Langford v. Vanderbilt University

318 S.W.2d 568, 44 Tenn. App. 694, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 3, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 318 S.W.2d 568 (Langford v. Vanderbilt University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langford v. Vanderbilt University, 318 S.W.2d 568, 44 Tenn. App. 694, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

These three suits were brought by the Reverend Mr. Robert L. Langford, his wife, and their four-year old daughter, Pamela (by him as next friend), each for $100,000 damages for libel for an item published in a student newspaper at Vanderbilt University known as the Hustler. The University, the student editor of the Hustler, Ormonde Plater, and the printer, Benson Printing Company, were joined as defendants.

This item appeared in the Hustler January 28, 1955, as a news story of the pleadings in six lawsuits filed January 20, 1955, by these plaintiffs for libel and invasion of privacy by a publication May 17, 1954, in another undergraduate student paper at Vanderbilt, called the humor magazine, or the Chase,- those six prior suits being against the University, the student editor of the Chase, James Gilliland, and the printer, Joyner-Hogan Printing Company.

With these three libel suits for the Hustler publication, plaintiffs brought three other suits on the same matter for invasion of their right of privacy. In these six latter suits defendants demurred to plaintiffs’ declarations. The Trial Court sustained the demurrers. The Supreme Court affirmed in the suits for invasion of plaintiffs’ privacy, holding this publication was not an invasion of their privacy, because it referred only to matters already made public by plaintiffs themselves in their six prior suits. See opinion on the former appeal, Langford v. Vanderbilt University, 199 Tenn. 389, 287 S. W. (2d) 32.

*699 The Court reversed in these three libel suits. It held that publication of a report of the contents of the pleadings in those six prior suits, even though no judicial action had been taken thereon, was privileged, if such report was fair and accurate and made without malice; but that since these declarations alleged this report was defamatory, not fair or accurate, and made with malice, they were sufficient in law to state a cause of action; and the demurrers were overruled and the cases remanded for defendants to plead over and for further proceedings. 199 Tenn. 399, 405, 287 S. W. (2d) 37, 39.

On the remand defendants filed general pleas of not guilty and special pleas that this Hustler publication was privileged, (1) because it was a fair and accurate report of the contents of the pleadings in those six prior suits, and (2) because it was invited and consented to by plaintiffs. And Vanderbilt University further pleaded that it was not liable under the rule of respondeat superior, because the publication was not made by it or by any servant or agent for it.

Upon the trial at the close of the evidence for plaintiffs the Trial Judge directed verdicts for Vanderbilt University and Benson Printing Company, and at the close of all the evidence he directed a verdict for Plater, and entered judgments dismissing the actions. Plaintiffs appealed in error, and have assigned numerous errors upon the trial. Their first and main insistence is that the evidence was sufficient to take the cases to the jury and the judge should have submitted them.

Upon the evidence there was no dispute as to any material fact. As stated, the so-called humor magazine, or the Chase, was published by undergraduate students *700 at Vanderbilt University, and its editor was James Gilli-land, and the printer Joyner-Hogan Printing Company. The alleged libelous matter appeared on page 7 of the Chase in its issue of May 17, 1954, in which it undertook to celebrate Mother’s Day, by use of cartoons, pictures of young women and babies, etc., apparently in light or humorous vein.

Page 7 was taken up with four pictures all with the overall title, “Everyone Loves Mother”, and each with its own legend underneath. The (1) upper left was a blank rectangle printed black, with “Father Loves Mother” under it. The (2) upper right was a picture of a small child, with this underneath: “Daughter Loves Mother (And wants to be one too!)”. The (3) lower left was a picture of a boy in a T-shirt, his arm tatooed with a heart enclosing the word “Mother”, with this below: “Sailor Boy Loves Mother”. The (4) lower right was a picture of a face partly covered by a hood, with this below it: “Midwife Loves Mother”.

There was nothing else on the page, nothing to refer to any of the plaintiffs, nothing to identify any of the pictures, except that the one of the child happened to be a picture of Pamela Langford which had been made when she was two years old and delivered by her father to this same printer (Joyner-Hogan Printing Company) to have a cut made of it to print Christmas cards two years before; and, by mistake or inadvertence, the printer used this cut again in printing this page of Chase.

Plaintiff Mr. Langford had formerly been a student at Vanderbilt and was now a Methodist minister with a church in east Nashville, where he and his wife and daughter lived. When this issue of Chase appeared on *701 the Vanderbilt campns, someone recognized this picture of his daughter and called his attention to it. Soon thereafter all but a few copies of this issue were seized and destroyed and further publication of Chase was banned by the Student Publications Board at Vanderbilt.

In September 1954, however, there was talk that plaintiff was going to bring a lawsuit about this matter. Two students, Plater, editor of the Hustler, and Joe Puryear, a reporter for it, went to see him, told him they were from the Hustler, had heard he was going to sue the University because of Chase’s unauthorized use of his daughter’s picture, and that, if so, they asked him for an interview and to let them publish a news story about it. He told them he had decided to bring suit, and gave them an interview for the story.

This took place at his home in the presence of his wife and daughter and a friend. It was all very friendly and cordial. He let them take some pictures, and then showed them some pictures of his daughter — one of her in a Vanderbilt T-shirt — and told them they might select one to be used with the story. Thereupon his friend suggested he call his lawyers, and after talking to them on the telephone, he told these students he would not release any picture and referred them to his lawyers for the legal details.

He was willing, however, for them to print the story. In fact, he told them he wanted publicity. Plater testified: “He told us that he wanted publicity in the matter, and to go and contact his lawyers for legal details”. Puryear testified he said: “I want publicity”. And he really did not deny it. In his cross-examination he admitted he had told them he wanted publicity, and then explained:

*702 “A. I wouldn’t have minded having a fair statement of the facts presented to the public. I was not ashamed of what I was doing. I believed that I was doing the will of my Almighty God in fighting this and I didn’t care if we had received publicity that would have presented it in its true light. ’ ’

Acting upon his suggestion, Puryear went to see his lawyers, Messrs. "Watkins & Crownover, and Mr. Watkins told Puryear he would call him when the suits were filed. On January 20, .1955, he telephoned Puryear that the suits were being filed at 3 o’clock that afternoon.

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Bluebook (online)
318 S.W.2d 568, 44 Tenn. App. 694, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langford-v-vanderbilt-university-tennctapp-1958.