117 Minn. 214 | Minn. | 1912
The Bibb Company, a corporation, on December 23, 1911, petitioned the district court for Hennepin county for an order dissolving said corporation and appointing a trustee to collect and distribute its assets. The court ordered the petition heard at a special term to be held January 20, 1912, and that notice of the order be given by publishing a copy of Ihe same in a legal newspaper in the county of Hennepin for three successive weeks. Petitioner caused the order to be published in “Finance and Commerce” for three successive weeks, and the court on January 20, after hearing the evidence, granted the petition and appointed a trustee, who qualified and proceeded to act as such. February 21, 1912, William F. Olsen, a creditor of the corporation, moved the court for an order setting aside its order of January 20, appointing the trustee, on the ground that “Finance and Commerce” was not a qualified newspaper. This motion was heard by the trial court on a stipulation of facts, and denied. Olsen appealed to this court.
The question before us is whether “Finance and Commerce” is a qualified newspaper under the laws of this state. The facts, as shown by the stipulation and the copies of the publication made part of the record, are as follows: Olsen had no actual notice of the proceedings and was not a subscriber to the paper. “Finance and Commerce” is a paper published daily in Minneapolis in the Eng
The stipulation states that the columns of “Finance and Commerce” are devoted primarily to the publication of legal matters, including the United States courts, the supreme court of this state, and the district, probate, and municipal courts of Hennepin and Bamsey counties, giving a complete report of the cases filed, the cases tried, and the results of such trials, the calendar of bankruptcy proceedings, the calendar of cases standing for trial in the courts, and the general proceedings of Congress and the state legislature when in session, a complete daily record of all instruments filed in the office of the registers of deeds of Hennepin county and of Bamsey county, all chattel mortgages and releases filed, all corporations organized, and all sales of real estate under judicial process. It contains “at least two or more columns of news, including general, theatrical, and current news,” publishes market quotations, financial statements, and bank clearings, lists of mortgage foreclosure sales, with the dates when the same will take place, and general items pertaining to city council proceedings of Minneapolis.
It may be conceded that “Finance and Commerce” is not light reading. But each copy contains intelligence of vital importance to many classes of men. News of court proceedings, the markets, the proceedings of Congress and the legislature, is of far greater interest to lawyers and business men than is an account of a political meeting, a social gathering, or a murder. It is not the particular kind of intelligence published that constitutes one publication a newspaper rather than another. Kellogg v. Carrico, 47 Mo. 157. And “Finance and Commerce,” though mainly devoted to legal and business
Appellant’s argument that the paper has not a general circulation, and therefore is not qualified, is not sustained. The statute requires that a newspaper be circulated in or near its place of publication to the extent of at least two hundred forty copies regularly delivered to paying subscribers. The circulation of the paper in question is sufficient, both as to character and extent.
Order affirmed.