Otero v. Ewing

110 So. 648, 162 La. 453, 56 A.L.R. 249, 1926 La. LEXIS 2271
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 2, 1926
DocketNo. 27910.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 110 So. 648 (Otero v. Ewing) 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
Otero v. Ewing, 110 So. 648, 162 La. 453, 56 A.L.R. 249, 1926 La. LEXIS 2271 (La. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This case comes here on apx>eal by the plaintiff from a judgment sustaining an exception that the petition did not disclose a cause of action, or, to state it more correctly, that the allegations of the petition disclosed that the plaintiff had no legal cause of action.

The suit is for damages in the sum of $172,-000, alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the publication of certain matters and things in the Daily States, a newspaper published in this city and having an extensive circulation, both in the city and throughout the state. ''

The damages claimed are divided into three elements: (1) An actual financial loss of $72,-000, sustained by reason of plaintiff’s defeat in his candidacy for the office of judge of section A, criminal district court, in the primary election held September 9, 1924; (2) damage to his good name, fame, reputation, and credit in the sum of $50,000; and (3) for mortification and humiliation to his feelings in the sum of $50,000.

The publication complained of is alleged to have been made in said newspaper September 3d and emphasized and enlarged in the issue of September 8, 1924, and, as set forth in the petition, is as follows:

(1) That petitioner possessed neither the ability, nor the other qualifications, for said judgeship.
(2) That petitioner was first a minor employee, later a full fledged associate, of the late D. O. O’Malley; that for years he was the agent and partner of Dominick O’Malley, notoriously the enemy of law and order.
(3) That petitioner received weekly payments from handbooks and other operators who are, fundamentally, violators of the law; that he was the recipient of weekly largesses from confessed lawbreakers.
(4) That, claiming to represent one of the city’s high officials, petitioner had demanded-a considerable sum of money to cover a fictitious deficit in campaign expenses; that this was confirmed to the States verbally and in writing by *457 one of the operators; that petitioner had sought to hold-up these lawbreakers, in the name of one 'of our leading politicians; that these charges were reported to Washington to the Woodrow Wilson administration, subsequently when petitioner became a candidate for United States marshal, and that in consequence thereof petitioner was not appointed marshal for the Eastern district of Louisiana, at New Orleans, by the (then) President of the United States.
(5) That every citizen of the underworld was campaigning for your petitioner.
(6) That petitioner was an undesirable.
(7) “Vote and vote right. They will- pay the price, if they vote to put on the bench of the criminal court Mr. Dick Otero, for whom every citizen of the underworld is campaigning.”
“We have recited charges of the gravest character against Mr. Otero, that he was the recipient of weekly largesse from confessed lawbreakers in the name of one of our leading politicians, and that, for years, he was the agent and partner of Dominick O’Malley, notoriously the enemy of law and order.”
“Mr. Otero has not answered these charges.”
“Should a candidate who has let them stand against him be put on the criminal court to deal out justice between the decent element of this community and the grafters, the gamblers and the lawbreakers generally?”

The petition alleges that the. publications were infamously false, wicked, scandalous, malicious, defamatory, and libelous.

It is further alleged that the petitioner is 55 years of age, had lived in this city all of his life, is married, and that he has always enjoyed the esteem and confidence of his neighbors and of many good people throughout this city and state.

It is further alleged that the denunciations of petitioner, as detailed in the petition, were intended by the said Ewing, Ross, and the Daily States to deprive petitioner of his good name, fame, reputation, and credit, and to bring him into odium and disrepute among the people of this city and state.

The exception of no cause of action was first tried before Judge Le Blanc of division G of the civil district court, who sustained the same as to the claim for lost salary, but otherwise overruled it.

Later, the ease was, in due course, assigned for trial before Judge Skinner. Thereupon the defendants asked to have the exception reopened, reinstated, and reargúed, which was done. The exception was then sustained by Judge Skinner, and the suit was dismissed, as already noted.

It is contended on behalf of defendant that the action of Judge Le Blanc, in sustaining that part of the exception which relates to loss of salary, became final and is not now properly before this court.

The contention is not well founded. In the first place, it was correctly suggested, in the motion to reopen the matter and reconsider the exception before Judge Skinner, that rulings upon exceptions are, at all times, within the control of the court and are always subject to reconsideration whenever the court considers it right and proper, and, in the second place, the plaintiff is appellant from a final judgment which put an end to his case in the lower court.

His appeal therefore brought up for review of the ruling on both phases of his demand, which was against him in the lower court.

The ruling in sustaining the exception, in so far as it relates to the claim of loss of salary, is so obviously correct and well founded that we have not felt called upon to devote much time to it.

It is common knowledge that there are many surprises at the result of elections by the people. They do not always go as some people expect them to go and would have them go. It is as impossible to say after an election what matters and considerations influenced the voters as it is to correctly divine beforehand how an election will go.

The court cannot assume as a fact, even if alleged in the petition, that the publications, referred to alone caused the plaintiff to be defeated.

The successful candidate led the plaintiff by some 3,000 votes, and, from the very nature of things, it is impossible for the plaintiff to *459 allege or to prove as á fact that the publications complained, of influenced enough votes 'to bring about that result.

Non constat the plaintiff would have been defeated, if no attack had been made on him by the newspaper in question.

But even more than this, while a democratic nomination in this state is equivalent to an election, still, the rule is not without exception. The law gives to a voter the right and privilege of writing on his ballot the name of and to vote for a person other than the one officially nominated and it sometimes happens, though not often, that the nominee is defeated at the final election. Who can say that, if the plaintiff had been nominated, he would not have been defeated at the'general election?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 So. 648, 162 La. 453, 56 A.L.R. 249, 1926 La. LEXIS 2271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otero-v-ewing-la-1926.