Wiley v. Oklahoma Press Publishing Co.

1924 OK 350, 233 P. 224, 106 Okla. 52, 40 A.L.R. 573, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1924
Docket13041
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1924 OK 350 (Wiley v. Oklahoma Press Publishing Co.) 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
Wiley v. Oklahoma Press Publishing Co., 1924 OK 350, 233 P. 224, 106 Okla. 52, 40 A.L.R. 573, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 558 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, C.

This is a suit for libel based upon a newspaper publication. A' general demurrer to the petition was sustained by the district court and the plaintiff, electing to stand upon his petition, judgment was for the defendant from which plaintiff has appealed. The question here to be determined is whether the*1 published article was libelous per se. The following is the published article complained of:

“ ‘YOU WERE RIGHT,’ FATHER TELLS COP WHO) SHOT HIS SON. T TRIED TO CONTROL HIM BUT IT WAS HOPELESS,’ WILEY SAYS, SHAKING HANDS.
“Boy Killed After He Ignored Warning. Policeman Ordered Him to Halt But He Attempted Flight; Pal in Office Building Job is Arrested.
“ T do not blame you; you did the right thing,’ said Attorney Thomas J. Wiley, father of Eugene Wiley, to Plainclothesman Howard Noble, who killed the boy yester-. day morning.
“With this comment Wiley gravely shook hands with the policeman.
“The father and the policeman met at the hospital shortly after the boy died. He had lived only a few minutes after he was carried to the hospita-l in an ambulance from the scene of the shooting in front of the Raymond Building.
“ T had been afraid Eugene would get in trouble,’ said the father brokenly to Chief of Police E. A. Maloney, in the chief’s office.
“ ‘Only last night I warned him to behave himself. I did everything I could for that boy, but I couldn't control him.’
“Shot While Eleeing.
“Chief Maloney made a thorough investigation of the shooting at 5 o’clock yesterday morning when, Wiley, who was 14 years old, and Paul Bailey, a youth slightly older, were attempting to escape from the police after they had ransacked several offices in the Raymond Building.
“At the conclusion of his investigation Chief Maloney announced:
“ ‘It is regrettable young Wiley was killed, but Noble didn’t „ shoot at a boy. He shot at a burglar who turned out to be a boy.
“• ‘He did absolutely right. When the police go out on burglar calls they expect to encounter despénate (men who 'vfll shoot first if they get the chance.’
“The chase of the boys followed a call to the police station from Patrolman R. Kelly that two burglars were in the Raymond Building on West Broadway.
“Plainelothesmen Noble, T. W. Watson and Dick Graham responded. Kelly met them and they went to the Wall street entrance to the building.
“The patrolman said he had watched the men enter the building, had waited for them at tlie foot of the stairs, and when they saw him, they turned and fled back upstairs.
“While Kelly and Graham stood guard at the sthirway, Noble and Watson went after the burglars. A search was made by the policemen of several offices. Suddenly Charles Runyan, an attorney who has offices and living quarters in the bifildlng. (Continued on Page Four)
‘“YOU WERE RIGHT FATHER TELLS COP.”
‘Boy Killed As Burgler After He Ignored Policeman’s Warning to Halt.
“(Continued from Page One)
“stepped from his doorway with his revolver drawn.
“Find Other Boy Hiding.
*54 “At first the policemen thought Runyan was' one of the burglars but discovering their mistake went through Mr. Runyan’s quarters toward an inner office.
“As they entered the office they discerned in the darkness, one bándit drop from the window to the electric sign over the clothing store, while another balanced on the window sill, pulling the shade down behind him.
“The officers rushed to the window. Piainclothesman Watson fired at the man who reached the sidewalk, but the boy had dropped under the awning and the bullet missed. The other hoy was making his way down the iron support rod of the sign, heedless of the command to halt, and Noble fired. (
“Both boys have'been in trouble at different times, but on pleas of their relatives, had always managed to go free.
“The funeral of young Wiley will be held at 2 o’clock this afternoon at the First Christian Church, the Rev. J. L. .Brandt officiating. A large number of the boy’s schoolmates from the Central high schoo plan to attend. Burial will be -in Greenhill cemetery.
“Boy Had No Weapon
“Wiley was unarmed when picked up by the police, but a flash light was found in, one of his pockets.-
“No weapon was found on Bailey, but he ■threw a flash light to the lawn as he entered the police station.
“Later when he faced his mother in the office of Chief Maloney young Bailey told her in answer to her question as to wlhat had become of her .25 caliber automatic pistol, that he threw it away at the same time he rid himself of the flash light.
“Police found the flash light, but not the pistol.”

Then follows a statement of.'the confession of Bailey, in which is recounted a number of robberies by him and the boy who was killed, and other robberies committed by Bailey himself, and Bailey’s statement that he and Wiley divided the loot equally, but that none of it would be] found atj Wiley’s room for the reason that he always preferred to take his part in cash, and tells of the search of the room of the Bailey boy and the finding of stolen property, of the statement of the county attorney that he was going to prosecute the Bailey boy, and of rumors on the part of the defendants to prove that ¿Bailey was only 15 years old, and of his having been arrested on former occasions but on promise of a reformation had not been prosecuted, and of his apparent defiance of the officers in this instance, and of his being placed in jail. The article closes with this paragraph:

“Thomas J. Wiley, father of the dead boy, was a candidate for city judge in the last democratic primary election, but was defeated by Charles Wheeler, present city judge.”

After a careful consideration of the briefs and the aunthoriti.es cited, we think the proper rules of construction of the article complained of and the petition based thereon, are those contended for by the defendants and agreed to by the plaintiff.

“(a) Unless the article is libelous per se, no cause of action is stated, since no special damages are alleged.” Kee v. Armstrong, Byrd & Co., 75 Okla. 84, 182 Pac. 494; N. S. Sherman Machine Co. v. Dun, 28 Okla. 447, 114 Pac. 617; McKenney v. Carpenter, 42 Okla. 410, 141 Pac. 779; Nunnery v. Bailey, 65 Okla. 260, 166 Pac. 82; Phoenix Printing Co. v. Robertson, 80 Okla. 191, 195 Pac. 487.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 350, 233 P. 224, 106 Okla. 52, 40 A.L.R. 573, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiley-v-oklahoma-press-publishing-co-okla-1924.