Kansas City Star Co. v. Carlisle

108 F. 344, 47 C.C.A. 384, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3773
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1901
DocketNo. 1,447
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 108 F. 344 (Kansas City Star Co. v. Carlisle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Star Co. v. Carlisle, 108 F. 344, 47 C.C.A. 384, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3773 (8th Cir. 1901).

Opinions

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The assignments óf error are very numerous, and embrace principally exceptions to the admission and exclusion of testimony. We • shall consider them mainly in the order that they were discussed by counsel, so far as it is deemed necessary to consider them.

At the beginning of the trial, after reading the libelous article complained of, of date February 20, 1807, and the two other articles of date February 21,1897, and March 7,1897, which are set out above in the defendant’s plea in mitigation, the plaintiff below offered in evidence a duly-certified copy of the record of a case entitled, “The People of the State of Colorado v. W. E. Gordon and H. Carlisle,” theretofore pending in the district court of Mesa county, state of Colorado, which is the case above mentioned in the defendant’s plea of justification. Attached to and forming a part of said record, as the same was made up and certified by the clerk of said district court [351]*351of Mesa county, Colo., was a statement under oath, signed by Ibe district attorney of said county, which was made in support of.au application to- said court for permission to dismiss the prosecution against Gordon and Carlisle, and on the strength of which said action was dismissed on March 6, 1897, and the defendants at that time discharged. The statement so made by the district attorney is too lengthy to be set out in full. It will suffice to say generally that the district attorney by said statement represented, in substance, to the district court of Mesa county that he had carefully goue over all the evidence in the possession of the defendants Gordon and Carlisle upon which they intended to rely for (he purpose of establishing their innocence of the charge of receiving stolen cattle, knowing the same to be stolen; that, as the result of such examination, and as the result of an examination of the evidence which, could be produced by the state to substantiate the charge of receiving stolen property, he had become satisfied that the defendants were Innocent, that a jury would so find, and that a trial of the case would be a useless expense, although, the defendants were ready for a trial, and were anxious for an acquittal by a jury. Yv'hen this record was offered by the plaintiff as an entirety, counsel for the defendant objected to the statement of the district attorney which was incorporated therein, and to the admission of this part of the record an exception was reserved. Before disposing of the exception, it is deemed advisable to stain certain facts which, in our opinion, have an important bearing upon the question whether the admission by the trial court of the entire record was a material error: One of the defendant’s attorneys, in his opening statement to ihe jury, which seems to have preceded the introduction of any evidence by either party, said to the jury, in substance, and with reference to the dismissal of the criminal proceedings in the state of ('clorado, that Cordon and Carlisle went out there and turned state’s evidence, and that then White, who had stolen the cattle, pleaded guilty, and “in consideration of that the prosecuting attorney dismissed the case as to Gordon and Carlisle.” In the article which the defendant caused to be published in its paper on March 7, 1897, and which wás pleaded by it in mitigation of damages, it was said, after stating the fact Hint the proceedings against Carlisle had been dismissed at the request of the district attorney, “he [Carlisle] was able to convince the prosecutor that the charges were false”; no mention being made of the circumstance, which was disclosed by the record of the Colorado court, that the action was dismissed by the district attorney notwithstanding the fact that the defendants were at the time anxious for a trial and an acquittal by a jury. The defendant’s plea of justification also contained the statement that “after the plaintiff was taken to Colorado for trial the criminal information against him and Gordon was dismissed, and the same was never tried on the merits.” It furthermore appears from the bill of exceptions shat, long before the defendant filed its plea justifying the libelous publication, it was well advised of all the proceedings that had taken place in the Colorado court, including the sworn statement that had been made and filed therein by the district attorney, and that it was' also well aware, through depositions which had previously been taken, [352]*352that S. P. Cbipman, at whose instance tbe criminal proceedings in the state of Colorado bad been instituted, and upon whose affidavit the criminal information against Carlisle and Gordon had been drawn, had himself testified, under oath, and in substance, that, at the time of malting said affidavit to procure Carlisle’s arrest, he “knew that Carlisle did not steal the cattle,” that he “never supposed that Carlisle knew that they were stolen cattle,” and that the criminal proceeding was set on foot in Mesa county merely to get him back to Colorado as a witness, so as to ascertain from whom he had purchased certain cattle which turned out to be stolen property. It will be conceded that the statements made by the district attorney of Mesa county, Colo., in support of his motion for leave to dismiss the criminal proceeding against Carlisle, were incompetent to show that he was not guilty of the crime of receiving stolen cattle. It goes without saying that upon that issue the statements were in the main hearsay or mere expressions of opinion; and if they had been admitted by the trial court to establish Carlisle’s innocence, and the jury had been instructed on that theory, the error would have been fatal. The entire record of the Colorado court, including therein the sworn statement of the" district attorney, was not admitted, however, upon any such theory as the one last suggested. When the entire record was received, the learned trial judge slated to the jury that the record' was not admitted “as showing that Carlisle was not guilty of the charge, but as evidence of what was done in court,” and as the court further remarked, ip substance, to refute the inference which might be drawn from the opening statement of counsel, which has been heretofore mentioned. In the final charge to the jury allusion was again made to the statement of the district attorney, and the jury were again advised that they should “not regard any recitation of facts therein made as evidence of the innocence or guilt of Carlisle or Gordon of the offense of which they were charged” in the criminal information. The court further remarked in that connection that the statement was originally admitted in view of the suggestion of the defendant’s counsel that the dismissal of the criminal proceedings had been brought about by some questionable means or influence. It is clear, therefore, that the jury were not left at liberty to attach any .weight to the statements of the district attorney as bearing upon Carlisle’s guilt or innocence, and, if they did so, their action was in plain disregard of the instructions of the trial court. Such action on the part of the jury will not be presumed.

It is claimed, however, that the statement in question was irrelevant to any issue in the case, and that, being irrelevant and immaterial, it must be presumed to have been prejudicial to the defendant company. We are not able to adopt that view of the evidence. The defendant had set forth the criminal proceedings in the Colorado court both in its plea of justification and in its plea in mitigation of damages. Having done so, it was bound to give a fair account of the proceedings, or at least not to give an account of the same which might lead to false inferences.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 F. 344, 47 C.C.A. 384, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-star-co-v-carlisle-ca8-1901.