Wright v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd.

31 Haw. 128, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 10
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1929
DocketNo. 1879.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 Haw. 128 (Wright v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Hilo Tribune-Herald, Ltd., 31 Haw. 128, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 10 (haw 1929).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT

BY BANKS, J.

On December 9, 1928, the defendant corporation published in the Hilo Tribune-Herald, a newspaper owned by it, the following article:

“Mrs. Wriglit reported to have forsaken post when needed in Kona Hospital.

*129 “Julian Yates tells Tribune-Herald that head of institution left one nurse to work all shifts Avith patients seriously ill.

“Forsaking her post at the Kona Hospital and leaving at least three patients in a serious condition with only one nurse and an inexperienced maid to run the entire hospital on 24-hour shifts, Mrs. Miriam Wright, resigning superintendent, came across the Island to Hilo yesterday on an unannounced ‘vacation,’ according to a report telephoned last night to the Tribune-Herald by Julian Yates, supervisor from Kona.

“Mrs. Wright is the nurse who’s administration and social affairs were to be probed by the Hawaii Board of Supervisors had she not handed in her resignation to become effective not later than December 31.

“She was suspended by the supervisors pending the investigation that would have been held tomorrow afternoon, but upon receipt of her resignation because of ill health, the board revoked its suspension action.

“ ‘We are stranded in Kona for a nurse tonight,’ Yates told the Tribune-Herald over the wire. ‘Hilo is short of nurses. I can find none on the Island. So I have wired to Donald BoAvman, head of the Hawaii Sugar Planters’ Association Avelfare Avork in Honolulu, and asked that he find a nurse there and send her to the Kona Hospital by the next boat.

“ ‘Mrs. Wright took her “vacation” Avithout notifying either myself or Chairman Samuel Spencer. She left no one to take her place. The entire burden of the Kona Hospital rests on Miss Irene Kono.

“ ‘Miss Kono can have no assistance until Ave can get another nurse. There are not many patients in the hospital, but three are in a grave condition.

“ ‘One maid left the hospital today. There is just one other there and she is inexperienced. This means that Miss Kono aat.11 have all responsibility for attending the patients.

*130 “ ‘All I know of Mrs. Wright is that she has gone to Hilo. She told someone that she would be back next Aveek.’ ”

The instant action, Avhich is one of libel, is predicated on the publication of this article. The complaint contains no innuendoes, and only general damages are claimed. The only plea interposed by the defendant was a general denial of the truth of the allegations contained in the complaint. Upon the issues thus joined a jury was impaneled and the case proceeded to trial. The defendant admitted that it was the OAvner and publisher of the “Hilo Tribune-Herald” in Avhich the article appeared. The paper containing this article Avas introduced and received in evidence. The plaintiff then testified in her OAvn behalf. At the conclusion of her case the defendant, without offering any evidence, moved for a nonsuit on the folloAVing grounds: “ (1) There' is a fatal variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proof adduced in support thereof; (2) it affirmatively appears that the articles published and complained of are substantially true; (3) that it affirmatively appears that the article complained of is a privileged communication and there is no proof of malice; (4) that it affirmatively appears that the article complained of is not libellous; (5) that it affirmatively appears that the article is one of fair and reasonable comment upon matters of public importance.” The motion was granted, the plaintiff excepted and noAV brings the case here for review on her exception.

We will first consider the second ground of the motion, namely, that it affirmatively appears that the article is substantially true. It is not denied, of course, that if it does so appear the motion Avas properly granted. It has too long been the laAV to be now questioned, that the truth of the matter contained in a publication is, in a civil suit for damages, a complete defense. (Waterhouse v. *131 Spreckels, 5 Haw. 240; Gomes v. Hawaiian Gazette Co., 10 Haw. 108, 113.) “In the absence of statutory or constitutional provision to the contrary, the general rule is that in all civil actions of libel or slander, defendant is justified in laAV and exempt from all cíauL responsibility, Avhere he alleges and establishes the truth of the matter charged as defamatory, Avhether the words are actionable per se or per quod, and notAvithstanding the publication Avas malicious, or without reason on the part of defendant to believe the imputation to be true.” 36 C. J. §193, pp. 1231-32.

In determining Avhether the truth of the article in the instant case Avas established Ave must look solely to the testimony of the plaintiff herself, that being the only testimony on the subject. In order to properly appraise this testimony Ave must consider it in connection Avitlx certain Avell established legal principles. At common laAV, if the truth of the matter published Avas relied on as a justification, it was necessary for the defendant to specially plead it. This is not the rule, however, in this Territory. Here the defense is available under a plea of the general issue. (Gomes v. Hawaiian Gazette Co., supra.) The sufficiency of the evidence relied on to establish the defense under a plea of the general issue must, however, be determined by the same rules as those by which the sufficiency of the special plea was determined under the common laAV. In other words, the evidence must be the same Avhether it is admitted under a special plea or the general issue. One of the rules gOArerning the special plea is that it must be as broad as the defamatory charge made in the publication and a statement of facts showing the truth of a part only cannot operate as a complete defense. (37 C. J., §375, pp. 42-43.) Under this rule if one' is guilty of publishing the whole of the alleged defamatory matter he cannot justify by slxoAving that some part of it, *132 though, divisible from the rest, was true. It is essential, therefore, in order to constitute a complete defense, that the evidence relied on establish the truth of the defamatory matter in its entirety and not that it establish only a part of it.

With these principles in mind we will compare the plaintiff’s testimony with the publication and see whether the latter substantially proves the truth of the former.

The portions of the plaintiff’s testimony which we conceive to be material to the question now under consideration are substantially as follows: On the date of the publication in question she was a registered professional nurse, having graduated from the Queen’s Hospital in Honolulu in 1919. She remained as a nurse in this hospital until 1923, at which time she became the superintending nurse of the Kona Hospital, which was located at Kealakekua, South Kona, on the Island of Hawaii, and which was maintained by the County of Hawaii. She remained in this position until on or about December 12, 1928.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Haw. 128, 1929 Haw. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-hilo-tribune-herald-ltd-haw-1929.