116 Wash. 65 | Wash. | 1921
This cause was presented to the superior court for Whatcom county for final disposition upon the merits, upon an agreed statement of facts under §§ 378-380, Rem. Code, relating to agreed cases. The purpose of the action is to have judicially determined whether or not the city may lawfully avoid, and treat as no longer binding upon it, a contract entered into by it with the defendant publishing company for the publication in its newspaper of the city’s legal notices during the year 1921.
The controversy has arisen because of a change in the name of the defendant’s newspaper, and also be
The controlling facts may be summarized as follows: Respondent publishing company is, and for several years past has-been, a domestic corporation of this state, and the publisher of a daily newspaper, printed and published in the English language, in the city of Bellingham, of general circulation in that city, being published on every day of the week except Monday. Prior to May 1, 1921, respondent’s newspaper was named and known as “The American Reveille,” the Sunday issue being designated as “The Sunday American Reveille.” On May 1, 1921, the name of the paper was changed by respondent to “The Belling-ham Reveille,” the Sunday edition being designated as “The Bellingham Sunday Reveille.” Otherwise, the paper has in all respects been, and will continue to be, printed, published and circulated as now being printed, published and circulated. During the late
“Section 1. No newspaper shall be considered a legal newspaper for the publication of any advertisement, notice, summons, report, proceeding or other official document now or hereafter required by law to be published unless such newspaper shall have been published in the English language continually (legal holidays and Sundays excepted) as a daily or weekly newspaper, as the case may be, in the city or town where the same is published at the time of the publication of such official document, for at least six months prior to the date of such publication, and shall be printed either in whole or in part in an office maintained at the place of publication: . . .” [Laws of 1921, p. 293, § 1.]
“Sec. 6. Where any law or ordinance of any incorporated city or town in this state provides for the publication of any form of notice or advertisement for consecutive days in a daily newspaper, the publication of such notice on legal holidays and Sundays may be omitted without in any manner affecting the legality of such notice or advertisement: Provided, That the publication of the required number of notices is complied with.” Laws of 1921, p. 295, § 6.
Our principal inquiry seems to be, will respondent’s newspaper be “a legal [daily] newspaper” for the publication of the city’s legal notices after the going into effect of the act of 1921? The language of § 1 above quoted may seem to lend support to the view that respondent’s newspaper will not be a daily legal newspaper after the going into effect of the act, having in view the fact that respondent’s newspaper has not been, and will not thereafter be, published on Mondays; from which fact there seems room for arguing
“The only question we are required to notice is whether The Morning Beveille is a daily paper, within the meaning of that term as it is used in the city charter. We think it is. The term daily, as applied to the publication of newspapers, is relative. It has never been given the exclusive meaning of every day of the weelq month or year, but papers published every day except Sunday, or every day except Monday, or every day except both Sunday and Monday, are re*69 garded by the general public as daily papers. This court in Puget Sound Publishing Co. v. Times Printing Co., 33 Wash. 551, 74 Pac. 802, held that a paper published every day except Sunday and legal holidays was a daily paper, and cited approvingly a case from California which held that a paper published every day except Monday was such a paper. A paper omitting both days may be less a daily publication than either of these cited instances, but it is not so widely different from them as to require it to be put- into a distinct class. It is a daily paper in the popular sense, and it was in this sense that the term was used in the city charter.”
Nor do we think that § 6 of the act argues to the contrary of our conclusion. That section manifestly was embodied in the act merely for the purpose of enabling the publication of legal notices to be omitted from holiday and Sunday issues of newspapers, “Provided, That the publication of the required number of notices is complied with;” that is, that the publication of a notice daily for the required number of consecutive days, omitting holiday and Sunday issues, will be regarded as a consecutive daily publication of such notice.
Does the change of the name of respondent’s newspaper render it a different newspaper from its predecessor in name, during the six months next following such change in name? We are quite convinced that the mere change of the name from “The American Reveille” to “The Bellingham Reveille,” in view of the other conceded facts shown by this record, is not a change in the identity of the paper; and that being our conclusion, it follows that such change of name has not affected, and will not affect, the legality of the publication of the city’s legal notices therein during any portion of the year 1921; assuming, of course, that the paper will be continued to be printed
The judgment is affirmed.
Mitchell, Mackintosh, Main, and Tolman, JJ., concur.