Pinn v. Lawson

72 F.2d 742, 63 App. D.C. 370, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4675
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1934
Docket6137
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 72 F.2d 742 (Pinn v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinn v. Lawson, 72 F.2d 742, 63 App. D.C. 370, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4675 (D.C. Cir. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

An appeal from a judgment of the lower court in an action brought by appellant for damages because of an alleged libel.

The appellant, Rev. James L. Pinn, who was pastor of the First Colored Baptist Church, was plaintiff below and claimed damages from the defendants, Emma E. Lawson and Helen Martin, upon a charge that they had willfully, maliciously, and falsely composed and published a libelous statement concerning him by filing the same with the deacon board of the church and stating therein that the plaintiff had been guilty of conduct unbecoming a Christian and a Christian minister, inasmuch as he had received from the Dorcas Missionary Circle of the church the sum of $25 as a contribution to African missions to be delivered by him to the Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention for that purpose, and that plaintiff had failed to deliver the same as agreed, hut unlawfully and in violation of good conscience had appropriated -and converted the same to his own personal use. Plaintiff alleged that the defendants’ charges so made against him were false, and that the defendants had caused a copy of the same to be read by the deacon hoard of the church and also by the congregation and published in the Washington Tribune, a weekly newspaper of large circulation throughout the District of Columbia and elsewhere. The plaintiff furthermore charged that the defendant the Washington Tribune did willfully, maliciously, and falsely, and with the intent to injure the plaintiff in his good name, before the charges aforesaid were properly heard, publish a statement to the effect that the plaintiff had been a storm center of the First Baptist Church for the past several months; that he was accused by a Baltimore doctor of being unduly friendly with the doctor’s wife; that *743 the Baltimore physician claims that divorce proceedings' grew out of the intimate relations the plaintiff had with the doctor’s wife; that the plaintiff had said in respect thereto: “I could have had any of the women of this church or their daughters.”

Plaintiff denied that he at any time had made the statements attributed to Min or had misappropriated the money as charged and published as aforesaid; and alleged that he had been greatly injured and disgraced in the community, and brought suit for damages in the sum of $30,000.

For their plea the defendants Emma E. Lawson and Helen Martin, who were members of the church and of the Boreas Missionary Circle, admitted that they had signed the charges against plaintiff and delivered the same to the deacon board, and they alleged that the charges were true and that the plaintiff was tried and found guilty of said charges by the First Colored Baptist Church sitting as an ecclesiastical court for the purpose o.f hearing and adjudicating the charges.

The defendant Washington Tribune for its defense alleged that the charges were heard at a public meeting of the church and that the Tribune without malice and in good faith and with perfect fairness and correctness reported the same as a matter of public interest to the community; and that the plaintiff had consented to such publication.

The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the defendants, and judgment was entered accordingly. Whereupon the present appeal was taken.

The record, does not contain the evidence heard at the trial. A bill of exceptions, however, is forwarded therewith which states in brief that testimony was offered at the trial in behalf of iho plaintiff tending to prove that he was pastor of the First Colored Baptist Church of Georgetown and a professor of Howard University; that the defendants had signed the written charges against him accusing him of misappropriating $25 which had been given to him by. the Dorcas Missionary Circle to be paid 1o the Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention; that the plaintiff was cited by the deacon board of the church to appear and answer the charges, but plaintiff did not appear, because he contended that the hoard had no authority io> hear such charges against him, as all such authority was vested in the church alone; that plaintiff was then cited by the church to appear and answer the charges, and plaintiff then appeared; that the defendant Tribune secured copies of the charges from the dea.con hoard and published the same; that the plaintiff did not authorize the Tribune to publish the charges, and that these were private matters with which the public was not concerned; that the statement of the plaintiff concerning the women of the church had been made in a church meeting while discussing an accusation published in a Baltimore paper, and that plaintiff then said: “If I was the kind oí a man they say I am, I would not have to go to Baltimore, I could use any women in this church or their daughters”; that the plaintiff did not misappropriate the $25, but was entitled to draw the same from the treasury for expenses.

The testimony offered by the defendants tended to prove the charges of misappropriation and an admission thereof by the plaintiff that plaintiff had given permission to the defendant Tribune to publish the items which he now complains of, and that those were published fairly and in good faith and as a matter of public interest alone.

In this court the appellant presents 12 assignments of error. The first three assignments are not properly before the court, inasmuch as they refer to the testimony introduced at the trial. The bill of exceptions does not contain the testimony, but merely recites that “there was testimony offered on behalf of the plaintiff tending to prove,” and that “there was testimony offered on the part of the defendants tending to prove” the facts relied upon by the respective pax-ties. Upon this statement alone the court cannot pass upon ¡he weight of the evidence nor upon the competency of the testimony.

Assignments 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 relate to the charge of the court. We need not discuss these in detail. The record seis out the charge in full, and we are satisfied that it was fair and correct. The court instructed the jury that it was the province of the jury to pass upon the questions of fact which wore submitted to them in the case; that libel consisted of any publication in writing or print which imputes to a, person a crime, or disgraceful, dishonest, or immoral conduct, or is otherwise injurious to the private character or credit of the person, and that one who- publishes a writing of that nature is liable in damage, unless the same be justifiable matter which in law is termed privileged, or unless the statements so published be true. As to the charges filed with the deacon board of the church by Emma E. Lawson and Helen Martin, the court said that, if these parties had an honest be *744 lief, and had probable cause to believe, that the plaintiff had misappropriated the money in the manner in which they charged, and if that was a reasonable belief — such a belief as an ordinary prudent and cautious person would fairly entertain upon the facts— then that would-be a privileged communication and would not be libelous. On the other hand, if there was no reasonable ground, for them to form such belief, nor probable cause to form such belief, and if the charge was made hy reason of actual malice on their part, then the verdict of the jury should be in favor of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 F.2d 742, 63 App. D.C. 370, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinn-v-lawson-cadc-1934.