10 Colo. App. 519 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
Price & McChesney under their firm name were engaged in publishing a newspaper in Aspen, called the Aspen Tribune. Under the election act of 1891, the county cleric, Fishel, sent the official ticket with its various emblems to tbe Tribune office and ordered its publication. It is conceded tbe clerk had the authority to give the order and that under-it the Tribune published the ticket for the statutory time and one additional day under the clerk’s direction. After the publication was completed Price & McChesney presented their bill to the board of county commissioners, which was
So far as we are advised by counsel, or have been able to discover, there is no statute with reference to the fees of publishers except section 1423 of the General Statutes, which generally provides that publishers of newspapers shall be entitled to seventy-five cents for the first insertion of each folio of one hundred words, and forty cents for each subsequent insertion “ for the publication of all legal advertisements.” The only question is then whether this statute is applicable and whether the compensation of the publishers is to be measured by that standard. We are quite of the opinion that this cannot be. We are ready to concede that in one sense it is a legal advertisement, because it is lawful, but it is not a legal advertisement in the sense in which the term is used in the statute, nor is it applicable to the work done.
If the plaintiffs had accepted the court’s suggestion and offered proof of the reasonable value of the printing we might under our statutory authority have either modified and affirmed the judgment, or entered such judgment as the testimony warranted. But in the absence of such proof, we are without the power, and can only reverse the case and send it back for another trial, which is accordingly done.
Reversed.