Munden v. Harris

134 S.W. 1076, 153 Mo. App. 652, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 193
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 1076 (Munden v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munden v. Harris, 134 S.W. 1076, 153 Mo. App. 652, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 193 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

*655 ELLISON, J.

This action is stated in a petition with two counts, one for damages for disturbing plaintiff’s privacy by publishing his picture without his consent; and the other for libel in publishing the picture along with false statements attributed to plaintiff. In each count punitive damages were asked, but no special damages were alleged. Defendants-demurred to the petition as not stating a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained, and plaintiff refusing to amend, judgment was rendered against him and he appealed.

Plaintiff is an infant five years old and the action was brought through a “next friend” as required by statute. The facts stated in the first count of the petition are that defendants, being jewelry merchants in Kansas City, invaded plaintiff’s right of privacy by willfully an d maliciously using, publishing and circulating his picture for advertising their business of selling merchandise; thereby destroying his privacy and humiliating, annoying and disgracing him and exposing him to public contempt.

Picture of Plaintiff. In the second count the facts, after certain preliminary allegations, are stated to be that: “defendants did wrongfully and maliciously compose, print and publish and cause to be composed, printed and published, of and concerning plaintiff, together with his photograph, the following false, defamatory, scandalous and malicious libel meaning thereby, and so understood by persons who. saw the same, to impute to plaintiff a falsehood and attributing to plaintiff in said publication, a statement which was false and malicious, to-wit: ‘Papa is going to buy mamma an Elgin watch for á present, and some one (I musn’t tell who) is going to buy my big sister a diamond,ring. So don’t you think you ought to buy me something? The payments are so easy, you’ll never miss the money if you get it of Harris-Goar Co., 1207 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo., Gifts for Everybody, Everywhere in their Free Catalogue.’ ”

*656 The upshot of defendants’ position in support of their demurrer to the first count, is that there is no right of privacy of which the law will take notice; or, stated differently, their argument is that the law does not afford redress for an invasionJhv one person-o-f-anotherVprivacy unless it isaccompaMedJta-smne injury to Ms property or interference therewith; and that .the mere priiitjng..and publishing one’s picture does not and cannot affect, his~ property-.-- -The - cases-principa-lly-reli - ed uq.on.J)ymUfendants are those of Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co., 171 N. Y. 538; Henry v. Cherry & Webb, - R. I. - (73 Atl. 97.); and Atkinson v. Doherty, 121 Mich. 372; in the first of which, in the course of an interesting opinion concurred in by a majority of the court, is found a course of reasoning which denies that a right of privacy 'exists which can be protected by a court of equity. That case was a bill in equity^ to enjoin ajmercantile firm from publishing a young woman’s picture as an attraction to an accompanying advertisement of a certain brand of flour. The court in denying the right of equity to protect a person thus embarrassed, shows its unfriendliness to the claim in the following language: {j‘The so-called right of privacy is, as the phrase suggests, founded upon the claim that a man has the right to pass through this world, if he wills, without having his picture published, his business enterprises discussed, his successful experiments written up for the benefit of others, or his eccentricities commented upon either in handbills, circulars, catalogues, peridocals or newspapers, and, necessarily, that the things which may not be written and published of him must not be spoken of him by-his neighbors, whether the comment be favorable or otherwise.^'

The conclusion of the court is based much upon the statement that the case there presented was without precedent, and, while admitting that equity, in the beginning and early part of its administration, was made *657 up of growth, case by case, which was without precedent, ' being based merely upon the conscience of the chancellor, yet there came a time when its growth ceased and what was formerly the personal conscience of the chancellor, became a “juridical conscience”, which would only permit relief to be administered in cases where it had been administered before, save in those instances “where there can be found a clear and unequivocal principle of the common law which either directly or mediately governs it, or which by analogy or parity of reasoning ought to govern it.” With such consideration as a guiding thought, the- court refused relief because there was no precedent for it and it did not appear to be Avithin any recognized legal principle. This view is approved in Henry v. Cherry & Webb, which was an action at law in the nature of trespass for damages for an invasion of the right of privacy by using and publishing the plaintiff’s picture as an advertisement in aid of the sale of merchandise. In such respect it was like Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co. Though one was an application in equity for restraint and the other was for damages at law, yet as each, by similar reasoning, denied that there Avas any such right, both denied any remedy/

The remaining case (Atkinson v. Doherty & Co.) was where after the death of John Atkinson, a celebrated lawyer, the defendants, who were manufacturers of cigars, named a brand of their make the “John Atkinson Cigar,” and placed the name, together with his picture, as a label on cigar boxes. His widow sought to restrain such acts by injunction. Her right was denied; and again the reasoning in Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co. was- approved. But it will be observed that while the Roberson case involved the right of privacy of the plaintiff’s own picture, the Atkinson case, like that of Schuyler v. Curtis, 147 N. Y. 434, sought to protect the right of privacy to. the name of a deceased relative, *658 a case which did not call for nrach that was said in the course of the opinion, concerning the general right of privacy, except by way of argument or illustration; and what was said beyond the right of privacy which may be claimed by relatives of a deceased, must be regarded as dictum. The point of agreement in these cases is that no relief can be had by way of protecting,,, right of privacy, for the reason that it was not a right of property and did not fall within any legal principle.

But courts which refuse assent to those decisions assert that it is a right of property and that there is such legal principle, old and ’well recognized; though they concede the case is new in its facts. The main ground for division of opinion in these courts is at last found to be based upon those conflicting assertions. So therefo.Ks_it appears that if it can be established that a person has a property right in his picture, those who now deny the existence of a legal right of privacy would* "freely concede a remedy to restrain its invasion, for all agree that equity will forbid an interference with .one’s right of_property_

Property is not necessarily a taxable thing any more than it is always a tangible thing. It may consist of things incorporeal, and things incorporeal may consist of rights common in every man.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 1076, 153 Mo. App. 652, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munden-v-harris-moctapp-1911.