Addison v. Town of Amite City

161 So. 364, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 541
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1935
DocketNo. 1454.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 161 So. 364 (Addison v. Town of Amite City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Addison v. Town of Amite City, 161 So. 364, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 541 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This proceeding was instituted by A. L. Addison, Boy M. Stewart, Mrs. S. M. Carpenter, and Mrs. Mae K. Morris, citizens and resident property taxpayers of the town of Amite City with the purpose of enjoining the ■execution of a purported contract a.leged to have been entered into on Sepiember 4, 1934, •by and between the mayor and board of aider-men of the municipality and the Daily Courier, a newspaper published daily in the city of Hammond, La., by the Courier Publishing Company, Inc., also made defendant herein, to print the official proceedings of the town council of said town of Amite City, including ordinances and delinquent tax notices. Plaintiffs represent in their petition for injunction that the Amite Progress is the only newspaper published within the town of Amite City and is therefore the only newspaper qualified to publish the official business proceedings and official notices of the municipality under the Constitution and Laws of this state. It is averred that the Amite Progress, through its owner and editor, offered to publish the official proceedings and notices at a price within that fixed by law and that the contract entered into with the Daily Courier, notwithstanding said offer by the Amite Progress, can have no legal effect.

On the application as presented to him in the plaintiffs’ petition, the district judge granted a temporary restraining order enjoining further execution of. the contract with the Daily Courier; but on the hearing of the rule for a preliminary injunction at which time the case was also tried on the merits, he dissolved the temporary restraining order which had issued, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiffs, rejecting and denying their demands at their costs. The plaintiffs then took this appeal.

Both defendants filed an exception of no cause or right of action and at the same time answered to the merits. The answers present the issue as to what constitutes the publishing of a newspaper under the statute which requires that the official proceedings of a municipality be printed in a newspaper that is published in the town and whi h shall have been in existence for a period of one year preceding its selection. The contention here is that whereas for a certain part of the year preceding the selection of a newspaper by the town of Amite City, on September 4, 1934, the Amite Progress was printed in the town of Kentwood and not in the town of Amite City, and although entered in the post office at Amite City, it did .not come within the requirement of the statute.

The selection of a newspaper as the official journal in which a municipality shall have its proceedings published is provided for by section 22 of Act No. 141 of 1912. By its latest amendment found in Act No. 201 of 192S, the pertinent provisions of the section are as follows:

“That the police juries, municipal corporations and school boards in all the parishes, the Parish of Orleans excepted, at their first meeting on and after the first day of August, 1928, and annually thereafter at their first meeting in July, shall select an official printer for their respective parishes, towns or cities, for a term not exceeding one year, who shall be the editor or owner of an established newspaper published in the parish, town or city, which shall have been in existence for a pe *366 riod of one year preceding such selection and which has not missed during said year the publication of more than three consecutive issues, which paper shall be known as the official journal of the parish, town, City or school board, and shall publish in the newspaper of which he is the editor or owner, all official ’proceedings of the police jury, town or city councils, or the school board. * ⅜ * The police juries, municipal corporations and school boards throughout the State may at their option have their proceedings, ordinances or notices, etc., published by contract. When the publication of the proceedings, ordinances, notices, etc., of the police juries, municipal corporations or school boards is not done by contract, the compensation for such publication shall be not more than one dollar ($1.00) per square of one hundred words for the first insertion and forty cents for each subsequent insertion, payable monthly or quarterly,' at the option of the police jury, municipal corporation or school board.

The first contention of the defendants, presented by their exception of no cause or right of action, is that Act No. 201 of 1823 has been repealed by Act No. 157 of 1932. Looking at the latter act, we find that its sole purpose was to amend and revise the provisions of Act No. 141 of 1912 in so far only as that act regulated the state printing of the state of Louisiana and its several departments. That is made clear by reading the title of the amending act. It states specifically that it is enacted “to amend and re-enact the title and Sections 4 and 7 of Act No. 141 of 1912, entitled” etc. In no manner does it attempt to amend Act No. 201 of 192S, which was a specific act amending only section 22 of Act 141 of 1912, which section, as appears from the herein quoted provisions, prescribed the manner in which the official printing of the proceedings of police juries and municipal corporations in the state should be given out. There is nothing inconsistent-with any of the provisions of these various acts, and therefore there is no repeal by implication.

The .second contention of the defendants under' their exception is that it is not mandatory on the part of the municipality to select a printer of certain specified qualifications who shall publish its official proceedings, ordinances, etc., but that by the very terms of section 22, amended by Act No. 201 of 1928, it is given the option to let out the printing by contract to its best advantage. That provision in about the middle part of section 22, on which counsel for defendants rely in support of this contention, must be read in connection with those that precede and follow it, and when that is done it becomes apparent that it relates to a contract with the official printer provided for in that section of the act when the printing is to bo done at a rate that is less than the one prescribed by the act itself. In other words, without a contract, the legal rate must be followed; but if there is a newspaper published in the municipality and qualified under the act, which agrees to do the. work for less than the legal rate, then the governing authority is given the right to contract with such newspaper. That, as we understand the statute, is the extent to which the municipality can exercise any discretion in the matter.

This disposes of the issues presented under the exceptions of no cause of action, and we now come to a consideration of the issue raised in the answers of the defendants to the effect that the Amite Progress was not a newspaper coming within the requirement of the statute, in that it was printed in the town of Kentwood, for som 1 time, at least, during the year prior to the selection by the town of Amite of its official journal.

It is shown that prior to October 31, 1933, all the material for the Amite Progress wa; gotten up and prepared in the town of Amite, but that the actual printing of the paper was done in a printing press in the town of Kent-wood. The printed copies were then brought to the town of Amite and entered as second-class matter in the po'st office there.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Plainfield v. Courier News
369 A.2d 513 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1976)
Hunterdon County Democrat, Inc. v. Recorder Publishing Co.
285 A.2d 258 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1971)
State Ex Rel. Sun Co. v. Vigil
398 P.2d 987 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1965)
Allen v. Globe-Democrat Publishing Company
368 S.W.2d 460 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1963)
Madigan v. City of Onalaska
41 N.W.2d 206 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1950)
Madigan v. Onalaska
41 N.W.2d 206 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1950)
State v. Briwa
5 So. 2d 304 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1941)
Bardwell v. Town of Clinton
180 So. 148 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 So. 364, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addison-v-town-of-amite-city-lactapp-1935.