Opinion
Donna Medeiros successfully petitioned the superior court to have the Oceanside Breeze established as a newspaper of general circulation for the City of Oceanside (Gov. Code, 1 §§ 6008, 6023). Objector South Coast Newspapers doing business as the Blade Citizen (South Coast) appeals, contending the court erred in finding the Oceanside Breeze had a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers and a substantial distribution to paid subscribers in the City of Oceanside as required by section 6008. 2 We reverse and remand.
Discussion
Section 6008 states in pertinent part:
“Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, a newspaper is a ‘newspaper of general circulation’ if it meets the following criteria:
“(a) It is a newspaper published for the dissemination of local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character, which has a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers and has been established and published at regular intervals of not less than weekly in the city, district, orjudicial district for which it is seeking adjudication for at least three years preceding the date of adjudication.
“(b) It has a substantial distribution to paid subscribers in the city, district, or judicial district in which it is seeking adjudication.
“(c) It has maintained a minimum coverage of local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character of not less than 25 percent of its total inches during each year of the three-year period.
“(d) It has only one principal office of publication and that office is in the city, district, or judicial district for which it is seeking adjudication.”
In In re Carson Bulletin
(1978)
“The term ‘substantial’ in the context of distribution to paid subscribers may be made reasonably certain by reference to other definable sources. The unabridged version of the Random House Dictionary of the English Language (1966) page 1418, gives as its first and primary definition of ‘substantial’ that it is something ‘of ample or considerable amount, quantity, size, etc.’ Similarly, in common legal usage, the term ‘substantial’ has been defined as “’’important” or “material” ’ [citation] and ‘considerable amount or value in opposition to that which is inconsequential or small’ [citations].
“We recognize that the phrase ‘substantial distribution to paid subscribers’ is a relative phrase. It is, however, apparent that a paid distribution to 12 persons in a city of 79,000 persons, less than two-hundredths of 1 percent (0.02 percent) of the local population, could not be deemed ‘substantial’ under the foregoing definitions in view of the purpose of the law to limit publication of official notices to newspapers meeting certain standards in order ‘to assure that the published material will come to the attention of a substantial number of persons in the area affected’ [citation].” (85 Cal.App.3d at p. 795 , fn. omitted.)
Carson is apparently the only case concerning section 6008’s requirement of substantial distribution to paid subscribers.
Section 6008 was enacted in 1974 as an alternative to section 6000.
3
(In re Carson Bulletin, supra,
“A ‘newspaper of general circulation’ is a newspaper published for the dissemination of local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character, which has a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers, and has been established, printed and published at regular intervals in the State, county, or city where publication, notice by publication, or official advertising is to be given or made for at least one year preceding the date of the publication, notice or advertisement.” 5
Given the legislative concern that the persons who are to receive legal notices be likely to read the newspapers publishing those notices, on this record we cannot say a subscriber to population ratio of approximately 1.48 percent amounts to a substantial distribution to paid subscribers as required by section 6008. Standing alone, 1.48 percent is too small a number to be declared to be substantial, nor can we say definitively that it is insubstantial
Disposition
Judgment reversed and case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Each party to bear its own casts.
Froehlich, J., and Nares, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise specified.
South Coast conceded below the only issue was whether there was a substantial distribution to paid subscribers. We therefore do not discuss the issue of a bona fide list of paying subscribers.
Section 6008 has never been amended.
There is no evidence in the record where the Oceanside Breeze is printed.
Following is a brief review of some of the cases citing numbers in their discussions of bona fide subscription lists.
In
In re Herman
(1920)
In
In re Simpson
(1923)
In
Baldwin
v.
Brown
(1924)
In
In re Hancock
(1949)
In
In re Paradise News Press
(1957)
Medeiros discusses the number of households in Oceanside as well as the population. We believe the relevant standard is population rather than the number of households.
The court below took judicial notice of petitions, declarations, and 1977 judgments in cases declaring the Del Mar Surfcomber a newspaper of general circulation under section 6008 for the City of Del Mar, and declaring the Del Mar News Press a newspaper of general circulation under section 6000. The Surfcomber had 1,132 paid subscribers in the Del Mar community (541 in the city of Del Mar and 591 in San Diego County) out of 4,743 households served by the Del Mar post office, a subscriber to household ratio of 23.87 percent. The record contains no information concerning the population of the relevant area.
As the Del Mar News Press qualified under section 6000 there was no requirement of a substantial distribution to paid subscribers. It had a bona fide list of paying subscribers of 500 in San Diego and elsewhere outside the city. In 1979, the Del Mar News Press filed an amended petition under section 6008. The copy in the record of the judgment on the petition is unsigned and bears no file stamp.
“A later amendment by the Assembly further qualified this to list the specific jurisdictions, such as the city in which it is seeking adjudication.”
(In re Carson Bulletin, supra,
