The Honorable Ron Thornburgh Secretary of State State Capitol, 2nd Floor 300 S.W. 10th Avenue Topeka, Kansas 66612-1594
Dear Secretary of State Thornburgh:
As secretary of state, you request our opinion regarding the effect of a reclassification of categories of mail by the United States postal service. Specifically, you ask whether legal notices required by state law may be published in newspapers designated by the United States postal service as periodicals.
K.S.A.
Four classes of mailable matter were developed in the comprehensive postal classification system established by congress in 1879. TheEnterprise, Inc. v. U.S.,
Second class mail is defined in § 200.01 of the domestic mail classification schedule as "mailable material consisting of newspapers and other periodical publications which meet the qualifications listed in sections 200.0101 through 200.0109, or 200.0110." Among the qualifications for newspapers are: (1) it must be issued at stated intervals at least four times a year, bear a date of issue, and be consecutively numbered; (2) have a known office of publication; (3) be formed of printed sheets; (4) be originated and published for the purpose of disseminating information of a public character, or devoted to literature, the sciences, art, or some special industry; and (5) have a legitimate list of subscribers who have paid or are promising to pay at an above nominal rate for copies to be received during a stated time.
Effective July 1, 1996, second class mail will be redesignated as periodicals. See
"The change in designation from `second-class' to `periodicals' was not intended as a substantive change affecting [various state law requirements making reference to second-class publications]. This is reflected in the Postal Service's Federal Register notice of March 12, 1996, publishing revisions to the Domestic Mail Manual to become effective July 1, 1996.
61 FR 10114 . As stated in the Federal Register notice, `E200 is renamed to recognize the renaming of second-class mail as Periodicals.' Id. Further, as reflected in the Federal Register notice, the revised DMM will contain the following section:
"1.0 Basic Information
"1.1 Second-Class
"Effective July 1, 1996, second-class mail was renamed Periodicals. This name change does not alter the status of authorized publications; second-class mailing privileges are now referred to as Periodicals mailing privileges and have comparable eligibility standards. Id. at 10123-24." Correspondence, Mary S. Elcano, April 19, 1996.
Substantial deference must be given to an agency's interpretation of its own regulations. Thomas Jefferson University v. Shalala, 512 U.S. ___,
A statute requiring, as an essential qualification of a newspaper to publish official legal notices, that the newspaper be accepted by the postal department as second class mail would be invalid on the ground that such requirement would make the validity of the publication of notices depend on the future, as well as the present, regulations of the United States post office, and would therefore be an unlawful attempt to delegate to the post office the determination of the qualifications of a newspaper to publish legal notices. Dearborn Independent, Inc. v.Dearborn,
A statute is not to be given an arbitrary construction, according to the strict letter, but one that will advance the sense and meaning fairly deducible from the context. It is not the words of the law but the internal sense of it that makes the law; the letter of the law is the body; the sense and reason of the law is the soul. Mahone v. Mahone,
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Richard D. Smith Assistant Attorney General
CJS:JLM:RDS:jm
