Norfolk Post Corp. v. Wright

125 S.E. 656, 140 Va. 735, 40 A.L.R. 579, 1924 Va. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 656 (Norfolk Post Corp. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norfolk Post Corp. v. Wright, 125 S.E. 656, 140 Va. 735, 40 A.L.R. 579, 1924 Va. LEXIS 211 (Va. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Milton T. Wright was arrested in Norfolk on July 14, 1922. The circumstances attendant upon this arrest so far as they are relevant are as follows:

Just preceding this date there had been a series of burglaries in Colonial Place and Riverview, residential ■sections of Norfolk lying just south of Lafayette river near each other but not contiguous.

Several special officers were detailed to cope with this outbreak of lawlessness, one of them was detective Leon Nowitzky. To him had been reported the recent looting of the home of P. W. Powell, east 39th street, in Riverview. While on this special detail his attention was directed to plaintiff and to a companion of his, Overton; these men he stopped and questioned. They ■told him that they were working for the Dixie Motor [737]*737Car Company, and were making a house to house canvass in an effort to sell automobiles. Nowitzky called up that company over the telephone and verified this information. He then, possibly with some reluctance, permitted them to go about their business! All of this took place in Riverview and on July the 13th. That afternoon he received some additional information tending to confirm his suspicion as to Wright and on the following day, in company with a fellow officer, Williams, went to Wright’s place of business and brought him and Overton to the police station where he was identified by a Mrs. Smallwood, the mother of Mrs. P. W. Powell, as the man seen at her daughter’s home. Thereupon a warrant of arrest was sued out formally charging him with that crime. It is not entirely clear that an arrest was made at the Dixie Motor Car Company’s place of business. There is evidence tending to show that these men came voluntarily to the police station and were first arrested there on said warrant. In any event a formal warrant then issued. They were held on it, bailed and discharged after a preliminary hearing. At that trial or preliminary hearing nothing was said about Colonial Place robberies, the investigation was limited to the offense charged in the warrant of arrest. Plaintiff appears to have been a man of excellent reputation.

The defendant corporation publishes an afternoon paper in the city of Norfolk, and on the day of this arrest published an account of this incident. It is that publication which is the basis of this action and which contains the alleged libel. It is:

“Suspect nabbed.

“Man held in Colonial Place robberies.

“Milton T. Wright, twenty-five, Portsmouth, was arrested shortly before noon today by detectives Nowitzky and Williams on Jamestown avenue, in connec[738]*738tion -with the burglary of numerous houses in Colonial Place recently.” On this action was brought and there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, which we are asked to set aside.

There are. three assignments of error. The first, because the court refused to set aside the verdict as being without evidence to support it; the second, because of instructions given, while the third is based upon the refusal of the court to admit certain evidence claimed to be proper.

Defendant says there was no libel, but that the facts stated in this publication are substantially true. When Nowitzky halted and examined the plaintiff in River-view, on 39th street, on July the 13th, the crime then immediately in his mind was the Powell robbery in Riverview and it was upon new evidence connected therewith that he brought Wright to the police station on the following day, where, after further examination, a warrant was issued which reads in part as follows:

“Whereas, officer L. Nowitzky, No...............■_............. street, has this day made complaint and information on oath before me, William T. Anderson, a justice of said city, that on the 11th day of July, 1922, at said city, Milton T. Wright, No. ............................street, did unlawfully and feloniously break and enter the home of P. W. Powell, 268 east 39th street, in the day time, and did take, steal and carry away from therefrom, etc.”

Mr. Chase, the reporter who was the author of the article, testified that it but restates and accurately states information the detectives gave him. The correctness of this information was a risk assumed. Stevens v. Commercial-News Co., 164 Ill. App. 6.

On the face of the record Wright was not “held in Colonial Place robberies.” He was arrested and held for house breaking in Riverview.

[739]*739The article itself substantially supports the headlines, but if it did not, the law is that unsupported headlines may be in themselves libellous. In an extended note to McAllister v. Detroit Free Press Co., 15 Am. St. Rep. 347, it is said:

“The ¡headline of an article or paragraph, being so conspicuous as to attract the attention of persons who look casually over a paper without reading all its contents, may itself inflict very serious injury upon a person, both because it may be the only part of the article which is read, and because it may cast a graver imputation than all the other words following it. There is no doubt that in publications concerning private persons, as well as in all other publications which are claimed to be libellous, the headlines directing attention to the publication may be considered as a part of it, and may even justify a court or jury in regarding the publication as libellous when the body of the article is not necessarily so.”

It could have been, and doubtless was, argued with great force that “Colonial Place robberies” was a generic term and covered the series of crimes lately perpetrated in a particular section of Norfolk. And the jury might have believed that “Colonial Place” and “Riverview” were comprehensive and interchangeable terms used to designate a general residential section of that city harassed by a persistent thief. So also it was proper to argue that to publish one as suspected of robbing “A” when he was in fact suspected of robbing “B” could do no damage beyond what a statement literally correct would have done. All of this may be true, but it was not true as a matter of law, and if it was true as a matter of fact, it was for the jury to say. These offenses might have differed in degree and the [740]*740damage might have been nominal or substantial; this, too, was for the jury. 25 Cyc. 463.

That the statement made is not in exact accord with the facts admits of no dispute. Wright was arrested for housebreaking in Riverview. He was held for that crime and at his trial Colonial Place was not even mentioned. The character of the charge was a matter of public record and had the reporter seen fit to examine it rather than to rely upon the statement of the detectives this litigation could never have arisen. The verdict is not without evidence to support it and so this assignment is overruled.

The next assignment of error is predicated upon the proposition that the article was true; and that it was therefore error to give any instructions based upon the theory that it was not, or under which a recovery could be had. It follows from what has just been said that this assignment is without merit.

And lastly, exception is taken to the refusal of the court to permit Wright, on cross-examination, to be asked if the same statement published by the defendant had been published by the Ledger-Dispatch, another afternoon Norfolk paper. These publications bear a common date.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 656, 140 Va. 735, 40 A.L.R. 579, 1924 Va. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-post-corp-v-wright-vactapp-1924.