Fagan v. Mayor & Common Council of Hoboken
Fagan v. Mayor & Common Council of Hoboken
Opinion of the Court
On the 2d day of January, 1903, the common council of the city of Hoboken by resolution, with consent of the mayor, designated the “Hoboken Observer” as the official newspaper of the city of Hoboken under the act of 1892. Pamph. L., p. 414; 3 Comp. Stat., 3767, § 24.
The section of the act directly involved in the matter presented for decision reads: “That it shall be lawful for the common council * * * with the consent of the mayor of any city of the second class in this state (Hoboken is a city of the second class), to designate by resolution the official newspaper or newspapers published in any such city, in which shall be solely published all official notices, ordinances, advertisements * * * and to fix a compensation to be paid by the city for the service rendered by such official newspaper or newspapers.” By a resolution of the 28th day of August, 1912, the common council of the city of Hoboken ordered claims of the Ivins Printing and Publishing Company, who publish a newspaper in said city designated as the “Hew Inquirer,” for the publication of official notices, ordinances, and other matters coming within the section of the act above set forth, in said newspaper, amounting to $214.36, to be paid. The “Hew Inquirer” had not been formally designated by the common council as the official newspaper of the city of Hoboken. This is one of the reasons why the prosecutor seeks to have this resolution set aside. A further reason urged is that the “Hoboken Observer,” having been designated as the official newspaper in 1903 and no change having been made therein, it is still the official newspaper and that the publication of the matters in the “Hew Inquirer” was unauthorized by law and hence an illegal act and the common council was therefore without any authority to order payment of the claims. We are unable to concede to this view of the effect of the statute of 1892. It is to be observed that the statute is not mandatory in its terms. It is clearly directory. It simply permits a common council of a city of the second class, by resolution, with the consent of the mayor, to designate one or more official news
There is nothing in the act which prohibits the common council from designating more than one newspaper as official. This has been expressly decided by this court in Anderson v. Camden, 29 Vroom. 515, where Mr. Justice Gummere, on page 521, in commenting on this act, says: “The common council of cities of the second class, with the consent of the mayor, were each of them authorized to designate by resolution, and without limitation as to the political complexion thereof, the official newspaper or newspapers in which should be solely published all official notices, ordinances, advertisements and official proceedings relating to the municipal affairs of any such city. Camden is a city of the second class, and on the 21st of February, 1894, in pursuance of the authority conferred by the act of 1892, it designated the “Post,” “Courier” and “Telegram” as its official papers.” It follows from this judicial declaration that there is vested in the mayor and common council the authority to designate more than oik! official newspaper in cities of the second class. It is therefore inconceivable upon what sound legal principle an irregularity in the method in which this authority has been exercised can make the act resulting from such authority, though accomplished in an irregular manner, a nugatory or illegal one. The authorized act though accomplished in an irregular manner is valid, unless there is something in the statute which would make it otherwise. As has been said, we find nothing in the statute which makes it obligatory, in its terms, upon cities of the second class to designate any official newspaper or newspapers. The authority to designate more than one official newspaper is clear. It follows, there
Prom the testimony taken in this case it appears that it was not the custom of the common council to direct the city clerk in what newspapers to publish the required official notices, &c., and that it has been the uniform custom for the city clerk to advertise in such newspapers as he might select and the bills therefor were afterwards submitted to the council and ordered paid; that this mode of procedure had been going on since 1906.
Thus it appears that at least since 1906, the common council had not recognized any official newspaper by express designation and although the bulk of official matter was published in the “Hoboken Observer,” other newspapers were permitted to share in the publication of official matter required to be published, without any question.
The bills attacked in this proceeding were ordered paid by resolution of the common council, with the approval of the mayor, and the public had the benefit and reaped the advan
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.