Turner v. Hearst

47 P. 129, 115 Cal. 394, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1023
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1896
DocketS. F. No. 335
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 47 P. 129 (Turner v. Hearst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Hearst, 47 P. 129, 115 Cal. 394, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1023 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Henshaw, J.

Appeals from the judgment and from the order denying defendant a new trial.

The action was for damages for libel. Defendant in his newspaper, the San Francisco Examiner, on the seventh day of December, 1893, published what purported to be an account of difficulties existing between Lotta, an actress, and Turner, the plaintiff. In this account it was stated that Lotta had caused Turner’s arrest upon a criminal charge, and that “the case was compromised, together with the settlement of several thousand dollars in notes, given by the Plumas county lawyer to the actress.”

On the trial it appeared, and was undisputed, that the article in question was printed and published in the Examiner. It further appeared that the matters in the article set forth were true, saving that the charges by Lotta were directed against one John H. Thomas, and not against John W. Turner; that Turner was entirely innocent of any wrongdoing, and had in fact been the legal adviser of Lotta in her troubles with the said Thomas.

The error in the Examiner’s publication occurred in the following manner: The issue of the San Francisco Post of the day proceeding the Examiner publication, had contained an accurate statement of the facts. In this it was announced that John W. Turner had commenced an action against Lotta to recover moneys due for legal services rendered by him as her attorney in certain litigation which Lotta had with John H. Thomas, and in the narration of the causes which led to the litigation it was stated that Lotta had made serious charges against Thomas to the effect that he had swindled her by false and fraudulent pretenses, and later had caused the arrest of Thomas in New York upon a criminal charge.

[398]*398The city editor of the Examiner gave to one of his reporters the article from the Evening Post, with instructions to “boil it down” for publication in the next issue. The reporter, in doing this late at night, and under a press of work, mistook the name John W. Turner for John H. Thomas, and made it appear, and it was so published, that the wrongful acts and criminal offenses mentioned had been committed by this plaintiff.

Defendant, for answer, and by way of extenuation and mitigation, pleaded these facts, and pleaded also a reparation and apology, published in the paper upon the fourth day of February, 1894, in which a correct version of the matter was given, and the account closed with the following: “ It will thus be seen that we have unintentionally done Mr. Turner á great injustice, but one which is likely to happen with the most carefully guarded attention to the news columns of a busy morning paper. Such mistakes are always to be regretted, as is this, and call for ample and prompt explanations, which we are always prepared to make. In this case we should have been pleased to have set the matter—Mr. Turner and our own mistake—-right at an earlier day had the matter been sooner called to our attention.”

Certain denials of the answer were, upon plaintiff's motion, stricken out. The ruling and decision on motion to strike out were made by the Hon. C. W. Slack. The trial was had before the Hon. W. R. Daingerfield. The bill of exceptions on appeal from the judgment, which was also the statement used upon motion for a new trial, was presented to and settled by Judge Daingerfield. Objection is here made to reviewing the order of Judge Slack in striking out portions of the defendant’s answer, upon the ground that the bill containing the exception to this ruling and decision should have been presented to and settled by Judge Slack, who made the order.

The objection is well taken. It is the duty of a litigant desiring to have a ruling or decision reviewed to [399]*399present the bill of exceptions, embodying the matters excepted to, to the judge who made the ruling or decision for settlement by him. (Cummings v. Conlan, 66 Cal. 403.) That judge alone can know the facts upon which he exercised his judgment, and, therefore, he alone, under our system, can properly settle the bill. Appellant could have presented his bill of exceptions to Judge Slack, either at the time of the'ruling (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 649), or after the judgment (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 650; Tregambo v. Comanche etc. Co., 57 Cal. 501); but, whichever course he elected to pursue, it was still the judge who made the ruling who should have settled the bill. Under such circumstances, appellant may have two or more bills settled and properly presented for the consideration of this court.

It was not error for the court to allow proof of the extent of plaintiff’s practice. Plaintiff was a lawyer engaged in the practice of his profession. The words of the publication being admittedly libelous per se, and affecting plaintiff’s standing in his profession, it was proper for the jury, in estimating the general damages to which plaintiff was thus entitled, to know his position and standing in society, and the nature and extent of his professional practice. General damages, in an action where the words are libelous per se, are such as compensate for the natural and probable consequences of the libel, and certainly a natural and probable consequence of such a charge against a lawyer would be to injure him in his professional standing and practice

It is the rule in this state that mental suffering is an element of general damages in an action for libel (Childers v. San Jose Mercury etc. Co., 105 Cal. 284; 45 Am. St. Rep. 40; Taylor v. Hearst, 107 Cal. 262); but the mental suffering is the suffering which plaintiff naturally experiences as the direct, immediate, and proximate effect upon his mind and feelings of the libel. In the case at bar plaintiff was allowed over objection to give evidence of what clients had said to him about the publication, and what the reporters of the papers in Eureka, [400]*400Humboldt county, had said to him about the publication, and what persons on the street said about it. He testified that he heard a remark “that, if that was the kind of a man I was, I would n’t get much business in Eureka”; and another remark to the effect that, “Unquestionably it must be true, or the Examiner would not have risked such a publication.” Respondent contends that this evidence was admissible: 1. To show the mental suffering of the plaintiff; or, 2. To show that the libelous words were understood by those who read them to refer to the plaintiff. But upon the first proposition it is well settled that the damages must be the direct result of the defendant’s libel, and not of any mere repetition of it by others. It is a safe rule to declare that the compensation for injury to feelings should be limited to the natural effect of the libelous publication, as it comes to the knowledge of the plaintiff. It would be pernicious to permit evidence of this kind for the purpose of showing increased suffering. The evidence itself could not be met. There would be no way of testing the sincerity of the remarks, or of determining whether they were prompted in fact by the publication, or sprang from secret hostility or malice toward the plaintiff, in which case the aggravation to plaintiff’s feelings would in no sense be chargeable upon defendant. As is said in Burt v. Advertiser Newspaper Co., 154 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
47 P. 129, 115 Cal. 394, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-hearst-cal-1896.