Snyder v. Tribune Co.

143 N.W. 519, 161 Iowa 671
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 143 N.W. 519 (Snyder v. Tribune Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Tribune Co., 143 N.W. 519, 161 Iowa 671 (iowa 1913).

Opinions

Dbemer, J.

A very large part of tbe record is taken up with tbe pleadings in tbe case, which are extremely voluminous. Some of tbe propositions relied upon have reference to these pleadings, but, instead of setting, them out in extenso, we shall, at a proper time, make sufficient reference thereto to elucidate tbe exact points presented.

[674]*674The defendant is a corporation conducting a daily newspaper in the city of Sioux City. Its stockholders are J. C. Kelly and his two sons, John and Eugene. At the time in question, one Ellerd was a reporter for the paper; G. K. Larimore, since deceased, was its telegrapher; one Elliott was another reporter; and John Biddison was city editor. Hearing of some escapades in the city of Cherokee and learning from one of the judges of the district court that the grand jury of Cherokee county had returned an indictment against plaintiff, Ellerd was delegated to procure and gather the facts with reference thereto. This he did; Elliott participating therein to some extent by conferring with W. P. McCulla, the county attorney of Cherokee county and a professor in the Cherokee County High School. Elliott, it seems, learned of the indictment of the plaintiff from the judge before spoken of. As a result, the following article was published in the January 13, 1912, issue of the Sioux City Tribune, the paper published by the defendant corporation:

Midnight Revels Ordinary Resort of Young People — Cherokee is Shaken to Center by Disclosures of Yicious Habits among Persons under Age — Drunkenness is Common— Girls and Boys Mixed in Escapade in Which Drinking is Carried to Point Passing Belief.

Cherokee, la., Jan. 13. A series of revels of high schools boys and girls of this place, culminating in a ‘Little Egypt’ dance on the stage of the opera house, following a performance of ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin,’ has resulted in the indictment 'of seven young men, the commitment of one girl to the state reformatory and the placing of a number of boys and girls under probation.

The investigation carried on by County Attorney Walter McCulla has scandalized this community. It was found that a number of high school boys and other young men about town had been bringing liquor into the town and staging some high life parties on the steps of the courthouse, in a vacant house and in the opera house.

The story of the jamboree of three young men and three girls in the opera house i§ told here. It is said that all were [675]*675intoxicated and that a sixteen year old high school 'girl held the center of the stage with a racy dance. The county attorney was unable to gather sufficient information to verify this party, outside of the fact that all six participants were intoxicated.

Another party of five young men and the same number of young women is said to have been ‘put on’ in a vacant house, from which all went away under the influence of liquor. The skating rink and the courthouse steps were also favorite scenes for the orgies, it is said.

The Offending Parties.

The arrests made thus far have been those of Miss Olive Minor, who has been placed in the state reform school; Roy Wadsley, the twenty year old son of a wealthy retired farmer of Cherokee; Frank Edwards, a twenty year old boy whose father is at the head of the Cherokee Bottling Works; Henry Cooper,'a resident of Cherokee; and C. J. Snyder, who is the owner of a drug store at Cleghorn, Iowa.

A third boy, who is sixteen years old, pleaded guilty to the charge of selling liquor to minor'girls. The youth’s mother is ill at the present time and his name would not be disclosed, Wadsley and Edwards were charged with selling liquor to minor girls. The other two youths, against whom are indictments for selling liquor to minor girls, will probably be taken into custody on Monday, says Mr. McCulla. Snyder and Cooper were charged with maintaining a nuisance, the former, it is alleged, has sold liquor at his drug store in Cleghorn, and the latter at his residence in Cherokee.

Three other young girls, no one of whom is over eighteen years, and one of whom has already spent some time in the state reformatory, are now on probation and will be committed to that institution on their next offense, according to the county officials. One of the three is still in attendance at the high school. No information has been filed against the three girls as yet.

Curfew Law Again.

The investigation has also disclosed conditions that have moved the city council of Cherokee to re-establish the 8:30 o’clock curfew. Some remonstrances have been filed against [676]*676the ringing by people residing near the local fire house on account of the noise.

It is said the employees of the opera house have been using their keys to return to that building late at night and put on jamborees. .The special instance partially disclosed by the investigation of the county attorney,, revealed some thrilling facts. One of the girls in the party was about twenty-one years old, but the other two were fifteen and sixteen years of age. The employee of the house is about twenty-six years old, but the other two boys are sixteen and twelve years, respectively. The party followed a performance of ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ and the drinking is said to have consisted mostly of beer. All six were intoxicated and the youngest girl is said to have staged such a -dance as was never before seen in Cherokee.

Many Intoxicated.

Special instances of drinking on the courthouse steps and in the skating rink were also disclosed. The party of ten in the vacant house was found out because some of the participants were so drunk they couldn’t get away, according to the statements of a resident here.

Nearly all the persons implicated in the affair are under age. Several of the boys and girls attended the high school last fall, but dropped out as the season advanced. Some of them are said to be in school at the present time.

The investigation was the outcome of vague rumors circulated about the town of the stew-bum parties and the complaints of drunken men appearing on the streets. Cherokee is a dry town. It is thought by the county attorney that most of the liquor was shipped in from Sioux Falls.

The town is still in great commotion and further developments may appear before the investigation ends.

The head lines of the article were written by the telegraph operator, since deceased.

Plaintiff alleged that:

In the printing and publishing of said article, the said defendant intended maliciously to and did charge this plaintiff with having engaged in the illegal gale of intoxicating [677]

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143 N.W. 519, 161 Iowa 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-tribune-co-iowa-1913.