Morasca v. Item Co.

52 So. 565, 126 La. 426, 1910 La. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 9, 1910
DocketNo. 17,860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 So. 565 (Morasca v. Item Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morasca v. Item Co., 52 So. 565, 126 La. 426, 1910 La. LEXIS 670 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Benedetto Morasca was the owner of a grocery store in ttje city of New Orleans.

He sued the defendant for $5,000 damages.

Plaintiff charges the “New Orleans Item,” a daily, with having published a false and libelous report, which reflects upon him and his business, which has occasioned damages in tfie sum before stated.

The police authorities were investigating a case of reported poisoning of three persons.

The newspaper stated at the time, in one of its columns, under the heading, in capital letters, that it was believed that the negroes had been poisoned from sugar contained in tea, for which they were under medical treatment.

Their names were given in the printed report, which stated that the sugar was bought from a “grocery store at Sixth and Rampart.”

The negro child died.

The day following that publication just mentioned, the defendant published on the fourth page that the “Poison Was Being Investigated” (heading of the report), and the article stated that the coroner thought that the child died from tartar emetic poisoning; that the chemist had the examination of the stomach, kidneys, and liver in charge; and that he also had samples of the sugar and tea procured from the grocery store of Bene-detto Morasca, where the occupants of the house who were poisoned made their purchase which was believed to have caused the child’s death.

The article read:

“It is the opinion of Coroner O’Hara that the child died, from tartar emetic poisoning. He thinks that some of this substance, which is used in the composition of ant poison, may have accidentally gotten in the sugar at the grocery.”

The first complaint of plaintiff is that his name was stated — his grocery — and that in connection with the statement that the persons named were further referred to as “the poison patients,” poisoned by sugar bought from his grocery; and the second complaint of plaintiff is that it was given as the opinion of the coroner that the sugar sold in plaintiff’s store contained poison.

[429]*429The articles were pleaded in the words of the publication.

The defendant admitted the publication, denied malice, pleaded privilege, and alleged the articles were printed as ordinary news taken from the public records and were given no more prominence or space than is usually given to similar articles.

The defendant offered the report of the police sergeant commanding the Sixth precinct police — a report made in accordance with the rule of the police department, and filed with the inspector.

In the report, the sergeant stated that he had instructed the patrolmen to investigate the suspicious cases of poison, and that he found a colored woman “naméd Sylvester Heins, aged 70 years, John B. Powell, Jr., aged 2 years and 7 months, and Nathaniel Burns, aged 16, all colored, residing in the ■same house apparently sick and claiming that they were attended by Dr. Debofie and Dr. Dejóle, who stated that the sickness was caused by the sugar put in the tea Saturday evening. The officer procured a sample of the sugar from the grocery of Benedetto Morasca, * * * where the sugar was bought by the sick family.”

One of the doctors afterward informed the policemen that the patients had taken something that caused irritation of the stomach causing them to throw up; that he had administered medicine; and that they were all doing well.

The coroner the same day went to the house, made an investigation, and said that he could find no trace of poisoning; they were doing well; in his opinion they were ailing from a disease prevalent in the city at the time.

At the autopsy, held by the coroner and jury over the body of the dead child, they arrived at the conclusion that death was due to antimony et potassi tartaris.

The Item published, three days after the casualty, that Benedetto Morasca denied that sugar purchased at his store can in any way 'be responsible for the death of the two year old negro, and that paper stated that it was the opinion of Dr. O’Hara that the child died from.tartar emetic poisoning, that proper examination by the city chemist was under way, and samples were taken from plaintiff’s grocery to see whether any poison used for roaches, ants, or other vermin had by accident gotten into the grocery.

That plaintiff said:

“The only sample taken from our store was some sugar. I have here the signed names of persons who bought sugar from the same barrel and were not hurt by it.
“In fact, we never used any poisons about the store to kill vermin, and it is not possible that any of our groceries could contain injurious matters of any kind. To prevent ants from getting into the sugar barrel, we used nothing but a rag soaked in coal oil tied on the outside at the bottom of the barrel.”

That the report did them an Injustice and subjected them to loss.

Morasca, the plaintiff, is the owner of the grocery that is conducted by his daughter. He has very little to do with it, as he is a musician, and his time is taken up in teaching music.

. As a witness, he sought to prove the extent of his loss by the failure of those who had bought to continue in buying from him.

Pressed to answer as to the extent of his loss, he was not at all exact in his answers, nor did he succeed in proving the extent of his loss.

• Discussion and judgment:

The result shows that the report that there was poison in plaintiff’s barrel of sugar was entirely untrue. It originated among the negroes who had bought sugar from the grocery. They insisted — particularly the mother of the dead child — that the sugar she bought from the grocery was the cause of death. To such an extent this report spread that the police authorities very properly undertook to investigate and see for themselves if there was any truth in the report.

[431]*431It was during that time, and while proper report was forwarded to the central office, that the police reporter of the newspaper wrote the two articles — one on one day and the other on the next day — of which plaintiff earnestly complains.

As to malice, it is not charged eo nomine, although the charge may be inferred from the fact that plaintiff charged it was “false,” “misleading,” “libelous,” and “defamatory in the highest degree and calculated to injure plaintiff.”

All of which, to an extent, is true; but we have not found that there was express malice on the part of defendant as a fact. The publication does not appear in the light of a publication made with actual knowledge of the charge as false. We can only say that it is not sufficient to show actual malice.

“Legal malice” is defined as an act growing out of the “wicked or mischievous intention of the mind; an act' showing a wanton inclination to mischief, an intention to injure or wrong, and a depraved inclination to disregard the rights of others.”

We are unable to say that such was the intention of the defendant, for in our opinion it was not. The most that can be said is that there was indifference.

There was no negligence imputed to the plaintiff nor the least wrong charged. There was no intimation that one person had attempted to poison others.

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Bluebook (online)
52 So. 565, 126 La. 426, 1910 La. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morasca-v-item-co-la-1910.