Menefee v. Codman

317 P.2d 1032, 155 Cal. App. 2d 396, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 1301
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1957
DocketCiv. 9080
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 317 P.2d 1032 (Menefee v. Codman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Menefee v. Codman, 317 P.2d 1032, 155 Cal. App. 2d 396, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 1301 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

This is an appeal from a money judgment on one count of respondent’s complaint and from an order granting a new trial on the remaining two counts as to which the jury had returned defense verdicts. The action was for libel.

Respondent is a resident of Fair Oaks community, near Sacramento. Since 1948 her husband has published a weekly newspaper for which respondent wrote a column dealing with shopping news and her personal thoughts and observations. The Menefees had four young children. In addition to her household duties and her work on the newspaper, respondent also taught psychology part time at Sacramento State College. She participated actively in community affairs and bore an excellent reputation as housewife, mother, church attendant, teacher and writer.

Appellant is a long-time resident of Fair Oaks community. She is descended from a pioneer family, is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, owns property in excess of $100,000, and has long interested herself in community affairs, in which she generally takes strong partisan positions and concerning which she has a penchant for public utterances, both verbal and in the form of long letters to the editors of newspapers. She sometimes publishes and circulates tracts of her own. She is an influential member of her community.

Count I of the complaint herein charged that appellant wrote and published of respondent the following:

“Seems strange that such an obscure little person as ‘plain Audrey’ should assume such a responsibility. (‘How one small head . . .’ ... Some of us here think that plain audery . . . should have been named ‘Narcissus.’ Hunt up your psychology textbooks for that one— . . .)
“Will plain Audrey’s ‘Operation Europe’ or ‘Mission to Europe’ include other activities besides Telling the World how to become popular in a small town (or is Audrey really qualified to advise them ?) and how to run a rural newspaper ? ’ ’

The second count averred that appellant wrote and published of respondent the following:

*400 “Plain Audrey’s Trip to Europe still is causing a lot of local yokel comment whenever mentioned. We see a late movie advertised—could that have been the real reason Plain Audrey went to Europe ? The movie is titled ‘Under the Paris Sky’— at the Guild Theatre, 35th and Broadway. The gal on the advertisement looks as though she wore a dirndl. When we come across Plain Audrey’s column on Paris, where she tells about her trip to the water front, then we’ll know. Meanwhile Plain Audrey’s water front ‘coverage’ will intrigue us. But what we all want to know is, Who covered Audrey while Audrey covered the water front? Surely Audrey didn’t slip along uncovered—no, she told us she wore a dirndl and an old blouse. Oh, well, we were just reminded of that old game about who took care of the caretaker’s daughter. We just changed the wording. ’ ’

By the third count, respondent alleged that appellant wrote and published of and concerning her, the following:

“The San Juan Record’s Associate Editor, no less! reported on her recent trip to Europe that she wore an old blouse and dirndl (was it? or slacks?) along the Paris waterfront. We presume she was ‘covering the waterfront’? We feel sorry indeed that she didn’t have proper clothes for this assignment, and we venture to suggest that the Editor, Boss, Dear Selden or what-you-prefer open a charge account at I. Magnin’s (that is, if his credit rates that good), and then his hard-working little wife won’t have to slink along the waterfront in an outdated dirndl (if that’s what she wore?)
“Sample Magnin advertising leaflet attached—it says, ‘A fulfillment of your most luxurious dreams’—and these dreams go as high as $69.95 for a ‘permanently pleated’ gown. Time 0 ’Day indicated in advertisement. ’ ’

It was alleged that there was attached to said writing, and addressed and mailed therewith, an advertisement for nightgowns and negligees. The advertisement contained pictures of ladies in various and sundry types and designs of nightgowns, negligees or other bedroom attire.

Alleging in each count that she had been an instructor and during a part of the years of 1951 and 1952 had been engaged in the occupation and profession of Associate Professor on a part-time basis at the Sacramento State College, that she had for several years been engaged in the occupation of women’s editor and associate editor of a newspaper of general circulation, to wit, the San Juan Record, that at all times she possessed and enjoyed a good name and reputation and a wide *401 following of readers in Sacramento County, respondent asserted that as a natural and proximate result of the alleged publications she had been greatly injured and prejudiced in her reputation, in her calling, occupation and profession as an instructor, editor and columnist, and had lost, and would continue to lose, gains and profits which otherwise would have accrued to her in her said calling, occupation and profession to her damage in the sum of $15,000. Respondent further alleged in each count that by reason of the publications she had been caused to suffer grievous mental suffering and humiliation to her damage in the further sum of $15,000, and that the publications had been made maliciously with the intent to injure her; wherefore she demanded exemplary and punitive damages.

Appellant demurred generally to the pleading, contending that the alleged defamatory publications were each not libelous per se or libelous on the face; that only general damages, as opposed to special damages, were pleaded and, therefore, that no cause of action was stated. The demurrers were overruled. Throughout the trial this contention of appellant was asserted by her and it here constitutes one of the major issues on appeal.

In 1944, there was published in the Southern California Law Review, volume 17, page 347, an article by Professor Charles E. Carpenter, the first paragraph of which reads as follows:

“The well established historical distinction between libel and slander is already, by reason of its artificial, illogical and unsound character, sufficiently confusing. But the existing confusion has been increased by the wholly unwarranted doctrine of ‘libel per se,’ which has recently arisen in California and several other States. This doctrine is to the effect that, if the publication is defamatory on its face—that is if extrinsic circumstances are not necessary to reveal its defamatory character—it is ‘libelous per se’ and an action may be maintained without alleging or proving special damages. If the defamatory character of the publication is not obvious on its face but is hidden and requires inquiry into extrinsic circumstances to make it so, then it is not actionable unless special damages are alleged and proved. A peculiarity of the situation is that the parents of this odd creature—the courts—do not realize, despite the labor pains of its birth, that they have brought forth a child. This article is written for the benefit of lawyers and courts of the States that have produced the new offspring, so that they may see that it is a new creature, *402

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Bluebook (online)
317 P.2d 1032, 155 Cal. App. 2d 396, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menefee-v-codman-calctapp-1957.