Bloomfield Davis County Messenger v. Bloomfield Democrat

205 N.W. 345, 201 Iowa 196
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 205 N.W. 345 (Bloomfield Davis County Messenger v. Bloomfield Democrat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomfield Davis County Messenger v. Bloomfield Democrat, 205 N.W. 345, 201 Iowa 196 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Albert, J.-

I. For a number of years prior to June, 1920, there were two papers published at Bloomfield, Davis County, Iowa, known as The Bloomfield Democrat and The Davis County Republican. Owing to the scarcity and high cost of print paper, and the high cost of labor, it was deemed best by the management of these respective papers that they be combined, and issued as one paper. An agreement was made between the publishers, the material part of which was that each publisher and owner should continue to own and edit his own paper, although the paper was to be issued as a joint paper, under the title of The Davis County Republican & The Bloomfield Democrat. Bach party was to make an inventory of property owned by him, and each was to have a salary of $150 a month. The expenses were to be borne proportionately by the owners, and the profit, if any, was to be divided in certain proportion. This,, roughly, is the substance of their agreement.

The two printing plants were moved 'into a building, and the parties proceeded to carry out their agreement. The subscription lists of the two papers were combined into one list, and persons who had previously subscribed to both papers were given credit as subscribers to the combined paper for a total time equivalent to the unexpired subscription for both papers. The business was carried on under this plan until sometime in September, 1922, when the owners proceeded to issue separate papers, a republican paper and a democratic paper, on different days of the week, both papers using the subscription list which had been formerly used by the combined papers. Each subscriber whose name appeared on the combined list received both the republican and the democratic paper.

The appellant’s newspaper was established in September, 1922.

*198 The appellee newspapers filed applications with the board of supervisors of Davis County, asking to be selected as official newspapers of the county for 1923. These applications were on file with the county auditor of that county on January 1, 1923.

The board of supervisors met on the 2d day of January. In the forenoon of that day, the new members elected were not sworn in, and the old members transacted the business. Among other things, they acted on the application of the two papers to be selected as official county papers for the year 1923. They were chosen and designated by the board as the official papers for 1923. At noon of that day, the new members of the board were sworn in, and the old members retired. Subsequent thereto, and on the same day, The Messenger filed application to be selected as one of the official papers of said county. The new board seems to have disregarded the action of the old board, and on January 4, 1923, the record shows that they adjourned, to meet on January 15th following, to hear contest as to official county papers. The respective contestants filed their affidavits and showings by that time, and on that date the record of the board meeting shows that the applications of the respective papers were produced by the county auditor, the seals broken in the presence of the board of supervisors, and the contents inspected.

The appellant filed with his affidavit a list of purported bona-fide subscribers to his paper, numbering 745. The Davis County Republican list ostensibly showed 2,368 subscribers, and the Bloomfield Democrat list ostensibly showed 2,387.

The showings filed by each of the appellees consisted of a pasteboard box of cards. On each card were written the name and address of an alleged subscriber. Accompanying these boxes of cards and inclosed in the box was the affidavit of the publisher, as required by statute, the correctness of which affidavit is not in question. The boxes containing the cards and the affidavits were sealed, as provided by law. This gives rise to the first point relied on for reversal.

The section of the statute governing this matter is Section 441, Supplement to the Code, 1915, and reads as follows:

*199 “In ease of contest, the applicants shall each deposit with the county auditor, on or before a day named by the board of supervisors, a certified statement, subscribed and sworn to before some competent officer, giving the names of the several post offices, and the number and the names of the bona-fide yearly subscribers receiving their papers through each of said offices living within the county; such statements to be in sealed envelopes, and opened by the county auditor upon direction of the board of supervisors.”

It is seriously urged by the appellant herein that this section of the statute has not been complied with by either of the appellees. Each of the cards in said boxes contained the name of a subscriber and his post-office address. The cards were bunched, and labeled on the back with the post-office address and the number of subscribers at each post office in the county. The affidavits accompanying the same sufficiently identified the contents of the boxes, and what was done in this instance was a substantial compliance with the statute. Nothing more could have been accomplished, had these names been copied on a paper and attached to the affidavit. Webster’s International Dictionary defines “envelope” as “that which envelops; a wrapper; an inclosing cover, especially the cover or wrapper of a document.” We therefore hold that this section of the statute has been substantially complied with.

II. The second point relied on for reversal is that the ap-pellees could not each appropriate to itself, as its own list of subscribers, the entire list of the consolidated papers, and file the same as the list of bona-fide yearly subscribers in the contest.

This is rather a novel question. No authority seems to have been cited by either side, and we have been unable to find any, on diligent search. It might be said in passing, however, that the evidence in the case very clearly shows the good faith of the appellee papers, both in ° x ■*- x their action in issuing a joint publication and also in their action in issuing separate papers, as notice was published in their paper fully explaining the intention in both instances; and after September, 1922, when they issued sepa *200 rate papers, both.papers were sent to subscribers shown by the joint list formerly used by both papers.

In Smead v. Stearns, 173 Iowa 174, at page 184, we said:

“ ‘To become'a subscriber to a newspaper includes some voluntary act on the part of the subscriber, or something which is, in effect, an assent by- him to the use of his name as a subscriber. ’ ”

When the appellees issued separate papers, and notified their subscribers that they would send both papers to each subscriber for the balance of their subscription, and the subscriber made no objection thereto, but continued to receive the papers, it constituted an assent on the part of the subscriber, within the meaning of the foregoing definition. We are of the opinion that'the respective owners of the appellee papers had the right to issue separate papers at such a time as they elected so to do, and were each entitled to appropriate the consolidated list of subscribers used by the consolidated papers.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
205 N.W. 345, 201 Iowa 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomfield-davis-county-messenger-v-bloomfield-democrat-iowa-1925.