Globe Newspaper Co. v. Commonwealth

74 N.E. 682, 188 Mass. 449, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1198
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 74 N.E. 682 (Globe Newspaper Co. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Commonwealth, 74 N.E. 682, 188 Mass. 449, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1198 (Mass. 1905).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

This is a writ of error to the Superior Court, to correct alleged errors in the proceedings whereby the plaintiff in error was found guilty of a contempt of court in publishing in its newspaper two articles relative to a prosecution for murder, upon an indictment then pending against one Charles L. Tucker.

The first question is whether a writ of error lies in such a case. This question was considered and decided affirmatively in the ease of Hurley v. Commonwealth, ante, 443.

The first assignment of errors is that the publication did not constitute contempt, in that “ said articles were published, not during the progress of the Tucker trial nor immediately before said trial, but at a time when the assignment of the date for said trial had been revoked and said trial had been indefinitely postponed.” The defendant’s plea in this part of the case is, In nullo est erratum. This raises the question of law, whether the publication of an article which otherwise would constitute contempt of court, as tending to obstruct the administration of jus[450]*450tice, can be justified on tbe ground that the trial to which it relates is not then in progress, nor immediately to be begun, but is to occur at a time to be afterwards fixed. When the articles and the circumstances of publication are such as appear in the present case, we are of opinion that it cannot be so justified. The disturbing and obstructing effect of such an article might be greater if the publication was immediately before the trial than if it occurred months before, and this should be taken into account in imposing the sentence. In some cases, the difference in the degree of detriment that would be expected to result might be sufficient to constitute a contempt if the publication were just before the trial, when the same publication, a long time before the trial, would affect the case so little as not to deserve punishment. But it is enough to subject the offending publisher to punishment if the publication is very objectionable, and the case to which it relates is pending at the time of publication. Onslow's case, L. R. 9 Q. B. 219. Hunt v. Clarke, 58 L. J. Q. B. 490. See also In re Cheltenham & Swansea Railway Carriage & Wagon Co. L. R. 8 Eq. 580; In re Sturoc, 48 N. H. 428; Respublica v. Oswald, 1 Dall. 319. In Rex v. Parke, [1903] 2 K. B. 432, the publication in a newspaper was made before one accused of murder was even indicted. It was contended that as no cause was pending in the high court, and it was not certain that there would be an indictment, the high court had no jurisdiction to fine the publisher for contempt. Proceedings having been instituted before a magistrate, it was held, after the fullest consideration, that the court had jurisdiction, and punishment was inflicted. Wills, J. said in the opinion: “ Great stress has been laid upon an expression which has been used in the judgments upon questions of this kind — that the remedy exists when there is a cause pending in the court. We think undue importance has been attached to it. . . . It is possible very effectually to poison the fountain of justice before it begins to flow. It is not possible to do so when the stream has ceased.” In the present case the indictment was found several months before the publication, and the time for trial had been appointed and postponed. The plaintiff in error had full knowledge that the publication might affect the proceedings in the pending case. The facts stated in this assignment show no error.

[451]*451The second assignment of errors was on the ground “ that said articles were true and impartial statements of news and facts, were not intended to injure either the prosecution or the defence in said trial, and were not intended to reflect upon the dignity of the court or to hinder or interfere with the due administration of justice.” The defendant in error moved to strike out this assignment, on the ground that the matters alleged in it were immaterial. At the hearing before a single justice the parties agreed that an order might be entered, granting this motion, with a stipulation that if, as matter of law, the motion should have been denied, the plaintiff in error should take such benefit from the assignment as the full court might deem it entitled to under the agreed statement of facts. It was accordingly so ordered.

As a preliminary to the discussion of the question thus raised, it may be well to refer to the publication. Two articles were published, the first in the Boston Sunday Globe of September 18, 1904, and the second in the Boston Daily Globe, on Monday, September 19, 1904. The first was a very long and elaborate article, which, after striking headlines, began with a facsimile of a specimen of Charles L. Tucker’s handwriting taken from a letter, with his signature, followed immediately by a facsimile of a paper found by the side of the body of Mabel Page, who was murdered. Then came headlines, the first of which was: “ Battle of the experts bids fair to be one of the most notable in the history of murder cases.” The first part of the general discussion of the subject is entitled, “ Analysis of the disputed ‘ Morton ’ address,” and it goes at great length into the particulars of likeness and unlikeness in the handwriting, as they might appear to experts, referring to letters and parts of letters, as well as to the words, including interviews with four different experts in handwriting, who were said to have been employed by the Commonwealth, and a very elaborate discussion of the supposed relations of every part of the evidence to be found in these papers to the other evidence on which the Commonwealth was expected to rely. The supposed views and opinions of the experts in handwriting were given, with a very full statement purporting to be made by one of them in an interview, and with much briefer statements made by the others who declined to talk about par[452]*452ticulars. The acts and methods of the attorney general and his assistants in the preparation of the case, in connection with this writing, were stated in detail. The account was embellished in its different parts with pictures of the four experts, and was of a sensational character. The article in the paper of Monday was headed, “ New interest in the Tucker case. Globe’s publication of facsimile of handwriting has aroused it.” It referred to the slip of paper as the “ leading and most assiduously guarded feature of the government case against Charles L. Tucker.” It said, among other things, “ Every one had an opportunity to see this ‘ Morton’ address, examine it for himself and judge of its importance in the solution of the murder mystery. . . . Naturally, every reader set out to constitute himself a handwriting expert, and thousands of Globe readers were analyzing the ‘ Morton ’ penmanship yesterday and forming their own impressions as to its likeness to the hand of the prisoner. Of course there were countless opinions on both sides of this question. The account of how the leading handwriting experts proceeded to scrutinize this evidence and reach their conclusions was also instructive.” In this article there was a further discussion, at considerable length, of additional supposed features of the evidence, all designed, so far as possible, to give the public a picture of the expected trial, as it would appear whenever it should occur.

It needs no argument to show that such publications were highly improper, and were a gross interference with the administration of justice in an important criminal case.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.E. 682, 188 Mass. 449, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-newspaper-co-v-commonwealth-mass-1905.