State ex rel. Liversey v. Judge of Civil District Court

34 La. 741
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 6802
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 La. 741 (State ex rel. Liversey v. Judge of Civil District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Liversey v. Judge of Civil District Court, 34 La. 741 (La. 1882).

Opinions

Tile opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

In a certain suit, before tbe Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, entitled W. Van Benthuysen vs. Liversey et al., the plaintiff represented, substantially, that, t.be defendants, as proprietors and publishers of a certain newspaper of this City, known as The Mascot,” bad theretofore published certain false, malicious and libellous cartoons and editorial paragraphs, libelling and defaming him, and designed and calculated to injure and destroy bis character and reputation as a man and a citizen. He further represented that he feared thattlie wicked, wanton and malicious libels, which had been made 'upon him in a prior issue of said newspaper, would be repeated in the next and in other future issues, and would thereby inflict upon him further irreparable injury and damage; wherefore, he prayed for and obtained, on a bond of fifty dollars, a writ of injunction, enjoining, restraining and prohibiting the said defendants and each of them from publishing or causing to be published in any manner, and particularly in ‘ The Mascot,’ to he issued on the 29th of April, 1882, or in any and all future issues of said ‘ Mascot,’ any defamatory cartoon or caricature of petitioner, and from naming or alluding to petitioner in any way calculated to disparage him in the estimation of the community, and that after due proceedings are had herein, said injunction may be made perpetual.”

No other relief was asked.

After the issue and service of this injunction, which issued according to our practice ex parte, the plaintiff, averring the defendants, had wilfully disregarded and disobeyed said injunction by publishing in a [742]*742subsequent issue of the Mascot, grossly libellous matter against liim, took a rule upon defendants to show why they should not be punished for contempt.

In return to this rule, the defendants filed their answer, substantially averring that their right to publish a newspaper, and to express and insert therein, without prior restraint, what they, as editors and proprietors, think right and proper, is protected by the fundamental principles of republican government and by the Constitutions of the State and of the United States; that courts have no power, by injunction, to abridge, destroy or restrain the exercise of this right; that the injunction issued was improvident and beyond the jurisdiction and power of the court; that they were not bound by the same, but that their constitutional right continued as if the same had not been issued ; that as to the question of fact whether the publications charged as violative of the injunction, were or not libellous or defamatory of plaintiff, that was a question upon which they were entitled to a hearing and to a trial, and to a trial by jury, if they so desired, and that the Judge was incompetent to pass upon the saíne on a rule for contempt, and could not do so without prejudicing the merits of the case ; and, disclaiming any intention to be in contempt of the court, they asked that the rule be discharged.

Thereupon, the court, after hearing evidence on the part of plaintiff, defendants offering none, made the rule absolute, and committed the. defendants to imprisonment in the Parish Prison for the term of ten days, which sentence is now in process of execution.

The said defendants, appearing as Relators in the instant cause, upon appropriate, allegations, the nature of which may be inferred from the, foregoing statement, apply for the writs of certiorari and prohibition, and pray that all of the proceedings in the said suit of Van Benthuysen vs. Liversey et al., including the injunction, be decreed to be absolutely null and void, and that the same be set aside, and that further proceedings in the cause be prohibited.

I.

It is to be observed that the power of the District Court to take cognizance of the cause referred to, depends entirely upon its power to issue the preliminary injunction applied for. The only relief sought is, in limine, the injunction, and, on final hearing, a judgment perpetuating the same.

If we hold that the court was without power to issue, the preliminary injunction, and should annul the same, that would be an end of the suit, because it would eliminate the entire subject matter thereof.

[743]*743II.

The Constitution of the State of Louisiana contains a Bill of Rights. Such Bills are modelled upon the famous English Bill of Rights, and, in the language thereof, are intended as public declarations of the “ true, ancient and indubitable rights of the people.” They are declaratory of the general principles of republican government, and of the fundamental rights of the citizen, rights usually of so fundamental a character, that, while such express declarations may serve to guard and protect them, they are not essential to the creation of such rights, which exist independent of constitutional provisions.

In our Bill of Rights, side by side with the rights of bearing arms, of religious freedom, of free speech, of assembly and petition, of habeas corjms, is found the declaration that “ no law shall be passed abridging the freedom of the press.”

A similar provision has existed in every Constitution of this State, exists in the Constitution of the United States and that of every State of this Union. It is a principle of English and American government, and whatever variety may be found in the forms of expression used in different instruments, they all signify the same thing, and convey the general idea which is crystallized in the common phrase, “ liberty of the press.” This is what the Constitution intends to recognize and to guarantee, and in order to ascertain what meaning and effect to give to the Constitution, we have only to inquire what is meant by “liberty of the press.”

We have not far to go. Even so elementary a work as a law dictionary fully defines the phrase as follows : “ This expression imports freedom from any censorship over what shall be published; exemption from control in advance over the dissemination of ideas by printing. It does not import that one may not be mulcted in damages or punished’ for what he has published, if, after the act, it is shown to be contrary to law, but that he shall not be restrained beforehand. The favorite idea in England and America has been that every person may freely publish what he sees fit, and any judgment of the law upon it shall be reserved till afterwards.” Abbott’s L. D., “ Liberty of the Press.”

Perhaps in the whole range of legal propositions, susceptible of dispute, there is not one that commands so unanimous a concurrence of judges and jurists.

“ Liberty of the press,” says Delolme, “consists in this: that neither courts of justice, nor any other judges whatever, are authorized to take notice of writings intended for the press, but are confined to those which are actually printed.” Delolme, Const. of Eng. 254; 4 Blackstone Com. 151; Story on the Const. § 1889; 2 Kent’s Com. 17, et seq; Cooley’s Const. Lim. 420, et seq.; Townshend Slander and Libel, § 252.

[744]*744The Constitutions of several of the 'States contain provisions expressly embodying the above ideas. Thus that of Maine says :

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34 La. 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-liversey-v-judge-of-civil-district-court-la-1882.