State v. Powell

66 Mo. App. 598, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 115
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 Mo. App. 598 (State v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Powell, 66 Mo. App. 598, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 115 (Mo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

This is an action for criminal libel under the provisions of sections 3869 and 3870 of the Revised Statutes of 1889, which, as far as they apply to the case at bar, are as follows:

“Section 3869. A libel is the malicious defamation of a person made public by any printing, writing, sign, picture,'representation, or effigy, tending to provoke him to wrath or expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, or to deprive him of the benefits of public confidence and social intercourse, * * *,
[600]*600" Section 3870. Every person who shall make or compose, dictate or procure the same to be done, or shall willfully publish or circulate any such libel or libels specified in the nest preceding section, or shall in any way knowingly and willfully aid or assist in making, publishing, or circulating the same, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The defendant was found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine. He assigns for error in this appeal the refusal of the court to strike out the second amended information against him, the refusal of the court to quash the second amended information because filed more than one year after the date of the alleged offense, and such second amended information charged other offenses than those contained in the original information, the refusal of the court to quash that information, or to sustain his motion to arrest, on the ground that the matters charged do not constitute a criminal libel, the rulings of the court on the evidence and instructions, and that the verdict is against the law and the evidence.

The defendant is the publisher of the Rolla New Era, a newspaper printed and published in Rolla, Phelps county, Missouri. The publication charged to be libelous appeared in the issue of that paper on the eighteenth day of February, 1893, and the first information was filed on the twenty-ninth day of Séptember, 1893. This information the prosecuting attorney amended by filing an amended information on the twenty-second day of March, 1894, by leave of court, and again amended by filing a second amended information by leave of court on the seventh day of November, 1894. When the second amended information was filed, the defendant moved to strike it from the files, and to discharge the defendant from further attendance, because there is no law permitting a second [601]*601amended information and because no valid charge •against the defendant was then pending in court. The •court overruled this motion, and the defendant excepted and properly saved his exceptions. The defendant also filed a motion to quash the information on the same .ground, and on the further ground that the second amended information charges no offense, because the publication is not libelous in its nature or defamatory in its character, and because the date at which the pretended offense is charged to have been committed was more than one year before the filing of said second amended information, and because the second amended information undertakes to charge new ' and separate •offenses other than charged in the original information. This motion the court likewise overruled, and the •defendant excepted and still excepts. The court, however, did upon defendant’s motion strike out parts of the second amended information, presumably on the .ground that it charged new matter.

It is important to notice in this connection that the various amendments made by the state had no refer•ence to the publication itself, which was set out in haeo verba in each of the informations. The amendments have reference solely to the innuendoes and colloquia. 'The civil code provides that, in an action for libel, it shall not be necessary to state in the petition any extrinsic facts for the purpose of showing the application to the plaintiff of the defamatory matter out of which the cause of action arose, but it shall be sufficient to state generally that the same was published concerning the plaintiff, and, if such allegation be not controverted by the answer, it shall not be necessary to prove it upon the trial. There seems to be no valid reason why, in the absence of a statutory requirement to the contrary, the charge in the information should be more specific, although the fact that the libel did refer to the [602]*602person named in the information as the person libeled would always have to be shown upon the trial, since the plea of not guilty puts the state to the proof of every material fact. It will be thus seen that the amendments were not touching matters of substance, and introducedin no sense any newcause of action. Thedefendant’s motion, therefore, as far as it was founded on the special statute of limitations applicable to misdemeanors, was properly overruled. The rule in all eases, civil and criminal alike, is that, when the statute is once arrested, it remains so until the end of the prosecution, it matters not how imperfect the first pleading may be. The questions whether an information can be-amended more than once, and whether the information as amended does sufficiently charge an offense, still remain.

The information as finally amended, and on which the defendant was tried and convicted, is as follows:

‘Robert Meriwether, prosecuting attorney within and for the county of Phelps, and state of Missouri, for a second amended information now here gives the court to be informed and understand that W. J. Pówell, late of the county of Phelps- aforesaid, at and in the county of Phelps and state of Missouri upon the eighteenth day of February, 1893, contriving and intending then and there unlawfully, willfully, knowingly, and maliciously to defame and ridicule one Joseph Campbell, to-provoke him to wrath, to expose him to public hatred, contempt and ridicule, and to deprive him of the benefits of public confidence and social intercourse, did then and there unlawfully, willfully, knowingly, and maliciously make a certain libel of and concerning him, the said Joseph Campbell, tending and intending by the said W. J. Powell to provoke him, the said Joseph Campbell, to wrath, to expose him to public hatred,, contempt and ridicule, and to deprive him of the pub-[603]*603lie confidence and social intercourse, the tenor of which libel is as follows, to wit:
“‘Let’s see, it was currently reported that Jo-Jo tried to indict some of the members of the Eolia school board once, because they refunded the district debt from a seven per cent debt to a five per cent one without asking his advice on the subject; a very glaring impertinence, of course, and one that ought to have been severely punished, but, alas, the unfeeling grand jury did not think so. Then, he was wanting some of the city council of the old city government put on the rack. Last term he was after a man who had finally quit pretending the great homage for the masterly ability and far seeing acumen, splendid business capacity and overpowering intellect of Jo-Jo, and Jo-Jo got enraged and with a mighty oath hied him to the grand jury. This effort expired of heart failure; but it is said he came near being indicted himself. Next, he was very busily engaged in the noble task of trying to beat a young man out of his means of making a livelihood, setting up things and getting people to make statements that they were not willing to make good publicly. Here was another case of heart failure. And now our humble self is the target of this grand (?) old man’s spleen.’ And the said W. J.

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Related

State v. Westbrook
171 S.W. 616 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
Cook v. Globe Printing Co.
127 S.W. 332 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1910)
State v. Simpson
118 S.W. 1187 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909)
Kenworthy v. Journal Co.
93 S.W. 882 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Heller v. Pulitzer Publishing Co.
54 S.W. 457 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1899)
Cowan v. Jones
79 Mo. App. 222 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Mo. App. 598, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-powell-moctapp-1896.