CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA v. ROME NEWS MEDIA, LLC D/B/A CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 21, 2019
DocketA18A1701
StatusPublished

This text of CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA v. ROME NEWS MEDIA, LLC D/B/A CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS (CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA v. ROME NEWS MEDIA, LLC D/B/A CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA v. ROME NEWS MEDIA, LLC D/B/A CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS, (Ga. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, C. J., DOYLE, P. J., and MERCIER, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

March 5, 2019

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A18A1701. CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA, et al. v. ROME NEWS MEDIA d/b/a CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS.

DILLARD, Chief Judge.

Catoosa County, Georgia, and three county officials acting in their official

capacities1 (collectively, “Catoosa County” or the “County”) appeal the trial court’s

grant of declaratory and injunctive relief to Rome News Media, LLC, d/b/a Catoosa

County News (“CCN”), which sued the County to enjoin it from changing the official

legal organ of the County from CCN to the Chattanooga Times Free Press

(“Chattanooga Times”). According to CCN, taking such an action would violate

OCGA § 9-13-142 et al., which sets forth the eligibility requirements a newspaper

1 The three individual appellants are Gary Sisk, in his capacity as Sheriff of Catoosa County; Jeffrey Hullender, in his capacity as probate judge of Catoosa County; and Tracy Brown, in her capacity as clerk of the Superior Court of Catoosa County. must satisfy to be designated as the official legal organ of a Georgia county. For the

reasons set forth infra, we affirm.

Rome News Media—a publishing company located outside of Catoosa County

in Rome, Georgia—publishes several newspapers, including CCN, which is a weekly

newspaper that has been the official legal organ for Catoosa County since its creation

in 1949. And since 1992, CCN has been physically located within Catoosa County

in Ringgold, Georgia, where it has several employees, including a full-time editor and

advertising sales representative, as well as two part-time reporters and a part-time

sports editor. The editor of CCN is responsible for “operating the news side of the

newspaper[,]” and once he determines the content and design of each paper, he then

sends it to Rome for processing and printing. But the decision-making for what

stories are to be written and by whom, and the layout of the stories in the paper,

occurs in Ringgold. In addition, the commercial advertisements for the newspaper are

solicited from CCN’s Ringgold office. The legal notices, on the other hand, are not

solicited because they are required by statute. Specifically, these legal notices include,

inter alia, notices to the public of foreclosures, adoptions, alcohol-pouring licenses,

2 and businesses filing articles of incorporation. All of the newspapers published by

Rome News Media, including CCN, are members of the Georgia Press Association.2

On November 30, 2017, Catoosa County’s probate judge, sheriff, and clerk of

court, passed a resolution changing the legal organ of Catoosa County from CCN to

the Chattanooga Times with an effective date of January 1, 2018.3 The Chattanooga

Times is a daily newspaper that serves the metropolitan area of Chattanooga, which

includes some counties in north Georgia and Alabama. And the north Georgia area,

which includes Catoosa County, is a significant portion of the Chattanooga Times’s

service area. Indeed, out of approximately 60,000 subscribers to the Chattanooga

Times’s Sunday newspaper, 13,000 subscribers live in Georgia and 5,000 of those

subscribers live in Catoosa County. The Chattanooga Times offers various

subscription options for a range of prices, including options to receive the paper

daily, weekly on Wednesdays, only on Sunday, or only on weekends (i.e., Friday,

2 The Georgia Press Association, a nonprofit association composed of 139 daily and weekly newspapers, filed an amicus brief in support of CCN. We thank the GPA for its thoughtful submission. 3 See OCGA § 9-13-142 (c) (providing that “[a]ny selection or change in the official organ of any county shall be made upon the concurrent action of the judge of the probate court, the sheriff, and the clerk of the superior court of the county or a majority of the officers. . . .”).

3 Saturday, and Sunday). Additionally, the Chattanooga Times has two reporters solely

dedicated to reporting news from Catoosa County and north Georgia, one of whom

is a resident of the County. Since 2005, the Chattanooga Times has also leased a

distribution center in Ringgold with employees who live in Catoosa County. But

before the newspaper is distributed, the articles written by the Chattanooga Times’s

reporters assigned to the north Georgia area are sent to Chattanooga, where the

newspaper is edited, published, and printed.4

In the years prior to the passage of the November 2017 resolution, the section

of CCN that included the legal advertisements was distributed for free to every

household in the County. But when CCN decided to cease distributing this portion

of the newspaper at no charge, the County sheriff, probate judge, and clerk of court

became concerned that, depending on CCN’s distribution rates, fewer residents would

have access to the legal advertisements. Given these concerns, the County officials

met with representatives of CCN, who explained that publishing the free weekly

newspaper was no longer cost effective, and CCN could not stay viable and continue

4 The director of finance and operations for the Chattanooga Times testified that the paper is “published and printed” in Chattanooga. But as discussed below, the meaning of the word “published” in the relevant statute is a question of law for the Court. See infra notes 6-7 & accompanying text.

4 to publish the free newspaper. According to the sheriff, the decision to change the

County’s legal organ to the Chattanooga Times was based solely on an effort to

provide access to the legal advertisements to as many residents of Catoosa County as

possible. And in the time leading up to the passage of the resolution, the County’s

probate judge reviewed the relevant statutes and determined that the Chattanooga

Times satisfied the statutory eligibility criteria to be the official legal organ of

Catoosa County. In connection with passing the resolution, the same Catoosa County

officials issued a press release and published a legal notice in the CCN, informing the

public of the change and providing several reasons for their decision.

On December 12, 2017, CCN filed a complaint against Catoosa County for a

temporary restraining order, an interlocutory and permanent injunction, a declaratory

judgment, and a writ of mandamus.5 Specifically, CCN sought a temporary restraining

order and an interlocutory and permanent injunction, preventing the County from

changing its official legal organ from CCN to the Chattanooga Times on January 1,

2018, as planned. CCN also requested a declaratory judgment that it is the only

newspaper currently published in Catoosa County, that the Chattanooga Times is not

5 CCN also sought attorney fees, but the trial court indicated that it would decide that claim separately, and it is not at issue in this appeal.

5 published in Catoosa County, and that the Chattanooga Times had not been published

in the County for the previous two years. As to the writ-of-mandamus claim, CCN

sought a court order compelling the individual county-officer defendants to rescind

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CATOOSA COUNTY, GEORGIA v. ROME NEWS MEDIA, LLC D/B/A CATOOSA COUNTY NEWS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catoosa-county-georgia-v-rome-news-media-llc-dba-catoosa-county-news-gactapp-2019.