Petty v. Nelson

155 S.W. 865, 170 Mo. App. 17, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 298
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 155 S.W. 865 (Petty v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petty v. Nelson, 155 S.W. 865, 170 Mo. App. 17, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 298 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Defendant is proprietor of the Kansas City Star, a newspaper of large circulation, [20]*20and plaintiff, a citizen of Paola, Kansas, claiming that he was defamed through the columns of the paper, brought this action for libel and obtained judgment in the circuit court.

The publication was of a‘picnic in “Boone’s pasture,” two miles out from Paola, on Easter Sunday, the 16th of April, 1911. Plaintiff was a member of that party, and a short statement of the nature and object of the gathering and his part in it, will aid in determining whether he has been defamed by the article published. The party was composed of twenty-five or thirty men, mostly residents of Paola, and they came on the grounds in the morning. It seems to be conceded that the traffic in intoxicating liquor is forbidden in Kansas; therefore a shipment of an eight gallon keg and a case of bottled beer had been ordered from Kansas City, Missouri, and it was awaiting the claim of an owner at the depot. So plaintiff with his team and the help of another man loaded up the liquor and took it to the pasture. There they dug a hole in the ground, placed the beer within, put ice on top and covered it up till needed a little later. They then set, or rather constructed, a table with boards brought along, and spread a lunch. Shortly eating and drinking began. Plaintiff partook of both. At one part of his testimony he denied he had any lunch, then qualified the denial into not remembering, and subsequently admitted he partook of it with the others; but all the time stated he drank his ‘ ‘ share ’ ’ of the beer. Whether he was intoxicated was a question left unsettled. Pie said he was not and others said he was. After the lunch was over gambling began in a game called “shooting craps,” in which as much as eight hundred dollars was lost and won. When that amount had changed hand's, either in cash, checks or verbal promise, it was suspicioned by a lawyer who happened on the ground that the dice were loaded, in consequence of [21]*21which, three of those engaged were getting about all the winnings. They were examined and found to be. filled on one side with quicksilver and on the other with cotton. This incident ended the game and the party returned to town. Plaintiff did not, • himself, take part in the game, though he knew it was going on. He confined his amusement to shooting at targets along a nearby creek with a rifle and five hundred cartridges he had brought out with him, and at about four o’clock in the afternoon he took up a collection for expense of the entertainment, put the proceeds on the table, and not being interested in the investigation of the dice, drove hack to town. And this, which has been taken from his testimony, seems to have ended his connection with the affair, except as he may have been tacked to it by the alleged defamatory article. His demeanor as a witness was not as candid as it should have been. He tried hard to say he did not know gambling was going on; said he only had a “presentiment” it was; that he merely “felt it in the air,” — when in fact he was so near that he must have known it as well as if he had been taking part. Again, he gave as a reason why he did not report the gambling to officers of the law, that it would have “compelled him to miss his Sunday hath and shave and Sunday attendance at church.”

The character of the entertainment and the extraordinary ending of it naturally became town-talk in Paola and nine of the participants, or guests as they were called, went before a magistrate after night and pleaded guilty to gambling and were fined ten dollars each. The prosecuting attorney of the county concluded that these pleas were collusive and began a prosecution against five of them for gambling.

The foregoing formed the basis for the publication of which plaintiff complains. It reads as follows:

[22]*22“LQADED DICE UPSET PAOLA.
“A Lawyer Exposed a ‘Sport’ and Others must he Tried.
“Charlie Boone laughed when Mercury was Taken from the Dice — His Guests Pleaded Guilty— County Attorney Charges Collusion.
“Paola, Has., May 10. — Paola’s ‘ Get-Rich-Quick-Wallingford’ has been exposed. It all happened in Charlie Boone’s pasture, a mile and a half east of town, Easter Sunday, April 16.
“Two spotted cubes, innocent looking on the outside caused Charlie Boone’s downfall as a ‘sport’ here. And it remained for a lawyer, Prank M. Sheridan, Democratic political manager of Miami County, to take the quick-silver from the educated dice.
“Easter Sunday in Paola always is observed in some'way or another, so about 11 o’clock John Lucas got into his motor car and drove seven or eight of ‘the. boys’ out to Charlie Boone’s farm.
“The boys had arranged to roast a few eggs. A keg of beer preceded them, but not one of them knows how it got there. One of the players admitted that they had taken their ‘twenty-two’s’ along to shoot at targets. But target shooting gets awful tame for blooded sports in a small town, so someone suggested that they shoot a round or two of craps. ‘Who’s got the bones,’ one asked. And luckily, — most of them agree on this point — Charlie Boone had. It was an innocent game when it first started. But it grew. Most any kind of crap shooter can throw ‘seven’ and ‘eleven’ with regular dice, where the results are only a matter of luck. After an hour’s playing, the Paola amateurs saw that three men — Boone, J. L. Puller and T. A. Reeves, were the only players that could make their ‘points’ with the high school dice. But if they suspected anything they never let their suspicions develop into fear. All the. players except Boone, [23]*23Fuller and Reeves lost all tlie money they had and started writing checks. A lot of them finally resorted to ‘month bets’ which means a verbal promise to pay when they got the money.
“Several hundred dollars was in the game — most of it was in Charlie Boone’s possession — when Frank Sheridan drove to the farm. He knew all the boys and walked over to watch the game. One round of the dice convinced him that Boone, Fuller and Reeves knew a lot more about that particular pair of ‘get-rich-quick’ implements than the other six men. Mr. Sheridan’s story follows: ‘I saw that something made those dice roll differently from others I had seen. “Let me roll ’em,” I told the boys. I shook them up well. They were heavy. I rolled them. I picked them up again. “I want to look at these a minute” I said and took them over to Lucas’s motor car. I drilled a hole in one of the dice and enough mercury to charge a thermometer rolled out. I picked out quite a large piece of cotton, too. Then Charlie laughed as if it were a great joke and paid part of the money back. The game stopped.’ But a good joke has to be told. It was only three or four days until word got to the sheriff about the Easter Sunday ‘party.’
“Four men were called before Gr. B. Hanna, justice of the peace. Under threats that they would be imprisoned if they didn’t tell about it they ‘squealed.’ Word got around to the others that they were to be arrested. Whether it was a collusion will be decided in the June term of court, but any way, nine men went to T. R. Kent, justice of the peace, at 10 o’clock one night about a week after the game', pleaded guilty to gambling and were fined $10 and costs. They paid. That process settled most troubles in small towns in Kansas, but not in Paola.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 865, 170 Mo. App. 17, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-v-nelson-moctapp-1913.