Salinger v. Cowles

195 Iowa 873
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 195 Iowa 873 (Salinger v. Cowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salinger v. Cowles, 195 Iowa 873 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Faville, J.

The appellant’s petition alleges that appellee is president of a corporation that owns, controls, and publishes a newspaper known as the Des Moines Register, published at Des Moines, Iowa; that, on September 4, 1916, the appellant was a judge of the Supreme Court of Iowa; and that, on said [875]*875date, there was published in said newspaper an article charging, in effect, that appellant had used his position as a judge of the Supreme Court of Iowa to coerce railroads having important litigation in that court into giving employment to one A. C. Savage. The petition alleges that, on October 23, 1916, the appellant served notice, in writing, upon the appellee, demanding of him that he make a retraction, and that no retraction had been made.

In January, 1918, the appellee filed an answer, which was a general denial. Subsequently, the appellee filed his first amendment to the answer, which amendment was attacked by motion for more specific statement and to strike parts therefrom, which motion was sustained by the court. Whereupon, the appellee filed his second amendment to answer, which was attacked by motion for more specific statement and to strike certain parts thereof, which motion was overruled. Thereafter, the appellant demurred to said second amendment to the answer, which demurrer was overruled. The cause proceeded to trial upon the issues so joined, and the jury returned a verdict in behalf of the appellee!

Thirty-five errors are assigned, which are supported by 108 brief points. The court held that the article was libelous per se.

I. It is strenuously urged by the appellant that the court erred in submitting to the jury any question of justification. The article sued upon is as follows:

“Former State Senator Savage is quoted by the Des Moines News as predicting that Harding will have more votes in Iowa than Hughes. We are pleased to hear from Senator Savage, because it brings his head above the political horizon and makes it proper to comment on his present employment and the occasion of it. Senator Savage is now on the pay roll of the Rock Island Railroad. Will he tell the readers of the Register how he happened to drop into that place, after having exhausted the family resources? Did Senator Savage apply for a job in the usual way? Or did Judge Salinger, of the Supreme Court, at a time when the railroads had litigation of the most important kind before his court, notify the railroads that Sen[876]*876ator Savage must be ‘taken care of?’ If Senator Savage does not choose to answer this question, perhaps Judge Salinger will care to answer it. ’ ’

Appellant alleged “that said matter was used in the defamatory sense of charging the plaintiff with having used his position as a judge of the Supreme Court of Iowa to coerce railroads having important litigation in that court into giving employment to one A. C. Savage. ’ ’

The first division of the amendment to the answer alleged:

“That the charge in the publication complained of by the plaintiff, charging the plaintiff with having used his position as a judge of the Supreme Court of Iowa to coerce railroads having important litigation in that court into giving employment to one A. C. Savage, was and is true, and said publication in this and all other respects was and is true. ’ ’

It is urged that, upon this state of the pleadings, there was. no sufficient plea of justification. It is contended that the plea of justification was insufficient because it is not as broad as the libel,' — as the very charge.

It is the general rule that a plea in justification must be as broad as the charge, and as the precise charge. , It need not be in the exact form of the charge, but it must be, in essence and substance, the same. Hollenbeck v. Ristine, 105 Iowa 488; Morse v. Times-Rep. Ptg. Co., 124 Iowa 707; Berger v. Freeman Trib. Pub. Co., 132 Iowa 290; Snyder v. Tribune Co., 161 Iowa 671; Wallace v. The Homestead, Co., 117 Iowa 348, 361; Rhynas v. Adkisson, 178 Iowa 287.

The allegations of the petition and of the answer are quoted above. It is apparent that the language of the answer literally follows the allegations of the petition charging the defamatory sense in which the published words were used. It is alleged that the charge as pleaded and claimed by appéllant was and is true, and that “said publication in this and all other respects was and is true. ’ ’

The answer admits the publication of the article. It admits that said article charged the appellant with doing the very thing which the petition alleges it charged him with doing. It avers that the charge as so alleged “was and is true.” It in no manner seeks to avoid the charge as made by appellant. There is [877]*877neither evasion, modification, nor qualification of the charge pleaded.

We think it quite apparent that the appellee’s plea of justification literally complied with the requirement that the plea “must be as broad as the charge, and the very charge.”

II. Appellant’s further contention is that the plea of justification, although in the identical language of the charge in the petition, is insufficient in that the instances and manner in which it is claimed the appellant misconducted himself were not stated “with sufficient particularity to inform the plaintiff precisely of what were the facts to be tried.” Appellant’s claim is that the object of the plea in justification is to give the plaintiff in the action “the means of knowing what are the matters alleged against him;” that “the particulars must be stated;” and “that the plea of justification should state specific facts, showing in what instance and in what manner plaintiff misconducted himself.”

The general rule in actions of libel is that, where the defamatory ■ charge is general in its nature, the plea must state specifically the acts or offenses of which plaintiff is guilty, or other facts showing the truth of the charge. A mere assertion that the charge is true is not sufficient. Donahoe v. Star Pub. Co., 3 Pennew. (Del.) 545 (53 Atl. 1028); Dowie v. Priddle, 216 Ill. 553 (75 N. E. 243); Amos v. Stockert, 47 W. Va. 109 (34 S. E. 821); Kansas City Star Co. v. Carlisle, 108 Fed. 344; McClintock v. Crick, 4 Iowa 453. For example, if it is published of one that he is a murderer or a thief or a perjurer or a swindler, it is not a good plea in justification to admit the publication and to aver that the charge is true. In such a case, in order for the plea to be a good plea in justification, it must contain averments of specific facts and instances, showing wherein it is true that the party is a murderer or a thief or a perjurer or a swindler, as the ease may be. But where the charge in the libelous article is not in such general terms, the rule as to allegations of specific instances in a plea of justification does not prevail. A few citations will illustrate the holdings of the courts. In Campbell v. Irwin, 146 Ind. 681 (45 N. E. 810), the court said:.

[878]*878“A distinction is made where the words impute an offense in a general way, and where they particularize the charge. Where the defamatory ivords as set out sufficiently describe the offense, then an admission by the defendant that he spoke the words as charged, and a general affirmation that they are true, has been held to be sufficient.”

In Stark v.

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195 Iowa 873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salinger-v-cowles-iowa-1922.