Shiver v. the Valdosta Press

61 S.E.2d 221, 82 Ga. App. 406, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1950
Docket33086
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 61 S.E.2d 221 (Shiver v. the Valdosta Press) 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
Shiver v. the Valdosta Press, 61 S.E.2d 221, 82 Ga. App. 406, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1120 (Ga. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

It appears from the petition as amended, that, on November 8, 1949, in Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, the defendant published in its daily newspaper the following article:

“ANOTHER $300,000 SUIT IS FILED IN RACE CASE

“Charging that they are victims of ‘members of a subversive organization’ who used ‘malicious abuse of civil process’ a former Clyattville couple involved in a dispute over their racial background filed another suit for $300,000 damages before U. S. Commissioner W. E. Perry today. The suit charges Murrel *408 Holderby, Mrs. Lillie Holderby, C. C. Gay, W. J. Arnold, J. H. Dukes and Eddie Shiver (the plaintiff), with ‘Malicious abuse of civil process’ and slander. The suit was filed by George White and Dollie Seay White on their own behalf and on behalf of their four minor children, Edward White, Shirley White, George James White and Betty White. The Whites seek damages in the amount of $50,000 each for themselves and each for their children. The original suit filed in connection with the dispute asked similar damages from the above named defendants and declaratory judgment against the Lowndes County School Board. Judge A. B. Conger dismissed this suit in Thomasville last Thursday after the plaintiff’s attorney requested it to be thrown out. The court ruled that the school board was authorized by law to act as a tribunal and further that the plaintiff’s case did not come under the jurisdiction of the Federal court of the Middle District of Georgia. Since the original suit was filed, the Whites have moved to Gilchrist County, Florida. The attorney for the family said that the case is now under the jurisdiction of the Federal court. The six individuals named as defendants file$ a formal complaint with the Lowndes County School Board, the suit charges, asking that the children of the Whites be excluded from the Clyattville Consolidated School on the grounds that they were of Negro ancestry. The White couple were subsequently arrested on warrants signed by Mrs. Lillie Holderby, charging ‘felony-miscegenation’ (marriage between whites and Negroes). They were released on bonds of $500 each. The Lowndes County Grand Jury is to consider the charge November 21. In the suit filed today the Whites’ attorney again denied that Dollie Seay White and her children have Negro blood in their veins. The suit again contended that the White family was a victim of members of a ‘subversive organization known as the Ku Klux Klan and/or the Southern Klan Inc., whose object and purpose is to promote envy, hatred, malice and discord’ who ‘did conspire to cause the issuance of said civil process for the purposes aforesaid and to satisfy their individual craving and desire and in the furtherance of the objects and purposes of said subversive organization.’ The suit charged ‘that as a direct result of the malicious abuse of civil process, plaintiffs have been excluded from society and held up to pub- *409 lie contempt, hatred and ridicule, and the minor plaintiffs have been forced by said exclusion, contempt and hatred, to interrupt their education.’ ”

The plaintiff alleged said article to have been maliciously published by the defendant and as being libelous per se in that it charges the plaintiff with being a member of a subversive ■organization and guilty of treason, namely the Ku Klux Klan, and also imputed to the plaintiff disgraceful conduct. The plaintiff further alleged that said article was not a fair and honest report of the court proceedings purported to be reported therein; and said article set out that the plaintiff and the others did conspire, confederate, and agree among themselves and ■caused the malicious issuance and abuse of civil process against the Whites, the family bringing the proceeding referred to and •dealt with in this article. It was stated in the petition that the plaintiffs therein (the Whites) alleged “upon information and belief” that the plaintiff in this case and the others were members of said “subversive organization,” and the defendant in ■said article purposely left out this preface from the article. The plaintiff further set up that the said article was therefore not privileged. The plaintiff also set up that the petition referred to was filed in the Federal court in Valdosta at 10:30 ■a.m. on November 8, 1949, and the newspaper of the defendant went to press at 11 a.m. on that day, and that said publication .appeared on that day and before there had been any service on the plaintiff thereof; and that it appeared, therefore, that the ■defendant did not exercise good faith in the transaction, and that same was not a privilege, but was used merely as “a cloalc by defendant for venting private malice.” The plaintiff alleged that the wrongful acts and conduct charged to him by ■■said newspaper article are false.

“A libel is a false and malicious defamation of another, expressed in print, or writing, or pictures or signs, tending to injure the reputation of an individual,” and its publication “is essential to recovery.” Code, § 105-701. Words need not charge .a specific crime in order to be libelous; they are actionable if they charge moral turpitude. See Hardy v. Williamson, 86 Ga. 551(b) (12 S. E. 874). “Any false and malicious defamation ■of another in any newspaper, magazine, or periodical, tending *410 to injure the reputation of any individual and expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, shall constitute a newspaper libel, the publication of such libelous matter being essential to recovery.” Code, § 105-703. The publication of untrue statements which may tend to injure the reputation of another and expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, is presumed to have been malicious until sufficient evidence rebuts that presumption. Horton v. Georgian Co., 175 Ga. 261 (165 S. E. 443). “In all actions for printed or spoken defamation, malice is inferred from the character of the charge. The existence of malice may be rebutted by proof, which in all cases shall go in mitigation of damages, and in cases of privileged communications it shall be in bar of the recovery.” Code § 105-706.

When language used is actionable per se, malice is implied except where the utterance is privileged. Lack of malice in cases of privileged communications will prevent recovery. Ivester v. Coe, 33 Ga. App. 620 (127 S. E. 790). However, in the present case, the petition, as amended, charges express malice by the defendant in the publication of this article.

“The following are deemed privileged communications: . . Fair and honest reports of the proceedings of legislative or judicial bodies.” Code, § 105-709 (4). This section is construed with § 105-711, which provides that “All charges, allegations and averments contained in regular pleadings filed in a court of competent jurisdiction, which are pertinent and material to the relief sought, whether legally sufficient to obtain it or not, are' privileged. However false and malicious they are not libelous.” An absolute privilege is distinguished ■from a conditional privilege; in case of the former, malice is immaterial, but in case of the latter, the privilege is lost through malice. See Atlanta News Pub. Co. v. Medlock, 123 Ga. 714 (51 S. E. 756, 3 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1139);

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E.2d 221, 82 Ga. App. 406, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shiver-v-the-valdosta-press-gactapp-1950.