Panhandle Publishing Co. v. Fitzjarrald

223 S.W.2d 635, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 19, 1949
DocketNo. 5969
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 635 (Panhandle Publishing Co. v. Fitzjarrald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panhandle Publishing Co. v. Fitzjarrald, 223 S.W.2d 635, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2141 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinions

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is a libel suit filed by appellee, J. O. Fitzjarrald, against appellant, Panhandle Publishing Company, Incorporated, to recover actual damages in the sum of $25,000 and exemplary damages in the sum of $10,-000, because of the publication by appellant in its newspaper, the Amarillo Times, of several alleged libelous articles concerning appellee as a citizen and a public official. He was County Attorney of Hall County at the time of the publications. Appellee alleged, in substance, that the articles com[637]*637plained of were published with the intent to injure him by humiliating him and for the purpose of subjecting him to public hatred, contempt and ridicule and further for the purpose of impeaching his honesty, integrity and reputation both as a private citizen and as a public official. He further alleged that the statements made by appellant in the said articles’were false, scandalous, defamatory, malicious, libelous and therefore damaging to him and that such statements were willfully and maliciously published by appellant with express malice toward appellee and for the purpose of inferring-by innuendo that appellee was wholly unfit to serve Hall County • as County Attorney. Appellee further alleged that he had properly conducted himself and the office he held and there was no just cause for- appellant to make any such vicious false statements about him.

Appellant answered with a number of special exceptions and a general denial. It further alleged in substance that the publications about which appellee complains were privileged, or at least conditionally privileged, in that such was a fair and reasonable report and comment about a mat-, ter of public interest and concern published by appellant without malice for general information at a time when appellee was serving as County Attorney and running for re-election and that such does not therefore give rise to a cause of action for libel; that the matters complained of were true or that appellant, after a careful and conscientious inquiry in Hall County, believed them to be true at the time of the publication; that the articles were not. maliciously published, nor were any of the statements published with malice of any kind or character, or wrongful intent or with any intention whatever to injure ap-pellee. Appellant further' pleaded the contents of a letter that Raymond Ballew sent to some 2500 voters of Hall County on April 19, 1948, making substantially the same statements that appellant -made in its publication, which publication of appellant went into the homes of approximately one hundred subscribers of Hall County. Appellant further pleaded that the statements complained of by appellee had been given wide publicity in Hall County generally both in writing and orally before such had been published in the Amarillo Times.

In order to better understand the facts out of which this litigation grew, it is well to state that during the year of 1947 Raymond Ballew, a long time resident of Hall County, had been several times convicted in the county court of the said, county on liquor law violations for which he had paid fine’s -totalling more than $8,000. He had announced for Sheriff of Hall County against the incumbent, Earl-Hill. The said Raymond Ballew was conducting a vigorous campaign for the office of sheriff and was attacking the manner in which alleged law violators had been apprehended and the manner in which -the Hall County court had been conducted. Ballew.. mailed out approximately 2800 circular letters to the voters in Hall County in which letters he apparently criticised the sheriff, county judge and county attorney of Hall County, all of whom' were running for reelection. In that letter we find the following excerpts taken therefrom:

“The office of Sheriff, is an important one, and as a citizen of this county, I do not like to see the authority vested in it abused, nor do I like to see those who come before it or under its authority mistreated. I believe that when a m-an takes the oath of office of Sheriff he is taking on the obligations of a public trust and -that he should and must conduct himself, both publicly and privately, in a manner that is in keeping with confidence that the people of the county have placed in him by electing him' to this position.
“If I am elected your sheriff, I will not tolerate a condition such as a Negro living in back of a judge’s home and selling liquor for what information he can give others.
“I will not put a man in jail without giving him' right to make bond.
“I will not commi-t perjury just to get a conviction. And you will never hear of my saying that it is all right for a sheriff to perjure himself to get a conviction of a person he doesn’t like. I think eyeryone should be treated alike.
[638]*638' “I will not say that the county is not big enough for me and some other man too, nor will I threaten to kill a man I don’t like.
“I will not fire a deputy for telling the grand jury the truth. That’s the kind of deputies I want.
“I will not employ deputies that acknowledge that they gave whiskey to school boys. I will fire one that does.
“I will not give a child ten cents to turn in his father, just so I can get a fine.
“I will not allow a county attorney to carry a gun around and pull it on Negroes just to scare them.
“I will not let a county attorney run the sheriff’s office, nor will I try to run his. I will cooperate with him in every way and expect him' to discharge his duties and I will take care of mine.
“In view of these beliefs, I will not tolerate nor take part in any of the Star, Chamber, methods of Hitler and the fake trial techniques of Stalin. If a man is accused of any crime or misdemeanor I want him to have a decent trial that is fair and one in which justice will be done. I do not believe that a man is ‘guilty until proven' innocent,’ but that he is innocent until he is proven guilty! I want the evidence established by good, truthful witnesses, and not by drunken perjurers and snitches.”

Someone sent a copy of the said letter to appellant’s Amarillo Times. Upon receipt of the letter by appellant, two reporters were sent to Memphis, the county seat of Hall County, to check up on the letter and the political situation in the sheriff’s race there. The reporters interviewed Ballew, Sheriff Hill, several other citizens including some of the Negroes. They tried to interview appellee but he declined to discuss with them the Ballew letter or chargf-es therein made. The management of the Amarillo Times thought the subject matter furnished a news story of interest to the public and as a result published the article in question along with some others.

Appellee declared upon three publications dated, respectively, April 28, 1948, April 29, 1948 and August 9, 1948. The instant case was tried to a jury in the trial court and the only publication submitted to it was that of April 29, 1948. This article, which furnished the basis of this suit, in its entirety was as 'follows:

“Memphis ‘Political Clique’ Accused of Kangaroo- Court
“By Bill Cox and Hampton Stennis “(Times Staff Writers)
“Third in a Series

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223 S.W.2d 635, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panhandle-publishing-co-v-fitzjarrald-texapp-1949.