Judges: Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General Prepared by: David LaCroix, Assistant Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/18/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
QUESTION:
Is a newspaper (the Sentinel Star) which has its home offices in Orange County, but which has a major production plant in Seminole County and is in general circulation there, qualified under Ch.
SUMMARY:
A newspaper which complies with the requirements of ss.
Section
". . . a publication in a newspaper printed and published periodically once a week or oftener, containing at least twenty-five per cent of its words in the English language, entered or qualified to be admitted and entered as second-class matter at a post office in the county where published, for sale to the public generally, available to the public generally for the publication of official or other notices and customarily containing information of a public character or of interest or of value to the residents or owners of property in the county where published, or of interest or of value to the general public."
Section
Assuming that the Sentinel Star has been entered as second class mail matter at a post office in Seminole County for a period of one year, that it is available generally in Seminole County for the publication of legal notices, and that it customarily contains either information of a public character or of interest or value to the residents or property owners of Seminole County or information of interest or value to the general public, your question is answered affirmatively.
The answer depends upon an interpretation of the phrase, "the county where published," and the phrase, quite obviously, could logically be interpreted in either of two ways: The county where the actual printing is done (or where the primary business office is located or where the newspaper is initially circulated), or any county in which the newspaper is generally made available for sale or distribution to the public.
Florida appellate courts appear to have touched upon this question only twice, discounting those decisions directed toward a definition of "publication" in reference to the choice of venue in a libel action against a newspaper. (See, e.g., Perdue v. Miami Herald Publishing Co., opinion filed Jan. 17, 1974 [Fla. Sup. Ct.], pending on rehearing.)
In Tylee v. Hyde,
Another statute substantially different from those in Ch. 50, F. S., was considered by the Supreme Court in City of Coral Gables v. Certain Lands, etc.,
Neither of these cases was concerned with a statute requiring "publication" in a county, as opposed to actual printing, but there are many cases from other jurisdictions which have interpreted statutes similar to s.
Each case in which the question has been decided has, of course, turned, in part, on the particular wording of the statute involved. However, when the terms of these statutes did not specifically require that a newspaper be "printed" or "located" in a particular place (and even, on occasion, when such requirements were specified), most courts seem to have considered the purpose and intent of such notice statutes as controlling their interpretation. Since the purpose of these statutes is to provide as effective a notice as possible to local residents and local property owners of legal events and actions having local significance, the circulation of a newspaper and its general content and relevance to the local populace ought to take precedence over technical factors such as the actual location of the typesetters and presses. As stated by the Supreme Court of New Mexico in State v. Vigil, supra, at 991:
"[T]he intent of our legislature in using the word "published" . . . was to give notice to the public by insertion in a newspaper of general circulation within the boundaries of the municipal corporation, regardless of where the newspaper is physically printed. After all, the aim of a statute requiring legal publications is so that the contents of the notice may be brought home to the public generally."
The location of a newspaper's business offices and the place where the newspaper is first circulated are also irrelevant factors to a determination of whether the newspaper is qualified to accomplish the purpose of legal notice statutes. The factors which are relevant — local significance, local availability, and local circulation — are required by s.