Ruble v. Redden

1973 OK 157, 517 P.2d 1124
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 26, 1973
Docket44974
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1973 OK 157 (Ruble v. Redden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruble v. Redden, 1973 OK 157, 517 P.2d 1124 (Okla. 1973).

Opinion

SIMMS, Justice:

The question presented is whether a newspaper which meets all the other requirements for publication of legal notices should be denied the official status of a legal publication because its newspapers are not reproduced within the county.

Under the facts and circumstances of the instant case, we hold that the requirement of printing set forth in 25 O.S.1971, § 106(c) should not be construed in its strict literal sense to deny the papers of plaintiffs in error the official status of legal publications.

*1125 Title 25, O.S. § 106 was amended in 1973, subsequent to filing of the appeal. The effect of this amendment will be treated in this opinion.

Reddens, appellants, defendants in the trial court, are owners and publishers of the Dewey County News, 51 years old, 1579 circulation; Leedey Star, 36 years old, 536 circulation; and, Vici Beacon, 59 years old, 944 circulation.

Edna Ruble, appellee, plaintiff in the trial court, is owner and publisher of the Taloga Times Advocate, which is 76 years old, 769 circulation, and along with her son and daughter-in-law, own two other newspapers in Dewey County; Vici News, 3 years old, 298 circulation; and, Seiling News Record, 3 years old, 1079 circulation.

The Reddens, defendants, have published legal notices in each of their newspapers since their inception. Plaintiffs complain, however, of Reddens continuing to publish legal notices after June 26, 1969, the date on which defendants began reproducing their newspapers outside the county.

The evidence is undisputed.

Defendants’ newspapers are all distributed in Dewey County, Oklahoma, at Vici, Leedey, and Seiling, respectively. An office is maintained at each location for the respective newspapers. One of the defendant partners manages the newspaper at Vici, and another partner manages the newspaper at Seiling. An employee maintains the office at Leedey.

Each newspaper is distributed under a second class mailing privilege in Dewey County. Advertising and subscriptions are solicited; news is gathered; and, the papers are edited at the central office located in Seiling, Dewey County.

The material for the newspapers is typed; the typed material is put into columns; headlines are produced; and, advertising is prepared in the Seiling office. All this material is then pasted onto a “mock-up sheet” exactly as it will appear when the newspaper is issued, except for local pictures. The mock-up sheets are then taken to Cheyenne in adjoining Roger Mills County, where the defendants have another newspaper. There the newspapers are reproduced by the off-set method. After reproduction, the finished newspapers are returned to the local offices in Dewey County for distribution. Until June 26, 1969, the papers were not taken to Cheyenne. On that date the Reddens began using the off-set method of printing.

In her second amended petition, plaintiff complains that defendants’ publishing of legal notices violates 25 O.S.1971, § 106, and “is injurious to the profits and good will of the plaintiff’s newspaper business and is unfair competition . . . ”; “that such action will work irreparable injury to the plaintiff’s said newspaper business

For her first cause of action, plaintiff prays for an injunction restraining defendants from publishing any legal notices in their newspapers until the newspapers are printed in Dewey County; and, for her second cause of action, plaintiff asks for a “declaratory judgment determining that said newspapers are not newspapers entitled to publish legal notices.”

The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff of both causes of action.

The pertinent portion of 25 O.S.1971, § 106, reads as follows:

“No legal notice, advertisement, or publication of any kind required or provided by any of the laws of the State of Oklahoma to be published in a newspaper shall have any force or effect as such, unless the same be published in a newspaper of the county which, during a period of one hundred four (104) consecutive weeks immediately prior to the first publication of such notice, advertisement or publication:
(a) has maintained a paid general subscription circulation in such county,
(b) has been admitted to the United States mails as second class mail matter,
*1126 (c) has been printed in the county where delivered to the United States mails; . . .,
(d) has been continuously and uninterruptedly published in such county.”

The above statute was amended by Session Laws 1973, c. 5, sec. 1, effective March 6, 1973, by adding the provision giving the district court the power, under specified conditions, to allow a newspaper to retain its legal qualification even though it is printed outside the county. The conditions set forth in the amendment are as follows':

“Such order shall be issued by the district court upon satisfactory proof (1) that the newspaper can be printed more efficiently outside the county, (2) that the newspaper complies with all requirements for a legal newspaper as provided in this statute, and (3) that the said newspaper shall be entered in the United States mails in the city or town and in the county in which the newspaper is otherwise qualified to publish legal notices, advertisements or publications of any kind required or provided for by any of the laws of the State of Oklahoma.”

We find that the 1973 amendment to 25 O.S.1971, § 106 restricts, rather than enlarges upon a newspaper’s right to reproduce its papers outside the county, at least insofar as the instant case is concerned. We hold that prior to the 1973 amendment of the statute, a newspaper, under certain conditions, could have its reproduction facilities outside the county. The 1973 amendment to § 106 merely codifies the conditions and sets forth the additional requirement of an order from the district court.

Plaintiff urges that the word “printed” should be strictly construed to require the entire process of the newspaper business to be carried on within the county where the legal notice is published. Defendant alleges 25 O.S.1971, § 106, is unconstitutional.

The legislature has an interest in seeing that the publication of legal notices is accomplished in a manner most likely to reach the persons affected by or interested in the notice. The circulation, distribution, and publication requirement of the statute satisfied the legislature’s concern. The further requirement of printing within the county is not unreasonable and violative of the constitution if the word “printed” is not too strictly defined. It is a fundamental and established principle that where there are two possible interpretations of a statute, one which would render the statute unconstitutional, and another which would render the statute valid, the Court should adopt the construction which will uphold the statute. Thompson v. Smith, 189 Okl. 217, 114 P.2d 922 (1941).

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Bluebook (online)
1973 OK 157, 517 P.2d 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruble-v-redden-okla-1973.