Toomey v. Jones

1926 OK 1003, 254 P. 736, 124 Okla. 167, 51 A.L.R. 1066, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 603
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
Docket17444
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1926 OK 1003 (Toomey v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toomey v. Jones, 1926 OK 1003, 254 P. 736, 124 Okla. 167, 51 A.L.R. 1066, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 603 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

POSTER, 0.

This was an action instituted in the. court below by the plaintiff in error, Paul Toomey, as plaintiff, against Richard Lloyd Jones and the Tulsa Tribune Company, defendants in error, as defendants, for a libel based upon a newspaper publication. Parties will be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

It appears from the record that in 1921 a demurrer to the amended' petition of the plaintiff was overruled, from which judgment overruling their demurrer the defendants attempted to appeal to the Supreme Court, but the appeal was, by this court, .dismissed for the reason that no journal entry of judgment had been entered in the court below. Jones et al. v. Toomey, 115 Okla. 169, 241 Pac. 1105.

Thereafter, and on the 11th day of December, 1925, the defendants obtained permission from the court to file their answer, in said cause, out of time. After plaintiff’s motion to strike the defendants’ answer had been overruled and after the plaintiff had filed his reply, the defendants, on the 29th day of December, 1925, filed their motion for judgment on the pleadings, which motion was, by the court, sustained, and plaintiff’s action dismissed. Prom this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

■Several errors were assigned, but in our view of the case it is only necessary to determine whether or not the trial court erred in "sustaining the motion of the defendants for judgment on the jdeadings. A determination of this question is dependent on whether, from an inspection of the petition of the plaintiff, aided by the innuendoes therein, it can be said that the published article in question was libelous. The article complained - of was attached to. plaintiff’s petition as an exhibit, and is as follows:

“Court Room Crowd Cheers Man Freed of Whipping ‘Red’
“Salesman Resents Slur on Americans ' . With Pists.
“I hope to see every Damn American Run out of the Country.’
“Paul Toomey, manager of the Kansas City Waffle House No. 4, Main and Fifth streets, is alleged to. have made that statement at the corner of Main and Fourth streets late Friday afternoon.
“J. C. Archer, salesman for the Burroughs Adding Machine Co., overheard the remark and promptly set to work upon Toomey. When Toomey was escorted into police bead-quarters by Traffic Officer McGuire he was bleeding profusely about the face.
“In police court 5’esterday, Toomey and Archer were placed on trial for disturbing the peace. After Archer had testified that he had, after hearing the remark, asked Toomey to repeat it, which Toomey did, lie said, he began using his fists. City Prosecutor A. C. Sinclair asked that the charge against Archer be dismissed.
“Toomey was fined $19 and costs. He was .given a severe lecture by the judge, who was outspoken in regretting that he had not been beaten so severely that it would have required hospital treatment to. restore him to health.
“Archer was highly commended by the judge, and a court room, crowded to capacity, rang with the applause of spectators as he was commended and dismissed.
“After Toomey had paid his fine he was arrested by Captain George H. Blaine and thrown into jail for investigation by federal authorities, the captain said.
“Exhibit ‘B’
“We don’t know personally Mr. J. C. Archer, the man who was applauded by a Saturday afternoon police court crowd for knocking him down a disloyal Tulsan, but here’s wishing him more power to his good right arm.”

It was alleged in plaintiff’s petition that the alleged defamatory matter contained in the headline of said published article, to wit: “Court Room Crowd Cheers Man Freed of Whipping ‘Red’,” was published of and concerning, the plaintiff, was false, injured *169 him in his reputation, business, and standing in the community, and exposed him to public hatred, ridicule, and contempt, to his damage in the sum of $50,000. It was further alleged in said petition as follows:

“That the- word ‘Red’ appearing in quotation marks in said article above quoted is a word which was at the time of said publication known and understood to mean a person subscribing to and believing in the doctrines of Bolshevism and Sovietism and is an approbrkras epithet to be applied to a loyal American citizen; that at the time and place of said publication it was intended by said defendants and was understood by the ordinary reading public that the said word ‘Bed’ meant a person who did not believe in obedience to the laws, but who did believe in the doctrine of having all of the workers unite and by violence and sabotage seize and appropriate from their lawful owners, all land and buildings and means of production and transiwi-tation; that the said word ‘Red’ in the sense and meaning above defined had been prior to the said date widely used in many of the newspapers throughout the United State of America, and was a familiar word to the ordinary reading-public and readers of the newspapers and was intended by the said defendants, and each of them to describe a person believing in the doctrines above set forth and was so understood by numerous persons reading said newspaper.”

No special damages were alleged, and the question is whether, in the absence of such allegation, a cause of action was stated sufficient to withstand a general demurrer. Plaintiff’s complaint is that the application of the term “Red” to him in the headline of the newspaper article referred to was defamatory because of the sense in which the word was understood by the persons reading the defendant newspaper.

Tie alleges that tfie meaning of the word, as understood by newspaper readers generally and by readers of the defendant, Tulsa Tribune, was to describe a person believing in disobedience to the laws and believing in the doctrine of having all of the workers unite and by violence and' sabotage seize and appropriate from their lawful owners all land and buildings and means of production and transportation.

The word “Red,” While now a word of common use in newspaper parlance and in the political arena, is, in the common understanding of that term, of recent origin, and appears to have been coined during or immediately after the World War, and was no doubt- inspired by the intense feeling engendered by that struggle. This being true, it is impossible for this court to say chat the meaning ascribed to the word by the plaintiff in his petition at the time of its publication on December 5, 1920, attempted to give a defamatory meaning to- a word of innocent import or that the innuendo ascribed a meaning to the word of which it was not capable.

If the word is capable of the meaning ascribed to it in the innuendo, however improbable it may appear to- be, it then became a question for the jury to say whether the word was in fact so understood by the readers of the publication. Newell on Slander, section 752.

We cannot say that the word “Red” is incapable of being used to designate a person believing in disobedience to the laws or his country and intent upon forcibly seizing and appropriating the property of others, as defined in the innuendo', and if.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 1003, 254 P. 736, 124 Okla. 167, 51 A.L.R. 1066, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toomey-v-jones-okla-1926.