Henrichs v. Pivarnik

588 N.E.2d 537, 20 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1787, 1992 Ind. App. LEXIS 325, 1992 WL 48735
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 1992
Docket64A03-9002-CV-56
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 588 N.E.2d 537 (Henrichs v. Pivarnik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henrichs v. Pivarnik, 588 N.E.2d 537, 20 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1787, 1992 Ind. App. LEXIS 325, 1992 WL 48735 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, Judge.

Appellant-Defendant Martin Henrichs appeals the summary judgment entered against him on the issue of liability in the defamation suit filed against him by Alfred J. Pivarnik. 2 A jury trial was held on the issue of damages which resulted in a verdict against Henrichs and in favor of Pivar-nik in the amounts of zero ($0.00) compensatory damages and fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000.00) punitive damages. Hen-richs also challenges the award of damages. Henrichs raises four (4) issues, which we restate and consolidate into three *539 (3), none of which constitutes reversible error.

FACTS

The facts in the light most favorable to nonmovant Henrichs indicate that on April 27, 1988, Henrichs, as editor-in-chief of a newspaper called the Lake-Porter Leader, published an article authored by Elmer L. Jacobsen entitled "Court Corruption in Indiana Courts" which vilified Pivarnik, then a justice on the Indiana Supreme Court, by claiming that he was connected with vice and organized crime and that he had committed several acts which would have constituted criminal abuses of the power of his judicial office when he was the judge of the Porter County Circuit Court. Eight thousand (8000) copies of the newspaper with the defamatory article were circulated.

Pivarnik filed the present lawsuit on September 12, 1983. On that date, he also served various discovery requests upon the defendants. The defendants have never responded to these discovery requests despite the trial court's order to comply.

On March 2, 1984, Pivarnik filed and served Requests for Admissions on each defendant. On September 17, 1985, the trial court gave all defendants an additional thirty (30) days to respond to the Requests for Admissions which had remained unanswered for more than 500 days. The defendants have never responded to the Requests for Admissions and the admissions became conclusively established under Ind.Trial Rule 36. With respect to Hen-richs, the matters admitted are as follows:

1. Martin Henrichs was the editor-in-chief of the Lake-Porter Leader on or about April 27, 19838.

2. Martin Henrichs is and has been the editor-in-chief of the Lake-Porter Leader since April 27, 1983.

3. Martin Henrichs is a member of the Lake-Porter Leadership Council, an unincorporated association.

4. Martin Henrichs is president of Lake-Porter Leadership Council, Inc.

5. Elmer L. Jacobsen is a member of the Lake-Porter Leadership Council, an unincorporated association.

6. Elmer L. Jacobsen is a member of Lake-Porter Leadership Council, Inc.

7. Elmer L. Jacobsen was a staff writer for the Lake-Porter Leader as of April 27, 1988.

8. The Lake-Porter Leadership Council, an unincorporated association, owns and publishes the Lake-Porter Leader.

9. The Lake-Porter Leadership Council, Inc. owns and publishes the Lake-Porter Leader.

10. On or about April 27, 19838, the Lake-Porter Leadership Council and/or Lake-Porter Leadership Council, Inc. published in the Spring issue of the Lake, Porter Leader, an article entitled "Court Corruption in Indiana Courts" authored by Elmer L. Jacobsen.

11. The article "Court Corruption in Indiana Courts" contained each of the following statements:

a. 'Prior to the appointment of Alfred J. Pivarnik to the Indiana Supreme Court in 1977, I had personally submitted to each of the seven members of the Indiana Judicial Qualifications Commission a 56-page documented and sworn complaint in writing setting out, by separate specifications, the activities and conduct of Alfred J. Pivarnik of Porter County, Indiana demonstrating his lack of fitness and qualifications to sit or act as a judge of any duly authorized court, and constituting reason and ground for his removal as judge of the Porter Circuit Court.!
b. 'The inseparable ties between vice and politics have increased with rapid strides to the point where the administration of justice in the Porter Circuit Court has come under severe serutiny.
In making these charges, complainant (hereinafter referred to as Jacobsen) emphasizes that nothing herein is intended to reflect in any way upon other judicial officers in Porter County. * * * It is Jacobsen's opinion that the superior court judges other than Judge Pivarnik, *540 are and have been men of high honor, capacity, and ability.
c. 'One of the major frauds in which Judge Alfred J. Pivarnik was involved was signing on April 30, 1975 the 'clean bill of health' findings submitted by an East Chicago law firm, Given, Dawson and Cappas relative to the fraudulent 5.8 million dollar contract of November 12, 1974 between the Metro Construction and the East Chicago Board of Parks and Recreation. Pivarnik had full knowledge of the fraud when he signed the findings.
d. 'In an effort to prevent an investigation of the facts and circumstances under which he signed the findings of April 30, 1975 in the Metro case, acting in collusion with certain members of the bar and acting contrary to law, Porter Circuit Judge Alfred J. Pivarnik violated his oath of office in several particulars including 1) unlawfully jailing his critics or driving them from the state, 2) blocking their appeals by entering an order prohibiting the court clerk from preparing records on appeal, 3) closing his court to certain litigants by directing the clerk not to receive their praecipes, pleadings or court papers, 4) breaking up a lawful picket line and suppressing free speech, 5) causing indictments to issue without probable cause, 6) intimidating witnesses to abuse of his judicial office, 7) knowingly entertaining a collusive lawsuit through a fraudulent declaratory judgment, and 8) conspiring with certain Lake County lawyers to use his judicial power to destroy the Northwest Indiana Crime Commission when it undertook to investigate and expose his judicial misconduct.'
e. 'In addition, the Indiana Judicial Qualifications Commission was informed in detail of numerous specific instances of violation of the Indiana Code of Judicial Conduct on the part of Circuit Judge Alfred J. Pivarnik.'
f. 'During that congressional campaign Mr. Crumpacker relentlessly exposed to the voters of his first district the corruption of the judicial system in Lake County and its continuing connection with the crime syndicate. His exposure included also former Porter Circuit Judge Alfred J. Pivarnik, who by then had been safely ensconced on the Indiana Supreme Court.!

12. Each of the above statements in sub-paragraphs af of paragraph 11 are false.

13. Each statement in sub-paragraphs af of paragraph 11 are defamatory.

14. Elmer L. Jacobsen knew at the time he wrote the article "Court Corruption in Indiana Courts" that each of the statements in sub-paragraphs a-f of paragraph 11 were false.

15. Martin Henrichs knew at the time the Lake-Porter Leader published the article "Court Corruption in Indiana Courts" that each of the statements in sub-paragraphs af of paragraph 11 were false.

16.

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Bluebook (online)
588 N.E.2d 537, 20 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1787, 1992 Ind. App. LEXIS 325, 1992 WL 48735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henrichs-v-pivarnik-indctapp-1992.