229 N.W. 227 | Iowa | 1930
The original notice in the instant action was published in time for the May, 1928, term of the district court of Iowa in and for Woodbury County. The notice was in proper form, and the statutory affidavit of publication was filed. The only question presented for determination is whether or not the "Daily Reporter" is a newspaper of general circulation, as the term is used in Section 11084, which in part reads:
"The publication must be of the original notice required for the commencement of actions * * * in some newspaper of general circulation published in the county where the petition is or will be filed, selected by the plaintiff or his attorney."
The facts were stipulated, and by said stipulation it is shown that the Daily Reporter is printed and circulated every day, with the exception of Sundays and holidays, in Sioux City, Iowa; that the paper was established in 1896; that it has a subscription list of approximately 500 subscribers, and its average *928 daily circulation during the last five years was between 400 and 500; that the following classes and professions are represented in the said subscription list: Attorneys, automobile dealers, repair shops, banks, building and loan associations, material houses, dry cleaning establishments, clothiers, coal dealers, finance companies, furniture dealers, furnace companies, electrical concerns, grocers (both wholesale and retail), hardware concerns, insurance agencies, jewelers, chattel mortgage companies, real estate loan companies, plumbing concerns, oil companies, public utility corporations, collection agencies, mercantile agencies, tire companies, doctors, abstracters, shoe stores, department stores, produce companies, wall paper companies, undertaking establishments, newspapers, florists, storage houses, drug stores, and individuals. It was further stipulated that during the past two years the Daily Reporter had made a specialty of the news of the courts and of legal matters, and that it does publish and has heretofore published a number of legal notices in Woodbury County, Iowa, and that said newspaper is often designated by attorneys and various city, county, and state officers as a paper in which legal notices should be published. It is conceded that the printed matter in said newspaper primarily concerns itself with information regarding court proceedings and courts, but it also contains some advertising matter of miscellaneous character, some literature of a general nature, a limited amount of news and current events, summaries of business conditions, and articles on business problems. The newspaper is a four-page sheet, measuring 10 1/2" x 14", with four columns on each page. It is entered as second-class matter in the post office at Sioux City, and has fixed subscription rates.
Section 11084, Code, 1927, at the time of its enactment, and before amendment by the general assembly, apparently in response to dicta found in Brice v. Graves,
"But the fact that a newspaper is devoted to the interest of a particular class of persons, as, for instance, those engaged in the same business or calling, and specializes on news and intelligence primarily of interest to that class, will not exclude it from classification as a newspaper of general circulation, if, in addition to such special news, it also publishes news of general character * * *."
Whether a newspaper is one of general circulation is a matter of substance, and not of size.
In re Application of Green,
In Lynn v. Allen,
"By a `newspaper of general circulation,' the legislature certainly did not intend a newspaper read by all the people of the county. As a matter of fact, every newspaper is, in greater or less degree, devoted to some special interest. No one, however, would claim that, because a newspaper should, for example, be the organ of a certain political party, and especially devoted to the interests of such party, it would not, therefore, be a newspaper of general circulation. Yet such a newspaper is, to a large extent, read only by members of the political party whose doctrines are advocated and expounded in its columns. * * * Indeed, it would seem that this newspaper is quite as likely as any party or other paper of general circulation to reach the *930 particular persons interested in the proceeding before the court; and, consequently, that the spirit of the statute is quite as well served as could be if the notice were published elsewhere. Its special purpose is to give news of the courts, and to circulate this news generally amongst all those who, whether of the legal profession or not, may be interested in such proceedings."
In the case of Hanscom v. Meyer,
We therefore hold that the "Daily Reporter," in the case at bar, is legally qualified as a medium of official and legal publications, under Section 11084, Code, 1927. It necessarily follows that the trial court did not err in overruling the appellant's special appearance and motion to quash. — Affirmed.
MORLING, C.J., and STEVENS, ALBERT, and WAGNER, JJ., concur.