Sanctuary v.Thackrey

189 Misc. 724, 72 N.Y.S.2d 104, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2709
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 Misc. 724 (Sanctuary v.Thackrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanctuary v.Thackrey, 189 Misc. 724, 72 N.Y.S.2d 104, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2709 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Pecora, J.

Plaintiff sues to recover damages for libel. One of the defendants is the owner and publisher, and the other [725]*725is the editor and general manager, of a newspaper published daily (except Sundays) in this city, called the “ New York Post ” (hereinafter referred to as the “ Post ”).

The alleged defamatory matter is contained in two installments of a book entitled “ Under Cover ”. They were published in the “ Post ” issues of October 16,1943, and. November 8, 1943, respectively. The book was written by one John Boy Carlson (a nom de plume), and published by E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc. In it the author details what he claims to have learned as a result of his private espionage, about subversive organizations which he believed were plotting for the seizure and overthrow of our Government.

The proof shows the book was on the best-seller lists in the latter part of 1943, and had been widely reviewed and commented upon. Several hundred thousand copies of it had been sold.

The defendants acquired the right to publish it serially in their newspaper. The same right had been given to various newspapers in other cities. The defendants commenced its daily serial publication on October 16,1943, and concluded it at about the end of that year.

The initial installment fills pages 24 and 25 of the “ Post ” issue of October 16,1943. On page 25 is a picture layout showing a photograph of a small quantity of weapons and ammunition on a table. Underneath this photograph is an inscription reading “Arsenal seized by - the F.B.I. in a Brooklyn home. J. Edgar Hoover charged they were to be used in an attempt to overthrow the government. John Roy Carlson describes today the origin of the plot. George Sylvester Viereck, Nazi agent, quoted freely by the Christian Front, and Col. E. N. Sanctuary, retired United States Army officer, were indicted in connection with anti-American activities.”

Flanking this photograph of the weapons, on the left and right sides respectively, are photographs of Viereck and Sanctuary (the plaintiff herein) with their names. Over the top of the picture layout across the whole width of the page, is a caption reading “ U. S. * Quislings ’. They Plotted' to Seize America.” Across the top of page 24 for its full width is the inscription “ Under Cover! The Nation’s No. l.Best Seller.” Across the full width of the front page of the issue of October 16, 1943, is the inscription “ The American Quislings Were Under Cover Until Carlson Lifted the Lid. Bead It Today on Pages 24 and 25 ”.

The installment contained in the issue of the “ Post ” of November 8, 1943, appears on page 20. It occupies about two [726]*726thirds of the page. At the top for the full width of the page is the inscription “ Under Cover I The Nation’s No. 1 Best Seller! ” At the right hand lower corner of the front page of that issue is the inscription “ Under Cover! Page 20.”

The above described picture layout was not taken from the book itself. The photograph of the arsenal ” had previously been published in 1940 as part of a news item which related to the seizure of the weapons by the F.B.I. in the home in Brooklyn of an alleged member of the Christian Front. Nothing in the text of the two installments referred to the plaintiff as being the person in whose home the weapons had been found, or from whose possession they had been taken. The installments contain a number of statements concerning the plaintiff. They relate chiefly to his dissemination of anti-Semitic literature, and to his association with various persons and organizations engaged in similar activities and in the spreading of pro-Nazi and pro-Fascist propaganda.

In the opinion of this court, the terms “ American Quislings ” and “ U.S. Quislings ” in the captions were intended to convey, and did convey to the average reader, that the persons connected with such activities and propaganda were — like the infamous Major Quisling of Norway, who collaborated with Ms nation’s invader — disloyal citizens of their country. Such references to the plaintiff hold Mm up to hatred, scorn, obloquy and contempt. Hence they are libelous per se (Seelman, Law of Libel and Slander, par. 11); and if they are not substantially true, their publication unless protected by privilege would entitle plaintiff to damages. In their answer the defendants plead the truth, as well as certain other and partial defenses.

Upon the trial a jury was empaneled and sworn. But before the introduction of any evidence, the plaintiff requested a trial of the issues by tMs court without a jury. With the consent of the defendants the jury was thereupon discharged, and the trial was resumed with the court sitting as the sole trier of the facts.

The evidence clearly reveals that for years plaintiff distributed many books and pamphlets of a violently anti-Semitic nature. He boasted of his authorship of some of them: He addressed a meeting of the notorious German-American Bund in tMs city in October, 1938, and tried, with some success, to sell Ms literature at its headquarters.

He helped to circulate the so-called “ Protocols of the Elders of Zion ”, which purports to outline a plan for world domination by Jews — a plan which in tMs court’s opinion is-both imprac[727]*727tical and ridiculous upon its face, but which is set forth with clever sophistry. He expressed his belief in their genuineness, despite the fact that in the world-famous trials in Bern, Switzerland, held in the years 1934-1935, they were adjudicated to be sheer forgeries promulgated for the purpose of creating enmity toward Jews. (See “ An Appraisal of-the Protocols of Zion ”, by Prof. Curtiss and other eminent American historians, Columbia Univ. Press, 1942.)

He edited a history of the hate-breeding Ku KIux Elan in 1940-1941, which was indorsed by its Imperial Wizard, He testified that the Elan unqualifiedly supported the principles of the Federal Constitution. But he finally admitted that the Elan’s advocacy of native-born, white, Protestant supremacy ” — with its consequent discriminations against Jewish, Catholic, colored and foreign-born American citizens — was inconsistent with those principles.

Referring to the conviction in 1942, in a Federal court, of one William Dudley-Pelley for subversive activities, plaintiff stated he believed that Pelley was “ unjustly in prison ”. It was also Ms judgment that one Ralph Townsend, who was convicted in 1942 in a Federal court of willfully failing to register ■ as a Japanese Government agent, had received “ a pretty rough deal ”. Those assertions afford some indication of plaintiff’s lack of respect for our judicial processes.

He also testified that George Sylvester Viereck, who had been convicted of willful failure to register as a German Government agent, was nevertheless an honorable gentleman ” This ' gives a clue to plaintiff’s peculiar conception of honor.

Plaintiff’s association with Pelley and Viereck was reflected in Ms indictment jointly with them and about twenty-seven other defendants, by a Federal Grand Jury in the District of Columbia on January 3,1944 for subversive acts. That indictment apparently superseded two prior indictments filed respectively on July 2, 1942, and January 4, 1943. During a protracted trial of the indictment in 1944, the presiding judge died, with a resultant mistrial. The indictment has since been dismissed for failure to prosecute.

Plaintiff is avowedly opposed to our democratic plan of government.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Misc. 724, 72 N.Y.S.2d 104, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanctuary-vthackrey-nysupct-1947.