Shumate v. Johnson Publishing Co.

293 P.2d 531, 139 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2086
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1956
DocketCiv. 20971
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 293 P.2d 531 (Shumate v. Johnson Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shumate v. Johnson Publishing Co., 293 P.2d 531, 139 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2086 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by defendants from a judgment for plaintiff entered on a jury verdict in an action for libel.

“Jet” is a periodical with national circulation published weekly in Chicago by defendant Johnson Publishing Company. Defendant John H. Johnson is editor and publisher of “Jet.”

Plaintiff and Dr. Lincoln Shumate were married in June 1952. They were well-known Negro residents of Los Angeles. On April 23, 1953, plaintiff filed suit for separate maintenance against Dr. Shumate alleging adultery with a named white woman on a number of occasions. Dr. Shumate cross-complained for divorce, alleging plaintiff had persistently refused to have marital relations with him and had committed adultery on several occasions with one Lorenzo Spencer, the husband of Vaino Spencer, plaintiff’s attorney in the separate maintenance action. These charges and counter-charges were widely featured in the Negro press of Los Angeles and other cities.

On May 5, 1953, Lorenzo Spencer filed an action against Dr. Shumate for libel based on the allegations of the cross-complaint. Immediately thereafter, Dr. Shumate retracted all of his charges of adultery between plaintiff and Spencer, and signed an agreement which is set out in the margin. 1 *125 He thereupon dismissed the cross-complaint against plaintiff, and Spencer dismissed the libel suit against Dr. Shumate.

On May 6, 1953, James Goodrich, a writer for defendant company and Hollywood editor of “Ebony,” a magazine published by defendant company, called on Mrs. Spencer at the direction of the managing editor of “Jet.” Mrs. Spencer showed Goodrich a copy of the retraction Dr. Shumate had signed and told him Dr. Shumate was dismissing his cross-complaint. Prior to May 14 Mrs. Spencer sent Goodrich at his request a statement of the status of the separate maintenance action, which he forwarded to the Chicago office of “Jet.”

On May 14, 1953, Dr. Shumate issued a sworn public apology which is set out in the margin. 2 On the same day Mrs. Spencer sent a copy of the apology to Goodrich. Goodrich immediately sent the copy of the apology to the managing editor of “Jet” in Chicago.

In the May 14, 1953, issue of “Jet” there was published an article titled “Wealthy Los Angeles Medic Charges *126 Wipe With Adultery,” set out in the margin, 3 with photographs of plaintiff, Dr. Shumate, Spencer, and Mrs. Spencer. In the May 28, 1953, issue of “Jet” there was published an article titled “Calif. Medic Drops Adultery Charge Against Wife,” set out in the margin. 4 Nothing was said in the article about the apology.

On August 14, 1953, plaintiff was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce from Dr. Shumate by default on the ground of cruelty. Dr. Shumate did not testify.

In the August 27, 1953, issue of “Jet” there was published the article on which this action is predicated. It reads:

“Are Women Changing Our Sex Morals?
“By Robert Johnson
“A wealthy Los Angeles physician became the subject of considerable tongue-wagging recently as the result of a *127 divorce action he brought against his pretty socialite wife. He testified that his wife had disregarded her marital vows to bestow intimate favors upon her employer, but had repeatedly refused marital relations with him. The wife, however, countered. In defense of her seeking a lover and rejecting her husband’s love-making, she told the court: ‘I can only refer you to the Kinsey report. ’
“What family secrets the accused wife revealed in her brusque remark became immediately apparent to friends of the couple, but the surprised doctor had not considered that his wife would go to such lengths in defending her marital misbehavior. For like many husbands who cling to the age-old concept of a double standard in marriage morality, he had rushed to a divorce court, secure in the knowledge that it would be the wife who would be held up to public ridicule for her sexual misconduct.
“Today, however, husbands are becoming more and more aware that double standards in sex morals have all but disappeared where wives are concerned, and the old adage, ‘What’s good for the goose is good for the gander’ is a more widely accepted code for modern women. Says New York gynecologist and psychiatrist Dr. Lena Levine: ‘It’s not a matter of the old-fashioned sex codes being no longer accepted. Rather, among more and more women, the codes are not even considered. ’
“Actually, the release this week of information contained in Dr. Alfred Kinsey’s long-waited report, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female (see next page), will point up startingly that women have changed our sex morals. It will reveal that there remains little correlation between our Puritannical codes and the actual sex adventures of women.
“Experts and counselors in courtship, marriage and family relations also point out that sex morals have become more relaxed because of a behavior trend which points to: 1) increasing premarital sexual adventures and promiscuity among women; 2) increasing marital unfaithfulness among ‘emancipated’ wives; 3) increasing acceptance of easy divorce and quick remarriage without moral or social stigma.
“Explained one counselor: ‘In the past when her mate was not particularly virile, the wife was secretly glad. Today, woman is becoming more released. She very well may go elsewhere when she finds the man not as capable as she might *128 like. The same often holds true for the wife who suspects that' her husband is cheating.

‘ Sociologist Walter H. Chivers who conducts marriage and family institutes in Negro colleges, has also noted among young people an increased concern over sex mores. Says he: ‘On most college campuses, the opinion is that the mores are not as strong as they used to be. Yet, every man wants to believe that infidelity is associated not with his woman, but the other woman. ’ ” On the page on which the article begins there is a sketch of three nude women, each with an arm around the other. Immediately next to the article, the following appears in a box:

“What Kinset Will Tell About Women
“Pre-marital Relations
“About 50 per cent of married women have premarital sexual relations.
. “Unfaithful Wives
“More than one-fourth (26 per cent) of all married women cheat on their husbands and a large percentage of them—. mostly college-educated—plan to continue their infidelities.
“Homosexuality

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Bluebook (online)
293 P.2d 531, 139 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shumate-v-johnson-publishing-co-calctapp-1956.