Magness v. Isgrig

225 S.W. 332, 145 Ark. 232, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 465
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 4, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 225 S.W. 332 (Magness v. Isgrig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magness v. Isgrig, 225 S.W. 332, 145 Ark. 232, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 465 (Ark. 1920).

Opinions

Wood, J.

The appellee held a State certificate showing that he was authorized to teach in the public schools of the State of Arknasas. .He was engaged to teach school for the year 1918 in Independence County, Arkansas, where he resided. Appellant, B. A. Magness, was a director of the school district where the appellee was employed to teach, and appellants, J. F. Cosey and C. N. Fields, were ex-directors in that district.

In 1917 appellants and.nine others, residents of Independence County, addressed a petition to Hon. J. L. Bond, State Superintendent of Public Instruction of the State of Arkansas, which reads as follows:

“Dear Sir: We, the undersigned, patrons of the Newark Special School District of Newark, Independence County, Arkansas, No. 33, respectfully show and represent that W. A. Isgrig, who holds a State certificate to teach in the public schools of Arkansas, and who has been employed, as we are informed, by the school board of said district, by a divided vote, as superintendent of said school for the coming year, is a person, as we believe, unfit to hold a State license or teach in the public schools of said State on account of his moral character, and we respectfully prefer against him the following charges, towit:

First. That the said W. A. Isgrig on or about the last day of August, 1916, near Newport, Jackson County, refereed a public prize fight between two men, in the presence of a large crowd of persons, and otherwise participated and encouraged said prize fight, in violation of good morals, and the statute laws of the State of Arkansas.

Second. That, during the years 1915 and 1916, he-was secretary and manager of the Newark Canning Company, having charge of its business and finances, and, acting in that capacity, so managed said business that it proved an absolute loss to many persons who are patrons of said school, and has wholly failed and refused to render said persons any intelligent or satisfactory statement of the losses of said business, and has subjected himself to charges of gross carelessness and mismanagement on account thereof.

Third. That the said Isgrig, who has been a resident of Independence County for the past three years, has not registered in the teachers’ institute in said county as the law directs. That, on account of the foregoing, and other improper acts on his part, we deem him a person wholly unfit to hold said license; and respectfully ask that he be required to make answer hereto, and that on a full hearing hereof his said license be revoked and annulled.”

The appellee instituted this action against the appellants,. setting out the above petition and alleging that it was maliciously published and circulated by the appellants concerning the appellee; that the statements were false, malicious, scandalous, defamatory, slanderous and libelous; that they tended to blacken and injure the honesty, virtue,- integrity, morality, and reputation of the appellee, and to expose him to public contempt, hatred and ridicule, and to injure and damage him in his profession, character and reputation; that he was caused great inconvenience and expense to meet and defend the charges, to his damage in the sum of $5,000. Appellee alleged that he had been greatly humiliated and disgraced and put to shame, which caused him great mental anguish and much worry, all to his damage in the sum of $20,000.

The appellants answered and alleged that appellant, Magness, was a school director and the other appellants were patrons and- taxpayers, and as such, interested in the Newark School District No. 33, of which district appellee had been elected and was acting as the superintendent of the school; that, acting upon information which they deemed reliable and which the;f believed to be true,- they signed the petition set out in appellee’s complaint and presented the statement to other patrons of the school who signed it; that they caused this petition to be filed with the Superintendent of Public Instruction for the purpose of having the license of the appellee as a teacher revoked. They denied that they were actuated by any malice or ill will toward the appellee, but say they were influenced solely by a sense of duty as director and patrons of the school and taxpayers of the district in the interest and welfare of the patrons and pupils of the school; that the statements contained in the petition were privileged and were, therefore, not a basis of liability against the appellants.

The appellee testified concerning the alleged prize fight as follows: The fight was held on Labor Day, the first Monday in September, 1916, between one Cliff Edwards, a Newark man, and Bennie Palmer, who was with a carnival at Newport, giving exhibitions of boxing and lecturing on physical development and care of the body. He met any and all comers during the carnival. Some of the friends of Edwards arranged for a boxing contest in Palmer’s tent on Saturday night, the first Monday in September. For some reason Edwards did not appear and they postponed the contest until Monday. There was some difficulty in securing a referee. Dr. Virgil Pascoe, a reputable physician, property owner and leading citizen of Newark, who had four children in school under appellee, and Mr. Holderby of Newark, came to appellee and asked him if he would referee the boxing contest, stating that if the appellee refused they would not go on with it. Appellee told them that he did not know the rules of boxing; that he knew what a foul was and that was the extent of his knowledge. They assured the appellee that there was nothing to it except a boxing contest like those that had been conducted at the Elks’ hall and like what had been going on all week before. Appellee consented on condition that he was not to make a decision as to who won or lost, but was just to keep the two men from making fouls, hitting below the belt or during clinches, or using unfair means in the boxing contest.

There were thirty or forty people from Newark there and a number of the patrons of the school, fathers of children in the school. The appellee had nothing' to do with arranging the contest, and there was no prize money paid, so far as he knew. Appellee expressly told those who requested him to referee the contest that he would not do so if it was to be a prize fight, and he was assured by them that there would be no prize, and he was told by Edwards that he was to receive nothing. Appellee refereed the contest under the belief that there was to be no prize or reward.

The boxing match was pulled off across the river about a quarter of a mile up the river from Newport. It was in the woods. Everybody up and down Main street knew where it was going to be. It was free for all. About sixty people went up on the boat. Appellee was always the leader in school athletics. They had the ground fixed and the rope stretched when the appellee got there. The place was about twenty feet square. The contest stopped at the end of the tenth round. The appellee did not know the terms of the contest, but only knew the terms that he made. He did not see the parties to the contest receive any reward.

Cliff Edwards testified that he was one of the principals in the so-called prize fight. He did not understand from anybody that he was to get any sort of reward. “He just fought a social bout because he liked the game.” They used nine-ounce gloves—large ones.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 332, 145 Ark. 232, 1920 Ark. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magness-v-isgrig-ark-1920.