Johnson v. State

Appellant was convicted in the County Court of Dallas County for libel, and sentenced to a fine of $100, from which judgment he appealed to this court.

The appellant published a defamatory article about one Owen L. Parry, a resident citizen of Dallas, in a newspaper called the "Kansas City Sunday Sun," which was circulated in Dallas County and City, in which the said Parry was charged with criminal intimacy, in Dallas City, with one Essie Watkins, a woman of dissolute character, and with malicious mischief in breaking a quantity of furniture and bric-a-brac, and with drunkenness in a public place, to-wit, in the house of said Essie Watkins, and with disorderly conduct. An information was filed upon an affidavit made by the said Parry, charging that so much of the article which is set out is grossly libelous, and that while it charged no penal offense, it charged matters which were false and disgraceful to him as a member of society.

1. Appellant complains, first, that the affidavit upon which the information was based did not begin, "In the name and by the authority of the State of Texas." This is unnecessary. Jefferson case, 24 Texas Ct. App. 535[24 Tex. Crim. 535]. The information did begin, "In the name and by the authority of the State of Texas," and that was sufficient.

2. The appellant complains that the court erred in overruling his exception thereto, and in ruling out appellant's testimony when he sought to prove the truth of the libel, which he had a right to do, because the libel did allege penal offenses against the laws of the State. The statute declares that when a libel charges a penal offense, and states the time, place, and nature of the offense, the truth of the libel may be offered in evidence. If the penal offense is charged generally, without the specifications required, the truth can not be proved, though in fact the libel may be true. It is the policy of the law to suppress the publication of all scandalous matter which simply tends to bring disgrace and trouble upon the citizen, but it is not its policy to suppress the discovery of crime, whereby the State may be duly notified of its existence. It is matter "proper for public information" (Bill of Rights, section 8), for it always concerns the public interest that crimes be revealed and punished. But the law will permit no criminal charge to be publicly made by any person without such specific statement as to time, place, and the nature of the offense; and this charge must then be published at the peril of the party making it, for if it is false, he will be guilty of libel. If he makes the publication without the specifications, he will be guilty of libel, though the facts be true. The charges here made were sufficiently specific as to the penal offenses charged.

The libelee is charged with having lived with a prostitute for one year preceding the publication of the libel, at a certain designated house in *Page 466 Dallas City, both being unmarried, and with having displaced one Anzy, who, however, kept up a secret intrigue with his old mistress; and this intrigue being discovered but a short time prior to the publication of the libel, the libelee had maliciously broken up and destroyed the furniture and bric-a-brac of the prostitute; also for drunkenness in a public place, and disorderly conduct, in violation of articles 337, 683, 144, and 314 of the Penal Code, defining said acts to be offenses against the penal laws; and by the terms of the statute (article 642) the defendant was entitled to prove the truth of the allegations made in said libel. And the error assigned, that the court erred in excluding the questions propounded by defendant to the witness Essie Watkins, to prove the truth of the libelous matter, was well taken, as they tended directly to prove it, and were addressed to the witness, who was able to prove them if they were true; and the action of the court in excluding such testimony is certainly incomprehensible when considered in connection with the charge of the court, that if the jury believed that the statements charged as a libel were true, they should acquit defendant.

3. We think, too, the prosecuting officer, in his final argument to the jury, did an injury to the rights of the defendant by alluding to and commenting upon the defendant's failure to testify. Code Crim. Proc., art. 730, subdiv. 4, as amended by Laws 1889, p. 37; Hunt v. The State, 28 Texas Ct. App, 149

4. The charge of the court in the ninth paragraph, to the effect, "that the truth of any statement charged as a libel may be shown in justification by the defendant, where it is charged in the information that said statement is false," is certainly erroneous. It is not only inconsistent with the action of the court in ruling out the proof of the libelous matter, but is wholly unwarranted by the statute, which clearly defines in what cases proof of the truth of the libel is admissible. For the errors designated, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Judges all present and concurring. *Page 467