114 So. 373 | Fla. | 1927
On petition of relators, alternative writ of mandamus was granted by this Court directed to Hon. A. J. Rose as Judge of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, commanding him to recognize The Daily Record of Miami, Florida, as a newspaper for the publication of legal notices, and to take jurisdiction of a certain cause pending in the said Eleventh Judicial Circuit wherein relators are complainants and R. P. Fulkerson is defendant, or to show cause, etc.
There was a return to the alternative writ and the cause now comes on to be heard on relators' demurrer to said *1020 return. The sole question raised by the demurrer is whether or not The Daily Record of Miami, Florida, is a newspaper in the contemplation of the statutes of this State relating to constructive service on non-resident, unknown, absent or concealed defendants.
Our statute providing for constructive service (Section 3111, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, as amended by Chapter 10102, Acts of 1925), and cognate statutes for similar purposes (Sections 3113, 3114, 2835, 2942, 3763, Revised General Statutes of Florida; and Section 3786, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, as amended by Chapter 8473, Acts of 1921, Laws of Florida), merely provide in substance that the order or notice to appear shall be published at stated intervals in some newspaper published in the county where the court is located, or where the sale takes place.
We are therefore in the outset confronted with the query: What is a newspaper as contemplated by the statutes heretofore enumerated relating to constructive service, especially Section 3111, Revised General Statutes of Florida? One of the fundamental canons of construction is that legislative intent will be gleaned from the language of the statute, the subject regulated, the purpose to be accomplished and the means applied for accomplishing the purpose. Tylee v. Hyde,
Our constructive service statute (Section 3111, Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, as amended by Chapter 10102, Regular Session of 1925, as amended by Senate Bill No. 86, Extraordinary Session, 1925, Laws of Florida), is designed to give non-resident, unknown, absent or concealed defendants an opportunity to come into court and make their defense to the bill or petition exhibited against them within the time specified in the order to appear. It is *1021 accomplished by publishing the order to appear without delay in such newspaper as may be designated therein, or by posting copies of the notices as per terms of the order as prescribed by the statute. We think that since such statutes usually involve property rights they must be construed with reference to due process.
Construing the term newspaper as used in our constructive service statute in the light of the foregoing facts, we think it must have reference to some publication appearing at daily or weekly intervals reporting the news or happenings of local or foreign interests, or both, such as social, religious, political, moral, business, professional, editorial and other kindred subjects intended for the information of the general reading public. It may become necessary in the course of litigation to reach members of any profession, trade, craft or calling by constructive service, hence the reason for publication in a newspaper of general circulation read and subscribed to by the public generally. Publication in any newspaper falling short of these requirements would not comply with the statute nor meet the requirement of due process of law. Tylee v. Hyde,
It would not only be unjust, but it would be contrary to the letter and spirit of the law to recognize as newspapers those publications designed for the benefit of any one class of the whole population, and that class a negligible percentage of the entire public, such as legal and medical journals or literary and scientific publications. Hanscom v. Meyer, supra. This objection, however, could be removed if it is made to appear that any periodical published for the benefit of a class or profession in addition thereto reports *1022
daily or weekly the news of a local or foreign interest, and in other respects meets the requirements of a newspaper as defined herein. Hanscom v. Meyer, supra; Railton v. Lauder,
Now in the light of these specifications let us assess the value of the facts as presented by the pleadings in the case at bar. It is alleged in the alternative writ that The Daily Record is a newspaper of general circulation, that it is more than seven months old, that it is published at Miami, Florida, every day except Sunday and legal holidays, and that while its contents is devoted largely to matters of interest to the legal profession, it is a journal of general circulation with more than five hundred subscribers in the United States, most of whom are in Dade County, and that it embraces news items of interest to the public generally, such as personal items, notices of passing events, and general trade news. It is also alleged that The Daily Record has among its subscribers, banks, lawyers, advertising companies, burial parks, bond and mortgage companies, real estate adjusters, builders, insurance dealers, jewelers, publishers, developers, real estate brokers, criminal bonding companies, property management, mercantile agencies, credit agencies, abstract companies, judges of the courts, court reporters, title searchers, municipal bonding companies, police department, clerks of courts, detective agencies, buyers of bankrupt stocks, farmers, tent and awning companies, advertising companies, department stores, restaurants, immigration officers, sheriffs, undertakers, general merchandise stores and others.
The return to the alternative writ admits that The Daily Record is more than seven months old and is published at *1023 Miami, Florida, every day except Sunday and legal holidays, but denies that it is a newspaper of general circulation, containing matters of interest to the public generally and that it has more than five hundred subscribers. The return further alleges that The Daily Record has a subscription of less than three hundred and fifty, that it is devoted to the particular purpose of disseminating information with reference to the transactions of the courts of Dade County, Florida, property advertisements, directories of the courts, current papers filed in the court house, and that the said The Daily Record is published obviously for one class of people, which class comprises a small part of the entire population.
Several copies of The Daily Record are made a part of the record here. Inspection of these copies shows it to be a well-prepared five-column folio, twelve by fifteen and one-half inches. About one-half of three columns on the front page is devoted to "News of the Day." All other space is devoted to the proceedings and transactions of the various courts of Dade County, including a few advertisements. A portion of the space given to "News of the Day" is occupied by subject-matter pertaining to the courts, and very little if any of it can be said to be of interest to the general public.
To the return of respondent, relators filed their demurrer. The demurrer admits the allegations of fact in the return and all fair inference therefrom. State ex rel. Railroad Com'rs. v. Louisville N. R. Co.,
This Court takes judicial knowledge of the population of *1024
Dade County (over 150,000). The Daily Record with a subscription of three hundred and fifty or less, in a county of the population of Dade County, and devoted primarily to reporting the proceedings and transactions of the courts, reporting little or no news in which the general public would be interested, would in our judgment, not be a newspaper in contemplation of our constructive service statute which must be construed in this connection with the due process clause of the State and Federal Constitutions. Olsen v. Bibb Co.,
The demurrer to the return to the alternative writ will therefore be, and is hereby overruled.
ELLIS, C. J., AND WHITFIELD, STRUM AND BUFORD, J. J., concur.
BROWN, J., disqualified.