Findley v. Wilson

1925 OK 805, 242 P. 565, 115 Okla. 280, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 330
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
Docket12829
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 805 (Findley v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Findley v. Wilson, 1925 OK 805, 242 P. 565, 115 Okla. 280, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 330 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

The parties herein will be designated as -they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff’s action was first brought against W. M. Findley and Mrs. W. M. Findley, but was afterwards dismissed as to Mrs. Findley. Petition alleges plaintiff was executive secretary of the Chamber of Commerce of the city of Pauls Valley, Garvin county, Okla., and was well known in said city, county, and state. That on May 9, 1920, plaintiff, with his wife, Lueile Wilson, a Mr. Nordin, and a young lady, drove from Pauls Valley to Sulphur, Okla., and on their return in the evening of the same day, and on account of heavy rains and the condition of the roads, they could not proceed further than Davis, Okla., where they were directed to the hotel kept by defendant, where they registered, plaintiff registering for himself and wife, Mrs. G. W. Wilson, Nordin, and the young lady each registering separately, and plaintiff requested the two men be assigned to one room, and Mrs. Wilson and the young lady friend assigned to a separate room. That after they had been assigned to their rooms, Mrs. Findley came up and ordered them out of the house, telling plaintiff and his wife they were not married; that they were “trash” and a bunch of whores: that she wasn’t running *281 a whore house; that men were going to the.women “like dogs to a slut.” That defendant came to the room in which they were seated, and after a conference with his wife at the end of the hallway, defendant returned and used the same language ascribed to Mrs. Findley, and called the town marshal, repeated the language to him, and ordered the arrest of the parties. They were not arrested, but the officer directed them to another hotel across the street, where they spent the night. That in the morning, defendant continued to make these statements to W. L. Tuck, the town marshal', and to Charley Lyons, Dave Slaughter, Bob MeOargo, andi Hon. F. W. Fagan, and to divers and sundry persons to plaintiff unknown. Plaintiff alleges actual damages to his business name and reputation, and prays damages, and because of the false, willful and malicious acts, prays exemplary damages.

Both defendants filed a demurrer to the petition, alleging several causes of action were improperly joined, and the defendants are sued as joint tort-feasors, and that the petition shows on its face that plaintiff’s causes of action are separate. Defendant states in his brief that this is now a moot question, plaintiff having dismissed as to Mrs. Findley. Mrs. Findley, however, filed her answer, admitting 6. W. Wilson and Mrs. Wilson, J. E. Nordin, and Miss Amia Lee Ferris, now Mrs. J. E. Nordin, registered at the hotel, as described, and admits she got into a controversy with members of the party over what she at that time thought was suspicious conduct on the part of one of the party, and “while in anger she may have spoken harshly to the plaintiff and sincerely regrets the same, and offers her apology.” That she did not then, and does not now, know anything derogatory to the character of the plaintiff.

Defendant W. M. Findley filed a general denial, and further admits the'parties registered at the hotel, as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, denied he threatened to have them arrested,-or called Officer Tuck. That so far as his personal knowledge goes, all the parties, including plaintiff, are of the highest character and integrity, and conducted themselves “properly and legally while in the hotel.” That he was asleep when his wife got-into the controversy with the party, and he tried to bring about an amicable adjustment and settlement.

On May 12. 1921, the cause' was called for hearing and the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff fixing' his actual damages at $500. and awarding' him $400' exemplary or punitive damages, and; defendant appeals and assigns as error: “First. The court erred in overruling objections of plaintiff in error to the introduction of any evidence on the; part of defendant in error.” Defendant did not demur to the petition on the ground that the facts therein set forth did not constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff fend .aglainst ,the dje^endant, and an examination of the petition discloses it was sufficient as against demurrer, and charged the defendant with using language which, in the absence of proof of its truth, was in the highest degree slanderous per se, and the petition further alleged its falsify, and that the same was uttered willfully and maliciously, and both actual and punitive damages are properly alleged, and the court committed no error in overruling the • objections to the introduction of evidence on the part of the plaintiff. The defendant’s brief on this point is confined exclusively to the citation of authorities holding the husband cannot maintain an action in his own name for slanderous or libelous publications directed against his wife, but we are not called on to pass upon this question, as the petition specifically alleges the language was applied to plaintiff, and, in effect, did mean and was intended to convey the impression that plaintiff -was guilty of pandering: that is, of soliciting men to come to his wife’s room for the purpose of having sexual intercourse with the wife, and that plaintiff was conducting a “whore house” in his rooms with his wife as one of the whores,\ and plaintiff was permitting men to “go to the women like dlogs to a slut,” for the purpose of sexual intercourse and no authority is cited, and we know of none, and trust we will never read one, wherein a husband is not permitted to introduce evidence of the use of such language applied to him and his wife when he files a proper petition for damages for slander.

Defendant assigns,as error the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence.

W. L. Tuck, the city marshal of the town of Davis, testified defendant did call him to the hotel on the night in question; found all the parties in the lobby of the hotel: that defendant said, “We are having hell here.” “These parties (plaintiff and his wife,— Nordin and the young lady, afterwards Mrs. Nordin) are stopping here and my wife claims she caught men going to them like dogs to a slut, and we want, them taken somewhere.” And that Mrs. Findley, in the presence of her husband and all the plaintiff’s party, vised' the" same language, and said the men were going in the room in *282 the manner described and she wanted them taken to jail. Tuck further testified that these expressions were used in the presence of others in the lobby, who were at the top of the stairs looking down into .the lobby; that Findley was “mad” and swore and used the words “God damn her”; that Findley said they (Mr. and Mrs. Wilson) claimed they were man and wife, “but they wasn’t any such thing.” Tuck refused to arrest them, as he had so many complaints from that hotel that would not stand up in court, and -refused to make the arrest unless the Findleys swore to a complaint. He did take the plaintiff and his party from the hotel at the request of the Findleys, but directed them to a hotel across the street. That the Findleys kept repeating the charges over and over, and attacked the character of the plaintiff and all his party, and repeated it two or three times the next day when Tuck visited the hotel.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 805, 242 P. 565, 115 Okla. 280, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/findley-v-wilson-okla-1925.