Rail v. National Newspaper Ass'n

192 S.W. 129, 198 Mo. App. 463, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 1
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 129 (Rail v. National Newspaper Ass'n) 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
Rail v. National Newspaper Ass'n, 192 S.W. 129, 198 Mo. App. 463, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 1 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

JOHNSON, J.

This is an action for libel against the proprietor of the Kansas City Post, a newspaper of general circulation published at Kansas City. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $500 actual and $1000 punitive damages, but the eoult sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial “on account of errors in plaintiff’s instructions,” and plaintiff appealed.

The petition alleges that on August 24,. 1910, de- ■ fendant published of and concerning plaintiff the following false and defamatory" article:

“BABY FARM IS FOUND IN APARTMENT HOUSE: TWO ARRESTED; ONE BABY DIES.”
“Mary Rail and Dr. Joel McDaniel held under $500 bond. Woman well known to police (meaning to charge and the readers of said article so published by defendant, as aforesaid, understood defendant to charge, and the defendant meant that the readers of said articles should understand the same to charge that this plaintiff, by reason of frequent and numerous violations of the law, has become and is well known to the police) formerly ran home for babies on the west side.
“Bodies of six infants found in Kansas City sewers recently. Unable to tell the police history of any child in her charge; woman denies responsibility for death of children; one baby dead; another dying at St. Anthony’s Home.
“Pursuing their investigations into the finding of six dead babies within the last few months in sewers in the neighborhood of Thirteenth and Fourteenth and [465]*465Harrison Streets, tlie police last night went into the apartments of Mrs. Mary Rail, alias Miss Chardis Lundin” (meaning to charge and the readers of said article so published by defendant, understood defendant to charge that this plaintiff has, in common with professional criminals, more than one name, designated as an “alias”) “at 1515 Harrison Street.” (Meaning to charge and being understood by the readers of said article, to charge, that the plaintiff is guilty of divers crimes, to-wit, the killing of six infants and has disposed of the bodies of said infants by placing them in sewers in her, plaintiff’s immediate neighborhood.) “They found four babies, all in sickly condition, one dies this morning and another is dying at St. Anthony’s Home, Twenty-third Street and College Avenue. The. other two babies probably will not live.” (Meaning to charge, and being understood by the readers of the said article, to charge that plaintiff was responsible for the alleged sickly condition of the last-mentioned four babies; that the plaintiff was responsible for the alleged death aforesaid of one of the above-named four babies; that plaintiff was responsible for the alleged dying condition of the baby aforesaid in St. Anthony’s Home; that the plaintiff was responsible for the alleged condition of the other two babies of the above-named four, which alleged condition pointed to the certain death of said two babies.)
“Mrs. Rail and Dr. Joel McDaniel, 211 East Twelfth Street, were arrested by Detectives Zickefoose and Farrell. They were arraigned in the municipal court this morning on charges of violating the city ordinance governing the birth, death and adoption of infants.”
“NEIGHBORHOOD IS SURPRISED.”
“The case was continued until next Tuesday morning, to allow the defendants to get some witnesses. The two were released on $500 bond each.
“The raid and the arrests bewildered others who live in the three-story apartment house on Harrison [466]*466Street. Although several families lived there, no person knew there had ever been a baby in the rooms of Mrs. Rail until the detectives carried the infants out last night to send them to St. Anthony’s Home.” (Meaning to charge and the readers of said articles so published by the defendant, as aforesaid, understood the defendant to charge, and the defendant meant that the readers of said article should understand the same to charge that plaintiff had the said .babies in her charge, intending to murder them, and, that on account of said felonious intention, the presence of the four babies aforesaid in her apartment was kept a profound secret.)
“In explanation of the four babies there, Mrs. Rail said she was nursing them and trying to find good homes for them at the recommendation of Dr. McDaniel. The physician said most of the babies taken to the woman’s place came from 2111 East Seventh Street, an institute. He said that the mothers of the children had asked him to find good homes for their little ones and that he sometimes put babies in charge of Mrs. Rail.”
“DENIES KNOWLEDGE OP OTHERS FOUND DEAD.”
“When questioned about the bodies of the six babies taken from the sewers- in that neighborhood during the last few months, the woman (meaning this plaintiff) said she knew nothing about them. She refused to tell the officers of any person with whom she had found homes for the little ones left in her care.” (Meaning to charge and being understood by the readers of said article to charge, that said six babies alleged to have been found in sewers aforesaid, were received by the plaintiff, murdered, and their bodies cast into the sewers in the vicinity of her home.) “She would not give the history of any particular baby — where she got it, what she did with it, who was its mother or who had adopted it. Nothing that she said served to clear up the mystery which the police have been working upon for many months.” (Meaning to charge, and [467]*467being understood by the readers of said article, to charge that plaintiff had received the' said six babies for the purpose of murdering them.)
“Of the four babies taken from the Rail establishment last night and removed to St. Anthony’s home one died this morning from a disease having the appearance of yellow jaundice, another is covered with sores, and apparently has not long to live, and the other two are sickly.”
“Mrs. Rail told detective Zickefoose last night that the babies came from 2111 East Seventh Street. One, she said was born yesterday, two Sunday and one Saturday.”
“BABIES MORE THAN A WEEK OLD.”
“Dr. W. L. Gist of the emergency hospital, who examined the infants last night, said that one was fully three weeks old and that none of the others was less than ten days old.
“Mrs. Rail and Dr. McDaniel are held on three charges, violations of sections 716, 855 and 856 of the Revised Ordinances of Kansas City. These sections provide that physicians must report all births and deaths to the Board of Health; that no person may conduct a baby farm without a permit from the Board of Health, and that infants for adoption must be reported to the Board of Health, and that permits for their adoption must be obtained by those adopting the child and also those giving away the child.”
“FORMERLY OPERATED A BABY FARM.”
“Mrs. Rail formerly, operated a baby farm at 1735 Washington Street. The police knew about her then but she was never molested.” (Meaning to charge, and being understood by the readers of said article, to charge that the plaintiff had a police record at the time of her alleged residence at 1735 W^^S^on Street.)

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 129, 198 Mo. App. 463, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rail-v-national-newspaper-assn-moctapp-1916.