Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc. v. FIELDS

259 N.E.2d 651, 254 Ind. 219, 1970 Ind. LEXIS 545
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1970
Docket1067S96
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 259 N.E.2d 651 (Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc. v. FIELDS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc. v. FIELDS, 259 N.E.2d 651, 254 Ind. 219, 1970 Ind. LEXIS 545 (Ind. 1970).

Opinion

Richard M. Givan, Judge,

having disqualified himself from participating in this cause and the four remaining judges of this Court participating being equally divided, Norman F. Arterburn, Judge, and Donald H. Hunter, Chief Justice, are of the opinion that the decision of the trial court should be reversed, while Roger O. DeBruler, Judge, and Amos W. Jackson, Judge, are of the opinion -that the decision of the trial court should be affirmed,

NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to Rule AP. 15(E), the judgment of the trial court is affirmed and the separate opinions of the participating judges herein are as follows:

Donald H. Hunter, Chief Justice.

Separate Opinion

Arterburn, J.

This is an action for libel brought in forty-four paragraphs of complaint by the appellee, Robert H. Fields, Sheriff of Marion County, against the appellant, Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc., publisher of the Indianapolis Star, a daily newspaper published in Indianapolis, Indiana. The action is based upon newspaper articles and editorials, sixty-two in number, pertaining to the Marion County Sheriff’s *220 department and jail supervision published on forty-four separate days during a period between October 27 and December 28, 1965. The jury returned a verdict for the appellee-sheriff for $60,000.00 on six of the paragraphs out of the forty-four.

The series of publications upon which the complaint is based was brought about when a newspaper reporter (Rick Johnson) in October, 1965, learned that two inmates (Elmer Reagan and Danner Crick) had died following beatings in the old Marion County jail the previous July. The story, when it broke, revealed as a fact that Elmer Reagan, age 50, was an alcoholic and had been confined in a basement cell in the jail in July. Following a beating, in which a number of his ribs were fractured, he was left lying naked in his own filth on the basement floor of the jail, without a bed, toilet facilities or running water. On July 14, 1965, he was admitted to the hospital in the condition described and died from pneumonia on August 7, 1965, as a result of this condition.

The newspaper article also revealed that another inmate, an alcoholic, Danner Crick, age 62, was found in practically the same condition in the jail with broken ribs and was taken to the hospital and died on July 14, 1965, as a result of such condition.

A deputy sheriff, one Cottey, is alleged to have tipped off the newspaper reporter Johnson that an inmate, Charles P. McAdams, had some information concerning the incidents involving brutality in the jail. Reporter Johnson interviewed McAdams, an inmate, and then took him before a Marion Criminal Court judge where he made a statement under oath before the deputy coroner, alleging that Reagan had been beaten by deputy sheriff King.

Following the statement taken by the deputy coroner, a grand jury investigation was called concerning conditions in the jail. The evidence shows that when Sheriff Fields learned of the McAdams statement through the prosecuting attorney’s office he ordered his deputies to pick up McAdams, a former *221 inmate, to bring him before the grand jury. However, Mc-Adams was taken to the jail first, where he was interviewed by the sheriff and deputies. McAdams was then taken to the grand jury later that day in the custody of the sheriff’s deputy and, immediately after his testimony, was returned to the jail. He was not released from custody until after he had made a statement repudiating his charge that he had seen a sheriff’s deputy beat up Reagan. The evidence shows he was given a flask of whiskey when he left the jail.

The sheriff claimed that it was not his deputies but rather a mental patient, William A. Brown, who was guilty of the beating and the death of Reagan when the mental patient was placed in the same cell with Reagan. Brown was 27 years of age and a former mental patient in a Philadelphia hospital. He was charged with second degree murder of Reagan, arraigned and returned to the Marion County General Hospital for psychiatric treatment and observation.' When tried he was found not guilty because of insanity.

The substance of appellee-sheriff’s charge is that from the series of articles innuendoes may be drawn therefrom that he was:

(1) An accessory after the fact of the murder of Elmer Reagan and Danner Crick in that he attempted to protect his guilty deputies.
(2) Guilty of prosecuting an innocent man, William A. Brown, the mental patient, for murder.
(3) Guilty of intimidating a Grand Jury witness, Charles P. McAdams.

We point out that the publications did not flatly say “Sheriff Fields is an accessory to the murder of a prisoner • by a deputy.” The newspaper articles, however, reported that Mc-Adams had stated and accused deputy sheriff King of beating and murdering Elmer Reagan, and that McAdams had been picked up and interrogated by Sheriff Fields and his deputies before he made the repudiation.

*222 There is no question that the evidence in this case shows a great deal of animosity and ill-will by the reporter Johnson towards Sheriff Fields because of controversies relating to the release of news connected with the Sheriff’s department for some time past. The evidence shows threats by Johnson to “get the sheriff” and that he was an “S.B.” It is also plain that the series of news items upon which the verdict is based were truthful except in a few details, that is, it is unquestioned that Reagan and Crick were severely beaten up, neglected and uncared for in the jail at the time stated in the newspaper articles and that they were found in filth, dying in the jail, and taken to the hospital where they did die; that someone was at fault, either another inmate or a member of the sheriff’s department.

The story about the beating in jail and the deaths was not discovered until some months afterwards by the newspaper. It is uncontroverted that after the news stories broke, McAdams, the informant, was picked up by the sheriff’s office and interrogated and a statement taken from him; that likewise Cottey, another deputy sheriff who, it was said, had tipped off reporter-Johnson was suspended and interrogated by the sheriff, and an affidavit taken from him in which he denied ever having informed Johnson of the facts. The real dispute is whether or not a deputy was guilty of the beatings, as stated in the newspaper articles and the inferences which reflect upon the sheriff. The series of articles dealt mainly with the activities of the sheriff’s deputies. In a few instances Sheriff Fields’ name was mentioned. It is argued by appellant that the innuendoes of wrongful acts that might be drawn as charged cannot be transmuted to the sheriff personally under the New York Times rule. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), 376 U. S. 254, 84 S. Ct. 710, 11 L. Ed. 2d 686.

Appellant contends that a great deal of evidence during the trial was admitted which was improper. The transcript in *223 this case is voluminous.

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Bluebook (online)
259 N.E.2d 651, 254 Ind. 219, 1970 Ind. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-newspapers-inc-v-fields-ind-1970.