Quentin Reynolds v. Westbrook Pegler, the Hearst Corporation and Hearst Consolidated Publications, Inc.

223 F.2d 429, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3981
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1955
Docket23329_1
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 223 F.2d 429 (Quentin Reynolds v. Westbrook Pegler, the Hearst Corporation and Hearst Consolidated Publications, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quentin Reynolds v. Westbrook Pegler, the Hearst Corporation and Hearst Consolidated Publications, Inc., 223 F.2d 429, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3981 (2d Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

This is a libel action based upon a column of defendant Westbrook Pegler, published on November 29, 1949, by defendant Hearst' Consolidated Publications, Inc., owner of the New York Journal-American, a New York City newspaper, which had purchased the article from defendant Hearst Corporation, whose King Features Syndicate division had syndicated the article not only to the Journal-American but to a large number of other publications throughout the United States. As federal jurisdiction Is based upon diversity of citizenship, the substantive aspect of the case is governed by New York law. The result of the trial to court and jury was a verdict against all defendants in the sum of $1.00 as compensatory damages and, in addition, punitive damages against Pegler in the sum of $100,000, against Hearst Corporation in the sum of $50,-000, and against Hearst Consolidated Publications, Inc. in the sum of $25,000, or smart money of $175,000 in all.

On this appeal defendants claim that the column, or at least the greater part of it, was not defamatory, that no award of punitive damages was warranted, especially against the corporate defendants, that the trial judge ruled as matter of law on certain issues which should have been submitted to the jury, and that defendants did not have a fair trial by reason of a variety of allegedly erroneous rulings said to have been prejudicial to defendants.

The controversy revolves about a book review of Dale Kramer’s “The Heywood Broun His Friends Recall,” which plaintiff wrote for the New York Herald Tribune Book Review of November 20,1949, some ten years after Broun’s death, and the Pegler column “On Heywood Broun and Quentin Reynolds,” published in the November 29, 1949 issue of the Journal-American, above referred to. By counterclaim it was alleged that the book review itself was defamatory of Pegler, and this question was not resolved, as the jury disagreed. In any event, defendants claim that, whether or not based upon excerpts from Kramer’s book or upon the book as a whole, the effect of what plaintiff wrote was to assert that Pegler had called Broun a liar, that Broun brooded over this allegedly false charge, and that, although suffering from a cold at the time, Broun couldn’t sleep or relax and that he died. This is interpreted as a charge of “moral homicide.” The Pegler column is supposed to be a reply to this charge. And the first few paragraphs, with well salted digressions, bear some resemblance to a reply, as they state that “Broun was a notorious liar,” that he was “a dirty fighter” and “made his living at controversy,” and it is broadly suggested that any notion that Broun sank into despondency and finally died because of anything written about him by Pegler was scarcely credible. There were a few shafts in plaintiff’s direction also in these opening paragraphs. The Pegler column then continues: “Reynolds gives some false impressions. So I offer some corrective data.”

What follows is a scathing denunciation of plaintiff, which the trial judge held had no conceivable relevancy to any part of plaintiff’s review of Kramer’s book. Many of the statements concerning plaintiff are plainly defamatory per se and the column read as a whole undoubtedly held plaintiff up to “public hatred, *432 contempt, scorn, obloquy or shame.”' Triggs v. Sun Printing and Publishing Association, 1904, 179 N.Y. 144, 71 N.E. 739, 742, 66 L.R.A. 612. Thus it is asserted in “As Pegler Sees It,” the column in suit, “that Reynolds and his girl friend of the moment were nuding along the public road,” that the neighbors might not understand, and if “they saw Reynolds and his wench strolling along together, absolutely raw, they would call the State police;” that “as Reynolds was riding to Heywood’s grave with her, he proposed marriage” to the widow; that Reynolds “became one of the great individual profiteers of the war” and “cleaned up $2000 of the ill-gotten loot of the Garsson brothers who, with Congressman Andy May, later were convicted of fraud in war contracts”; that he was a “four-flusher,” with “an artificial reputation as a brave war correspondent in the London blitz,” one of the “ ‘let’s you and him fight’ school of heroes” and that Clare Boothe had “peeled him of his mangy hide and nailed it to the barn door with the yellow streak glaring for the world to see”; and more to the same effect.

Various and sundry explanations are furnished by defendants to support their contention that these charges are innocuous and susceptible of innocent and harmless interpretations, but these explanations are wholly without merit or substance. For example it is suggested that “[P]erfectly honorable people are nudists,” and that “[A]t common law, nudism was not a crime.” The ride to the grave may have been “years after the date of Broun’s death,” and the Mosaic Code is cited as imposing “upon a brother the duty of proposing to his dead brother’s widow;” and so on.

Defendants’ counsel in his brief referred to the part about the “yellow streak” as “political gloating in jesting terms,” and it may well be that many readers of the column were highly amused by what they read. But this is a curious and unprofitable sort of jesting, as others may not view the humor in the same light. After all, it is elementary that the alleged defamatory article must be read as a whole.

The trial judge presided with his usual meticulous attention to detail, examining with care the authorities cited in support of the many questions of law pressed upon his attention by defendants’ experienced counsel. The part of the charge relative to the defamatory character of the column, including the statement, “[T]hat column read in its entirety, I charge'you as matter of law, is defamatory,” was read to the lawyers for the respective parties in chambers and counsel for defendants agreed that it was unexceptionable.

The refusal of the trial judge to charge as requested with reference to paragraphs 12 and 20 of the Pegler column is assigned as prejudicial error. These paragraphs included the statement that plaintiff’s “medicine grew too strong even for Collier’s” and “a fellow of his politics can do fairly well in Hollywood,” also the statement that plaintiff “cleaned up $2000 of the ill-gotten loot of the Garsson brothers.” But the innuendoes pleaded in the complaint did not so far exceed the scope of any reasonable interpretation of the language used in the alleged libel as to justify a ruling as matter of law that the innuendoes were unwarranted. The document must be read as a whole, as has already been noted; and the interpretations given in the innuendoes are neither strained nor unnatural. The trial judge properly instructed the jury that if it failed to. find that the meanings suggested by plaintiff were conveyed by the words used, then in that event the paragraphs were “out of the case,” but, if the language used was found fairly to import and to be understood by the public as having-the meanings claimed by plaintiff, the jury should proceed to determine whether or not these paragraphs were defamatory in accordance with the rules given in the general instructions on that subject. These rulings were in accord with well settled New York law. See Sullivan v. Daily Mirror, Inc., 1st Dept. 1931, 232 App.Div. 507, 250 N.Y.S. 420; Mattice *433 v. Wilcox, 1895, 147 N.Y. 624, 638, 42 N.E. 270; Morrison v. Smith, 1904, 177 N.Y. 366, 369, 69 N.E. 725.

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223 F.2d 429, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 3981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quentin-reynolds-v-westbrook-pegler-the-hearst-corporation-and-hearst-ca2-1955.