Swartz v. World Pub. Co.
Decision Date | 27 October 1960 |
Docket Number | No. 35220,35220 |
Citation | 57 Wn.2d 213,356 P.2d 97 |
Parties | Donald SWARTZ, Appellant, v. WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY, a corporation, Respondent. |
Court | Washington Supreme Court |
Lewis & Campbell, Moses Lake, for appellant.
Earl W. Foster, Harvey F. Davis, Wenatchee, for respondent.
The issue presented on this appeal is whether a certain news story is capable of a defamatory meaning.
Plaintiff alleged a libel from the defendant's publication of the following article:
'Moses Lake--Donald Swartz, 30, Moses Lake, electrician, was arrested at 2:20 a. m. Saturday by Sgt Kelly Rogers and Officer Dave Penn of the Moses Lake police on a drunk and disorderly charge.
'Swartz was released after posting $1000 bond.'
Each statement in the news story, taken separately, is now conceded to be true.
In the complaint (paragraph IV) it was charged,
'That said publication was false and defamatory in the following respect:
'1. That in fact the plaintiff Donald Swartz was never at any time charged with attempted robbery.
No special damages were asked, but general damages in the sum of fifty thousand dollars were alleged.
It was stipulated at the beginning of the trial that the allegation in (1), supra, might be stricken from the complaint, it being conceded that the plaintiff had been charged with attempted robbery.
The trial court concluded, when that allegation was stricken, the complaint did not state a cause of action, and entered an order of dismissal. The plaintiff appeals.
The applicable rule, as it appears in the Restatement of Torts, was recently quoted in Purvis v. Bremer's, Inc., 1959, 54 Wash.2d 743, 344 P.2d 705, 711:
"(1) The court determines whether a communication is capable of a defamatory meaning.
"(2) The jury determines whether a communication, capable of a defamatory meaning, was so understood by its recipient." 3 Restatement, Torts, 304, § 614.
See also MacLeod v. Tribune Publishing Co., Inc., 1959, 52 Cal.2d 536, 546, 343 P.2d 36.
No reasonable person, reading the news story in the Wenatchee Daily World, could conclude therefrom that the defendant was imputing the reported attempted assaults on and robberies of elderly women to the plaintiff. This clearly comes within the category of cases where the communication is not capable of a defamatory meaning; and the trial court properly dismissed the action. See Blende v. Hearst Publications, Inc., 1939, 200 Wash. 426, 93 P.2d 733, 124 A.L.R. 549; McClure v. Review Publishing Co., 1905, 38 Wash. 160, 80 P. 303.
Judgment of dismissal affirmed.
If the two sentences in the third paragraph of the published article had been in separate paragraphs, I would have agreed with the holding of the majority that the news story was not capable of a defamatory meaning. However, a paragraph is generally considered to be a rhetorical unit dealing with a particular point of the subject, or a grouping of one or more sentences dealing with a single topic and closely related to each other. (Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed.)).
Because of the unfortunate paragraphing of the article, I think that a reasonable person, reading the news story, might infer that the person named in the first sentence of the third paragraph was responsible for the reported and hitherto unsolved similar crimes referred to in the second sentence of that paragraph. The publication is to be measured not so much by its effect, when subjected to the critical analysis of a mind trained in the law, but by the natural and probable effect upon the mind of the average reader. MacLeod v. Tribune Publishing Co., Inc., 1959, 52 Cal.2d 536, 546, ...
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