State v. Tugwell

43 L.R.A. 717, 52 P. 1056, 19 Wash. 238, 1898 Wash. LEXIS 355
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1898
DocketNo. 2886
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 43 L.R.A. 717 (State v. Tugwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Tugwell, 43 L.R.A. 717, 52 P. 1056, 19 Wash. 238, 1898 Wash. LEXIS 355 (Wash. 1898).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

On the 3d of March, 1898, the attorney general filed an information against, and moved for a rule upon, the defendants, to show cause why an attachment should not issue against them for contempt of court in re[239]*239spect to the publication on the 24th of February, 1898, in a certain weekly newspaper in the city of Tacoma known as the Tacoma Sun, of the following article, to-wit:

The supreme court of this state has again eased its conscience, if it ever had any to ease, by its infernal rotten decision in the Tacoma warrant case. . . . (naming a member of the court) can now sit snugly up alongside some other supreme simpletons and suck the hind teat of plutocracy. It is said that he changed his mind. Suffering saints, who ever made a charge that he had a mind to change? It is true he voted the other way when the case was up before, but nobody ever accused him of having a mind, and even if they did, after reading the decision in the warrant case referred to, which he is supposed to have written, they would know that the accusation had no foundation and could not be substantiated. This decision is only remarkable for its malignant, dishonest and damnable distortions of, not only the law, but also the facts. It states the facts shockingly contrary to the truth, as shown by the record in the case, as will be seen by the dissenting opinion that will soon be filed. It is the conception of an ass, a lean-witted, anile leripoop, who no doubt thinks he would rather be rich than be right. We speak of . . . more particularly because he flopped. What made him flop, he knows best, but every one else has a good idea. There is only one thing about . . . that pleases me, and that is his term soon ends, and he will be relegated to that everlasting oblivion that awaits all of these last rotten articles of republicanism. How long, O Merciful Creator of the Universe, are we to still suffer for the misdeeds of dishonest, corrupt and disreputable public servants? The people of Tacoma have lived in a wild and reckless revel of republican rule. They have drunk deep from the foul cup that folly has filled with perfumed poison and held to trusting lips, while the sweet sensuous song sung by satan’s sirens, lulled the senses to fancied rest, security and safety as they plunged headlong into the frightful chasm of debt, at the bottom of which they will find destitution, destruction, dishonor and death. While yet .money can be raised, [240]*240our citizens ought to erect a monument in memory of the past, to stand as a solemn warning for the future. The pedestal or base should be of busted banks, six stalwart representatives of republicanism, such, say, as Boggs and McOauley, Hedges and Holmes, Sbane and McKane, should stand shoulder to shoulder with hands clasped and eyes raised with a look of envious emulation at the central figure yet above them all. And that figure should be . . . , on the top of a long shaft straddling the American eagle, in one hand a bunch of illegal warrants and in the other a double-barreled horse pistol as he commands fair Tacoma to kneel down and take one more dose of the vile, nauseating stuff, distillations of republican rottenness, that this supreme court has fixed up for us; then circling around all we would have the republican council dancing like diabolical demons trying to put out a huge bonfire made from the wreck and ruin of a light plant the city once owned, with imaginary water from a water plant for which the city paid more than a million real dollars. If all this could be placed in the public park where good pious people could go when the weather was nice and warm, and sit on the benches amidst the perfume of sweet flowers, with a picture of Grattan H. Wheeler in one hand and Walter J. Thompson in the other, oh, what a flood of tender memories would float over the soul! Oh, what a history, pages without printing, volumes without words. But Tacoma will never down, she will fight for justice till the last dishonest damn rascal that drags his slimy carcass across the road to justice shall have been fed to the crows. Men who have forgotten more law than . . . and his stud of supercilious asses ever knew, have studied this warrant question for months, and years; and they say the warrants have been paid; that they are dead and should not be paid again. This is only a touch of the tail end of republican prosperity of the past; , but let us go on to the future. The day fast comes1 when the stains of disgrace and dishonor, those perfidious and pusillanimous tools of the trusts, have placed upon the fair name and fame of Washington, will be wiped out forever. We must fight the ground inch by inch until honest men, who see no [241]*241Klondike in the bench, shall be elected. Men who have the people’s interests at heart, as well as the interest of tne bondholder and warrant shark. This state will rise in its ivrath and when fall comes, vicious, vacillating . . . will be swept into oblivion forever.”

The information charged that the defendant Tugwell was editor and Baker was associate editor of the newspaper and that such publication was made of and concerning the cause of W. C. Bardsley, plaintiff, v. W. A. Stemberg, treasurer of the city of Tacoma, defendant, then pending in this court. The rule to show cause was issued and the defendants appeared and answered to the information. They admitted that on the 24th of February, 1898, defendant Tugwell was editor and defendant Baker, associate editor, of the weekly newspaper knoAvn as the Tacoma Sun, published in the city of Tacoma, and that they published the article set forth in the information. -They denied that on the 24th day of February, 1898, or at any time thereafter there Avas still pending in this court the cause of Bardsley v. Sternberg; denied that by the publication of the article stated in the information they were guilty of any act or omission towards the court defined and deemed by the laws of the state to be a contempt of court; alleged that under the facts stated and under the laws and constitution of the state they had a right to publish the facts and comments as they appear in the article set out in the information; denied that they were amenable to the court for the publication; denied the right or power of the court to call upon them to answer as in these proceedings required, and denied that the publication amounted to a contempt. The attorney general thereupon demurred to the answer on the ground that it set up no defense and stated no reason why attachment should not issue against defendants. The facts relative to the pendency of the cause [242]*242of Bardsley v. Sternberg were of record in this court when the case was argued. The cause of Bardsley v. Sternberg was argued and submitted at the May session, 1897. On June 22, 1897, an opinion was filed by this court affirming the judgment of the superior court in such cause, two of the judges at that time dissenting from the opinion then filed. On July 20, 1897, counsel for the appellant Bardsley duly filed a petition for rehearing, and a rehearing thereafter was granted and the cause re-argued in this court. On February 18, 1898, the opinion of the court was filed reversing the judgment of the superior court. On February 24, 1898, a dissenting opinion in which two of the judges joined was filed. On February 28, 1898, a petition for a modification of the opinion of the majority of the 'court filed on the 18th day of February was filed in this court by Messrs. John P. Judson, John O. Stallcup and B. F.

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Bluebook (online)
43 L.R.A. 717, 52 P. 1056, 19 Wash. 238, 1898 Wash. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tugwell-wash-1898.