Sargent v. National Broadcasting Company

136 F. Supp. 560, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2458
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedDecember 20, 1955
DocketCiv. 33968
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 136 F. Supp. 560 (Sargent v. National Broadcasting Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. National Broadcasting Company, 136 F. Supp. 560, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2458 (N.D. Cal. 1955).

Opinion

THOMAS F. MURPHY, District Judge.

Defendant N. B. C. moves to dismiss the amended and supplemental complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In the alternative it also moves to strike certain paragraphs of the complaint for reasons of immateriality.

The plaintiff’s successive pleadings, complaint, amended complaint, amended and supplemental complaint with proposed amendments thereto present a verbosity of allegations that blithely ignore the proscription of Rule 8, 28 U.S.C.A., that a pleading “shall contain * * * a short and plain statement of the claim.” Parenthetically, the briefs of both parties, not hampered by any such salutary rule, are equally disturbing both as to size and prolixity.

First Cause of Action — Defamation.

Each of the two causes of action will be treated separately. Distilled, the first cause of action for defamation may be summarized as follows:

Invoking diversity jurisdiction plaintiff alleges that he is a citizen of California and an attorney admitted to the bar of that state and the defendant a citizen of Delaware. In substance plaintiff claims that his reputation was injured by a broadcast and telecast of the *562 defendant originating in New York and heard and seen in New York, California and elsewhere.

According to his interpretation a fair construction of what was said of him on a program entitled “American Forum” on August 8, 1954, by Congressman Hays is that he committed perjury in testifying before a Congressional Committee ; that he unlawfully smeared 650 individuals and organizations; that he was unethical and an irresponsible lawyer without any standing in his own state and in his community.

The controversy arises from the following facts as alleged by the plaintiff: He alleges that not only is he an attorney with a sound professional reputation but he has done research into and appeared as an expert before State and Federal investigating committees touching on subversive movements affecting colleges, universities and schools, and as such has acquired a national reputation as an attorney and consultant in such field; that in May 1954 he appeared three times pursuant to subpoena before a Congressional Committee investigating tax exempt foundations and testified; that one of the members of this Congressional Committee was Congress,man Wayne L. Hays; that on August 5, 1954, in Washington, D. C., Congressman Reece, chairman of the committee, and Congressman Hays, made a recording and film at the invitation of the defendant for use by it on its radio and television net work program known as the “American Forum.” Using the recording and film so made the defendant on August 8, 1954, broadcast the program over its radio and television station in New York, reaching an area insofar as television was concerned of a 50-mile radius, i. e., parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, and insofar as the radio broadcast was concerned, a radius of 375 miles, i. e., parts of New England and the Middle Atlantic States. In addition and as part of such broadcast the defendant caused both programs to be transmitted to its stations throughout the United States including a number of radio and television stations in California, two of which are owned by the defendant in Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The program consisted of a moderator, the aforesaid Congressmen and others, and the questions and answers related to a central topic, “Should Foundations Be Entitled To Tax Exemption.” In the course of this program Congressman Reece was explaining that the foundations were given an opportunity to testify and express their views but that it became necessary to discontinue the public hearings, when a panel member interrupted and asked Congressman Hays if he had not tried to disrupt the hearings by constantly interrupting the witnesses. The following then transpired:

“Congressman Hays: No, Mr. Keyser, that is not a fact: and, since you brought this out, I will do a little talking about it. Those apparently are the reasons that Mr. Reece says that I am familiar with; * * *
“Mr. Niles (Panel Member): Didn’t you interrupt Mr. Sargent 246 times in the course of a three-hour testimony?
“Congressman Hays: I couldn’t say about the three-hour testimony, but I had my staff check him, and I interrupted him a total of 600-and-some times, and I believe that I didn’t interrupt him enough because he alleged by insinuation that 650 responsible American people and institutions tried to prove by guilt by association, and inference and name dropping and quotations that they were sort of leftwingers or something, and I feel as though that every time he did that I should have interrupted him, and I think I was about JpO interruptions short of what I should have done.
“Mr. McCormick: Mr. Stevens has a question.
“Mr. Stevens (Panel Member): Wasn’t one of these examples a quotation from an encyclical, Mr. Hays ?
*563 “Congressman Hays: No, that wasn’t in relation to Mr. Sargent’s testimony. That was a quotation that I asked Mr. MeNieee to comment on and Mr. MeNieee commented that he thought that that was closely comparable, I believe I am using his exact language, ‘to Communistic literature that I have read.’ I didn’t do that in order to embarrass Mr. MeNieee. I merely did it to show the danger that could come about from lifting paragraphs out of context, which the witnesses that we had before the committee, notably Mr. Sargent, had done over and over and over again. (So italicized in the pleading). * * * ”
“Congressman Hays: * * * But I didn’t call you any names. I may have made an assertion that you did something that you didn’t think was just in line with what you thought I should have said, but I called a spade a spade and I interrupted the witness, and I cross-examined him when I thought it was necessary and when it became too embarrassing for these witnesses— and remember this, Mr. Chairman, you brought in some rather obscure witnesses to testify against some pretty well-known people. And when I thought it was necessary to protect the dignity and the good name of not only the foundations but the Congress from these name droppers, these people lifting paragraphs out of context, these people who were accusing people that they knew nothing about, I felt it my duty to interrupt and the only time I told you I wouldn’t obey the rules was that I said you couldn’t gavel me into silence and you couldn’t shut the minority up.
“Mr. Keyser: Would you say Dr. Rowe, who is Dean of the Yale University Graduate School, is an irresponsible individual?
“Congressman Hays: Well, we weren’t talking about Dr. Rowe, and I might tell you that Dr. Rowe, after the session before the committee — I went down to him and I said, T hope, Doctor, that you don’t feel that you were subjected to anything unusual,’ and he said, ‘No,’ he said, ‘there was nothing out of the way at all. I enjoyed it very much.’
“Now, the witness we are talking about — and we might as well face

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Bluebook (online)
136 F. Supp. 560, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-national-broadcasting-company-cand-1955.