Warren v. Pulitzer Publishing Co.

78 S.W.2d 404, 336 Mo. 184, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 369
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 404 (Warren v. Pulitzer Publishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Pulitzer Publishing Co., 78 S.W.2d 404, 336 Mo. 184, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 369 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for publishing an article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch alleged to have been "false, damatory, and libelous" and "wilfully, intentionally, wrongfully, wantonly and maliciously printed and published in said newspaper." Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $10,000 actual and $15,000 punitive damages. The trial court ordered a remittitur of $5,000, from the amount assessed as actual damages and $10,000 from the amount assessed as punitive damages. This remittitur was made and judgment was entered for $5000 actual damages and $5000 punitive damages. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

Plaintiff's petition alleged:

"That plaintiff was . . . a minister of the Gospel laboring as such at his calling in Winnebago County, Illinois," and "that said publication was likely to and did raise the inference and communicated to the public the ideas and statements that the plaintiff had seduced Hazel Lamb and that he had had sexual intercourse with her by force and that he had attempted to have sexual intercourse with her by force and that he repeatedly had sexual intercourse with her and that he had enticed her to come to him out into the dark for improper purposes and that he was untrue to his wife and that he hated old women and would not speak to them and that he was unfit to be a minister of the Gospel and that he was immoral and unchaste and that he was a hypocrite and a libertine and that he was dishonest."

Defendant's answer admitted the publication, denied that it was false, defamatory or libelous; alleged that the statements in the article concerning plaintiff were true; but that defendant refrained from publishing anything about plaintiff until after he had been tried by, found guilty and expelled from the church; stated that the article was a fair account of the church trials of plaintiff, which were matters of great public interest; alleged that the article was published in good faith, without knowledge of falsity, without malice, and was therefore privileged in law; and also alleged that Chicago and other Illinois papers had published similar articles prior to this publication. The answer also alleged that plaintiff's reputation was bad before defendant's article was published.

Plaintiff's reply denied the allegations of the answer "except that a committee of a body known as the Rock River Conference heard charges against plaintiff, and that a majority of said committee passed a resolution forbidding him to act as a minister of the Methodist Church." The reply further alleged:

"The proceedings of said Rock River Conference with reference to plaintiff were not proceedings in good faith, but were irregular and fraudulent proceedings, and were conducted and carried through *Page 192 by members who formed said majority of said committee of said Conference, and by other members of said Conference, who knew that said charges were false, but irregularly and fraudulently rendered and caused to be rendered said resolution of expulsion, and this action and the hearing were originated and controlled and dictated by said opponents and personal enemies of plaintiff, . . . and plaintiff's appeal was dismissed without his knowledge and consent . . . by the wrongful acts of his chief counsel . . . induced to take such action by threats and persuasion and misrepresentation of said opponents and personal enemies."

The article, complained of, was published as a full page of the magazine section of the Sunday Post-Dispatch on November 13, 1927, with pictures below the headlines of plaintiff, his wife, Hazel Lamb, and the Durand Church, and also a drawing showing a girl, with bowed head, entering a darkened doorway in which the faint outlines of a man appear. The headlines of the article were, as follows:

"The Way of a Minister With a Housemaid" (in large letters).

"She Couldn't Resist His Eyes, So Durand (Illinois) Pastor is Now Out of a Pulpit and Is Suing Six Members of His Flock for Slander" (in bold type but smaller letters).

The article below these headlines and pictures was separated into nine paragraphs which are so numbered in this opinion, for convenience in reference thereto, to-wit:

(1) "A sprightly young Methodist minister was the Rev. John A.Logan Warren, and he had a roving eye and a disposition to befriendly. Especially, he liked the ladies, and the younger ones. The elder female members of his flock found him not quite so amiable. A good many said he high-hatted them. Sometimes when they met him on the street he would pass right on, looking past them as if absorbed in mighty problems, and even after services, when he stood at the door shaking hands, he was not quite thesort of pastor the elder sisters admire and find most comforting in the dullness of a small town like Durand.

"But in spite of these traits, unfortunate as they were in a village where much depends on the feelings of the elder sisters, the Rev. Mr. Warren was achieving a fair degree of success as pastor of the Durand Methodist Episcopal Church. Some who defended him said he was intellectually superior to his congregation and that his opponents merely couldn't understand him. Anyway, if he wasn't so sympathetic as he might have been, he was businesslike, and his collections were larger than collections had ever been before his arrival. In a little more than a year he had completed the building of a new $80,000 church to replace the one destroyed by fire two years earlier, and with all his high-hatting he had brought about a lively increase in attendance. Of excellent standing in the Rock River Conference, *Page 193 he was almost `made' as a minister, almost ready for promotion to a big-town pulpit.

(2) "Then suddenly the Rev. John Logan Warren found himself in trouble — the worst mess a minister of the gospel had gothimself into since the fictional Elmer Gantry's affair with Lulu Bains down at Schoenheim. It was `girl trouble,' very similar toElmer's, and in this case considerably more disastrous. That was last January.

"Without further chronicle of the steps in his downfall at this point, it may be stated that the Rev. Mr. Warren no longer is a minister. After several months of gossip, charges, counter charges, slander suits and church hearings, he was unfrocked not long ago when a Rock River Conference trial board of 15 ministers heard his case at the Conference meeting at Oak Park, a suburb of Chicago. Found guilty of unbecoming conduct (which really was only a euphemism), he was not only deprived of ministerial standing, but also cast out of the Methodist Church.

"He is selling insurance in Rockford now, and Durand isdiscussing what will happen if he ever shows his face thereagain. It has been discussing the scandal or some of its ramifications ever since last winter, and the story seems destined to at least a neighborhood immortality. It may be that some of the very young children in Durand will outlive the tale of Pastor Warren's indiscretions, but that is doubtful.

(3) "So far as the townspeople can remember now, the morning of last January 14 was a very quiet morning, as most mornings are in Durand. That is, it was quiet up to a certain time. About 8 A.M., it seems, Mrs. Warren came downstairs a little morequietly than usual and went softly to the kitchen. There stoodher husband with both arms around the housemaid. The maid saw her and broke away, but Warren didn't see her and followed the maid across the room. The first intimation he had of his wife'spresence was when she screamed and let fly at him with a stoveshaker.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W.2d 404, 336 Mo. 184, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-pulitzer-publishing-co-mo-1934.