Jones v. Express PubLishing Co.

262 P. 78, 87 Cal. App. 246, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 117
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5981.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 262 P. 78 (Jones v. Express PubLishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Express PubLishing Co., 262 P. 78, 87 Cal. App. 246, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 117 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit rendered at the close of plaintiff’s case, in an action for libel. The plaintiff claims that the nonsuit was erroneously granted, since she had proved a prima facie case by showing that the published language which charged her with unchastity was libelous per se, and that under such circumstances the law presumes malice and casts the burden on the defendants to show an absence of *249 actual malice. Respondents assert that the evidence shows that the alleged libelous language was privileged, and that the charge therein contained was true.

The defendants were jointly charged with libel in the publication of alleged false and malicious statements concerning the character of plaintiff which were made in the “Los Angeles Evening Express” on May 13 and June 2, 1922. Separate answers were filed, one by the defendant Wool-wine and the other by the remaining defendants jointly. At the close of plaintiff’s ease a nonsuit was granted as to all defendants. Pending the appeal the defendant Wool-wine died and the action survives only as to the remaining defendants. The Express Publishing Company, P. W. Kellogg and Edward A. Dickson were publishers of the “Los Angeles Evening Express,” a daily newspaper of general circulation having a subscription list of some fifty thousand readers in and about the city of Los Angeles. At the time of the publication of the alleged libelous matter the defendant Woolwine was district attorney of Los Angeles County, and plaintiff was his deputy, having charge of the investigation of juvenile offenses. The district attorney sought to discharge her by letter, but she refused to acknowledge his authority to do so without confirmation by the Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission, to which she appealed for vindication. During a public investigation of the affair by this commission plaintiff voluntarily made admissions of her guilt of the material portions of the alleged libelous publications. The publishers of the newspaper were entire strangers to the plaintiff and no express malice was shown.

The record in this case discloses a state of affairs with relation to the personal association of the defendant Wool-wine and the plaintiff which, if true, would have justified the dismissal of both as unfit to hold their respective offices. Dissension arose between them. May 2, 1922, Mr. Woolwine sent the following letter to plaintiff:

“You are hereby discharged from the position you now hold in the district attorney’s office, that of juvenile investigator', for the good of the service. It is my usual custom to allow employees who have forfeited a right to hold their positions in the district attorney’s office to resign, but after *250 a consideration of all the circumstances, I do not deem that you are entitled to this courtesy.
“Yours very truly, “Thomas Lee Woolwine,
“District Attorney.”

On the same date' he addressed a communication to the Civil Service Commission pursuant to the requirements of section 34, subdivision 13, of the charter of Los Angeles, which read as follows:

“This is to advise you that I have discharged Ida Wright Jones, an employee of the district attorney’s office. Her dismissal was embodied in a letter of date May 2, 1922, a copy of which I enclose.
“In accordance with the provisions of subdivision 13 of section 34 of the charter, I give my reason for such action as follows:
“It was communicated to me by one of the employees of the district attorney’s office, that Miss Jones had stated to him that she was going to make an affidavit to the effect that she had been intimate with me, and that she was going to sell this affidavit to my political enemies for the sum of $10,000 and then leave the state. Upon verifying the fact that she made such a statement and that she had planned to take such action, I immediately discharged her.
“Very respectfully,
“Thomas Lee Woolwine,
“District Attorney.”

Subsequent to the delivery of these letters the plaintiff demanded and secured a public hearing before the Civil Service Commission, and on May 17, 1922, her deposition was taken in shorthand at great length, and with minute details she voluntarily confessed to a continuing course of sexual intimacies with the district attorney, extending over a period of several years, and resulting in a miscarriage on one occasion, and the performance of an illegal operation upon her, at another time. She also admitted that she had consulted with her attorney and that she had made an affidavit concerning this illicit relationship, which affidavit she alleged was solely for her own protection, and denied that it was made for the purpose of selling it to his enemies.

*251 This conflict between the district attorney and the plaintiff led to several conferences. It was a common topic of conversation about the courthouse and in political circles, and was known to the reporters of the public press. An investigation of the truth of these stories was made by the reporters of the “Los Angeles Evening Express.” Several interviews occurred between the reporters and the defendant Woolwine, and a request was made of him to furnish a true statement of the facts, in response to which he provided the newspaper reporters with copies of the two letters above quoted, together with a written statement concerning the affair. Plaintiff immediately learned of the district attorney’s letter to the Civil Service Commission, and of its contents. She did not deny the charge of unchastity. Indeed, she subsequently admitted the truth of this charge. There was good reason for the reporters to believe that the charge of unchastity was true. It was therefore in perfect good faith “that these two letters together with excerpts from the district attorney’s written statement with explanatory headlines was, on May 13, 1922, published in the “Los Angeles Evening Express.” The material portion of this newspaper article was true. The plaintiff subsequently confessed her unchastity. While, in a public investigation before the Civil Service Commission, she was contesting the authority of the district attorney to discharge her, she will be estopped from denying that she was in fact a public officer so as to relieve her from the application 'of the doctrine of privileged communications. The occasion rendered the communication privileged under the circumstances.

It is unnecessary to quote the entire newspaper article. The gist of this publication was found in the first paragraph, as follows:

“A plot to ruin him through charges of immorality was made today by district attorney Thomas Lee Woolwine in a letter to the county civil service commission announcing he had discharged Ida Wright Jones, an investigator in his office. The district attorney alleged that Miss Jones had tried to sell to his political enemies for $10,000 a false affidavit in which she claimed to have had intimate relations with him.”

The complaint contained two causes of action.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 78, 87 Cal. App. 246, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-express-publishing-co-calctapp-1927.