Tucker v. Kilgore

388 S.W.2d 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 26, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 388 S.W.2d 112 (Tucker v. Kilgore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Kilgore, 388 S.W.2d 112 (Ky. 1965).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

Robert Kilgore, a Louisville policeman, brought this, action against C. Ewbank Tucker, a bishop of the Zion Methodist Episcopal Church, for libel. He recovered $3,000 compensatory and $1500 punitive damages. The jury found against the bishop on his counterclaim for assault and battery. He appeals on the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to support the amount of the verdict and that the trial court erred in refusing to give an instruction on qualified privilege and in overruling his motion for a mistrial.

In December of 1961 the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity held a national convention at the Sheraton Hotel in Louisville. At the request of one or more of its officers the police department of the city assigned Patrolman Kilgore to duty at the hotel. Kilgore, a University of Louisville graduate, was a member of the fraternity. He had been on the city police force for 23 years. Bishop Tucker, who was not a member of the organization, came to the hotel and entered the room in which one of its meetings was being held. He was asked to leave and refused, whereupon Kilgore, who had been called to the scene, laid hold of him and escorted him out of the hotel. A week or so later the bishop distributed some 2,000 copies of the handbill that is the basis of Kilgore’s complaint. It read as follows:

“NEGROES OF LOUISVILLE— WAKE UP — AND GET WISE TO THESE ORGANIZATIONS WHO LOOK DOWN WITH DERISION UPON THE MASSES OF THE PEOPLE.
“The Tea Sippers and pseudo-aristocrats have held their convention at the Sheraton Hotel — The Alpha Boys have departed, unwept, unhonored and unsung as far as the masses of Negroes *114 in Louisville are concerned — and we have got ‘good riddance’ of ‘bad rubbish’.
“This Greek letter Fraternity — like others of its kind operates on the theory of the exclusion of what they term the ‘common people’.
“Some of these society — crazy folk— members of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity would not recognize a Greek letter if they saw it written in box car letters. Among them Robert Kilgore— of limited training, no culture and a professional moocher, who strikes you for SOc or a dollar every time he meets you on the streets. This man was used in an attempt to embarrass me at the Sheraton Hotel — without justification or warrant of law — illegally using his temporary authority as a policeman, and acting at the behest of his masters — in this phony race organization. I asked him to arrest me but he did not have the nerve to do so. C. Ewbank Tucker is never embarrassed when he fights for the Civil Rights of his people, and when he smokes out organizations like the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity which never made any contribution to the integration fight in Louisville. I shall continue to do so, and to fight until hell freezes over against any charlatan group that sets itself up as an aristocratic oligarchy.
“C. Ewbank Tucker,
“Presiding Bishop Ky. Conference of Methodist Episcopal Zion Church President of Louisville Chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality
Co-Chairman of the Integration Committee.”

Published words are actionable per se if they directly tend to the prejudice or injury of any one in his profession, trade or business. Baker v. Clark, 186 Ky. 816, 218 S.W. 280, 283 (1920); Hill v. Evans, Ky., 258 S.W.2d 917 (1953); Restatement of Torts, § 569, Comment e. There is no question but that the references to Kilgore in the handbill were, in the absence of a valid defense, actionable per se. The two defenses pleaded by the bishop were truth and qualified privilege. The trial court instructed on the defense of truth but not on qualified privilege.

The significance of the defense of qualified or conditional privilege is that it removes the conclusive presumption- of malice otherwise attaching to words that are actionable per se and thereby casts on the plaintiff a technical burden of proof in that respect. Thompson v. Bridges, 209 Ky. 710, 273 S.W. 529, 530 (1925); Tanner v. Stevenson, 138 Ky. 578, 128 S.W. 878, 882, 30 L.R.A.,N.S., 200 (1910). This does not require any greater degree of proof by the plaintiff, because the offensive character of the words still is sufficient by itself to support an inference of malice. The practical difference, therefore, is that in the one case the instructions do not require a finding of malice as a condition of recovery and in the other they do. Cf. McClintock v. McClure, 171 Ky. 714, 188 S.W. 867, Ann.Cas.1918E, 96 (1916).

“A publication is conditionally or quali-fiedly privileged where circumstances exist, or are reasonably believed by the defendant to exist, which cast on him the duty of making a communication to a certain other person to whom he makes such communication in the performance of such duty, or where the person is so situated that it becomes right in the interests of society that he should tell third persons certain facts- which he in good faith proceeds to do.” 33 Am.Jur. 124 (Libel and Slander, § 126). “Qualified privilege * * * comprehends communications made in good faith, without actual malice, with reasonable or probable grounds for believing them to be true, on a subject matter in which the author of the communication has an interest, or in respect to which he has a duty, public, personal, or private, either legal, judicial, political, moral, or social, made to a person having a corresponding interest or *115 duty.” 53 C.J.S. Libel and Slander § 89, pp. 143-144. See also Miller v. Howe, 245 Ky. 568, 53 S.W.2d 938 (1932), enumerating the requisites of the defense.

“The condition attached to all such qualified privileges is that they must be exercised in a reasonable manner and for a proper purpose. The immunity is forfeited if the defendant steps outside of the scope of the privilege, or abuses the occasion. Thus qualified privilege does not extend * * * to the publication of irrelevant defamatory matter with no bearing upon the public or private interest which is entitled to protection,” etc. (Emphasis added.) Prosser on Torts (2d ed.), p. 625.

Bishop Tucker, for many years a prominent member of the bar in Louisville before his accession to the clerical office he now holds, has been a leader in advancing the cause of his people. Their interests being his interests, it may be assumed without argument that the activities of other persons and organizations in the same area provide the occasion for reasonable comment, criticism and warning by him to the members of his community. Even, however, had it been true (and the jury evidently found it was not) that Kilgore was a moocher, a common panhandler, what was the occasion for or proper purpose to be served by advertising it?

The bishop testified that during his practice of law Kilgore had approached him for money in return for suborning the absence of witnesses or for seeing to- it that charges against his clients were dropped, that on more recent occasions he had solicited him (unsuccessfully) for small sums of money, and that he had a general reputation for such activities. As to his own motives, the bishop answered as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
388 S.W.2d 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-kilgore-kyctapphigh-1965.