Haynes v. Spokane Chronicle Publishing Co.

39 P. 969, 11 Wash. 503, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 335
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1895
DocketNo. 1528
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 P. 969 (Haynes v. Spokane Chronicle 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
Haynes v. Spokane Chronicle Publishing Co., 39 P. 969, 11 Wash. 503, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 335 (Wash. 1895).

Opinion

The.opinion of the court was delivered by

Anders, J.

This is an action to recover damages for an alleged libel published by the respondent corporation in the Spokane Daily Chronicle, a newspaper of which it was the publisher and proprietor. The complaint is in the usual form, and sets forth in full the publication alleged to be libelous, and which, it is as[504]*504serted, was printed and published of and concerning the plaintiff, and which reads as follows:

“POUND HIS BONES.
PEACEFUL VALLEY PEOPLE ARE ANXIOUS TO KNOW IP OLD MR. MURPHY WAS MURDERED—SAID TO HAVE BEEN A CRIME-POLICE ARE NOT CERTAIN WHO WAS KILLED OR WHO IS GUILTY, BUT ARE INVESTIGATING.

“ Peaceful Valley is not peaceful to-day. The quiet little settlement on the south bank of the river, west of Monroe street, is bubbling over with suppressed excitement and rumors of murder and mystery. The coroner, policemen and detectives have entered Peaceful Valley, and the people can discuss nothing but skulls and bones and shallow graves, through which the clear spring water is slowly seeping to supply the settlement under the hill.

“The police say there is a mystery and perhaps a murder to be investigated, and they began their work in earnest to-day. The people of Peaceful Valley are satisfied that a foul murder has just been brought to light after years of careful concealment.

“ The skull and bones that call for an account were found last Saturday on the steep hillside near the foot of Oak street. Franz Pietsch, a German who has a fine garden at the foot of the hill, wanted to increase his supply of spring water. The hillside is full of springs, and the West Riverside Land Company readily gave him permission to run a drain across their land and bring water from it to his garden.

Friday afternoon he began work with his son Max and Mike Sullivan. They had hardly started digging when John Haynes, whose whitewashed cabin stands on the next lot, ordered them to go away. They told him they were not on his land or cutting off his water supply. He insisted that they' were cutting off the water from his land.

“Finally, it is claimed, his wife came out and commenced piling brush in the ditch they were digging. As it was nearly 5 o’clock, and as Mrs. Haynes is at this time in a delicate condition, they decided not to resist her and went home. Mr. Pietsch notified the [505]*505authorities, but they thought the case did not warrant interference.

“ Saturday morning the men returned, cleared out the brush and resumed work. They had a trench twenty feet long and from two to three feet deep when Haynes reappeared. Once more he ordered them to stop work and when they refused he went back to the house and led Mrs. Haynes back to the ditch.

“Mike Sullivan was working in one end of the ditch and had just reached the edge of a round pit two feet across and twenty inches deep, which was in the line of the ditch. Mrs. Haynes jumped into that end of the ditch and when he thrust the shovel into the ground she stepped on it. He tried to raise the shovel, but Mrs. Haynes weighs about 200 pounds, so he gave it up and tried another place. Again she stepped upon the shovel. For several minutes this game went on.

“Finally the other men noticed that she devoted all her attention to Sullivan and began joking about it. Haynes heard them and called her back to the house, himself starting to town to get an officer.

“ Sullivan kept digging and in a few minutes his shovel struck something hard. With another minute’s work he threw out a human skull. It was lying about two feet under ground but only a foot distant from the bottom of the shallow hole previously described.

“Following the trace they found the jaw bone, then the vertebrae and ribs, but neither arm nor leg bones. The body seemed to slant downward, and lay as if the shallow hole had been dug first and from it a tunnel had been driven slanting downward, just large enough so the dead man’s body could be thrust into it easily.

“ The bones were put in a bucket and carried to Mr. Pietsch’s house where they were examined by all the neighbors. Death-on-Trail unhesitatingly pronounced it a white man’s skull which may have been buried four or five years ago. Other old settlers are of the same opinion, and say the low cheek bones and broad well formed skull belonged to a Caucasian.

“ ‘ Has any white man disappeared in this neighbor[506]*506hood ? ’ inquired Officer Davenport, who was sent this morning to investigate the case.

■ “ ‘ There was an old bachelor named Murphy,’ said Mr. Pietsch to whom the question was addressed. ‘ He used to have a garden on this hillside, and Haynes worked for him five or six years ago. Haynes has told me that he afterward bought the garden from the old man who went back to Canada, but there are rumors that the old man never reached Canada and letters came from there inquiring about him.’

“‘What did Haynes say when you showed him the skull ? ’

■ “‘Well,’ said the old man hesitatingly, ‘he looked awful queer and angry. I can’t tell how he did look.’

“‘He didn’t say anything,’ said Mike Sullivan, who was asked the same question. ‘ He would hardly look' at the bones at all.’

“ Mr. Haynes was not at home, so his version of the story could not be obtained. The neighbors are divided in their opinion. Some think it was the body of some Indian who died of fever and sweat house treatment. Others believe it to be the body of Murphy and demand investigation. In any case those who drink spring water are not sorry to have it taken out of the hillside.

“Coroner Newman visited the spot this afternoon in company with Officer Sheahan and examined the remains carefully. He was unable to decide with certainty whether the bones are those of a white man or of a squaw, but.decided not to hold an inquest. Judging from the skull he believes it belonged to a middle-aged or elderly person, and has been in the ground five or six years. The officers will continue the investigation.”

The complaint further alleges:

“That said defendant in said article so published falsely, unlawfully and maliciously, intended to and did accuse and charge this plaintiff with the crime of murder, and with an attempt to conceal the crime of murder, and thereby meant and intended to have it [507]*507understood, and it was so understood by the readers of said article so published in said paper, that the plaintiff was guilty of the crime of murder, and had murdered a human being and was attempting to conceal such murder, and defendant did further, by said publication of said article, bring this plaintiff into public contempt, hatred, ridicule and scorn, and thereby deprived plaintiff of the benefit of the public confidence and social intercourse and esteem, and plaintiff has by reason of said publication of said article ever since been, now is and will continue to be the object of public scorn and execration, and the publication of said article has greatly injured plaintiff’s good character and reputation, and has caused and will continue to cause this plaintiff great mental pain and suffering, all to his damage in the sum of twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 P. 969, 11 Wash. 503, 1895 Wash. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-v-spokane-chronicle-publishing-co-wash-1895.