Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Gray

1929 OK 309, 280 P. 419, 138 Okla. 71, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 485
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1929
Docket12186
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1929 OK 309 (Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Gray, 1929 OK 309, 280 P. 419, 138 Okla. 71, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 485 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

The defendant in error was the plaintiff and tbe plaintiff in error was the defendant in tbe trial court, and they will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

The defendant published in the Daily Oklahoman, a daily newspaper owned and published by the defendant, a certain statement, as follows:

“Lawyer Arrested on Fraud Charge.
“Lee M. Gray, Counsel for Green, Faces Federal Trial.
“Lee M. Gray, Attorney, of Hennessey, was arrested Wednesday night by a deputy United States marshal on an indictment issued by the federal grand jury in session at Guthrie last week charging him with using the mails to defraud. He was taken before United States Commissioner Ernest G. Chambers and released for appearance in court here under a bond of $5,000.
“Gray is charged with the same violations of the federal law for which Ellsworth J. IGreen and his son, E. PI. Green, are held for trial. It is alleged that he conspired with the Greens in promoting five oil stock selling companies controlled by the Great Western Guarantee Investment Company that offered and sold stock under a guarantee that, subscribers would double their money by a certain date. The contracts given all subscribers, it is said, contained the ‘resale clause’ which caused the indictment of the Greens”

—which was distributed in Kingfisher county and in the cities of Kingfisher and Hen-nessey.

Plaintiff contends that this statement was false and defamatory and that the defendant “* * * willfully, maliciously, wickedly, intending to deprive the plaintiff of public cdbfidenee and to injure him in his profession and business and to expose him to public hatred, contempt, ridicule, scorn and obloquy, did, on or about the 2nd day of August, 1918, maliciously, publish and circulate in Kingfisher county and in the town of Hen-nessey and in the city of Kingfisher * * the said article.

The plaintiff filed his petition in the district court of Kingfisher county against the defendant, in which be alleged, among other allegations, in substance, the following: That plaintiff for 25 years had been a successful lawyer, living and practicing law in the city of Kingfisher and the town of Hennessey; that the defendant was a corporation and the publisher of the Daily Oklahoman; that plaintiff and others, including the Greens named in said article, were jointly indicted, as stated by plaintiff, * * to put it briefly, with selling worthless stock to the public generally; that they devised a scheme to sell worthless stock to the public generally, and in furtherance of that scheme they used the mail service of the United States;” a copy of the indictment being set out therein; that at the trial of the plaintiff and his codefendants on the indictment, the attorney for the plaintiff made a statement to the jury, which was set out in the petition, and which consisted of an extensive statement of what the plaintiff’s attorney said the evidence would show on 'behalf of the plaintiff and included hearsay statements, statements that were incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial to the issues herein and statements which were purely self-serving, including what the attorney himself had done and conversations which the attorney had had with other people in the absence of tbe defendant herein or its officers and agents; that it took about a month to try the case of the indictment and for 16 days the plaintiff had to sit there listening to the unfolding of the cause against Green and that at the conclusion of the evidence the demurrer of the plaintiff thereto was sustained; that a receiver was appointed for the oil companies thereafter named in the indictment and the receiver brought a suit against the plaintiff and others and upon a trial thereof plaintiff testified that he was not connected with the Greens as counsel or otherwise and that case was dismissed as to him, all of which was a matter of record in the district court of Oklahoma county, and the defendant knew or could, with reasonable diligence, have ascertained that the plaintiff was not counsel for the Greens.

“That when said defendant published said article in said issue of said newspaper it meant to say and did say that this plaintiff was counsel for said Greens and acting as their attorney and counsel for the purpose of using the United States mails in furtherance of a fraudulent and criminal conspiracy to sell worthless^ stock in oil companies to certain persons named in the indictment and to the public generally; that the said defamatory matter so published and circulated by said defendant in said Kingfisher county, Okla., of and concerning this *73 plaintiff and of and concerning Ms business and profession was false and untrue and known to said defendant to be false and untrue at the time said defendant so published and circulated the same; and was so published and circulated in Kingsfisher county by said defendant with the intent to destroy the good name and reputation and business of the plaintiff and to cause him pecuniary loss in his profession and business.
“That said false and defamatory matter so published and circulated in Kingfisher county and throughout the state of Oklahoma by said defendant of and concerning said plaintiff and of and concerning said plaintiff in reference to his profession and business, exposed said plaintiff to public hatred, contempt, ridicule, scorn, and obloquy and with the intent to deprive him of public confidence and injure him in his profession and business, and by reason of the publication and circulation aforesaid in Kingfisher county, state of Oklahoma, of said matter by defendant, said plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $30,000.
“That said defendant designedly, wilfully, wantonly, wickedly and premeditatedly without regard to human rights or without regard to human feelings and in o,rder that more people in Kingfisher county and throughout the state of Oklahoma should be attracted to and read said articles, the caption to said article was printed in large letters and under conspicuous headlines, the said defendant knowing the said headlines to be false and defamatory; thereby trying to assassinate the character and reputation of the plaintiff and receiving the benefit of extending the circulation over said county and state by reason of said sensational article which was printed maliciously.”

The defendant filed its answer in which it alleged as a defense that the published matter was true except as to “counsel for Green”; that the statement was privileged, and that it was made in good faith and with no intention to injure. Plaintiff filed a general denial as a reply.

Defendant thereafter filed a motion for continuance, which was overruled by the court, and defendant was thereupon granted permission to file an amendment to its answer as of the day of the original filing of the original answer and the answer was amended to deny the innuendo contained in the petition and to admit an error in the name of the United States commissioner before whom the plamtiff had been taken.

The cause was tried to a jury on the issues thus made.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff, a lawyer, lived at Hennessey and that he had practiced law in.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 309, 280 P. 419, 138 Okla. 71, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-publishing-co-v-gray-okla-1929.