54 Minn. 281 | Minn. | 1893
By the terms of the charter of defendant city (Sp. Laws 1887, ch. 2, subeh. 12, § 15) the city council was required at its first meeting in the month of April, in each year, to cause the city clerk to advertise in the then official newspaper for sealed proposals for publishing for the ensuing year the ordinances, official proceedings of the council, and other matters required to be officially published, in some daily newspaper which had been printed,- published, and in general circulation in said city for at least six months prior to such advertising. On or about April 1, 1893, notice was given by advertisement in the official paper of the city that on the 17th day of that month sealed proposals for the official publications required by law would be received by the city council, and on that day proposals were received from three different parties. The lowest bidder was the defendant Schmied, publisher .and proprietor of a daily newspaper called “The Commonwealth,” and on the 24th of April the city council, by resolution, and in due form, awarded the city printing to said defendant for the ensuing year, and designated his paper as the official newspaper of the city for the same period of time. The plaintiff, as a taxpayer of the municipality, brought this action to restrain and enjoin the city and its officers from entering into the required contract for said printing, and this appeal is from an order denying his motion for a temporary injunction.
No question is made but that The Commonwealth was a competent paper, and answered all of the requirements of the charter, on the 1st day of April, 1893, for it had then been printed, published, and in general circulation, in the city of Duluth, as a daily newspaper, for more than six months. But it is the position of counsel for appellant that the competency and eligibility of The Commonwealth to become the official organ of the city was not to be ascertained under the provisions of the charter, but was to be determined by later legislation, which had, it is claimed, superseded the charter provision several days prior to the adoptign of the resolution before mentioned. This legislation is an act entitled “An act defining what shall constitute a newspaper for publication of the laws of
This assumption in respect to the law of 1893 leads us at once to a consideration of the principal questions of fact in the case, which are: Was the paper called the “Daily Short Line,” a newspaper, within the meaning of the law of 1893 ? and, if this be affirmatively held, was The Commonwealth a different paper from it? The paper bearing the name of “Daily Short Line” was established early in 1891, and was an advertising sheet intended for gratuitous distribution upon the cars and boats running into Duluth, and into its neighboring city of West Superior, in the state of Wisconsin, and
Order affirmed.