Louisville Times Co. v. Emrich

66 S.W.2d 73, 252 Ky. 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 73 (Louisville Times Co. v. Emrich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville Times Co. v. Emrich, 66 S.W.2d 73, 252 Ky. 210 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Couet by

Drury, Commissioner—

Reversing in part and affirming in part.

Wm. Emricli recovered against the Louisville Times Company $2,000 compensatory and $50 punitive damages for libel; Ms wife, Mayme I. Emrich, made a lite recovery, growing ont of the same publication; and the Times Company has appealed.

From July 3, 1929, until June 11, 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Emrich resided at 1219 Homeview drive, in Louisville, Ky., in what appears to have been a one-story bungalow, which had been erected by a Mr. Monahan, and by him sold to James J. Mouser, from whom it was rented by one or both of the Emrichs, but whether to both or one and, if one, to which one, is not disclosed of this record.

About 1:30 a. m. June 11th fire was discovered in this house, and before it could be extinguished the roof and upper part of it were practically destroyed. The ravages of the fire disclosed two gable walls over the porch about 30 inches apart, thus making a sort of closet between them about 135 or 140 cubic feet in extent, the size of which will be more readily grasped by *212 considering that the average room contains between 2,000 and 3,000 cubic feet. This closet was at the end of an unfloored and unlighted attic, and, to reach it, it was necessary to coon the joists of the porch ceiling. This secret closet had been built and used for the storage of whisky by Mr. Mouser, the owner of the building, when he lived there. It would be practically impossible at any reasonable expense to construct a closet more cleverly concealed than this one, or one more difficult to find and less likely to be discovered. There was a small door opening into it, and the door and the means of opening and closing it were likewise well concealed. This closet and the roof above it were less damaged by the fire than any other of the upper parts of this building. After the fire, there was discovered in this closet a five-gallon stone jug, two paper cartons containing a number of empty half-pint bottles, such as are sometimes used for whisky, and in the main part of the attic there was found what looked like part of a burned stave from a keg or barrel, but no hoops, and a few other partly burned pint and half pint bottles, and in the ruins of the living room a five-gallon tin can. No liquor of any kind was found anywhere.

The Times Company had a picture made of what was left of the house, and this picture and a rather thrilling story appeared on the front page of the first four editions of the Times that afternoon, and almost the same story, but slightly softened, appeared in the last two issues. The original story and to some extent the revised story contained sensational mention of and references, both in the body of the article and in the headlines, to “Hidden whisky,” “Secret plant,” “Rum blaze, ” “ Aging needle, ” “ Closet containing the liquor, ’ ’ “Rum cache,” “Whisky containers,” etc. A reporter for the Times, who visited the place says he found no whisky there, and when he telephoned in the. information upon which the article was written that he said nothing of any “Hidden whisky,” or that there was any whisky there at all. He was asked about this part of the article: “The hidden closet containing the liquor was constructed under the roof.” Of course, we do not know how much 'confusion he exhibited on the stand, but here is the way it looks in the record: “I think it was —is a misprint, more than anything else.” It was perhaps charitable to call it a misprint, but not likely to *213 impress a Jury, then considering the question, was it true?

This hidden closet is described in the article as opening into an unfinished room on the second floor,, this reporter admitted on cross-examination, that it was at one end of an attic, and it had no other door to it opening into anything. The door opening into this closet from the attic was the only opening to this closet.

This article continues: “The electric aging needle is a device that works on the principle of an electric-curling iron. It is a perforated tube of a composition material — ” “The wires are connected to an ordinary electric cord and plug attachable to any light socket. ”■ Another position taken by the appellant is that there was whisky in this secret closet and the whisky became overheated, exploded, and was destroyed in the fire. It even proved there were two explosions, and it contends its article was substantially true. We will follow it to this position and see if there can he truth in it.

If it were the liquor in this closet that exploded, then the first fire, the most intense fire, the fire fed by the burning whisky, would have been in this closet, yet the very pictures which it introduced on the trial and the one it printed in its paper showed this closet to be the least injured part of this building. The bottles found in this closet were in paper cartons and the cartons were not destroyed. And as this reporter was pressed further on cross-examination he finally admitted there had been no flames in this secret closet.

Going back to the aging needle which the article described as a perforated tube of composition material, the Times Company calls attention to a short piece of pipe which was picked up in this attic after the fire, out of which it is now endeavoring to construct an aging needle. We examined this scrap of pipe (a little over four inches long), and v/hen we did we found it has no hole or holes in it anywhere; it has not even one perforation. Mrs. Emrich describes a pipe formerly attached to the bath tub, a cheap arrangement by means of which a shower bath could be taken, which had given away, had fallen, and had been thrown into this attic to get out of the way, and the physical appearance of this piece of pipe shows so clearly that it was merely a piece of bath room plumbing that the. effort of the Times *214 Company, to make the jury believe it was the remains of an aging needle perhaps hurt its ease.

It may be fairly said that all reporter found was a jug, a tin can, a scrap of what appears to be brass pipe, some empty bottles, a secret closet, and that the rest of the story was largely imaginary. After the first issue of the paper appeared, about noon, the Times was called on the telephone, told the article was nntrue, and Mr. and Mrs. Emrich asked for an interview and a retraction, neither of which was accorded them, and Mr. Emrich was told, “He had better get out from under the police,” and the article was published in the five subsequent editions. The Times Company for defense relied upon the substantial truth of the article, and the jury found against it.

The intended effect of this article was to convey to the average reasonable reader the impression that this house was then being used for the .illicit storage and manufacture or processing of whisky, .and that in the aging of it a bit of carelessness in the use of an aging needle had caused the fire. The article was libelous per se (17 R. C. L. p. 279, sec. 20; 36 C. J. p. 1204, sec. 132).

The name of Mayme I. Emrich is not mentioned in the article.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 73, 252 Ky. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-times-co-v-emrich-kyctapphigh-1933.