Lewis v. Hayes

132 P. 1022, 165 Cal. 527, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 453
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 5923.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 132 P. 1022 (Lewis v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Hayes, 132 P. 1022, 165 Cal. 527, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 453 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiff sued to recover damages for a libel published of and concerning her in the San Jose Daily Mercury, a newspaper owned and published by the defendant and appellant. The complaint charged in two counts; in the first, seeking compensation in the sum of ten thousand dollars for general damages; in the second, seeking compensation in the sum of twenty thousand dollars for special damages alleged to have been occasioned to her by the injury to her lodging-house business and to her business as an instructress in the art of dancing. Trial was had before a jury, which returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1,792. From the judgment which followed this verdict the Mercury Publishing Company appeals, the evidence being brought up for review by bill of exceptions.

The libel complained of is the following:

“San Jose Teacher is a Victim of Leprosy
“Miss Carrie Lewis, Dancing Instructress, Leaves for Island in the Pacific Ocean.
“It was learned yesterday with great sorrow by the many friends of Miss Carrie Lewis that this woman, who was well known in San Jose for so many years, had contracted' the dread disease leprosy. Several .physicians of the city have been watching the ease with the greatest of care for several days past, and it has been decided by them that the malady *529 is nothing less than the disease mentioned. The patient of her own will has asked to be taken to the Sandwich Islands, where she may be away from all possibility of infection to others and where she may be treated for the disease she now suffers from.
“Early yesterday morning Miss Lewis was taken from the city and will wait in San Francisco for the steamer which will carry her to her future home in the islands.
“How the patient has contracted this disease the medical profession is. at a loss to know, as there appears no reason from the recitation of her life that would point to any means of contracting the disease.”

The answer denied that the publication “was and is false and defamatory.” It denied all of the allegations of injury and damage to plaintiff and to her business, and it then pleaded that the publication was a privileged publication, herein averring that Dr. William Simpson was the health officer of the county of Santa Clara and ex-officio the hoard of health of the county; that upon the eighteenth day of March “at the city of San Jose in said county of Santa Clara, said health officer and board of health of said county held a public official meeting and proceeding”; that the words contained in the publication complained of “were said and spoken by said health officer in said public official meeting and proceeding in the course thereof,” and that “said publication was and is a true and fair report, without malice, of said public official meeting and proceeding and of the words and things said and stated by said health officer in the course thereof.” And in this connection it is pleaded that it was brought to the attention of the defendant “that unavoidable mistakes and unintentional errors had been made by said health officer in said official proceedings and in said words and things said by him in the course thereof, and that the initials, first name and name of said plaintiff were used by him instead of the initials, first name and name of another person”; that in the next issue of defendant’s paper and in the most conspicuous part thereof the following was published :

“Correction: The statement made in the Mercury of Thursday morning to the effect that Miss Carrie Lewis was suffer *530 ing from leprosy, and that she was about to leave for the Hawaiian Islands, is not .true. Miss Carrie Lewis has not been ill at all, and her sister, Miss Helen Lewis, is a sufferer from a severe form of eczema, not leprosy, as stated by the- Mercury by what is regarded as the highest authority. This' paper is glad to know its authority for the statement is wrong and that Miss Lewis is steadily improving in health. This correction is made voluntarily and cheerfully.”

By appellant it is first contended that the evidence fails to show that the respondent suffered any damage to her business. But in this the argument is not so much that the testimony of plaintiff did not in fact establish this damage, for plaintiff testified that following the publication the income from her dancing pupils fell to twenty dollars or thirty dollars a month from one hundred and fifty dollars to two hundred dollars a month as it had been previously, and that following the publication of the article all her roomers, save one, left her house. Appellant’s argument goes rather to the inferences which it thinks should be drawn from the testimony. It appears that plaintiff’s sister, who had been associated with her in the business of giving dancing lessons and conducting the rooming-house, had become afflicted with a disfiguring, puzzling, and stubborn skin disease, and the argument of appellant is that it was this fact which impaired or destroyed respondent’s business. This argument is a reasonable one to be addressed to the jury, but cannot here operate to control the jury’s finding. And, as against this argument, it may be said that in the public print to charge this plaintiff with the affliction of so loathsome a disease as leprosy could not fail to have a direct effect in impairing her revenues from her two vocations—the giving of dancing lessons and the maintenance of a rooming-house, each of which involved not only close and constant physical propinquity, but frequently physical contact with her patrons.

The Civil'Code (see. 47, subd. 4) declares a privileged publication to be one made “By a fair and true report, without malice, in a public journal, of a judicial, legislative, or other public official proceeding, or of anything said in the course thereof, or of a verified charge or complaint made by any person to a public official, upon which complaint a warrant' shall have been issued.” But two facts, each independent of *531 the other, destroy the asserted privileged character of this publication. The first is that it nowhere purports to be a report of any public official proceeding or of anything said in the course thereof. (Gilman v. McClatchy, 111 Cal. 606, [44 Pac. 241], Storey v. Wallace, 60 Ill. 51; State v. Sheridan, 14 Idaho, 222 [15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 497, 93 Pac. 656; Ilsley v. Sentinel, 133 Wis. 20, [126 Am. St. Rep. 928, 113 N. W. 425].) And the second is that it was not in fact such a report. The evidence upon this matter is that upon the evening of March 18th there was held a banquet of the Santa Clara Medical Society, which was. attended by Dr. William Simpson, the then county health officer. The banquet was a social and not an official occasion. During its progress a reporter of defendant approached Dr. Simpson and asked him if he had heard that Miss Lewis had leprosy, and the doctor replied that he had so heard.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 1022, 165 Cal. 527, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-hayes-cal-1913.