Mangum Electric Co. v. Border

1923 OK 547, 222 P. 1002, 101 Okla. 64, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1923
Docket10814
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 1923 OK 547 (Mangum Electric Co. v. Border) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mangum Electric Co. v. Border, 1923 OK 547, 222 P. 1002, 101 Okla. 64, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 8 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

This action was commenced by Dr. G. F. Border against the MangUm Electric Company, John O. Keys, and certain other defendants to recover damages for injury to his business, reputation, and health, and for exemplary damages. The allegations of the petition are substantially as followis: That Dr. Border, a regularly licensed and practicing physician, conducted a hospital at Mangum, Okla., and was mayor of said city. That on or about the 1st day of July, 1914, Doctor ■ Border, as mayor, and the city council of Mangum called a special election to be, held on the 4th day of August, 1914, in said city for the purpose of determining whether (he city should issue bonds to install a municipal electric light and power plant. That the Southwestern Cities Electric Company and the Mangum Electric Company were the owners of a franchise in the city and were engaged in furnishing the city with electricity for light and power purposes. That John C. Keys was the duly elected president of the Southwestern- Cities Electric Company and also president o^ the Mangum Electric Company; that E. W. McClintic was treasurer, and J. IV. Chambers was the manager of the Man- y.\ gum Electric Company; that C. P. Walker,’' ' Cy Williams, R. A. Baird, Dr. J. F. Campbell, and Julian Bond were acting agents , and employes of the corporations. It.was » further alleged that John C. Keys, presi- 1 dent of the Mangum Electric Company", E. W. M'eClintie, treasurer, and J. W. ..Chambers, the general manager, willfully” Jtiid maliciously conspired together for the ¿purpose of defaming, slandering, and decoying the good name and reputation of /the plaintiff in his business, and as a physician and surgeon, and to injure his reputation as a public official, and thereby destroying his influence in favor of the bond issue aforesaid, and thus defeat the same. That said parties in carrying out said conspiracy employed the services of. the William J. Burns International Detective *66 Agency, and through the other defendants above mentioned, who wiere informed o-f the conspiracy, and who agreed to aid and assist the defendant corporation and their officers in said conspiracy, secured a pregnant woman, to wit: Maude Marshall, and by unlawful means sought to induce plaintiff to perform a Criminal operation, to wit. an abortion, upon said Maude Marshall. That in carrying out said conspiracy and in their attempt, to have said plaintiff commit said abortion, the said Maude Marshall. R. A. Baird. Cy Williams, and B. V. T-Tnp-'ni. Ilm agent, of the Burns Detective Agency, went to the town of Hobart and there registered at a hotel and instated a dictograph in the room of said Mande Marshall, and one of said parties telephoned to said plaintiff at Mangum, requesting him to come to Hobart to perform an operation, but said plaintiff refused to come to Hobart. That thereafter said Maude Marshall, said Baird, Williams, and Henson went to Altus, Okla., and there registered at a hotel, and installed a dictograph in their roam■ That R. A. Baird then went to Mangum to induce plaintiff to come to Altus for the purpose of performing an operation, but said plaintiff refused. That on or about the 24th day of July, 1914, the parties, above mentioned, in carrying out their unlawful conspiracy, went to the city of Mangum, registered at a hotel and there installed a dictograph in the room of said Maude Marshall and again solicited the plaintiff to attend said Maude Marshall in the capacity of a physician for the purpose of performing an operation. That the plaintiff, believing the defendants had entered into a conspiracy, caused the arrest of said parties- for conspiracy. That the dictograph was installed in the different rooms of said Maude Miarshall for the purpose of overhearing and recording the conversation with reference to such criminal operation, with the intent to thereafter make said conversation public, and thereby injure plaintiff in his business, or threaten him to make the same public, unless, be desisted from supporting the bond issue. That said J. W. Chambers, in carrying out said conspiracy, issued certain • slanderous statements in the presence of Jim Sharpe, Marion Northcutt, O. R. Stubbs, and J. I). Cnrreathers-. to wit:

“Dr. Border has been hallooing around long enough about that bond (issue. He '.will be packing his grip and hiking to Europe pretty soon. The blackest scandal will come out here in a few days, tha: will shock tliis town, and outside money will he used to do it, and not Mangum money.”

The petition alleges that said acts injured plaintiff in his business and profession, and prayed for damages.

No sendee was bad on the Southwestern Cities Electric Company, and the case as fo it was dismissed.

Th,e defendants fl-led separate -answers. A change of venue was granted from Greer county to Beckham county. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff and against, the defendants S. B. Williams, R. A. Baird, B. V. Henson. G. P. Walker, Mangum Electric Company, John C, Keys, and J. W. Chambers for the sum of $1 2,000 for damages to the reputation and character and standing of plaintiff as a physician; $10,-000 for mental anguish and pain; $20,000 for actual damages -to plaintiff’s business; $20,000 for exemplary damages, or a total of $62,000. •

For reversal plaintiffs in error assign numerous assignments of error, among which are that the court erred in overruling -the demurrer to the petition, and the motion to strike certain allegations from the petition, to wit, the allegations regarding defendants Baird, Henson, and Williams and Maude Marshall registering at the hotels and installing dictographs and soliciting -the plaintiff to perform an operation upon Maude Marshall, and in refusing to require the plaintiff to elect as to which cause of action he would proceed to trial upon, as defendants contend that the petition alleges three separate and distinct causes _ of action, to wit: An action for damages resulting from the overt acts alleged to have occurred frlom conspiracy; second, an action for slanderous remarks alleged to have been made by J. W. Chambers; and third, an action for slanderous remarks alleged to have been made by C. P. Walker. It is further contended that the court erred in -overruling- the motion to require the plaintiff to separately state, and number his several causes of action.

In considering the above assignments of error, it is necessary to first determine the kind and character of action, if any, that is stated in the petition. The defendants contend this is- an action for damages for slander, while plaintiff contends this is an action for conspiracy. The acts complained of as a foundation for this action may be summarized to allege that the ’ defendants willfully and maliciously sought bo injure plaintiff in his official capacity by willful, malicious, and corrupt means. This is not an action for.slander, but is an action to re *67 cover damages against certain defendants for conspiring together to willfully and maliciously injure plaintiff in his profession and business without just cause or excuse.

The rule is well settled that in a civil action against members of .a conspiracy for the recovery of damages the gist thereof is the damages, not the conspiracy. One of the leading cases upon this question is Martens et al. v. Reilly et al., 109 Wis. 464.

The first, second, and fourth paragraphs of the syllabus are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 547, 222 P. 1002, 101 Okla. 64, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mangum-electric-co-v-border-okla-1923.