Gaffney v. Scott Publishing Co.

212 P.2d 817, 35 Wash. 2d 272, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 333
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 30989.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 212 P.2d 817 (Gaffney v. Scott Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaffney v. Scott Publishing Co., 212 P.2d 817, 35 Wash. 2d 272, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 333 (Wash. 1949).

Opinion

*273 Grady, J.

This is a civil action for libel brought against Scott Publishing Company, a corporation, and its editor and his wife. A demurrer was interposed to the complaint and sustained. The plaintiff refused to plead further, and judgment was entered dismissing the action. This appeal followed. We shall refer to the defendants collectively as respondent.

The complaint, by two causes of action, alleges in substance that the respondent is engaged in publishing a newspaper called the Tri-City Herald at Pasco, Franklin county, Washington; that the appellant is a licensed attorney at law in the state of Washington, and is also the prosecuting attorney of Franklin county; that on December 26, 1947, and February 25, 1948, the respondent published articles concerning appellant in his capacity and profession as an attorney at law and as the prosecuting attorney of Franklin county; that these articles were false and defamatory, and were published maliciously with knowledge of their falsity, to expose appellant to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or obloquy, or to deprive appellant of the benefit of public confidence or social intercourse, and to injure appellant in his business or occupation; that these articles impute to the appellant, in his character as prosecuting attorney, either (a) incapacity in such position, or (b) fraud, dishonesty, misconduct, or want of integrity to act in his official capacity as prosecuting attorney; and that publication of the articles has been and is greatly injurious and prejudicial to the appellant and his reputation, and has injured him in his profession and business to the extent of seven thousand five hundred dollars as to each of the articles.

The articles complained of are set out in full as exhibits attached to the complaint. The portions relied upon by appellant in his brief as establishing the alleged libel are as follows:

“Who Fumbled the Ball?

[Published on December 26, 1947]

“The staff of this newspaper has interviewed several officials since Monday’s Occurrences, and has reached the conclusion that the prosecuting attorney bears most of the *274 responsibility for the collapse of the case against those arrested . . .

“The prosecutor’s job is to protect the public interest by bringing to trial all persons guilty of crimes against the public. His job is not to protect the interests of those persons. Their interests are supposed to be protected by the courts and by their own attorneys.

“In the case of the—the prosecutor, who has previously pledged cooperation in efforts to clean up vice in Pasco, should have let Justice Stone proceed with the trials and should have made constructive efforts to build cases against those persons who, in his judgment, were most liable to be found guilty of serious offenses.

“Even if the end result had been the same—that the 33 arrested persons had gone free—at least the enforcement agencies would not feel, as they do now, that their efforts had been, subverted by the man sworn to prosecute the enemies of the public.

“The prosecuting attorney feels strongly that he should have been consulted before the raids were made. He feels that he might have given instructions to the law officers which would have resulted in more and better evidence.

“Under ordinary circumstances, this would be true. However, the sheriff, the chief of police and the police captain have told this newspaper that on numerous occasions, the prosecuting attorney has downgraded charges on serious offenses, has delayed filing commital papers and has gone to great lengths to protect the interests of accused parties, while often failing to conduct a vigorous prosecution in cases which, on their faces, appeared to warrant conviction.

“Another reason is that such raids must be conducted in absolute secrecy. Last Sunday’s raid was in the making for approximately two weeks, yet only the top enforcement executives knew about it. . . .

“Much of this discussion misses the main point—-that the prosecutor should be taking the lead in the attack on gam-' bling institutions and bawdy houses, and should not be destroying initiative and confidence of the enforcement agencies by turning their efforts in subjects of ridicule. We can imagine the jubilation among the town’s gambling fraternity when news of Monday’s fiasco was noised around; instead of having them on the run, they have us on the run, and we feel the prosecuting attorney right now is the bottleneck in the anti-vice campaign, in spite of any argumentation he may employ in mitigation of his actions.”

*275 “Gaffney Hasn’t Learned

[Published February 25, 1948]

“It was the sincere hope of this newspaper, following the episode in December when a number of persons arrested for vagrancy were released without official action against them, that the Franklin county prosecuting attorney would make a more vigorous effort to clean up conditions of vice, gambling and health nuisances which existed, and still exist, in the vicinity of Pasco.

“He has not done so.

“In his latest failure to take vigorous steps to clean up these conditions, he has declined to prosecute Frank C. Connell, operator of a trailer camp ordered closed by Dr. Charles Tudor, even though Dr. Tudor has formally called upon him to prosecute.

“William J. Gaffney, the prosecuting attorney, has expressed his opinion to the effect that Connell has not violated the law in permitting about 35 out of an original 60 tenants to keep their trailers in his camp, following Tudor’s closure order. Gaffney says Connell has observed the technical requirements of the law by refusing to accept rent money, by refusing to accept new tenants, and by serving eviction notices on them.

“This interpretation of his duties by the prosecuting attorney passes comprehension. Gaffney’s job is to prosecute, and let the court decide whether or not the law has been violated. Gaffney is not defense attorney, although in this case, as in the case of the vagrancy charges in December, he' has behaved as though he were. . . .

“If Connell’s camp is a menace to public health—and Dr. Tudor’s investigations would indicate that it is—Gaffney has a clear duty himself to close it down as a public nuisance. He has taken no steps in this direction. . . .

“But Gaffney is permitting a large group of potential law violators, gamblers, procurers, prostitutes, fugitives from justice and others—to gain a clear and unfortunately accurate impression that Pasco is an easy place in which to get along. It was called to our attention today that one of the men caught in the recent vice raids, and released without action, is a man with a long criminal record. Why wasn’t he spotted and taken out of circulation for a while on a vagrancy charge?

“What is to be done? It is our opinion that citizens of Pasco would be fully justified in instituting recall proceed *276 ings against the prosecuting attorney.

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Bluebook (online)
212 P.2d 817, 35 Wash. 2d 272, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaffney-v-scott-publishing-co-wash-1949.