Moritz v. Kansas City Star Co.

258 S.W.2d 583, 364 Mo. 32, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 569
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 8, 1953
Docket42808
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 258 S.W.2d 583 (Moritz v. Kansas City Star 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
Moritz v. Kansas City Star Co., 258 S.W.2d 583, 364 Mo. 32, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 569 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

*34 BARRETT, C.

Mr. Jesse I. Moritz, a lawyer, instituted this action for libel against the Kansas City Star Company, the publisher of the Kansas City Star and the Kansas City Times. The action was in four counts, based upon a series of four articles published in the' Star and the Times on October 20th, 21st, 27th and November 3rd, 1945. There was a jury verdict for the defendant on the third and fourth counts, and a verdict for the plaintiff on the first count for $3500 actual and $3500 punitive damages, and on the second count for $3250 actual and $3250 punitive damages. The trial court sustained the defendant’s motion for a new trial upon the specified ground that the court had erred in giving instruction number one at the request of the plaintiff. The plaintiff, Mr. Moritz, has appealed from that order and qontends here that the instruction was not so prejudicially erroneous as to require the granting of a new trial. The Kansas City Star Company contends that the instruction was prejudicially erroneous and, in addition, contends that the publications complained of in counts one and two were not libelous of the plaintiff, were qualifiedly privileged and, since there was no proof of express malice, that the court erred in not directing a verdict in its favor on those counts.

The first article was written in these circumstances: The publisher’s capable police reporter, with forty years experience, has an office across the street from the Municipal Court Building. There is a loudspeaker in- his office connected with the police radio system and all police radio broadcasts and reports are heard in his office. About 11:15 on Saturday morning, October 20th, 1945, a report came over the loudspeaker that a streetcar had crashed into the rear of another streetcar and the reporter immediately telephoned the city editor and was informed, since other reporters were not available, that he should ‘ ‘ get the story. ’ ’ The reporter said that he waited a half hour until the officers returned to the 63rd, Street Police Station when he got in touch with them and “took my notes and got the names and as much of the information as I could about the car crash.” He said that he learned from them that in connection with the accident they had “arrested a man who interfered with the men taking names of the victims and getting their police report, and said this man interfered with them there, bothered them.” After obtaining this information *35 he called the publisher’s office and gave the story to a “rewrite reporter’! who prepared the article, except the headlines, for publication. The two articles, italicizing the language particularly complained of, are as follows:

“WOE TO POLICE HELPER JESSE I. MORITZ IS ARRESTED
IN TRAM COLLISION Officers Say Man Who Called Himself a Lawyer Was Interfering With Their Rescue Work.
‘ The man making the most noise this afternoon just after one streetcar rammed the rear of another at Swope Parkway and Park Avenue was not one of the five passengers injured, police said.
“While four passengers lay on the parkway awaiting ambulances from the General Hospital and police were attempting to stop blood flowing from the left thumb of the operator of one streetcar, the man was shouting police said.
“POLICE SAT HE SHOUTED
“ 'I’m a lawyer, I’m a lawyer! ’ They said a man who hurried to the scene called to the accident victims and to other passengers on the cars at the time of the crash.
“On the ground lay Edith Griffith, 59 years old, 3244 Michigan Avenue, and C. E. MeCorkle, 27, of 4726 Park Avenue, who were taken to the General Hospital. Also there, awaiting an ambulance were two Negro women, Lucile Stevenson, 36, of 2440 Euclid Avenue and Hannah Shelby, 55, of 5321 South Benton. Both were taken to General Hospital No. 2.
“Police said the man bent over victims attempting to take their names and addresses, interfering with police attempts to obtain necessary information.
“TAKEN TO POLICE STATION
“Unable to proceed with their investigation, police said they arrested the man and he was taken to the Sixty-third street station.
“There the man identified himself as Jesse I. Moritz, 46 years old, 2317 Swope Parkway. He said he was a lawyer, with an office in room No. 1633 at the Dierks Building.
“He was booked for interfering with an officer. Bond was set at $50 which Moritz posted about two hours later.
“Moritz denied he was soliciting business at the scene of the accident. He said he was there to help and was taking names and addresses in order to assist police.,
“ ‘I was "just trying to help out,’ he insisted. ‘I had no other reason for being there. ’
*36 “BOTH CARS GOING EAST
“Tlie two streetcars were traveling east on Swope Parkway when the first, operated by F. A. Fleming, 70 years old, 4235 Woodland Avenue, thirty-three years an employee of the Kansas City Public Service Company, stopped tl^e car to discharge passengers at Park Avenue.
“ G. A. Foutch, 43 years old, 644 Southwest Boulevard, operator of the rear car, said he was moving at fifteen to twenty miles an hour and believed he had plenty of time to stop. He didn’t.
“ Foutch’s car rammed the rear of the other car, penetrating about five feet and shattering virtually all the glass in both cars. His left thumb was lacerated severely and he was treated at the scene. lie' said he had been with tlie company thirty days.
“At the hospital it was reported that none of the victims suffered dangerous injuries.
“POLICE HELPER TRIAL SET
JESSE I. MORITZ FACES CHARGE OF INTERFERING WITH OFFICER
“The trial of Jesse I. Moritz, 46 years old, 2317 Swope Parkway, charged with interfering with an officer while police were earing for injured passengers and making reports after two streetcars had collided yesterday at Swope Parkway and Park Avenue, will be held in the municipal court Thursday morning.
“The police accuse Moritz of shouting, ‘I’m a lawyer, I’m a lawyer,’ and bending over injured victims in an effort to obtain their names. Moritz said he was trying only to assist the police. He was released on $50 bond..”

As the publisher urges, in so far as the articles report the actions and activities of police officers, including the details and reasons for Mr. Moritz’s arrest, his trial and acquittal upon the charge of “interfering with officers at the scene of accident,” they are qualifiedly privileged. People’s United States Bank v. Goodwin, 148 Mo. App. 364, 128 S. W. 220; Burrows v. Pulitzer Pub. Co., (Mo. App.) 255 S. W. 925; Tilles v. Pulitzer Pub. Co., 241 Mo; 609, 145 S. W. 1143.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.2d 583, 364 Mo. 32, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moritz-v-kansas-city-star-co-mo-1953.