Moore v. Davis

16 S.W.2d 380, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 459
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1929
DocketNo. 3189.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 380 (Moore v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Davis, 16 S.W.2d 380, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 459 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HAUL, O. J.

The appellant, plaintiff below, filed two suits in the district court of Cooke county against W. O. Davis, appellee, on the 6th day of July, 1927. In both eases appellant sought to recover damages for alleged libelous statements published in the *381 newspapes. Upon motion, tlie court consolidated tlie eases, and they were tried together. Tl.e case was submitted to a jury upon a general charge. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff, Moore, has appealed.

The court did not order the parties to replead. This should have been done. Wright v. Chandler (Tex. Civ. App.) 173 S. W. 1173; Peck v. Powell (Tex. Civ. App.) 259 S. W. 640. Since both actions are based upon the same alleged libelous publication, the failure of the trial judge to require plaintiff to replead after consolidation tends in no way to confuse the issues presented here.

The matter alleged to have been published in the newspapers of Denton and Cooke counties is as follows:

“W. S. Moore seems to think that he ought to be elected by the people because the lawyers are opposed to him. The lawyers are Moore’s nearest neighbors and know more about him than any one else. When did a man have the impudence to claim that he was entitled to an office because his neighbors did not have a good opinion of him? We should •mistrust the man who claims to have bad neighbors; the fault is generally with himself. It is no recommendation to a lawyer that other members of the bar have a poor opinion of him. They are familiar with his method; they have been consulted by people who have had dealings with him and who complain that they have been defrauded. Mr. Moore could have urged as another qualification for district judgeship that the Odd Fellows are against him. He was formerly a member of the lodge and they know what he attempted to do with their property.”
“I note that R. R. Bell, our former county attorney, and now a resident of Oklahoma City, has rushed into print advocating the election of W. S. Moore. The people remember how R. R. Bell prospered as county attorney. W. S. Moore learned under him. Nothing more need be said.”

Plaintiff alleges that such article was published on July 10 and 16, 1926, and was signed by the defendant Davis; that by such language the defendant meant, and intended to mean, that the plaintiff, as a practicing lawyer, had defrauded his clients in his capacity as an attorney, and had been'guilty of fraudulent, dishonorable, and criminal conduct in his relations with his clients as their attorney; that plaintiff, had been guilty of fraudulent, dishonest, and dishonorable conduct in connection with the property belonging to the Odd Fellows lodge; that, while one R. R. Bell was county attorney of Cooke county, he had been guilty of fraudulent and corrupt conduct, had prospered thereby, and that plaintiff had learned, by reason of his association with Bell, to practice dishonorably and resort to corrupt methods in obtaining money. Plaintiff alleges that he had a good name, character, and reputation among the people of the judicial district; that he was then the judge of the judicial district, composed of the two counties in which the libelous matter was published; that the people had confidence in his honesty and integ-, rity, and that said article was published with the malicious intent to injure plaintiff, and that plaintiff had been injured and damaged in his good name and reputation, and had been humiliated and subjected to mental agony and distress; that many good and worthy citizens of the judicial district had believed the statements in said article, and that its publication exposed plaintiff to public hatred, contempt, ridicule, and financial injury, and tended to impeach his honesty and integrity; that, by reason of the wrongful and malicious acts complained of, plaintiff had sustained actual damages in the sum of $10,000, and exemplary damages in the sum of $15,000.

The defendant, Davis, answered by general demurrer, numerous special exceptions, general denial, and specially alleged, in substance, that in March, 1926,’ plaintiff had. been appointed by Governor Ferguson to fill the vacancy in the judgeship for the Sixteenth judicial district, resulting from the death.of Judge O. R. Pearman; that the defendant, as well as nearly every other practicing attorney in the district, believing the plaintiff to be unfit for that trust, protested against his appointment; that this protest angered the plaintiff, and in his speeches during the campaign for re-election, and in his published communications, he denounced the attorneys in the district, and especially those residing in Gainesville, as shysters, tricksters, and dishonest practitioners, who were opposing him because he would make them quit their dishonorable practice and conduct themselves properly. At the first term of the court which plaintiff held in Gainesville, he delivered a lecture from the bench, and in the hearing of many bystanders and the attorneys practicing before him, and openly charged that their practice and conduct had been criminal, and that his predecessors on the bench had permitted them to run the court and secure whatever decisions they desired, which practice he intended to stop. The plaintiff thus aspersed the memory of his predecessors, who were honorable and upright judges. After court adjourned, he openly stated that he delivered his lecture to show the lawyers that he was not afraid of them, and applied to the lawyers a vile epithet not fit for print. In his speeches advocating his cause before the people, especially in Denton county, he denounced the defendant as “an old liar that no one would believe.”

The defendant, believing plaintiff unfit for the judgeship, and that his election would be a public misfortune, endeavored to make known to the people some of the things showing him to be unfit for the office which he was seeking; that the matters stated in the publi *382 cation were literally true, as well also as any legitimate inference therefrom. The defendant then sets out nineteen specific acts and transactions in which it is charged that plaintiff has been guilty of unfair, dishonest, and fraudulent conduct in relation to numerous parties and in connection with 'numerous business deals and transactions and in violation of plaintiff’s duty as an attorney and an officer of court. Defendant then alleges that there are many other similar transactions in which the plaintiff has been engaged, but that defendant believes that those enumerated are sufficient to justify any legitimate inference from the newspaper publications complained of.

The statement of facts contains 497 pages, including more than fifty documents which are set out in full. The statement might have been abbreviated if rule 72 for the district and county courts had been complied with, and the appellee has specifically objected to the statement upon such ground. This violation of the rule, however, affects only the question of costs. *

In one paragraph, the court charged the jury as follows:

“You are further instructed that if you find and believe from the evidence before you that at the time W. O.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 380, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-davis-texapp-1929.