Hylsky v. Globe Democrat Publishing Co.

152 S.W.2d 119, 348 Mo. 83, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 12, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 119 (Hylsky v. Globe Democrat Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hylsky v. Globe Democrat Publishing Co., 152 S.W.2d 119, 348 Mo. 83, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 683 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for publishing alleged libelous article. Plaintiff asked $50,000 actual and $50,000 punitive damages. Defendant demurred to the petition [120] on the ground that it failed to state "facts sufficient in law to constitute a *Page 85 cause of action against defendant." The trial court sustained the demurrer. Plaintiff elected to stand upon his petition, refused to plead further and judgment was entered for defendant. Plaintiff has appealed.

The petition alleged that on February 20, 1937, defendant maliciously published in its newspaper of and concerning plaintiff a false, defamatory and libelous article, to-wit:

"CONFESSES MURDER OF HEALER. (Picture) "Patient of Geo. Zellman Clears Widow and Paramour "Frank Slezak, 54, Says Victim Had Put `Spell On Him.' ------------------- "2 Indicted For E. Side Killing ------------------- "Officer Working Alone Solves Case, Trapping Own Friend. -------------------

"A confession in the murder of George Zellman, 76-year-old Rosicrucian psychic healer, was obtained by an East St. Louis detective sergeant last night from Frank Slezak, 54, a former packinghouse worker, who is held in the observation ward of St. Mary's Hospital, East St. Louis.

"Slezak, a former patient of the healer, told police, they said, how he came to hate the man to whom he had gone for help and finally, alone with Zellman, he drew a pistol and started firing.

"Meanwhile Zellman's widow, Mrs. Cecilia Zellman, and her paramour, Thomas Pierce, are held in jail at Belleville under indictment for the murder and are due to be brought to trial next month. East St. Louis police said they would check Slezak's strange story of the shooting in the home of the healer on February 5. Part of his story will be compared with details of the various confessions of Mrs. Zellman. Pierce has consistently denied any connection with the murder." (The article continued with matters with reference to the alleged confession of Slezak, and then continued.)

"Detective Sergeant Anton Hylsky is responsible for the confession by Slezak, which East St. Louis police regard as clearing up the case. Hylsky had taken part in the questioning of Mrs. Zellman, but had not otherwise been detailed to the case and his investigation was done while unoccupied with other police assignments. . . .

"Hylsky, who was aware of the half a dozen versions of the killing *Page 86 given police by Mrs. Zellman, in some of which she named herself as the slayer and in one other Pierce as the killer, took up the case after the pair had been indicted a week ago and locked in the County Jail at Belleville.

"Proceeding on the theory the stories told by Mrs. Zellman were all due to nervous frenzy, Hylsky examined a ledger of Zellman's which showed the names of all his clients and examined such of them as he knew.

"Among them were Slezak. The latter speaks very little English and carries on all his conversation in Bohemian which Hylsky speaks fluently.

"Tuesday Slezak attempted to commit suicide. . . ." (after giving details, the article continued).

"Hylsky, who lives at 1118 Lynch avenue, has been a friend of Slezak for 15 years and had seriously considered the possibility he might have been involved in the case, recalling Slezak had been subject to spells of depression since the death of his wife more than a year ago. When he heard of the attempted suicide he went to the hospital to visit Slezak and asked him why he had attempted to destroy himself.

"Hylsky quoted Slezak as saying he had been having terrible dreams for the three nights prior to his suicide attempt.

"`I think I have shot and killed a man,' the detective quoted the patient as saying, `but I can't remember, my mind is so hazy.'

"As a result of this statement Hylsky went to the Lynch avenue home, where he searched until he found the revolver hidden in the basement under some rags. The weapon still had the five discharged shells in it. He took the pistol to the hospital, where Slezak talked freely but incoherently of the shooting." (The article then reviewed the confession at length).

After setting out the above article in full, the petition charged:

"That said publication was likely to and did raise the inference and communicate to the public the ideas and statements that plaintiff had deceived his own friend to such friend's injury and that plaintiff by dishonorable artifice had enticed his own friend into an injurious and harmful trap and that[121] plaintiff had posed as a true friend and as seeking the welfare of his own friend when in truth and fact he was undertaking to wrongfully mislead and injure and destroy said friend by wrongful deception and that plaintiff was not worthy of the confidence or friendship of honorable persons and that plaintiff was tricky and treacherous and dishonorable and would stoop to dishonorable and repulsive and wrongful methods to wrongfully injure for his own benefit persons who confided in him and that plaintiff had wrongfully posed as the friend of Frank Slezak and pretended to be acting rightfully and in the discharge of his duty for the purpose of wrongfully deceiving and injuring said Slezak; *Page 87

"That plaintiff was at the times herein mentioned a sergeant of the police of East St. Louis, Illinois, and had been such for years;

"That said publication was likely to and tended to and did provoke plaintiff to wrath and expose him to public hatred and public contempt and public ridicule and public execration and deprive him of the benefits of public confidence and of social intercourse and said publication was likely to and did damage and will damage the name and reputation of plaintiff as a citizen and honorable man and a man of integrity and also as a police officer and it has caused and will cause him great mental and physical pain and suffering and it has injured and will injure his reputation and the same was published as aforesaid of and concerning plaintiff by defendant to a great number of persons in East St. Louis, Illinois, and the rest of the world to the great damage to plaintiff as aforesaid."

Appellant's position is that "if a false article tends to provoke plaintiff to wrath or exposes him to public hatred or public contempt or public ridicule or public execration or deprives him of the benefits of public confidence or of social intercourse then the article under the statute and on the decisions is libelous;" that the word "trap," a noun, means a device, a pitfall, snare or contrivance by which one may be caught unawares; that the word, "trap," a verb, means to catch in a trap, to take by strategy or by artifice or wiles. Appellant contends that the article stated that plaintiff trapped his own friend; that plaintiff, in trapping his own friend, was not performing any services required by any form of law, but was a volunteer in the alleged work of trapping; that the statement to the effect that plaintiff had trapped his friend was false; that "the ordinary meaning of the word `trap' carries out the idea of deception to the deceived person's injury;" that the article charges that plaintiff had deceived Slezak to his injury by trapping him, by posing as his friend, meaning that he betrayed, deceived and ensnared him by dishonorable means; and that, therefore, the article "accuses plaintiff of wicked and contemptible and wrongful conduct and is, therefore, libelous." Appellant further says that entrapping is considered to be conduct which is dishonorable and improper, "condemned by Holy writ and the cases cited."

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 119, 348 Mo. 83, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hylsky-v-globe-democrat-publishing-co-mo-1941.