In re Estate of Castanien

29 Ohio Law. Abs. 152
CourtOhio Probate Court of Franklin County
DecidedJuly 1, 1939
DocketNo 82,226
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 152 (In re Estate of Castanien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Probate Court of Franklin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Castanien, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 152 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

OPINION

By McClelland, j.

This matter comes on to be heard upon the motion of Frank Marsh, an alleged creditor of the escate ui Alfred Castanien, deceased, for an order to require the administrator to republish the notice of appointment, on the ground that the publication of said notice heretofore made was not in a newspaper of general circulation within the county.

The record in this case shows that two administrators of the estate were appointed and qualified. on March 9, 1938. On the 9th day of March, 1938, the Probate Court gave notice that the administrators had been duly qualified in the estate of Alfred Castanien, and caused the said notice to be published in the Ohio Jewish Chronicle. On April 4, 1938, the Ohio Jewish Chronicle filed in this Court its affidavit of service, stating that the notice was published on March 18th, 25th, and Apil 1. 1938, in the Ohio Jewish Chromclr*, a newspaper of general circulation in the county aforesaid.

The motion directly raises the question as to whether or not the Ohio Jewish Chronicle is a newspaper of general circulation within the county of Frank[153]*153lin. This question has already been adjudicated by some ot the courts of Ohio, the chief decision on this question being that rendered by the Common Pleas Court of Lorain County, April 22, 1911, in the case entitled State ex rel Stevens, Pros. Atty. v Lorain Democrat Company, et al, 22 Ohio Decisions 267. In this decision, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court, as indicated in 87 Oh St 467, it was held that a news publication in the German language is a proper publication in which to publish the annual report of the County Commissioners as provided in the former statute No. 2508. The first syllabus of which is as follows:

“ ‘General’ used in connection with the circulation of a newspaper refers to the character of a paper and the purpose of its publication, whether designed to represent some special interest, business, trade, society, religion, organization, or for the circulation of passing event, local and general news and items of common interest. Hence, a newspaper of ‘general’ circulation as prescribed by §2508, GC, is one devoted to matters pertaining to and of concern to the whole community and of public and common interest; its character is not determined by the extent of circulation through a given community.”

Another adjudicated case is that of State ex rel Sentinel Co. v Wood Co. (Combs) reported in Ohio Circuits at page 93. This case was affirmed without opinion as indicated in 84 Oh St 447. The third syllabus of this case is as follows:

“A newspaper having a circulation of 800 subscribers in a county of about 50,000 inhabitants, in fifteen of the twenty townships of wmch it had a circulation of thirty -six subscribers out of a population of 35,000 or more, and the remainder of its circulation being in a part of the county containing the other five townships, is a paper 01 general circulation within the meaning of §2508 GC. Parker, J, dissents.”

In this case, an injunction was sought to prevent publication of a report of the county commissioners in the “Weekly Beacon,” on the ground that it was not a paper of general circulation within the county.

Another important decision was one rendered by the Court of Appeals of the Third District, being that of Huffman v State ex Dally, 20 Abs 378. The question arose in a mandamus action by which it was sought to compel the county auditor of Hancock County to publish certain notices in the Hancock County Herald. The first syllabus of which is as follows:

“1. A newspaper of ‘general circulation’ is one devoted not to any single or particular object but to matters of public and common interest pertaining to and of concern to the whole community.”

In the body of the decision we find the following language:

“The county auditor tenders the issue that the Hancock County Herald does not have a general circulation. It is admitted that The Hancock County Herald has an approximate circulation of 700 copies in the county; about 600 copies of this regular circulation are distributed in Portage, Pleasant and Blanchard townships, Hancock County, Ohio, and the remaining 100 copies are distributed in Liberty, Allen and Union townships and the city of Find-lay; that the news, editorial matter and advertising published therein is of a generai nature m the sense that it is not confined to the interest of any party, sect, trade, profession, class or order and is available to anybody and everybody in the county on the same terms and conditions.
“What is meant by the word ‘general’ in connection with the circulation of a newspaper? In the opinion of this court it may refer somewhat to the extent of its circulation through a given community. However, in the main, it refers to the character of the paper and the purpose of its publication, [154]*154whether designed to represent some special interest, business, trade, society, religion, organization or whether designed for circulation as the disseminator of intelligence or passing events, local and general news and items of common interest. A paper of general circulation is one not devoted to any single or particular object but is devoted to matters pertaining to and of concern to the whole community and of public and common interest. ,
It is admitted in the presentation of the case, that the Hancock County Herald was published. for general circulation to give the news of common interest to all persons who might care to take the paper.” * . * *

In our opinion there is no better statement of the legal conception of the term “general eirculation” than that contained in the foregoing excerpt.

In our investigation of this question, we find the opinion oi Hon. Timothy S. Hogan, Attorney General of Ohio, rendered on May 24, 1912. This opinion was rendered to Hon. Samuel L. Black, Probate Judge of Franklin County, Ohio; the particular question being whether the Catholic Columbian, a newspaper printed in the City ox Columbus, Ohio, was a newspaper of general circulation in the county. In that opinion, Attorney General Hogan held that thé Catholic Columbian was a newspaper of general circulation within Franklin County, and fulfilled the requirements of the statute existing at that time. The writer of that opinion, in addition ,to quoting the Wood County case and the Lorain County case, also quotes from the case of Bigalke v Bigalke, 19 O. C. C. 33, as follows:

“ ‘Cleveland Daily Record’ devoted ■principally to news of a legal character, Held to be a ‘Newspaper’ and publication of legal notices therein, complied with the law.”

The question in that case was not whether it was a paper of general circulation, but whether it was a newspaper. It seems to have been admitted by all parties that the Catholic Columbian was a newspaper published largely for the purposes and in the interests of people of the Catholic faith. It had a circulation of approximately 50,000, and its circulation was not confined to members of the Catholic faith, but was one of general circulation within the county.

Our attention has also been called to the opinion by Hon. John S. Connor, rendered'on September 17, 1897, to V. R. Shepard, Editor and Publisher of The Court Index, at Cincinnati, Ohio.

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29 Ohio Law. Abs. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-castanien-ohprobctfrankli-1939.