McClung v. Star Chronicle Publishing Co.

202 S.W. 571, 274 Mo. 194, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 571 (McClung v. Star Chronicle Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClung v. Star Chronicle Publishing Co., 202 S.W. 571, 274 Mo. 194, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 15 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

RQY, C.

Plaintiff’s petition in three counts charges defendant with libel. There was a verdict for plaintiff on all counts, and the damages were assessed by the jury at $5000 actual and $5000 punitive damages on each count, making a total of $301,000. The trial court compelled a remittitur on each count of $4000 actual and‘$2500 punitive damages, and entered judgment on each count for $1000 actual and $2500i punitive damages, in all $10,500.

[199]*199The defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff was Warden of our State Penitentiary for a term beginning March 24, 1913. The defendant is-a corporation, and the owner and publisher of “The New St. Louis Star,” a newspaper published in St. Louis and circulated throughout the State.

For many years, as long at least as the knowledge goes of those connected with the institution,' one form of punishment for violation of the rules of the penitentiary was to put the offenders “in the rings.” They were handcuffed, and their hands were then held just a little above their heads by being attached to rings which were fixed in the concrete walls of the cells in what is spoken of as “Punishment Hall.” They stood with faces to the wall. There were twenty or more cells in that hall furnished with those rings, fixed at different heights in order to fit different individuals. Whipping was another form of punishment. The evidence for plaintiff shows that there were about four whippings in the year just preceding the trial in this case. The evidence does not show for how many hours a. day, nor for how many days successively, any prisoner was kept in the rings • prior to the time when plaintiff became such warden. The total number of convicts is about 2500, of whom about - ten per cent have seen previous experience as such. About five per cent are incorrigible and hopeless, many of them addicted to whiskey and “dope.” The victims of the whiskey and drug habits are active in inducing others to indulge therein, the ^overcrowded conditions of the institution furnishing abundant opportunity for. such work. The whiskey and heroin tablets are introduced surreptitiously, and, when very scarce, sell in the prison at almost fabulous prices.

On October 20, 1913, one Steve Willis, a. convict, was found with a bottle of whiskey on his person, and heroin tablets were found in the place where he worked. He was put in .the rings. On November 10, 1913, an article was published in defendant’s paper, the important parts of which are as follows:

[200]*200“Missouri’s Shame Published to the World.
“Three press associations, two of them with international alliances, sent out to the civilized world Friday the story of a helpless Missouri convict hanged up by his wrists in steel handcuffs for eighteen days. These same press associations, the day following, sent over their wires the statement that the Governor of Missouri and his Board of Prison Inspectors heartily approved of this hideous torture.
“Information that a convict was being subjected to this barbarous torture came to the New St. Louis Star last week from such an unquestioned source that it could not be ignored. A trained, trustworthy correspondent was sent to Jefferson City. He found the prisoner Steve Willis, hanging on the door of a room in the Penitentiary, his wrists held tightly in a jlair of steel handcuffs. His feet rested on the floor — the guard and prison physician were careful to call attention to this. It was shown by them, too, that the victim could move as much as two feet in either direction and he was fed bread and water twice a day, Also, in an • excess of kindness, the jailers permitted him to sleep ten hours of each twenty-four, without blanket or mattress upon the steel floor. At 7:30 each morning the guards fed him his mouthful of bread, washed down with a cup of water, before they strung him up for another fourteen hours of torture.
“And do you not consider this fourteenth century inhumanity a splendid advertisement for the imperial State you call your own? Will you not be proud hereafter to say you are a Missourian, a citizen of a State which sanctions through its Governor and his appointees, a. brutality that would incite to insurrection in Turkey?
“They burned men and women at the stake once. The pain they endured was frightful, but it did not last long. Convict Willis was tortured for twenty days. And after twenty days, broken in spirit and almost dead from exhaustion, Willis ‘confessed’ that he got the whiskey found in his possession from a negro trusty. [201]*201So they let the beaten convict down from his cell door. Bnt the negro trnsty accused by Willis will take the latter’s place, strung up on the door of the cell, fourteen hours of the twenty-four, until he tells where he got the liquor outside the prison.”

And on the same day another article was published in that paper, of which the following is the'material part:

“Prisoner, Tortured 20 Days, Confesses Whiskey Smuggling.
“Negro Trusty is Implicated and is Put in Chains. Major Approves.
“Punishment is admitted Barbarous but is held Necessary.
“After twenty days of torture and starvation, by being strung up and fed on bread and water, Steve Willis, a St. Louis convict serving a term in the Penitentiary at Jefferson City, confessed Sunday the whiskey morphine found in the possession recently had been obtained from Major Wright, a negro serving seven years for robbery.
“Wright was put up in the rings Monday morning and will be strung up and starved until he tells where he got the whiskey and drug. Warden McClung stated that he will continue the treatment as- far as necessary to reveal the source of smuggling which had been, furnishing convicts with liquor and drugs in large quantities.
“Major favors ‘Stringing Up.’
“G-overnor Major told a reporter for the New St. Louis Star at the.Planters Hotel Monday that he was not opposed to stringing Penitentiary prisoners up by their wrists and that such a custom is to continue in the institution. ‘The prison officials have the right under the law and they can prescribe any punishment they see fit,’ he said. ‘Any punishment?’ asked the reporter. ‘Yes, any punishment within reason. I see by the newspaper that Willis has confessed and now [202]*202the prisoner he accuses will he strung up in ,the same way until he confesses.’ ”

On November 12th thereafter it published this:

“How Major Can Advertise Missouri.
“Governor Major in an address to the St. Louis Advertising Men’s League, urged the members to advertise Missouri. A pity ’tis that the Governor did not practice his preaching. Missouri never has had such unfortunate advertising as that given it by the Governor and his Board of Prison Inspectors in the Steve Willis ease.
“The New St. Louis Star is heartily in favor of advertising the marvelous resources of St. Louis and Missouri. There is good advertising and bad advertising and the kind the Governor and his official family have brought upon the State is the worst kind imaginable. The Governor, however, can, in part at least, counteract the effect of the Willis case. He can order abolished all inhuman practices in the Penitentiary.

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Related

Merriam v. Star-Chronicle Publishing Co.
74 S.W.2d 592 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
Conrad v. Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co.
73 S.W.2d 438 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)
State Ex Rel. Zorn v. Cox
298 S.W. 837 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
State Ex Rel, Tune v. Falkenhainer
231 S.W. 257 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)
McClung v. Pulitzer PublishIng Co.
214 S.W. 193 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 571, 274 Mo. 194, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclung-v-star-chronicle-publishing-co-mo-1918.