Higbee v. Owens

1931 OK 771, 7 P.2d 854, 155 Okla. 93, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 22, 1931
Docket20582
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1931 OK 771 (Higbee v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higbee v. Owens, 1931 OK 771, 7 P.2d 854, 155 Okla. 93, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 141 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

The action was based upon the publication of an affidavit made by the defendant, a copy of which is as follows :

“Affidavit
“E. O. Higbee, of lawful age, being first duly sworn deposes and says:
“That he is Superintendent of the Cromwell Public Schools, School Dist. No. 11, Seminole County, Oklahoma, in such position he is. in a position to observe his teachers at all times during the school term.
“That during the last school term Miss Elsie Windel, now Mrs. Smith and Lola R. Owens acted unladylike in a conduct unbecoming a school teacher.
“That several of the patrons of the school have approached him at different times and told him that they would not send to school this term if the two above mentioned teachers taught.
“That in his opinion they are unfit to teach in his school and for this reason he has failed to endorse their contracts to the County Superintendent for his approval, as is customary for him to do with the other teachers:
“Signed this the 16th day of September, 1926.
[Signed] “E. C. Higbee.”

[Notarization]

The plaintiff had been employed as a teacher in the Cromwell school during the school year of 1925-1926; and prior to the making and approval of the annual estimate for the following year the school board of Cromwell had entered into a purported written contract with the plaintiff to teach the following year, the school year of 1926-1927.

The plaintiff alleged that by reason of the publication of the affidavit, which she alleged to be false and libelous, the county superintendent of schools refused to approve her contract, and that she thereby lost her monthly salary of $125 per month for nine months, and was otherwise damaged and humiliated.

The defendant in his amended answer admitted the publication of the affidavit, and alleged that it was done in the performance of duty, and in the utmost good faith, in the interests of the schools of the district, and to his superior in line of duty; and that, therefore, the affidavit was a privileged communication.

The defendant also alleged the truth of the matters stated in the affidavit, and alleged that during the preceding school year the plaintiff had acted in an unladylike manner and in a manner unbecoming a school teacher, in that she spent much time in and around Field’s Drug Store in the town of Cromwell, in the nighttime as well as in the daytime; and that during that time the store had a bad reputation in the town as being a place where whisky and “jake” were kept and sold; that during said time the plaintiff frequented Clark’s Drug Store in said town, which had a like reputation; that during the latter part of the preceding year and during the preceding summer prior to the making of the affidavit several patrons approached him at different times and told him that they would not send their children to school that term if Lola B. Owens and Elsie Windel taught, assigning their aforesaid conduct, “among other things,” as reasons therefor; and that by reason of the conduct of the said Lola B. Owens as therein set forth and the complaints made to him by said patrons concerning her conduct in those particulars and others, she became unfit, in his opinion, to teach in the school system at Cromwell.

To the amended answer the plaintiff replied with a general denial, a specific denial of good faith, and a specific. denial of the allegation that the matters alleged in the affidavit were true.

The case went to trial, not only upon the contention that the affidavit had been made in good faith, but on an affidavit alleging that the defendant had been in a position to observe the plaintiff’s conduct and allegations specifically based upon such observation, and also upon a square issue of the truth of what had been alleged in the affidavit; and the charges of unladylike conduct and conduct unbecoming to a school teacher had been rendered specific by alleging that she frequented the drug stores, and that complaints had been made of her conduct.

There was nothing in the affidavit to indicate that any complaints were made of anything not known to the affiant personally, but in the amended answer, following the allegation of the truth of the charge of unladylike conduct and conduct unbecoming *95 to a school teacher, after the specifications of alleged fact, the charge of frequenting and loitering in drug stores having the reputation of violating the prohibition laws, the defendant went on and alleged that complaints had been made of that and of other things, not specifying what those, other things were, or whether they were of matters which he claimed to know to be facts, or of things which he merely relied on as being true because of the complaints. These “other things” would only be material on the issue of good faith, as the answer did not allege that the other things complained of were true. In fact no effort was made to prove the truth of anything except the charge of frequenting and loitering in drug stores, with the exception of one other thing that the defendant testified he had observed, once seeing the plaintiff in her pajamas out in the yard at the place where she roomed.

So, upon the issue of truth as to the conduct that was unladylike and unbecoming to a school teacher, there was nothing involved except whether or not the plaintiff frequented and loitered in the drug stores, in the daytime or in the nighttime.

Most of the evidence as to her having been in drug stores came from the plaintiff herself. She testified that when she first came to Cromwell she went to the Field’s Drug Store and that for a time she ate her meals there, having been told by a man at the store that the store was catering to the trade of the teachers. Soon after school began she quit going there because of hearing profanity there one night, and she said that after that she was 'in that store only once during the remainder of the year, and that was to meet some woman from out of town.

The evidence fell far short of proving that the plaintiff frequented drug stores, either in the nighttime or in the daytime, and there was very little evidence of her having even been seen in drug stores. One witness, one Passmore, who was one of the Protestants against her employment, only testified to having seen her in a drug store twice, and admitted that there was no other drug store in that end of town. On those occasions she was with other teachers, and they were drinking “pop or coke, or whatever it was,” and it does not appear from his evidence that there was any loitering around. When asked if he ever observed anything unladylike in the plaintiff’s conduct, he said that he considered the mere fact that she went into such places to be unladylike. That testimony and his protest, so far as his personal knowledge was concerned, were all upon having seen her in a drug store twice.

Mrs. Wolforth, who was president of the parent teachers association, testified. She was one of the women whom the county superintendent spoke of as having complained of the plaintiff at his office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 771, 7 P.2d 854, 155 Okla. 93, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higbee-v-owens-okla-1931.