People ex rel. Attorney General v. News-Times Publishing Co.

35 Colo. 253
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
DocketNo. 5681
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 35 Colo. 253 (People ex rel. Attorney General v. News-Times Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Attorney General v. News-Times Publishing Co., 35 Colo. 253 (Colo. 1906).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Gunter

delivered the opinion of the court.

June 30, the attorney general, in his official capacity, filed in this court an unverified information, a copy of which, omitting the caption, is the following:

“Comes now N. C. Miller, attorney general of the state of Colorado1, in behalf of and in the name of The People of the State of Colorado, who respectfully shows and gives this Honorable Court to understand and be informed as follows:

[255]*255That on the 24th day of June, A. D. 1905, there were and still are pending in this conrt the following named and numbered canses for the adjudication and determination of this court, namely:

No. 4850, wherein The People of the State of Colorado are petitioners, and Henry V. Johnson is respondent; •

No. 4976, wherein The People of the State of Colorado are plaintiffs in error, and S. H. Alexander is defendant in error;

No. 5619, wherein Bobert J. Byrne is plaintiff in error, and The People of the State of Colorado', etc., are defendants in error;

No. 5622, wherein The People of the State of Colorado are appellants, and Charles S. Elder is appellee;

No. 5637, wherein The People of the State of Colorado are appellants, and Berger et al. are appellees ;

No. 5654, wherein The People of the State of Colorado, etc., ex rel. Nisbet, are' appellants, and Hamilton Armstrong is appellee;

No. 5655, wherein The People of the State of Colorado ex rel. Lawson et al. are appellants, and J. N. Stoddard et al. are appellees;

No. 5660, wherein The People ex rel. Harrington are appellants, and Rice et al. are appellees; which cases are generally known as ‘the county offices election cases. ’

That on June 23, A. D. 1905, this conrt rendered a decision in each of the foregoing causes, but said decisions are still under the control of and subject to revision by this court. .

• That The News-Times Publishing Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Colorado and engaged in publishing-two daily newspapers in the' City and County of [256]*256Denver, in said State of Colorado, which said papers are known as The Pocky Mountain News and The Denver Times.

That on the 24th day of June, A. D. 1905, there appeared in The Denver Times, one of said newspapers so published as aforesaid, in the editorial columns thereof, of and concerning said causes so pending in this court, and of and concerning this court and the justices thereof, and the action of this court with reference to said causes, a certain article in the words following, that is to say:

‘THE ELECTIONS DECISION.

The decision rendered yesterday by a majority of the supreme court in. the election cases is the most far-reaching and portentous that has ever been rendered by any court in the United States. For the first time in the country’s judicial history it is announced that the people may amend their state constitutions only just so far as a supreme court is willing that they should. With the twentieth amendment as much a part of the constitution as any one of the original articles, with the addition that the provisions bf the twentieth article are the latest expressions of the sovereign will of the people, the supreme court holds that portions of it are inoperative because they are unconstitutional. In other words, a part of the state constitution is unconstitutional — treating constitutional provisions as ¡though they were state statutes and subject to be ' annulled by measuring them with the constitution of which they are a part.

The wrongs that this decision will work are innumerable and irreparable. The chief scheme of government under the twentieth amendment — the consolidation of offices, the retrenchment in salaries, home rule in local matters — are all practically wiped [257]*257ont and tlie old, old and pernicious order of things restored..

The people of St. Louis and San Francisco, who have been enjoying the full benefits of just such a system of government as the twentieth amendment provides, will be astonished to learn that they no longer live in a republic — for the Colorado supreme court holds that such a government is SO' unrepublican that it cannot be tolerated in Colorado.

What next? If somebody will let us know what next the utility corporations of Denver and the political machine they control will demand, the question will be answered.’

■ That the concluding paragraph of said editorial article is as follows:

’ ‘What next? If somebody will let us know what next the utility corporations of Denver and the political machine they control will demand, the question will be answered. ’ [Meaning thereby that this court and the justices thereof are controlled by certain corporations and by partisan political influence, and were so controlled in rendering the decision in said causes.]

II.

The attorney general further gives the court to understand and be informed, that on the 25th day of June, A. D. 1905, there appeared on the first page of The Bocky Mountain News, one of said newspapers, so published as aforesaid, a certain cartoon and illustration, wherein are shown caricatures of five members of this court, namely, Chief Justice Gabbert, Mr. Justice Maxwell, Mr. Justice Bailey, Mr. Justice Campbell and Mr. Justice Goddard, and wherein Chief Justice Gabbert is represented as ‘The Lord High Executioner’ in the act of beheading certain persons described therein (being the in[258]*258cumbents of certain county offices and the litigants mentioned in the foregoing causes, pending in this court), with display headlines in large letters over said cartoon and illustration, reading as follows, namely:

' ‘ IF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY HAS OYERLOOKED ANYTHING FROM THE SUPREME COURT, IT WILL NOW PROCEED TO ASK FOR IT.’

Also the -following words appeared therein as describing this court, namely:

‘The Great Judicial Slaughter-house and Mausoleum.’ [Thereby meaning and intending to convey the impression to the public that this court and the several members thereof, and especially Chief Justice Gabbert, Mr. Justice Maxwell, Mr. Justice Bailey, Mr. Justice Campbell and Mr. Justice Goddard were and are influenced by, and were and are under the control of the Republican party, and were and are governed by political prejudice, and that this court is under the domination of a partisan political machine and of certain political bosses, and were, at the time of rendering said decisions, and are at the present time, so influenced, controlled, governed and dominated.]

That .the said cartoon and the accompanying headlines, as published in said newspaper, are attached hereto as a. part hereof, and are as follows:

III.

The said attorney general further gives the court to understand and be informed that on Monday, June twenty-sixth, A. D. 1905, there further appeared in the said Denver Times of said day and date, and upon the first page thereof, of and concerning the said election cases so pending in this court, and of and concerning this court, and of and concerning [259]

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Bluebook (online)
35 Colo. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-news-times-publishing-co-colo-1906.