Judges: Carla J. Stovall, Attorney General of Kansas
Filed Date: 3/13/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Richard J. Edlund State Representative, 33rd District State Capitol, Room 273-W Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Representative Edlund:
As state representative for the thirty-third district, you request our opinion regarding the provisions of K.S.A.
"It has been published 52 times per year for over 5 years.
"It has a second class mail permit.
"It has a general paid circulation in both Wyandotte and Johnson Counties.
"More than 50% of its circulation in each Wyandotte and Johnson Counties is sold to subscribers on either a weekly or yearly basis.
"It is a newspaper that offers general news to the public and is not a trade, religious or fraternal publication.
"It is printed in Kansas by the Olathe News in Johnson county."
Prior to the 1994 amendment of K.S.A.
K.S.A.
"(1) It must be published at least weekly 50 times a year and have been so published for at least five years prior to the publication of any official city publication;
(2) it must be entered at the post office of publication as second class mail matter;
(3) it shall have general paid circulation on a daily, weekly, monthly or yearly basis in the county and shall not be a trade, religious or fraternal publication; and
(4) it must be printed in the state of Kansas and published in the county publishing the official publication, or if there is no newspaper published in the county, then in a newspaper printed in Kansas and having general paid circulation in the county." (Emphasis added).
By comparison, K.S.A.
The first question you ask is whether a publication that has met all of the the other requirements of subsection (a), and which has an established paid circulation in Johnson county, has met the requirements of K.S.A.
K.S.A.
Your second question is whether the establishment of an advertising, circulation, layout and billing office in Johnson county meet the requirements of subsection (a)(4). The requirements of this subsection speak to printing in Kansas and publication in the home county, or in the alternative, printing in Kansas and circulation in the home county. You tell us that the paper in question is in fact printed in Kansas and circulated in both Wyandotte and Johnson counties. Thus, the requirements of printing and circulation are a given. Your second question therefore appears to concern the site of publication and whether the advertising, circulation layout and billing activities qualify as publication.
Many cases define "publish" to mean where the paper is first put into circulation, and not where it is printed. 66 C.J.S.Newspapers sec. 7 (1950). See also Attorney General Opinion No. 91-132; 24 ALR 4th "Newspapers of General Circulation" (1983).
"The word ``publish' means to declare publicly, to make generally known. It is not synonymous with the word ``print.' Thus, something may be printed without being published, and it is published only when it is offered for sale or put in general circulation. . . . Although there is authority that the place of publication is the place where the paper or other periodical is printed, and not where it is circulated, the more accepted view is that the place of publication of a newspaper designated or selected for the publication of official notices is the place where the paper is first put into circulation, that is, where it is first issued to be delivered or sent, by mail or otherwise, to its subscribers, or where it is entered in the post office as second class matter. . . . It has also been said that a newspaper is considered published at the location where it has its principal offices and where its form and content is determined, or where it is ``given to the world' that is, where all final editing, printing, correction of printed proofs, assembly, bundling, truck delivery, and mailing takes place. In other words, the place of publication is the newspaper's home office." 58 Am.Jur.2d Newspapers sec. 51 (1989). (Emphasis added).
We have not found any authority that recognizes more than one place of publication for a newspaper. Rather, the authority we have located uses "the place" of publication in the singular. While each newspaper may conceivably have many offices in and be circulated to several counties, we believe that it may have only one single place of publication. Thus, merely moving some of the advertising, circulation, billing, or layout functions to a different county will not change the county in which the paper is published.
Your third question has two parts "1. Are the requirements of sections (a) and (b) separate and distinct requirements? 2. Can a newspaper validly publish legal notices in a county if it meets the requirements of section (b) without reference to section (a)?"
As stated previously, subsections (a) and (b) are separate and distinct requirements. The qualification provisions of subsection (a) apply to official city newspapers for cities of the first class and the requirements of subsection (b) apply to official county newspapers.
Your fourth question recognizes that the language in K.S.A.
In summary, the 1994 amendments to K.S.A.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Theresa Marcel Nuckolls Assistant Attorney General
CJS:JLM:TMN:bas