termination, for on October *687 21, 1957, she was handed another letter from the board. This time she was advised not to enter upon the school property under penalty of a complaint being made with “law enforcing agencies to restrict you from doing so”. 3 She was also told at that time by the board president, Lowell Jenkins, that if she went into the school she would be arrested. She nevertheless entered the school. Jenkins followed her in and again asked her to leave. When she refused, he arrested her for disturbing the peace 4 and took her before the deputy magistrate at North Pole where she was given an “arrest ticket” for “disturbing the peace”. 5

While appellee was at the magistrate’s office she had an extended discussion with a reporter from the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. That evening the paper carried a front page article regarding appellee’s difficulties with the school board. There was a banner headline — “NORTH POLE TEACHER FIGHTS BOARD” — followed by sub-headlines reading as follows:

Territorial Police Called to Expel Fired Schoolmarm. Dispute at Outlying Community Finds Teacher Defying School Board; She Is Arrested for Disorderly Conduct.

These were the words which appellee claimed were false, malicious and defamatory, and upon which she based this libel action. 6

The trial judge found that the foregoing publication was libelous in itself, since it had a natural tendency to diminish the esteem in which appellee was held and to result in a lack of confidence in her professional competence. This is what we had held on the first appeal. 7 The trial judge also found that all the statements of fact contained in the publication were false. The question that we must first decide is whether this finding of fact is clearly erroneous. 8

Findings of fact in a judge-tried case are not to be lightly disturbed. The reason is that the trial judge, who has seen and heard the testimony, is in a better position to judge the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be attached to their testimony than an appellate court reviewing a printed record. 9 That is why we have held in a number of instances that clear error is not shown unless we are left with the definite and firm conviction *688 on the entire record that a trial judge’s finding of fact was a mistake. 10

It is unnecessary to pay such deference to the trial judge’s findings where he has not seen and heard the witnesses. That is the situation here. The trial judge based his findings of fact on a review of the written transcript of the testimony at the first trial. We are reviewing the same transcript, and are in as good a position as the trial judge to determine issues of fact. 11

The trial judge found to be false the statement made by appellant in its newspaper that appellee was engaged in a fight with her employer, that the police were called to expel her, and that she was arrested for disorderly conduct. We disagree with this finding, and have decided on the evidence that the statement is substantially true.

As we pointed out in our decision on the first appeal, 12 appellee’s insistence on continuing her teaching job after being told she had been relieved of her duties and was no longer permitted to enter upon school property could legitimately be characterized as a “fight” with the school board and an act of defiance of the board’s decision. The statement that appellee had been arrested for disorderly conduct could be justified by proof that she had been arrested for the specific offense of “disturbing the peace” which, according to the terms of the North Pole ordinance, was included in the definition of “disorderly conduct”. 13 The statement “territorial police called to expel fired schoolmarm” was erroneous. The police were not called for that purpose, but instead had been summoned by appellee because she thought she needed their protection. But she was actually expelled from the school when arrested by Jenkins who, among other things, was a North Pole police officer. Thus, the reported purpose for which the territorial police were called could be considered an immaterial variance from the literal truth. It is not necessary to prove the literal truth of the precise statement made. Slight inaccuracies of expression are immaterial provided that the defamatory charge is true in substance. 14

What is left, then, in the 1957 publication is a statement that appellee had been “fired” as a school teacher. We held on the first appeal that the combination of statements as to appellee being engaged in a fight with her employer, being expelled by the police, and being arrested for disorderly conduct, together with the allegation as to her being fired, was defamatory in itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
445 P.2d 685, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairbanks-publishing-company-v-pitka-alaska-1968.