In Re Molz
In Re Molz
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 838
We are called upon to determine whether a newspaper of general circulation that was established prior to 1923 may, without publishing notice, obtain an adjudication that it is a newspaper of general circulation for every city incorporated since 1923 within the county in which the newspaper is established. We conclude that doing so is inconsistent with applicable statutes and contrary to public policy.
The impact of becoming a newspaper of general circulation for a city is significant. Certain legal notices, such as fictitious business name notices, may be published in any adjudicated newspaper in the county. (Bus. Prof. Code, §
Norwalk Call held that where a newspaper had before 1923 met the requirements to qualify as an established newspaper of general circulation for a township, the facts that the township subsequently was incorporated as a city and that the newspaper was not printed within the city did not terminate the newspaper's standing as of general circulation for the geographical area. (Norwalk Call, supra,
In April 2001, the Met News filed a second application for modification of the 1952 decree. This application was filed ex parte and without publication. It sought to further modify the judgment to include cities incorporated after 1923 within the County of Los Angeles. Judge Malcolm Mackey granted the application, and decreed the Met News a newspaper of general circulation, as defined in section 6000, for the Cities of Artesia, Baldwin Park, Bell, Bell Gardens, Bellflower, Calabasas, Carson, Cerritos, Commerce, Diamond Bar, Downey, Gardena, Hawaiian Gardens, Industry, La Canada-Flintridge, La Habra Heights, Lakewood, La Mirada, Lancaster, La Puente, Lawndale, Lomita, Los Angeles, Malibu, Norwalk, Palmdale, Paramount, Pico Rivera, Rancho Palos Verdes, Palos Verdes Estates, Rolling Hills, Rolling Hills Estates, Rosemead, San Dimas, Santa Fe Springs, Santa Clarita, Signal Hill, South El Monte, Temple City, Walnut, and West Hollywood, as well as the County of Los Angeles, and State of California. *Page 841
The Daily Journal asserts that it discovered the 2001 order in January 2003. In February 2003, the Daily Journal filed a motion to vacate the 2001 order. The motion states as grounds for relief that the Met News failed to publish notice as required by section 6021 and that a blanket adjudication for all cities in Los Angeles County incorporated after 1923 is impermissible. The Daily Journal disqualified Judge Mackey, pursuant to section
Judge Bruguera denied the motion to vacate the 2001 modification. This appeal followed. We permitted the California Newspaper Publishers Association (CNPA) to file a brief as amicus curiae in support of the Daily Journal.
The Met News has moved for dismissal of the appeal, arguing that the order denying the motion to vacate is not appealable. We reject this contention.
A proceeding to adjudicate that a newspaper is a newspaper of general circulation is a special proceeding governed by section 6000 et seq. (See In re Herman (1920)
Former section 963 and current section 904.1 are both located in part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Met News points out that our Supreme *Page 842
Court has held that the provisions of part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure (§§ 307-1062.20) do not apply to special proceedings unless the statutes governing the special proceeding expressly incorporate those procedures. (Carpenter v. Pacific Mut. L. Ins.Co. (1939)
Other decisions of our Supreme Court, however, established a right to appeal from final judgments in special proceedings based upon provisions contained in part 2. Early cases relied upon former section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which expressly authorized an appeal from a final judgment in an action or special proceeding. (See In re De La O (1963)
Nor do we find that the Legislature's failure to expressly state that the denial of a motion pursuant to section 6024 is appealable evidences a legislative intent that the order not be appealable. (See Westervelt v. McCullough (1923)
We hold that an order denying a motion to vacate pursuant to section 6024 is appealable.
Even were the order not appealable, we would treat the Daily Journal's appeal as a petition for writ relief. (See Angell v.Superior Court (1999)
II. Publication
The Daily Journal contends that the Met News was required to publish notice of its 2001 motion for modification, relying upon section 6021, which requires publication of a petition "for an order declaring it to be a newspaper of general circulation." Section 6022 provides that "[u]pon proof of the publication of the petition and notice, the court shall set the petition for hearing."
The Met News did not petition pursuant to section 6021, however. Instead, it filed its motion to modify under section 6024, which provides: "(1) The decision and judgment may be vacated, modified or set aside by the court on its own motion, or on the motion of any person, whether a party to the original proceeding or not upon: [¶] (a) A verified statement of facts being made to the court. [¶] (b) Ten days' notice to the petitioner. [¶] (c) A satisfactory showing made to the court that the newspaper has ceased to be a newspaper of general circulation. [¶] (2) The decision and judgment may be modified by the court on its own motion, or on the motion of any person interested, whether a party to the original proceeding or not, upon a similar verified statement and the same notice and a satisfactory showing made to the court that the newspaper had modified its name without any substantial change in its character or identity as a newspaper of general circulation."
Relief pursuant to section 6024 is available upon a showing either that "the newspaper had ceased to be a newspaper of general circulation" or that "the newspaper has modified its name without any substantial change in its character or identity as a newspaper of general circulation." (§ 6024, subds. (1)(c), (2).) The Met News made neither showing. Instead, it sought an order declaring it to be a newspaper of general circulation for certain cities in Los Angeles County. We therefore conclude that section 6024 did not afford a basis for such an order. *Page 844
Section 6021 requires publication of notice where a petition seeks an order declaring a newspaper to be a newspaper of general circulation. Since the Met News sought such an order, and not a mere name change, section 6021 applied. This is a case where application of the plain meaning of the statute also achieves the object and purpose of the legislative scheme. (See In re CovinaArgus-Citizen (1960)
We conclude that the Met News's 2001 motion for modification was in substance a petition for an order declaring it to be a newspaper of general circulation pursuant to section 6020. The Met News was therefore required to meet the publication requirements of section 6021. Absent notice, the trial court was without statutory authority to hear and grant such a motion. (§ 6022.)
III. The motion to vacate
The Met News contends that the Daily Journal, having filed a motion to vacate pursuant to section 6024, was required to show changed circumstances, and that it failed to do so. The Met News also urges that any challenge to the 2001 order should have been made by appeal or by writ in this court.
Failure to provide notice, particularly in an in rem proceeding, results in a ruling that is subject to collateral attack. (See Estate of Buckley (1982)
IV. Social policy
Both parties and the amicus curiae have extensively briefed the many public policy implications of the dispute over adjudication of newspapers as newspapers of general circulation in the myriad cities of the county. The Daily Journal and CNPA emphasize the social policy that public notices appear in local papers, where interested persons have a reasonable opportunity to view them. They assert that a downtown newspaper, such as the Met News, cannot be effective in reaching the residents of outlying cities. They also urge that the Legislature intended to limit newspapers to adjudication for no more than one city.
Additional newspapers supported the Daily Journal's position below. While we do not know the number of newspapers poised to follow the Met News's lead, should it receive an affirmative outcome, the parties point to two superior court decisions in which petitioning newspapers sought to be adjudicated of general circulation for every city incorporated within a county since 1923 under the reasoning of Norwalk Call, supra,
The Met News asserts that the policy at issue is competition, and that CNPA is supporting those of its members with monopolies in the new municipalities. In addition, the Met News asserts that it was not awarded new adjudications for 40 additional cities by virtue of the 2001 order, but rather obtained a clarification that it was not to lose territory because of the post-1923 formation of cities within theretofore unincorporated areas of the county. Thus, it should be allowed to compete in those markets and by so doing obtain a price benefit for the public. The Met News also argues that in our mobile society, creditors of the residents of small outlying cities are more likely than not to live in a larger city within the county and work in a more commercial area.
The parties have not developed a factual record sufficient to address these issues. While they dispute the Met News's circulation, the record contains no evidence regarding whether the Met News has "a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers, and has been established . . . and published at regular intervals" in the cities in issue. (§ 6000.) Interested parties, given the opportunity, may raise additional issues. *Page 846
V. Remand
We shall reverse the order appealed from, and direct the trial court to grant the motion to vacate the 2001 order. We do not reach the merits. These important issues all deserve a thorough hearing in the trial court.
Boren, P.J., and Ashmann-Gerst, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 14, 2005, and respondent's petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 8, 2005.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In Re Application of Henry Molz, Publisher, for Establishment of the Los Angeles Enterprise as a Newspaper of General Circulation. Metropolitan News-Enterprise, and v. Daily Journal Corporation, Objector And
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published