Mahnke v. Northwest Publications, Inc.

124 N.W.2d 411, 266 Minn. 515, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 756
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 18, 1963
Docket38,831
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 N.W.2d 411 (Mahnke v. Northwest Publications, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahnke v. Northwest Publications, Inc., 124 N.W.2d 411, 266 Minn. 515, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 756 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment which dismissed William L. Mahnke’s libel action against Northwest Publications, Inc.

Defendant accepts plaintiff’s statement of facts as substantially accurate, subject to certain corrections hereinafter noted.

Plaintiff is a detective captain with the Minneapolis Police Department. He brought this action for general damages to his reputation and standing in the community, as a police officer and as an individual, arising out of the publication of an article in the St. Paul Dispatch on January 21, 1960, which, according to plaintiff, charged him with misconduct in the handling of a criminal matter.

The trial court adopted the ruling made at a pretrial conference that the plaintiff’s retraction demand to the defendant, which was served pursuant to Minn. St. 548.06, did not comply with the requirement of the statute because it did not appear to specify the particular statements claimed to be libelous. It also ruled that there was material in the article in question which as to plaintiff was libelous per se, but that pursuant to § 548.06 plaintiff is limited in his recovery to special damages.

Plaintiff took exception to that part of the ruling pertaining to the request for a retraction, and defendant excepted to the ruling that the alleged publication was libelous per se.

Counsel for plaintiff then made a statement for the record of what plaintiff’s proof would involve. Therein counsel stated that plaintiff would not submit evidence as to any special damages resulting from *517 the publication of the article in question. Defendant’s motion to dismiss was then granted by the trial court.

The corrections in plaintiff’s statement of facts which defendant believes should be brought to the attention of this court are briefly these: That the article complained of was not a straight news article in the sense of reporting acts or incidents as facts, but rather was the story of statements made by the executive director of the Catholic Welfare Association, and that it was clear from the article that only the director’s version was being recited; that counsel for plaintiff stated, and the order for judgment so specified, that plaintiff had no special damages to prove, but his statement of facts implies that even though evidence of such damages might exist it was not submitted; also, that plaintiff originally complained of two substantially similar articles published in newspapers controlled by defendant and had sent identical retraction demands in reference to each article. To the first demand (the only one we need consider as plaintiff withdrew his complaint as to the second article) defendant replied that it was unable to determine the portions of the article plaintiff wished to have retracted and asked him to specify the slanderous material contained therein, but never received a reply from plaintiff to this request.

Plaintiff’s demand on January 28, 1960, for retraction of the St. Paul Dispatch article of January 21 read as follows:

“This is to inform you that we have been retained as attorneys for William L. Mahnke, a captain of the Minneapolis Police Force.
“We hereby give notice that your article printed on the front page of your January 21, 1960, issue of the St. Paul Dispatch included false, scandalous, defamatory, and libelous charges agáinst our client, Captain Mahnke. All charges published therein concerning the conduct, advice, or actions of Mr. Mahnke are noted as matters in this complaint. A photostatic copy of this article is enclosed herewith as Exhibit ‘A.’
“It is hereby demanded that you retract in the future the false, scandalous, defamatory, and libelous charges made against Mr. Mahnke in this article.”

Thereafter, on February 4, 1960, defendant by its attorneys replied by letter to plaintiff’s attorneys, the important part of which read:

*518 “* * * We are unable at this time to determine what portion or portions of the article should be retracted. We feel, and have advised the newspaper that no action can be taken on your demand until and unless you specify the slanderous material in the article.”

Plaintiff assigns that the trial court erred in ruling that plaintiff was restricted to the recovery of special damages.

It appears to us that the pertinent legal question is whether plaintiff’s notice to defendant demanding a retraction satisfies the requirements of the statute. Minn. St. 548.06 provides in part as follows:

“In an action for damages for the publication of a libel in a newspaper, the plaintiff shall recover no more than special damages, unless a retraction be demanded and refused as hereinafter provided. He shall serve upon the publisher at the principal place of publication, a notice, specifying the statements claimed to be libelous, and requesting that the same be withdrawn. If a retraction thereof be not published * * * he may allege such notice, demand, and failure to retract in his complaint and recover both special and general damages, if his cause of action be maintained. If such retraction be so published, he may still recover general damages, unless the defendant shall show that the libelous publication was made in good faith and under a mistake as to the facts.”

Plaintiff argues that his demand for retraction properly specifies the statements claimed to be libelous and should be upheld because it was patterned after demands which have been approved by this court. He cites Craig v. Warren, 99 Minn. 246, 109 N. W. 231, and Uhlman v. Farm, Stock & Home Co. 126 Minn. 239, 148 N. W. 102, as controlling.

The Craig case was an appeal by the defendant from an order of the district court overruling a demurrer to a complaint, which alleged that the editor and publisher of a weekly newspaper “did falsely and maliciously write and publish in such newspaper, of and concerning respondent, false, libelous, and defamatory matter.” Under a heading “Grafters Foiled” plaintiff was referred to, with another, as attempting to extort from and blackmail a property owner who had asked for per *519 mission, which was refused, to shoot deer which he claimed were destroying his garden. The complaint also charged that plaintiff had served a notice on the defendant as provided by statute, which notice read in part as follows:

“You are hereby notified that the article published by you in ‘The Hinckley Enterprise’ on the twentieth day of August, 1904, of and concerning the undersigned, and hereinafter particularly mentioned, was and is false and defamatory.”

Grounds urged in support of the demurrer were that the notice was not sufficient; that the complaint failed to identify plaintiff with the person libeled and to show the libelous nature of the matter complained of with respect to the plaintiff.

In affirming the trial court in that case, this court said that the article as a whole, if false, was libelous per se as it tended to injure the reputation and good standing of the plaintiff and expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kapellas v. Kofman
459 P.2d 912 (California Supreme Court, 1969)
Mahnke v. Northwest Publications, Inc.
160 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W.2d 411, 266 Minn. 515, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahnke-v-northwest-publications-inc-minn-1963.