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Southland Publishing Co. v. Sewell

Court of Appeals of Georgia
May 27, 1965
111 Ga. App. 803 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)

Opinion

41264.

ARGUED APRIL 5, 1965.

DECIDED MAY 27, 1965. REHEARING DENIED JUNE 11, 1965.

Libel. Hall Superior Court. Before Judge Smith.

Wheeler, Robinson Thompson, Emory F. Robinson, for plaintiff in error.

Robert J. Reed, Darrell W. MacIntyre, contra.


The language employed in the alleged libelous publications was reasonably susceptible of a construction by the average reader which would render such publications libelous under the provisions of Code § 105-703; and under the allegations of the petition the determination of the question of whether or not the tendency of the alleged publications was to bring the plaintiff into hatred, contempt, or ridicule, was an issue of fact for the jury, as it cannot be said as a matter of law that the alleged newspaper libel was not of and concerning the plaintiff.

ARGUED APRIL 5, 1965 — DECIDED MAY 27, 1965 — REHEARING DENIED JUNE 11, 1965.


Carl Earl Sewell filed suit against the Southland Publishing Company, publisher of a daily newspaper, to recover damages for the publication of an alleged newspaper libel of the plaintiff. The petition was predicated upon a series of articles published in the defendant's newspaper during the third week in July, 1963, the principal basis of the suit being an article published on the front page of the Sunday edition of July 14, 1963, and set forth as Exhibit A to the petition. This article was as follows:

"Activity on Increase.

"LAW OFFICERS SEIZE $30,000 STOLEN CARS.

"By Tom Winfield, Times District Editor.

"CUMMING — Area lawmen struck a hard blow at car thieves in Forsyth County Friday and confiscated close to $30,000 in stolen automobiles.

"Sheriff Loy Barnett found four 1963 model cars stripped in the northeast section of the county Friday morning.

"In the afternoon he teamed with GBI, NATB and FBI agents in a raid on Smith and Sewell Garage in Cumming. Four more cars were found at the garage and were impounded, GBI Agent R. J. Cleghorn said Saturday.

"Barnett said he received a call early Friday morning from Mr. and Mrs. Mell Mashburn, who live in rural Forsyth County about five miles from the Hall County line.

"He said they told him they had found some automobiles in the woods. He investigated and found three 1963 Chevrolet Impala sport coupes and a 1963 fastback Ford. The cars were stripped of every available part, except for a front seat in one of the Chevrolets and a rear window on the Ford.

"The cars represented a minimum $14,000 investment, Forsyth County Deputy Hoyt Burruss said.

"Mashburn told The Daily Times he lives `just up the road from where the cars were found.' The location is some three or four miles down a dirt road off Georgia 141 to Cumming. The dirt road leaves the highway at Earl Burruss' store.

"He and his wife said, `We've seen cars coming in and out of here this week and wondered what was going on. Last night (Thursday) we saw a big truck, it looked like a moving van, coming down here.'

"`You know, this is Dr. Charles Stone's place . . . we thought he was building something.' So they took a walk Friday morning to see what was going on. When they reached Dr. Stone's place, an old barn deep in the woods, they found the cars.

"`I saw a boy come down here in an old car, and I know who it was, but I can't remember his name. My eyesight's not what it used to be,' Mrs. Mashburn said.

"Lawmen called.

"Sheriff Barnett called in other lawmen on the case. GBI Agents, R. J. Cleghorn, R. C. McCracken, M. J. Vandiver and Van Worthy; NATB Agent Tom Todd and an FBI agent out of Gainesville.

"The cars found in the woods were from Fulton, Cherokee and Thomas Counties and one from Virginia.

"Finishing their work at Dr. Stone's place the lawmen drove to Cumming where they pulled a surprise raid on Smith Sewell Garage. "Here, Agent Cleghorn said they found four more automobiles: a 1963 Pontiac convertible, a 1963 Oldsmobile, a 1962 Chevrolet and a 1961 Chevrolet Corvair.

"No Charges.

"Cleghorn said none of the cars had serial numbers on them and were impounded for that reason. They are believed to be stolen cars, he said, which had serial plates removed to prevent identification. `No charges were made in the raid, not yet, anyway,' Cleghorn said. . ." (Emphasis supplied.)

On July 16, 1963, an article set forth as Exhibit B to the petition, was published which read in part as follows: "Officers of the law made a haul of stripped cars last week in Forsyth County deep in the northeast section of the county. When their work was finished in the woods they motored to Cumming and pulled a surprise raid on Smith Sewell Garage. At the garage they found four automobiles without identification plates. They were impounded. Altogether, lawmen found and impounded about $30,000 in automobiles before the day was over. . ."

The petition alleged that the statements in the articles complained of that a "surprise raid" had been conducted on the Smith Sewell Garage and certain automobiles "thought to be stolen" had been impounded were libelous, defamatory, false and untrue; that no raid, surprise or otherwise, had been conducted on the Smith Sewell Garage, and that the story of the alleged "surprise raid" was a figment of the imagination of the writer of the story and the alleged quotation attributed to Agent R. J. Cleghorn in the article of July 14, 1963, that "No charges were made in the raid, not yet, anyway," was a malicious fabrication on the part of the writer as no such statement was made by Mr. Cleghorn.

The petition further alleged that the plaintiff was the co-owner of the Smith Sewell Garage and that "the divers citizens of Forsyth County, Georgia, knew petitioner, Carl E. Sewell to be the Sewell affiliated with the Smith Sewell Garage, and as such the publication of said articles identified petitioner personally"; and that the plaintiff by means of the publication of the false and malicious libel had been greatly injured in his good name, reputation, fame and credit, and exposed to public hatred, contempt and ridicule, "amongst all his neighbors, and other good and worthy citizens of said county and state and elsewhere, insomuch that divers of his neighbors and citizens to whom the innocence and integrity of the plaintiff in the premises are unknown, on account of the committing of the said grievances from thence hitherto suspected and believed, and still and do suspect and believe the said plaintiff to have been guilty of the larceny and stealing of automobiles and a surprise raid having been conducted upon the premises of the business of which petitioner is a co-owner wherein stolen automobiles were found by said law officers and petitioner be a person guilty of said crime so falsely and maliciously charged upon him and imputed to him by the defendant, as aforesaid, and have by reason of the publications of said libel by the defendant, from thence hitherto wholly refused, and still do refuse to have any transaction, acquaintance or discourse with the said plaintiff as they did before the publication of said libel."

The defendant's general and special demurrers to this petition were overruled and the exception is to that judgment.


1. This action is predicated upon an alleged newspaper libel which is defined by Code § 105-703 as: "Any false and malicious defamation of another in any newspaper, magazine, or periodical, tending to injure the reputation of any individual and expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, shall constitute a newspaper libel, the publication of such libelous matter being essential to recovery."

A publication coming within this definition is actionable without any averment of special damage to the plaintiff, Holmes v. Clisby, 118 Ga. 820, 822 ( 45 S.E. 684), Witham v. Atlanta Journal, 124 Ga. 688, 693 ( 53 S.E. 105, 4 LRA (NS) 977), Sheley v. Southeastern Newspapers, Inc., 87 Ga. App. 167 ( 73 S.E.2d 211), Davis v. Macon Tel. Publishing Co., 93 Ga. App. 633 ( 92 S.E.2d 619), or of actual malice on the part of the defendant. Code § 105-706; Horton v. Georgian Co., 175 Ga. 261 (1) ( 165 S.E. 443). As stated in the Horton case in headnote 1, "a false defamation of another, by means of a newspaper publication which may tend to injure the reputation of any individual and expose him to either hatred, contempt, or ridicule, is libelous. The publication of a statement in writing, which is untrue, and which may tend to injure the reputation of another and expose him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule, will be presumed to have been a malicious publication until sufficient evidence has been produced to rebut the presumption." And as stated in the Witham case, supra, at p. 693: "It is clearly apparent from the language now under consideration that the statement therein contained tended to injure the reputation of the plaintiff, and to expose him to public hatred or contempt; and it was therefore actionable without any allegation of special damage arising therefrom."

As a general rule the question of whether or not a particular publication is libelous, as well as whether the libelous matter was of and concerning the plaintiff, is a question of fact for determination by a jury. Horton v. Georgian Co., 175 Ga. 261 (2), supra; Whitley v. Newman, 9 Ga. App. 89 (1) ( 70 S.E. 686); McIntosh v. Williams, 160 Ga. 461 ( 128 S.E. 672). "Where the language of a publication is reasonably susceptible of the construction that it makes a libelous charge, it becomes libelous when it conveys that charge and would be so understood by the person to whom the writing might be communicated." Brandon v. Arkansas Fuel-Oil Co., 64 Ga. App. 139, 144 ( 12 S.E.2d 414). "Whenever a publication is susceptible of two constructions, one of which would make it libelous and the other not, it is for the jury to say whether the words are in fact libelous. . . The plaintiff cannot by innuendo draw from a writing a conclusion not justified by the language used; but it is competent for the plaintiff to explain in this way an ambiguous publication, to point out the intention of the author, and to show wherein the effect of the language was to injure his reputation. . . And the rule is that a publication must be construed in the light of all the attending circumstances, the cause and occasion of the publication, and all other extraneous matters which will tend to explain the allusion or point out the person in question." Holmes v. Clisby, 118 Ga. 820, 823, supra.

The language of an alleged libel must be construed, not by what the writer intended to mean, but by the construction which would be placed upon it by the average and reasonable reader. Southeastern Newspapers v. Walker, 76 Ga. App. 57, 60 ( 44 S.E.2d 697); Davis v. Macon Tel. Publishing Co., 93 Ga. App. 633, supra. "A publication claimed to be defamatory must be read and construed in the sense in which the readers to whom it is addressed would ordinarily understand it. So the whole item, including display lines, should be read and construed together, and its meaning and signification thus determined. When thus read, if its meaning is so unambiguous as to reasonably bear but one interpretation, it is for the judge to say whether that signification is defamatory or not. If, upon the other hand, it is capable of two meanings, one of which would be libelous and actionable and the other not, it is for the jury to say, under all the circumstances surrounding its publication, including extraneous facts admissible in evidence, which of the two meanings would be attributed to it by those to whom it is addressed or by whom it may be read." Constitution Publishing Co. v. Andrews, 50 Ga. App. 116, 117 ( 177 S.E. 258); Ledger-Enquirer Co. v. Brown, 214 Ga. 422 ( 105 S.E.2d 229).

With these principles in view it is clear to this court that the language under consideration here was at the very least reasonably susceptible of a construction by the average reader which would render it libelous under the provisions of Code § 105-703; and under the allegations of the petition the determination of the question of whether or not the tendency of the alleged publications was to bring the plaintiff into hatred, contempt, or ridicule, was an issue of fact for the jury as it cannot be said as a matter of law that the alleged libel was not of and concerning the plaintiff.

To charge falsely that the police or other law enforcement officers pulled a "surprise raid" upon one's place of business and found certain stolen, contraband, or otherwise illegal goods there which were confiscated or impounded, as the publications complained of may be found to have done, not only tends in a general way to injure the reputation of the owner and expose him to public hatred, ridicule and contempt, (which is sufficient under Code § 105-703 to constitute an actionable newspaper libel) but more specifically, such defamation may be found to impute to the owner the commission of a crime and to constitute a charge on him with reference to his trade or business, such being actionable per se, whether the defamation be oral or written. Code § 105-702. "To render words actionable per se, it is not necessary that they should, in express words, charge another with a crime punishable by law; it is sufficient if they impute a crime, in such terms as that the hearers understand that this is what is meant." Lewis v. Hudson, 44 Ga. 568. "It was unnecessary that a specific crime should be charged to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action. Charges made on one in reference to his trade, office or profession calculated to injure him therein are actionable, and no special damage is essential to support the action." Hardy v. Williamson, 86 Ga. 551 (b) ( 12 S.E. 874, 22 ASR 479).

The fact that the defamatory publication in terms designated a certain named place of business, "Smith Sewell Garage," and did not refer to the plaintiff individually, does not as a matter of law prevent a recovery by him, where as here, the plaintiff alleged that he was a co-owner of the garage, and was understood by the citizens of Forsyth County to be the "Sewell" affiliated with that business, and that he was therefore identified personally in the publications complained of. Weatherholt v. Howard, 143 Ga. 41 (1) ( 84 S.E. 119). Davis v. Macon Tel. Publishing Co., 93 Ga. App. 633, supra. In the Weatherholt case, it was held that in a suit to recover general damages for the publication of a libel, while the publication in terms designated a certain named company, it was competent for the plaintiff, under proper allegations by way of innuendo, to show that he formerly owned and did business under the name of the company designated, that this was a trade name of which the plaintiff's individual name was a component part, and that the statements alleged to be libelous in fact referred to the plaintiff and imputed insolvency to him.

The case of Witham v. Atlanta Journal, 124 Ga. 688, supra, which is strongly relied upon by the defendant as authority for the proposition that the plaintiff would have no individual right of action in a case such as this, is not in conflict with the Weatherholt case, nor with the ruling herein made. The plaintiff in that case had not sought to predicate his cause of action on the fact that he owned an interest in a business about which libelous matter had been written but was seeking to recover because his surname had been mistakenly used as an adjective descriptive of a bank which had reportedly failed. The court in that case held that the alleged libelous publication clearly referred to and concerned the bank and not the plaintiff and since the plaintiff did not allege that he owned any interest in the business, the publication could not be a charge on him in reference to his trade or business. The plaintiff in this case did allege that he owned an interest in the "Smith Sewell Garage," about which the alleged libelous publication had been written, and under the allegations of the petition, a finding was authorized that the instant publication was of and concerning the plaintiff and tended to injure his reputation and to subject him to hatred, ridicule and contempt.

The petition in this case clearly stated a cause of action for the recovery of general damages because of the defendant's alleged libel of the plaintiff in the articles set forth in the statement of facts and was not subject to the grounds of general and special demurrer in which it was asserted that the petition did not state a cause of action for the reasons that the plaintiff was not identified in the articles; that the articles were not libelous; that if libelous, the plaintiff was not a proper party to bring the action; that no basis of express malice was pleaded; and that no special damages were alleged.

2. The plaintiff alleged in paragraph 2 of the amended petition that: "on Sunday, July 14, 1963, and Monday, July 15, 1963, news bulletins were read on Radio Station WGGA, to whom defendant supplies news information, condensations of the articles appearing in the Daily Times of Sunday, July 14th, wherein it was stated by the reporter, whose name is unknown to plaintiff but well known to defendant, that law officers had seized $30,000 in stolen cars in Forsyth County, Georgia, and that a surprise raid had been conducted on the Smith Sewell Garage which information was furnished by defendant and the same being libelous as will hereinafter be set forth." This allegation was irrelevant and immaterial to the plaintiff's cause of action and should have been stricken on demurrer as contended by the defendant.

3. The trial court did not err in overruling the general demurrers and all grounds of the special demurrers with the exception of those special demurrers addressed to that portion of paragraph 2 which is set forth in Division 2 of the opinion.

Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part. Felton, C. J., and Russell, J., concur.


Summaries of

Southland Publishing Co. v. Sewell

Court of Appeals of Georgia
May 27, 1965
111 Ga. App. 803 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)
Case details for

Southland Publishing Co. v. Sewell

Case Details

Full title:SOUTHLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY v. SEWELL

Court:Court of Appeals of Georgia

Date published: May 27, 1965

Citations

111 Ga. App. 803 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)
143 S.E.2d 428

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