Hoan v. Journal Co.

298 N.W. 228, 238 Wis. 311, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 45
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 228 (Hoan v. Journal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoan v. Journal Co., 298 N.W. 228, 238 Wis. 311, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 45 (Wis. 1941).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed May 20, 1941:

Rosenberry, C. J.

In his complaint the plaintiff sets forth two causes of action. We shall not attempt to set forth in this opinion the pleadings or the facts in their entirety but only so much thereof as is necessary to an understanding of the questions presented for decision.

The plaintiff alleged that the defendant Journal Company is publisher of the'Milwaukee Journal; that the defendant Grant is its managing editor and one of its principal stockholders and a director of the company, in immediate charge and control of the paper and knew of the malicious áttacks on the plaintiff complained of; that the defendant Eklund is a newspaper *313 reporter employed by the Journal Company; that plaintiff was elected mayor of the city of Milwaukee in April, 1916, and ever since continuously had been mayor down to the time of the matters complained of.

The plaintiff further alleged that since he was elected, the Journal Company adopted and followed consistently and continually a policy of defaming and vilifying the plaintiff, holding him up to public ridicule and contempt, stating and insinuating that he was insincere, unworthy of holding the office of mayor, insinuating that he was guilty of various acts of official misconduct as such mayor; that he was guilty of dishonest practices, misdemeanors, and other illegal acts, and thereby sought to discredit him in said city and elsewhere; that in furtherance of that policy the defendant Grant caused all the false and defamatory matter and articles referred to in the amended complaint to be published in the Milwaukee Journal, and in doing so the Journal Company and the defendant Grant have employed the defendant Lawrence C. Eklund to assist them in preparing, publishing, and circulating said defamatory matter and articles; that the adoption of this policy has been purely malicious on the part of each of the defendants; that for many years the defendants maliciously attacked and defamed the plaintiff and published.many malicious falsehoods of and concerning him; that on Saturday, October 26, 1935, a bomb containing high explosive was placed and caused to be exploded by some person or persons, then unknown, at the city hall of the village of Shorewood, an adjoining suburb, whereby the building was greatly damaged, surrounding property impaired, and many lives were endangered; that the next day, a bomb was placed and caused to be exploded by some person or persons, then unknown, at the bank building of Citizens Branch Office of First Wisconsin National Bank at 3602 West Villard avenue, in Milwaukee, and on the same day a bomb was placed at the East Side Branch of that bank at the corner of East North avenue and North Farwell avenue; that *314 on October 31, 1935, a bomb was placed and exploded at the •fifth-precinct station of the police department of the city of Milwaukee; that on the same day a bomb was placed and exploded at the third-precinct station of said police department at the corner of North Twelfth and West Vine streets in the city of Milwaukee.

• It was further alleged that on account of said repeated bombings, the citizens of said city and territory surrounding the city became greatly disturbed and disquieted, and a feeling of apprehension and of impending danger prevailed; that offers of large rewards for the apprehension and prosecution of the perpetrators were made; that all local newspapers carried full and alarming accounts of said acts; citizens were publicly •called on to aid the police department and other law-enforcing '’agencies to discover and apprehend the perpetrators of said bombings; that many people became fearful and apprehensive of imminent danger and peril to themselves, their families, and friends.

It is further alleged that the Journal Company and Grant caused the defendant Eklund to go to Sheboygan Falls and interview the mayor of said city, and on November 3, 1935, the day of the last bombing, which had disclosed who probably were and had been the perpetrators of said bombings, with intent to defame and injure the plaintiff, published a news article of and concerning him, which contained the following false and defamatory matter:

“The mayor of Sheboygan Falls has slight regard for his fellow mayor, Daniel Webster Hoan of Milwaukee, which was shunned by Kinite in its return to the state.
■ ■ T ‘Mayor Hoan travels, arouñd the country telling how well Milwaukee is governed,’ said the mayor of Sheboygan Falls. ‘Meanwhile terrorists bomb Milwaukee’s police stations and banks. Mayor Hoan himself is to blame for those bombings.’” . . .

It was further alleged that reference to the plaintiff had no relation to the subject matter which was contained in the article, but was injected, maliciously and solely for the purpose *315 of defaming and injuring the plaintiff; that the article so published was in no' sense a legitimate criticism of a public official, but deliberately and with malice aforethought, falsely charged the plaintiff with commission of a felony; that in publishing' said article on Novembr 3, 1935, the defendants meant and intended in effect to charge and did charge and accuse plaintiff with the crime of malicious and felonious destruction of property by dynamite and other explosives, with having conspired, counseled, abetted, and encouraged those who actually exploded said bombs, and with having sympathized with, incited, encouraged, aided, abetted, harbored, and protected said persons who caused said explosions; with having, “as mayor of said city and principal law-enforcing officer thereof,” intentionally failed to protect it, its citizens, their lives and property from said bombings and the property damage resulting' therefrom; that since the publication of said libel on November 3, 1935, and wholly apart from it, the defendants have continued their policy of maliciously defaming, vilifying, and holding plaintiff up to public ridicule, scorn, and enmity, and have repeatedly since then maliciously published about him many false, defamatory, and scurrilous articles.

For a second cause of action the allegations of the first cause of action are substantially repeated, the additional allegation being that the matter was republished on November 4, 1935, the day following the accidental explosion, which resulted in the death of three persons.

The defendants answered. In their answer the defendants deal with each paragraph of the complaint, specifically denying allegations where a matter was to be put in issue, other matters standing admitted. By paragraphs 21 and 22 they plead in justification as follows:

. “21. As and for a further answer to said complaint and in justification of the alleged libelous statement quoted in paragraphs 12 and 21 of said complaint, and by way of defense in bar, the defendants allege the matters set forth in this paragraph of this answer.
*316 “(a) At the time of said publication, and for many years prior thereto, the plaintiff had been the mayor of the city of Milwaukee.

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Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 228, 238 Wis. 311, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoan-v-journal-co-wis-1941.