Grubb v. Elder

72 P. 790, 67 Kan. 316, 1903 Kan. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1903
DocketNo. 13,208
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 P. 790 (Grubb v. Elder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grubb v. Elder, 72 P. 790, 67 Kan. 316, 1903 Kan. LEXIS 253 (kan 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Cunningham, J. :

The day following the death of President McKinley, in September, 1901, plaintiff, in the presence of several citizens of Freeport, Harper county, used language relative to the president which angered those who heard it and the members of the community to whom it was communicated. Soon thereafter a notice, signed by the defendants, was served on the plaintiff, the same being as follows :

“notice.
“September 15th.
“The person in this township who made remarks this morniug derogatory to our late beloved president is invited to pack his grip and leave this township at once, as we will tolerate no one among us who re[317]*317joices in the death of our president by assassination, or any one who sympathizes with anarchists.”

Damage was sought in this action for defamation of character by reason of the language, employed in this notice. The jury found in favor of the defendants, and judgment was rendered against plaintiff for the costs of the action.

The first assignment of error arises upon the overruling of plaintiff’s demurrer to that part of defendants’ answer pleading justification. The plaintiff, in stating his cause of action, set out said notice with innuendoes as follows:

“The person (meaning thereby this plaintiff) in this township (meaning thereby Silver Creek township, referred to in the first cause of action above set forth) who made remarks this morning derogatory of our late beloved president is invited to pack his grip and leave this township at once, as we will tolerate no one among us who rejoices in the death of our president by assassination (meaning thereby to charge and publicly declare that this plaintiff was or lately had been triumphing and rejoicing in the assassination of President McKinlej?), or any one who sympathizes with anarchists (meaning thereby to charge that this plaintiff was a sympathizer with anarchists, and especially with that detestable anarchist who had then but recently assassinated our lamented president).”

The material portions of the defendants’ answer pleading justification were as follows :

“The language used, and the matter contained in the paper attached to the plaintiff’s petition in this action, which said language and matter is charged in said second cause of action to be defamatory to the plaintiff, is true, in this : That on or about the 15th day of September, 1901, the same being the day following the death of William McKinley, late president of the United States, the plaintiff, in the presence of [318]*318and against the protests of a large number of the citizens of Freeport and vicinity, in Silver Creek toivnship, in said Harper county, in answer to and in connection with expressions of grief on the part of the said citizens of Freeport and vicinity over the death of William McKinley, spoke and uttered the following words : ‘ I’d as lief vote for a damned dog as for McKinley. He was no better than a damned dog. Any man who sympathizes with his family has n’t any ■ sense ’; and made use of other words and expressions of like character, and by his demeanor and conduct, as well as by the language that he used, plaintiff showed that he did not in any manner sympathize with the grief felt by the people of Freeport and vicinity as aforesaid, and that in fact he rejoiced in the death- of William McKinley at the hand of the assassin.”

It is now insisted that by reason of the innuendo laid in the petition the defamatory matter set out was that the plaintiff rejoiced in the assassination of the president and sympathized with the anarchist who had committed the crime; that the justification must be coextensive with this charge ; and further, as only the quoted words are counted upon as justification and no facts pleaded which would justify the conclusion laid by the innuendo, that the matters stated in the answer were not coextensive with the matters charged in the petition, and hence were not sufficient to constitute justification. It must be noticed, however, that, in addition to pleading specific words, there was the further averment that by his demeanor and conduct, as well as by his language, the plaintiff showed' that he did not sympathize with the grief of the public upon the assassination of the president, and that as 'a matter of fact he rejoiced therein. No motion to make more definite and certain by stating what these acts were was filed. We are not intimating that one should have been sustained if filed.

[319]*319Many indescribable, but very expressive, acts may be committed, serving to emphasize and give character to one’s words, that cannot adequately be put upon paper. A look of the eye, a toss of the head, a gesture or posture might give very much of added meaning to a phrase and real import to a word, which would more easily be determined by seeing the speaker and his actions at the time the word was uttered than merely by reading the same from cold type or irresponsive writing. A phrase with one inflection or with one expression might carry to its hearer one meaning, while the same phrase with another inflection and expression might carry to its hearer an altogether different meaning. Here, the sting of the defamatory matter charged is found in the innuendo ; that is to say, in the allegation that by the use of the language in the notice the defendants intended to charge that the plaintiff entertained the reprehensible sentiments mentioned in the innuendo. The justification is that those who heard the words understood them, by reason of the demeanor and conduct of the plaintiff, in the way the innuendo alleged the defendants used them. With this view, it seems to us that the justification pleaded was as broad as the libelous matter contained in the notice, as explained by the innuendo. To be sure, the defendants did not plead in words that would justify the conclusion that plaintiff rejoiced in the death of the president or sympathized with the assassin, yet they did plead that, accompanying the words which he uttered, were acts and conduct such as warranted those hearing the words in believing that he did so rejoice and sympathize. We think the demurrer was properly overruled.

It is next claimed that there was not sufficient in [320]*320the proof, and this because the defendants did not, prove all of the language which their answer claimed the plaintiff used. Upon this point the principal witness for the defense testified concerning what plaintiff said: “I heard some one making the remark, ‘I would just as soon vote for a God damn dog as William McKinley.’” Whereupon witness replied to the plaintiff: “Young man, you ought not to use such language at this time, with our president lying dead.” To which plaintiff replied : “By God, I said it, and I am here to back it up.” Witness answered : “You ought to be drummed out of the county, to use such language.” Plaintiff replied: “By God, there are not enough men in town to do it.” Witness replied : “You insult every man, woman and child in the United States, using such language at this time.”' Whereupon plaintiff madé the remark: “Any man that would be insulted at that was a damned fool, and did n’t have any sense.”

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Hamilton v. McKenna
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144 P. 268 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 P. 790, 67 Kan. 316, 1903 Kan. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubb-v-elder-kan-1903.