Kilgour v. Evening Star Newspaper Co.

53 A. 716, 96 Md. 16, 1902 Md. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 53 A. 716 (Kilgour v. Evening Star Newspaper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilgour v. Evening Star Newspaper Co., 53 A. 716, 96 Md. 16, 1902 Md. LEXIS 134 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action for libel. The defendant interposed a demurrer which the Court sustained. The judgment being for the defendant, the plaintiff appealed.

The declaration contains three counts — the first and third set out parts of the alleged libelous publication, with certain innuendoes ; the second contains the entire article, but without colloquium or innuendo. No special damages have been pleaded ; and therefore the only question presented by the record, is, whether the publication is libelous per se. Whether this be so or not, is always on demurrer within the province of the Court; and it is also “ matter of law ” whether an innuendo is fairly warranted by the language declared on. Lewis v. Daily News Co., 81 Md. 472; Avirett v. State, 76 Md. 510; Haines v. Campbell, 74 Md. 158; Negley v. Farrow, 60 Md. 180.

The declaration charges that at the time of the publication the appellant was and still is a practicing attorney and the State’s Attorney of Montgomery County, and that the publication was “ of and concerning him in respect of his said profession as a practicing attorney and of his duties as State’s Attorney.” It is not contended that the words of the publication are libelous as against the appellant, otherwise than as they touch upon or have reference to his profession and his official position of State’s Attorney. The rule of law applicable to a case of that kind, seems to be clear. “Words spoken *24 of a person in his office, trade, profession, business or means of getting a livelihood, which tend to expose him to the hazard of losing his office, or which charge him with fraud, indirect dealings or incapacity and thereby tend to injure him in his trade, profession or business, are actionable without proof of special damage, even though such words if spoken or written of an ordinary person, might not be actionable per se.” 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 942 (2nd ed.); Wilson v. Cottman, 65 Md. 197.

“The words must go so far as to impute to him some incapacity or lack of due qualification to fill the position, or some positive past misconduct which will- injuriously affect him in it.” Sillars v. Collier, 151 Mass. 50; Newell on Defamation, Slander and Libel, ch. 8, p. 178; Townsend, Libel and. Slander, secs. 188, 189.

So this Court said in Newbold & Sons v. The J. M. Bradstreet & Son, 57 Md. 53: “To say or publish of a merchant anything that imputes insolvency, inability to pay his debts, the want of integrity in his business, or personal incapacity or pecuniary inability to conduct it with success, is slanderous or libelous per se if without justification.”

In Richardson v. State, 66 Md. 212, the Court citing from Woodgate v. Ridont, 4 Foster & Finlason, 223, said: “It is of essential importance the administration of justice should be open to discussion ; but that criticism must be fair and honest and not reckless and uncharitable ; and that anything beyond this, and which imputes corrupt motives to those who administer it, is an abuse of privilege.” “If one goes out of his way to asperse the personal character of a public man and to ascribe to him base and corrupt motives he must do so at his peril, and must either prove the truth of what he says or answer in damages to the party injured.” Negley v. Farrow, 60 Md. 158.

These principles, which are fully supported by authority, establish the proposition, that, in order to find the words of this publication libelous, we must be enabled to determine that they impute to the appellant as an attorney and State’s Attor *25 ney, some base or corrupt motive, or incapacity, in the discharge of the duties of such office; or,- as stated by Newell, some “unfitness to perform” the duties of the office, or “want of integrity in the discharge of them.” Newell on Slander and Libel, da. 8; Neeb v. Hope, 111 Pa. St. 153—154; Ba ldwin v. Walser, 41 Mo. App. 243—254.

The publication was published in the “Evening Star,” a. newspaper printed in the city of Washington, and circulated in Montgomery County. Apparently, it is an ordinary news item, containing a statement of the circumstances attending the death and burial of a negro baby, of the suspicions concerning it that were aroused in the community where the events took place, and of the actions of the State’s Attorney in connection therewith. It is not requisite that the whole article be reproduced here. It is long, and it. will answer every purpose, if we state its general purport and then refer more particularly to those parts that are relied on by the appellant to show the libelous character of the publication. As set out in the second count of the declaration, the article states, that one Bessie Sellman had given birth to a child, no physician being present; — that the mid-wife, who officiated, told the reporter that it was healthy and that after seeing it some half-dozen times at intervals of probably a week, she predicted it would “grow up that on May 3rd, ‘she was horrified to be told that a notice was tacked on a tree’ to the effect that the baby was -dead and that Henry Mason had buried it in Steven’s lot.” Some conversation between this woman and Henry Mason is then recited. • The article then proceeds (in substance) to state, that the actions and language used by Mason led the reporter to watch near Mason’s house, and he saw Mason’s father-in-law come out of Mason’s house with a spade and “go to the place said to be a grave” and dig up a box shaped like a coffin, which he carried away and buried (as the reporter afterwards learned) in Mason’s yard. That he then reported the matter to the Justice of the Peace who consulted the appellant; that the latter told him to “issue warrants for the arrest of everybody suspected of *26 having anything to do with the affair and commit them to the Rockville jail. ” The justice however issued a warrant only for the arrest of the mother who was committed to jail for a hearing. That the remains of the baby were disinterred “with the idea that an autopsy was to be made” and in compliance with his request the State’s Attorney was notified. “The latter Mr. Thompson said, reached Gaithersburg about the hour appointed for the inquest to begin, and almost at once, supposedly by appointment met Dr. McCormick, who saw the baby soon after its death. A conversation between the doctor and the State’s Attorney followed and at its termination, Mr. Kilgour informed Deputy Sheriff Thompson and Justice Baughman, that if an autopsy was held he would refuse to recommend the payment of the bill for the expenses, with the result stated.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 716, 96 Md. 16, 1902 Md. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilgour-v-evening-star-newspaper-co-md-1902.