State v. New Mexican Printing Co.

177 P. 751, 25 N.M. 102
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1918
DocketNo. 2202
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 P. 751 (State v. New Mexican Printing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. New Mexican Printing Co., 177 P. 751, 25 N.M. 102 (N.M. 1918).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT.

HOLLOMAN, District Judge.

On the 9th' day of August, 1917,.there was filed in the office of the clerk of the district "court for Socorro county an information charging the appellant with contempt of court. The information was filed by the district attorney of that court. The information sets out that on the 30th day of March, 1917, there was then pending in that court for adjudication and determination two causes, one being No. 2037 on the civil docket, wherein Henry Dreyfus was plaintiff and the New Mexican Printing Company and others were defendants; the other being cause No. 1031 on the criminal docket of the court, wherein the state of New Mexico was plaintiff and Bronson M. Cutting and E. Dana Johnson were defendants, on indictment for criminal libel. The information further sets out that at said time there was published in the city of Santa Fe a certain daily newspaper known as the “Santa Fe New Mexican,” of general circulation throughout the state of New Mexico, of which said paper on said day the New Mexican Printing Company, a corporation, was the owner and publisher, the said E. Dana Johnson was the managing editor, and the said Bronson M. Cutting was the president of the said New Mexican Printing Company and in full control of the policy of said newspaper. The information further sets out that on the 30th day of March, 1917, there was published in said newspaper a certain article, the parts set forth in said information and considered as contemptuous being as follows:

.“The filing' of an affidavit by Judge Merrit-C. Mechem, of the Seventh judicial district, not in his judicial capacity, b0Ut as a private individual, seeking to exonerate Attorney M. C. Spicer of the charge of secretly signaling to witness and plaintiff Henry Dreyfus, during the trial of his alleged libel suit against the New Mexican at Los 'Limas, makes proper and necessary the publication by this newspaper of many details of the conduct óf the Dreyfus case hitherto unpublished, and especially relating to the presiding judge.
“The New Mexican, since the returning of indictments by the Socorro county grand jury against the newspaper, has never been under any delusions as to what it was up against in the campaign of H. O. Bursum, absolute political dictator of Socorro county, to ‘put the New Mexican out of business.’
“The New Mexican has never been under any misapprehensions as to what would happen either in Socorro or Valencia county; the former under the sway of Mr. Bur-sum’s political organization, the latter as completely under the sway of the allied Otero political organization, and a county which for decades has been famous for the fact that a' Democratic vote on election day was always about as scarce as the dodo. Socorro and Valencia counties for many years have been the two strongest strongholds of the old territorial Republican machine. It was in a Valencia county precinct that the celebrated alphabetical voting took place, and it was from Valencia county, in answer to the Republican query, ‘How many votes have you?’ that the answer came back, while the returns were still pending, “How many do you need?”
“To start with, the reader is asked to bear in mind the fact, a matter of general knowledge for many years, that those two counties are as completely under the political sway of H. O. Bursum and the political associates of the late Don Solomon Luna, who rules Valencia like a king, as Bernalillo county years ago was under the absolute despotism of Frank A. Hubbell. In those two counties this combination is virtually the arbiter as to who shall be named for public office. In Socorro county, Bursum is czar; men nominated by the Republicans must have the O. K. of the boss, tacit or expressed; where you find a Republican office holder you find a Bursum man, by choice or necessity. Especially in the town of Socorro is the Big Boss supreme; he has been mayor there for years, as the conditions of the town attest; Henry Dreyfus, the city marshal, is absolutely typical of the class of men selected by Bursum as his lieutenants; the methods followed in county affairs, which have been completely aired by this newspaper, are typical of Bursum.
MECHEM STRONG BURSUM MAN.
“Judge M. C. Mechem of the Seventh district is and has been a strong- supporter of H. O. Bursum. He contributed heavily to the Bursum campaign fund at the last election; he” is a business associate of H. O. Bursum; a strong personal friend of Bursum, closely indentified with the Bursum political faction, and became judge largely through the Bursum influence. All of which, of course, is the privilege of Judge M. C. Mechem and his personal right. The New Mexican specifically sets forth Judge Mechem’s political affiliations merely for the purpose of informing the people of the state who may be uninformed. This is not an attack upon the politics of Judge Mechem, but the statement of pertinent facts which for many reasons the public should know.
THE MECHEM AFFIDAVIT.
“The New Mexican has realized from the beginning of the Bursum libel suit that it must try its case before the people.
“Despite that knowledge, as a review of the case shows, out of a scrupulous respect for the court it has consistently suppressed various details of the proceedings, several times at the particular request of the presiding judge, and to prevent any notoriety for the court which might be undesirable or unpleasant.”

The information further alleges that on the said 30th day of March, 1917, the said New Mexican Printing-Company, the said Bronson M. Cutting, and the said E. Dana Johnson caused to be printed and published the said newspaper containing the foregoing article, and caused the same to be circulated and given general publicity in all of the counties composing the Seventh judicial district of the state of New Mexico, of and concerning said causes so pending in this court, and of and concerning this court and its supposed action with reference to said causes.

The information further alleges that the printing, publishing', and circulation of the aforesaid matters in said newspaper as aforesaid was and is a contempt of court, in this: That said publication attacked the integrity of the court, generally and particularly in relation to said pending causes; that said publication tended to embarrass the due administration of justice in said pending cases, and that the evident purpose and intent of said publication was to influence public opinion against the court and to bring, the court into contempt and disrepute; that said publication was so made for the purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing the court in its determination of the issues in said pending causes.

Upon the filing of said information an order was issued, directed to the defendants, requiring them to appear to answer said information on oath, and to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt.

The defendants appeared and filed a motion to quash the information and rule to show cause. The motion to quash is very voluminous and not necessary to set out herein.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 751, 25 N.M. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-new-mexican-printing-co-nm-1918.