Savannah News-Press, Inc. v. Hartridge

120 S.E.2d 918, 104 Ga. App. 22, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 597
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 26, 1961
Docket38836
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 S.E.2d 918 (Savannah News-Press, Inc. v. Hartridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savannah News-Press, Inc. v. Hartridge, 120 S.E.2d 918, 104 Ga. App. 22, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 597 (Ga. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Jordan, Judge.

In determining whether a newspaper article is libelous, it is necessary to consider the entire article in or *23 der to arrive at its true meaning. It would be well, therefore, to set forth the articles in their entirety, including the headlines, as they were printed. The first article published on November 13,1958, on which count 1 is based, is as follows:

“WERE SENTENCED ONCE.

TWO ACQUITTED OF ASSAULT BY DISTRICT COURT JURORS.

“Two white men who had been sentenced to 20 years in prison by Federal District Judge Frank M. Scarlett for rape were acquitted of the crime Wednesday.

“The second trial, ordered by the U. S. Court of Appeals because of prejudicial remarks made by Scarlett to the jury, was conducted by Attorney John Joseph Sullivan. He had been brought into the case after Scarlett’s 20-year sentence. He was assisted by Attorney Julian Hartridge, Sr., one of the two original defense counselors.

“The two defendants, Richard T. Cook, Jr., 36, and Vernon C. Hill, 23, had been indicted for raping an 18-year-old girl on the Ft. Stewart reservation in October, 1956. Since the offense was allegedly committed on government property, the federal court had jurisdiction in the case.

“At the end of the first trial in May, 1957, the foreman of the jury reported to the bench that the jury could not agree on a verdict.

“Scarlett to id him it was ‘no credit to a juror to fail to agree on a verdict because of a pure spirit of stubbornness.’ He said the case has been explored fully and it was the duty of the jurors to come to a joint conclusion.

“The week-end was approaching at the time and Scarlett told the jurymen to arrange for fresh linen and shaving necessities so they could deliberate ‘until Sunday, if necessary.’ He indicated he was planning to go to his home in Brunswick for the week-end.

“About an hour later, a verdict of guilty was returned, with a recommendation for the mercy of the court. Scarlett was quoted in the press at the time as saying he ‘did not see how the jury could have acquitted the two men.’

“When Sullivan entered the case, he petitioned the Court of *24 Appeals for a reversal because of the judge’s comments and Won the new trial.

“The attorney raised a strong question as to whether the alleged crime occurred on government property. He produced a survey of the area prepared at his request by the engineering firm of Thomas and Hutton. This tended to show that the site where the girl said she was criminally assaulted was nine-tenths of a mile from the Ft. Stewart boundary.

“Sullivan also' put Cook on the stand who repeated his previous assertion that he had not molested the girl. Hill made no statement at all in the second trial.

“The jury was out about an hour and a half before returning the not guilty verdict.”

The petition alleged that Hartridge had been engaged in the practice of law since 1922 and had earned for himself a reputation in his community as a lawyer of good professional skill and ability; that the publication was a false, wilful and malicious defamation of petitioner, in effect making charges against him with reference to his profession and calculated to injure him therein. The petition further alleged that the publication failed to' state that the other original defense counselor was Mr. Shelby Myrick, Sr., the oldest and most experienced and distinguished member of the bar of that county; that the publication contained a deliberate falsehood that when another attorney entered the case, he petitioned the Court of Appeals for a reversal and won the new trial when the truth was that the petitioner personally and by himself handled the successful appeal for a new trial; that such false publication imputed to' the petitioner a gross want of skill and competence in his profession.

An examination of the statements in the publication with reference to the attorneys shows that: (a) The second trial was conducted by Attorney Sullivan; (b) Sullivan had been brought into' the case after the 20-year sentence was imposed; (c) he was assisted in the tidal by Attorney Hartridge; (d) Attorney Hartridge was one of the two original defense counselors. None of these statements is alleged to be false by the petition and they are therefore taken as true. The only complaint in the petition with reference to these particular statements is that the publica *25 tion failed to state that the other “original defense counselor” was Mr. Shelby Myrick, Sr. Therefore, the only statement in the publication claimed to be false was the statement that when Sullivan entered the case, he petitioned the Court of Appeals for a reversal because of the judge’s comments and won a new trial. Assuming this statement to be false, as we must on demurrer, was it, as a matter of law, defamatory or libelous of the plaintiff? We think not. It is true that it failed to give proper credit to the plaintiff, but of itself contained no> imputation of professional incompetence to the plaintiff. Even if Hartridge had turned over the appeal to Sullivan after associating him in the case, we cannot see where an assignment of this duty to Sullivan would have inferred incompetence on the part of Hart-ridge so as to damage his professional reputation. It is understood by lawyers, and the public as well, that attorneys working together on a complicated case usually assign themselves specific duties commensurate with the individual talents of each attorney. Indeed, the very purpose of associating additional attorneys is to assist in conducting an appeal, the cross-examination of witnesses, the striking of a jury, or some other duty in which the associated attorney might be especially proficient. Therefore, to say that one attorney associated another to 'assist in any phase of a legal proceeding cannot be said to be an admission of incompetence on the part of such attorney, nor understood as such by the reading public.

Under such circumstances; the false statement could only mean that one attorney in the case was credited with accomplishing an act which was in fact accomplished by his associate. We cannot see where such false credit could injure the professional reputation of one who failed to receive the proper credit. Neither can we construe the article, when considered as a whole, to infer or charge the plaintiff with gross ignorance or unskillfulness in his profession such as would tend to impair his professional reputation or law practice. Indeed, the article as a whole recites the successful story of two attorneys working together in securing a new trial for their clients and a verdict of acquittal on the second trial. Since professional ethics forbids attorneys to advertise, such a story of the successful defense of their clients is *26 usually looked upon by attorneys as a most welcome form of publicity. The article not being libelous per se or subject to be construed as having a defamatory meaning, the trial court should have sustained the demurrer to count 1.

The basis for count 2 of the petition is an article published on September 25, 1959, which reads as follows:

“LAW FINDS ANCIENT CAR HAD VERY GOOD DRIVER.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E.2d 918, 104 Ga. App. 22, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savannah-news-press-inc-v-hartridge-gactapp-1961.