In re the Proceedings Against Hayes

73 So. 362, 72 Fla. 558, 1916 Fla. LEXIS 398
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 73 So. 362 (In re the Proceedings Against Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Proceedings Against Hayes, 73 So. 362, 72 Fla. 558, 1916 Fla. LEXIS 398 (Fla. 1916).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

—This is the first time in the history of Florida that this court has issued a rule against the editor and reporter of a newspaper to show cause why [560]*560they should not be attached for contempt because of the publication of a libelous article impugning the integrity, dignity and authority of this court. It is to be hoped that the good sense of our people, their love of order and respect for the institutions of our government will operate to restrain the impulsive and illnatured words of those among us who seem to be so alert to suspect and ready to condemn and that proceedings of this nature may not become necessary in the future to restrain the vicious tendencies of those who traffic in scandal and sensation and which lead them to attacks upon the integrity and authority of our institutions.

It is true that respect to the courts is the voluntary tribute which the people pay to worth, virtue and intelligence and every man who has the honor to occupy judicial position in our government should strive to attain to that standard of judicial purity and efficiency which right thinking people require of their judicial officers; but it is also true that malicious, designing persons m'ay greatly impair the authority and efficiency of our courts by using the powerful arm of the press to scatter abroad suspicion and distrust by unfounded accusations against the intelligence, impartiality, integrity and mental honesty of the judges of our courts of justice.

Such accusations are an insult to the people whose agents the courts are; the injury accomplished is to the institution which the people by their government have established. The author and distributor of such publications therefore is an enemy to his people, a veritable traitor to his government whose protection he enjoys.

Mr. Chief Justice English in the case of State v. Morrill, 16 Ark. 384, said: “It was well remarked by counsel, that no court could coerce public respect for its decisions; and we may add that no sane judge would at[561]*561tempt it. If it were the general habit of the community to denounce, degrade and disregard the decisions and judgments of the courts, no man of self-respect and just pride of reputation would remain upon the bench, and such only would become the ministers of the law, as were insensible to defamation and contempt. But happily for the good order of society, men, and especially the people of this country, are generally disposed to respect and abide the decisions of the tribunals ordained by government as the common. arbiters of their rights. But where isolated individuals, in violation of the better instincts of human nature, and disregardful of law and order, wantonly attempt to obstruct the course of public justice, by degrading and exciting disrespect for the decisions of -its tribunals, every good citizen will point them out as proper subjects of legal animadversion.” “The court looks to the sober judgment of all reflecting and intelligent men, and to none with more confidence than the enlightened and liberal conductors of the press, who, as before remarked, há>ve generally manifested a disposition to maintain public respect for the judicial tribunals of the country.”

In the case of Watson v. Williams, 36 Miss. 341, the court said: “In this country all courts derive their authority from the people, and hold it in trust for their security and benefit. In this State all judges are elected by the people, and hold their authority- in a double sense directly from them; the power they exercise is but the authority of the people themselves exercised through courts as their agents. It is the authority and law emanating from the people, which the judges sit to exercise and enforce. Contempts against these courts in the administration of their laws are insults offered to the authority of the people themselves and not to the humble [562]*562agents of the law whom they employ in the conduct of their government. The power to compel the lawless offender against decency and propriety, to respect the laws of his country and submit to their authority (a duty to which the good citizen yields hearty obedience without compulsion) must exist, or courts and laws operate at least as a restraint upon the upright who need no restraint, and a license to the offenders whom they are made to subdue.” How appropriate is this language to our State government whose constitution provides for the election by the people of the judges of our Supreme Court.

In the case of State v. Frew and Hart, 24 West Va. 416, the court said: “We are well aware that the trust reposed in us to protect the people’s court from degradation is a delicate as well as a sacred trust. The power claimed, it is said, is arbitrary and liable to abuse. That is no reason why the power should not exist and be reposed somewhere. The few instances in which this power has been used during the last century shows that it was wisely placed and may be safely left in the hands of the courts. It is well established by the authorities that the power is inherent in courts of justice to summarily punish constructive as well as direct contempts. And in this country, where the courts are in the divisions of power by the Constitutions of the several States constituted a separate and distinct department of government clothed with jurisdiction and not expressly limited by the constitution in their powers to punish for contempt the inherent power that is thus necessarily granted them cannot be taken away by the legislative department of the government.”

For seventy-one years this State has enjoyed the advantages and benefits of Statehood in the government [563]*563of the United States and as pointed out herein this is the first time in its history that this court has felt the necessity for the exercise of the power to bring any one before it and punish him for seeking through the public press to destroy its efficiency by shaking the confidence of the people in its integrity. There has been no disposition and there is none now on the part of this court to seek opportunities to exercise this power. It has passed unnoticed some ill-advised criticisms and untrue statements regarding its decisions, deeming them to have originated in the disappointment and poignancy of defeat which calm deliberation and sober thought would rectify in the minds of our people, but this is the first time that it has met a deliberate and meditated insult from the editor and reporter of a newspaper who published an article charging this court with hostility toward counsel, stubbornness, partiality and partisanship in a cause then pending in and being heard and considered by the court. In the conclusion at which we have arrived, we have not forgotten that we have no right in this manner to avenge individual wrongs, although the best years of the lives of some of the judges of our Supreme Court have been given^conscientiously to an honorable discharge of the duties devolving upon them; a fair and just consideration of all causes brought before us, and into whose hearts the unkind and malicious thrust of this contemptuous article has sunk with bitter cruelty we remember only the studied injury to the peoples’ court, for as Judge Okey Johnson of West Virginia said, “It is a matter of stern and inflexible duty from the performance of which under our official oaths we dare not shrink. For we well know that as the ermine was spotless when we put it on,' the people expect us to leave it as untarnished for our successors.”

[564]*564The profession of journalism is a great profession.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Price
672 A.2d 893 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1996)
Walker v. Bentley
660 So. 2d 313 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1995)
Sandstrom v. State
336 So. 2d 572 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1976)
State v. Mayhew
288 So. 2d 243 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1973)
Lieberman v. Marshall
236 So. 2d 120 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1970)
Pennekamp v. State
22 So. 2d 875 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1945)
Shiell v. the Metropolis Co.
136 So. 537 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
State v. Shumaker
157 N.E. 769 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1927)
Ex parte Earman
95 So. 755 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1923)
Ex parte Biggers
95 So. 763 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1923)
Walton Lunch Co. v. Kearney
236 Mass. 310 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 So. 362, 72 Fla. 558, 1916 Fla. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-proceedings-against-hayes-fla-1916.