Owens v. Clark

1931 OK 749, 6 P.2d 755, 154 Okla. 108, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 498
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 1, 1931
Docket20493
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1931 OK 749 (Owens v. Clark) 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
Owens v. Clark, 1931 OK 749, 6 P.2d 755, 154 Okla. 108, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 498 (Okla. 1931).

Opinions

CHEATHAM, Special Justice.

This action was commenced in the district court of Atoka county on December 27, 1927, by J. W. Clark against O. O. Owens and World Publishing Company. The parties will be referred to here as plaintiff and defendants as in the lower court.

The petition consisted of four causes of action, based upon the publication of an article in the Tulsa World on October 24, 1926, October 31, 1926, November 1, 1926, and November 2, 1926. Each publication constituted a separate cause of action.

Each cause of action charged a false, malicious, unprivileged, defamatory publication, which falsely imputed and charged this plaintiff with the commission of crime and with malfeasance and willful misconduct in his office as Justice of the Supreme Court, and which false, malicious, unprivileged, defamatory communication did expose this plaintiff to public hatred, contempt, ridicule, obloquy, and which tended to deprive him of public confidence and to injuriously affect him in his occupation and profession as an attorney, and in his office as a member of the Supreme Court.

The defendants answered by way of general denial and specific denials and by way of justification and privileged communication. Defendants further pleaded the statutes of limitation. The plaintiff replied by way of general denial and specially pleaded that Mr. Justice Hunt nor any other person was authorized to act for the plaintiff.

The cause was tried to a jury and judgment rendered for the plaintiff and appeal prosecuted to this court.

All members of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma having filed their disqualifications to sit in this cause, the Governor of the state of Oklahoma, Honorable William H. Murray, appointed J. B. Moore, Special Chief Justice, John E. Thomas, Sr., L. Y. Orton, Wm. L. Cheatham, W. N. Redwine, Claude Hendon, Joseph H. Ford, J. E. Ealk-enberg, and A. S. Dickson, to serve as Special Justices of the Supreme Court to hear this cause.

The article complained of is in words and figures as follows, to wit:

“So that the people may know why I am a candidate for state representative.
“I have never had any political ambition. I have none now. I seek election to the Legislature for the purpose of rendering such service as constructive thought and fearless and aggressive action will permit, including particularly initiating and pressing
“A Thorough and Searching Investigation of The Conduct and Practices of the Supreme Court.
“Courts, as a whole, and particularly the highest court in the state, should be respected, and referred to with respect. But when an undercurrent of gossip and rumor becomes so widespread among the lawyers that the Supreme Court no longer has the confidence and respect of the bar (as lawyers of this state are collectively referred to) the whole people should be informed, so as to avoid the pitfalls of misplaced confidence and trust.
“The public is now well informed on the Supreme Court’s attitude with resp'ect to matters political, but only the lawyers, and those laymen who have been unfortunate enough to learn by bitter experience with the Supreme Court, can know the attitude of certain of its members on matters commercial and financial.
“The Supreme Court has recently been bitterly assailed by practically every newspaper in the state and charged with attempting to legalize alleged fraud. If the Supreme Court will condone alleged corruption in political matters, what will it do, and what has it done, in financial and commercial controversies?
“The Supreme Court has been charged, because of its action in the Dabney-Searcy political controversy (121 Okla. 193, 249 P. 381) with depriving the citizens of their constitutional rights. Certain members of the Supreme Court have also been charged with lending its power, and making of it, the lower courts, and the legal machinery, of the state, a tool for use in private controversies, in depriving or attempting to deprive citizens of their property, and in looting or attempting to loot business enterprises. Such procedure denies the injured individuals other constitutional rights than that of suffrage. It denies the citizens the right to own property.
“The Supreme Court, through the actions of certain of its members, has arrogated to itself all the power of all branches of the state government, legislative, executive, and judicial. Certain members of the court have made their will and desire the law. They have thereby made the Supreme Court a menace to government, society and the people’s sacred rights and welfare.
*110 “The vacillating- attitude recently displayed by the Supreme Court in political controversies is nothing less than, a sacrifice of principle and conviction for expediency. The Dabney-Sea'rcy opinion is but a leering insult to the intelligence of the people of the state:

Second Column:

“A Perfect Demonstration that Politics, Intrigue and Influence Center into the Consideration by the Supreme Court of Controversies Coming before it.
“Justice Mason, as a result of a decision of the Supreme Court, obtained his position on that court under a cloud of suspicion such as now overshadows Dabney. With Justice Mason occupying such an unenviable position, why, then was the Dabney-Sear cy Case assigned to him to write the court’s opinion? Is there anyone so credulous as to believe he would have written any opinion other than the one he did? And he cited the court’s opinion in his own case as a precedent for his handiwork for Dab-ney! What else could be expected?
“The Dabney-Searcy opinion is admitted to be an attempted outrage of the people’s rights. How many equally outrageous opinions have been written by the Supreme Court in private controversies? Only the lawyers and the extremely experienced laymen know. The whole people should be informed.
“Since statehood every other branch of the state government has been either suspected, criticized or investigated or impeached. In the past, the Supreme Court has only been suspected; recently it has been criticized. It should now be investigated. The Legislature is the only body empowered to make such investigation and apply the proper remedy.
“Lack of information ,on the part of the layman, as well as lack of knowledge of the correct way to proceed, has prevented any aggressive steps being taken. Dear and professional selfishness on the part of the lawyers have restrained them in any attempt to correct the known and suspected evils existing in the Supreme Court.
“It is for the purpose of exposing such conditions, and applying the proper remedy, that I seek election to the Legislature. It is for the purpose of eliminating; if possible, the contempt for law, facts, evidence, precedent, equity, and justice heretofore exhibited by certain members of the Supreme Court, that I am a candidate for election as a state representative.”
(Across bottom of page)
“I do not want the job for the money.
“O. O.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 749, 6 P.2d 755, 154 Okla. 108, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-clark-okla-1931.