"[C]ertain legal notices — such as probate and foreclosure notices — `must ... be published in a newspaper of general circulation....'" (In re Establishment of Eureka Reporter (2008) 165 Cal.App.4th 891, 895 [81 Cal.Rptr.3d 497].) Government Code section 6000
Section 6006
The Sonoma County Herald Recorder (Herald Recorder) was adjudicated a "newspaper of general circulation" in 1953 and currently publishes various legal notices, such as notices of trustee sales. In 2010, the Press Democrat — a Sonoma County daily newspaper and a competing "newspaper of general circulation" — moved to vacate the Herald Recorder adjudication. The trial
The Press Democrat appeals. It contends the court erred by denying the motion to vacate because the Herald Recorder did not qualify for the section 6006 exemption and, in the alternative, because the Herald Recorder did not establish it had a "bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers" under section 6000.
In April 1953, the Herald Recorder, then operating as the Sonoma County Herald, petitioned for adjudication as a newspaper of general circulation under section 6000. The petition alleged the Sonoma County Herald (1) was a "newspaper of general circulation published for the dissemination of local and telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character at Santa Rosa, in the County of Sonoma"; (2) "ha[d] a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers"; and (3) had been printed, established, and published at regular intervals in Santa Rosa "since 1899." In May 1953, the court granted the unopposed petition and entered a judgment establishing the Sonoma County Herald a newspaper of general circulation. The court determined, among other things, the Sonoma County Herald had a "bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers."
The Sonoma County Herald changed its name to the Herald Recorder and, in 1963, the court modified the judgment to reflect the name change. In 1988, the Los Angeles-based Daily Journal Corporation acquired the Herald Recorder and later moved the printing of the newspaper to the Daily Journal Corporation's Los Angeles printing facilities.
The Herald Recorder publishes "a large percentage of the Notices of Trustee's Sales in the City of Santa Rosa and the County of Sonoma." It also publishes "some notices for the County of Sonoma, such as Ordinances and Notice[s] of Hearings."
The Press Democrat is a daily newspaper circulated in Santa Rosa and throughout Sonoma County. It was adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation in 1951. Approximately 42,842 subscribe to its weekday editions in Sonoma County; approximately 20,499 subscribe to the weekday editions in Santa Rosa. The New York Times Company owns the Press Democrat.
In August 2010, the Press Democrat moved to vacate the judgment establishing the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation (§ 6024). The Press Democrat argued the Herald Recorder "`ceased to be' a newspaper of general circulation" because it was not printed in the city or county of publication and did not have a bona fide list of paying subscribers pursuant to section 6000. It also contended the Herald Recorder could not qualify as a newspaper of general circulation pursuant to section 6008, which provides alternate criteria for qualifying as a newspaper of general circulation. Finally, the Press Democrat claimed the Herald Recorder did not qualify for the exemption set forth in section 6006.
The Press Democrat's verified statement of facts offered in support of the petition averred (1) the Daily Journal owns the Herald Recorder and publishes it in Los Angeles; (2) the Herald Recorder had 110 subscribers who received the newspaper five days a week, a decrease from 400 subscribers in 1989; and (3) the 2010 population of Sonoma County is 493,285 and the population of Santa Rosa is 163,436. The verified statement of facts attached supporting documents.
In opposition to the motion, the Herald Recorder argued it was not required to be printed in the City of Santa Rosa pursuant to section 6006 because it was a newspaper of general circulation prior to 1923. The Herald Recorder claimed: "[i]t cannot be seriously argued that a newspaper publishing legal notices for over 100 years ... would not be entitled to the ... exemption" set forth in section 6006.
Relying on In re San Diego Commerce (1995) 40 Cal.App.4th 1229, 1232-1236 [47 Cal.Rptr.2d 303] (San Diego Commerce), the Herald Recorder also contended it had a bona fide list of paying subscribers pursuant to section 6000 because it had "82 total paid subscribers, 50 of whom reside in the City of Santa Rosa and 79 of whom reside in the County of Sonoma," which equates to "paid subscribers of slightly over .03% of the population," the same percentage as was found to be a bona fide list of paid subscribers in San Diego Commerce. The Herald Recorder noted that its paid subscribers included, among others, a library, a mortuary, a vineyard, a cabinet company, and a real estate company.
The Herald Recorder also filed an August 31, 2010 list of its "paid subscribers" under seal (Subscription List). Without citing any authority, the Herald Recorder claimed the Subscription List constituted a "trade secret." The unredacted version of the Subscription List listed 80 "subscribers" in the County of Sonoma by name, address, phone number, account number, and the date the subscription expired.
Counsel for the Herald Recorder gave the Press Democrat a redacted copy of the Subscription List on an unspecified date before the hearing. The redacted copy omitted the name, address, and telephone number of the "subscriber." The day before the hearing on the motion to vacate, counsel for the Herald Recorder made the unredacted Subscription List available to counsel for the Press Democrat.
The Press Democrat raised two arguments in reply. First, it argued the Herald Recorder failed to satisfy its burden of proving it qualified for the section 6006 exemption. The Press Democrat noted the absence of a court decree prior to 1923 adjudicating the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation and argued the Herald Recorder did not and could not establish it "met all the requirements to qualify as an established newspaper of general circulation" before 1923, specifically that it had a bona fide list of paying subscribers prior to 1923 and was printing legal notices prior to 1923. The Press Democrat also argued the school bond election notice in the 1906 edition of the Windsor Herald was not a legal notice required to be published in a newspaper of general circulation.
In a tentative ruling, the court denied the motion to vacate.
At the hearing, counsel for the Press Democrat argued there was no evidence the Herald Recorder was a newspaper of general circulation before 1923. Counsel argued the 1906 and 1949 copies of the Herald Recorder submitted in opposition to the motion to vacate did not demonstrate the Herald Recorder was a newspaper of general circulation in 1923, specifically because the school bond notice in the copy of the 1906 Herald Recorder "was not covered by the predecessor to [section] 6000. In other words, it is not a legal notice.... [Former] Political Ed[ucation] Code Section 1881 ... specifically says that a notice of a school district bond election can be
Counsel also noted there was no evidence the Herald Recorder had a bona fide list of paying subscribers in 1923 and discussed several cases addressing whether a certain number of paying subscribers constituted a "bona fide list of paying subscribers" pursuant to section 6006.
In response, counsel for the Herald Recorder questioned the Press Democrat's motives for moving to vacate the judgment establishing the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation. Counsel also contended the school bond notice published in the 1906 edition of the Herald Recorder was a "legal notice" and that the Herald Recorder's inability to locate a paid subscriber list from 1923 did not preclude it from qualifying as a newspaper of general circulation in 1923.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the court adopted the tentative ruling and denied the motion to vacate the judgment establishing the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation for the City of Santa Rosa and the County of Sonoma. A few days later, the court issued a protective order nunc pro tunc designating the subscriber list as "`Attorneys' Eyes Only'" and designating it "confidential." In a January 2011 written order, the court denied the Press Democrat's motion to vacate the adjudication of the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation for Santa Rosa and Sonoma County.
Before 1923, former Political Code section 4460 defined a newspaper of general circulation as "a newspaper published for the dissemination of local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character, having a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers, and which shall have been established, printed and published at regular intervals, in the state, county, city, city and county, or town, where such publication, notice by publication, or official advertising is given or made, for at least one year preceding the date of such publication, notice or advertisement...." In 1943, the Legislature replaced section 4460, without significant modifications, with section 6000. (In re Establishment of Eureka Reporter, supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at p. 898 & fn. 6; see former Pol. Code, § 4460 [added by Stats. 1905, ch. 345, pp. 406, 407], replaced without modification by § 6000 [added by Stats. 1943, ch. 134, p. 987].)
The Herald Recorder did not prove it was a newspaper of general circulation prior to 1923. In opposition to the motion to vacate, the Herald Recorder presented the following evidence: (1) the declaration of its publisher, Griego, who averred the Herald Recorder was established in 1899; (2) Griego's further declaration that the only copy of the Herald Recorder's predecessor Griego could locate from the years 1899 to 1940 was a March 24, 1906 edition of the Windsor Herald, containing a "School Bond Election Notice" that she asserted "appear[ed] to be a legal notice"; and (3) a copy of the May 30, 1949 "50th Anniversary" edition of the Santa Rosa Herald, "another predecessor to the Herald Recorder" which contained three pages of legal notices, including notices of trustee sales, and notices to creditors.
Second, Griego's claim that the school bond election notice "appear[ed] to be a legal notice" did not demonstrate the notice was a "legal notice" required to be published in a newspaper of general circulation. As it did in the trial court, the Press Democrat contends school districts were not required to publish notices in a newspaper of general circulation in 1906, when the Herald Recorder's predecessor newspaper published the school bond election notice. The Press Democrat relies on former Political Code section 1881, which required a notice of a school bond election to be "called by posting notices, signed by the board, in three of the most public places in the district, for not less than twenty days before the election; and if there is a newspaper published in the county, by publishing such notice therein not less than once a week for three successive weeks." (Former Pol. Code, § 1881 [added by Stats. 1881, ch. 54, p. 62]; see id., § 4458 [added by Stats. 1903, ch. 361, § 1, p. 478, amended by Stats. 1905, ch. 345, § 1, p. 406]; see Palos Verdes Library Dist. v. McClellan (1929) 97 Cal.App. 769, 777-778 [276 P. 600].) The Herald Recorder did not respond to this argument in the trial court or on appeal.
In the absence of any evidence that it published legal notices before 1923, the Herald Recorder failed to satisfy the requirements of section 6006 because it did not establish it published "`local or telegraphic news and intelligence of a general character'" before 1923 or that it had a bona fide subscription list of paying subscribers in 1923. The Herald Recorder concedes it did not provide a "paid subscriber list in existence sometime between 1899 and 1922," or produce a witness to "authenticate the content of each and every issue of a newspaper published in Santa Rosa some 90 years ago."
Because the Herald Recorder did not prove it qualified for the exemption set forth in section 6006, its adjudication as a newspaper of general circulation must be vacated because it is not printed in Santa Rosa or Sonoma County. (See In re Covina Argus-Citizen (1960) 177 Cal.App.2d 315, 318 [2 Cal.Rptr. 184] [trial court properly vacated adjudication of The Covina-Argus Citizen as a newspaper of general circulation where it was not "printed and published within the city of Covina"]; cf. Brown Newspaper Publishing
Having reached this result, we need not address the Press Democrat's claims that the Subscription List was "sealed in violation of the Rules of Court" and that the court erred by concluding the Herald Recorder currently has a "bona fide list of paying subscribers" under section 6000.
In May 2011, the parties filed a joint request to augment the record with various documents that should have been, but were not, included in the clerk's transcript. These documents include the redacted Subscription List and the requests for judicial notice considered by the trial court in connection with the motion to vacate. We granted the request.
In July 2011, the Press Democrat filed an unopposed request for judicial notice asking the court to take judicial notice of various documents filed in connection with its motion to vacate and were judicially noticed by the trial court. We initially deferred a ruling on the request for judicial notice. We now grant the request. (Evid. Code, § 459 ["reviewing court shall take judicial notice of (1) each matter properly noticed by the trial court and (2) each matter that the trial court was required to notice under [Evidence Code] Section[s] 451 or 453"]; see Simons, Cal. Evidence Manual (2012 ed.) § 7:24, p. 560.)
In February 2012, the Press Democrat filed an unopposed supplemental request for judicial notice asking this court to take judicial notice of pleadings filed in the trial court and Court of Appeal by the Herald Recorder in In re Molz (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 836 [26 Cal.Rptr.3d 131]. The Press Democrat claims these documents are "relevant to show that statements made by [the Herald Recorder] in the instant appeal ... as to the proof requirements of ... [section] 6006 and the legislative intent of California's adjudication statutes are inconsistent with statements made by the owner of [the Herald Recorder] on these exact issues in a prior adjudication proceeding."
We initially deferred a ruling on the supplemental request for judicial notice. We now deny the supplemental request for judicial notice for several reasons. First, Molz is an unrelated case concerning the Metropolitan News-Enterprise and the Daily Journal Corporation, neither of which are parties to this appeal. Second, the Press Democrat does not contend the statements in the Daily Journal's briefs in Molz are judicial admissions, nor does the Press Democrat claim judicial estoppel precludes the Herald Recorder's arguments in this appeal.
The order denying the Press Democrat's motion to vacate adjudication of the Herald Recorder as a newspaper of general circulation pursuant to section 6024 is reversed and the matter is remanded to the trial court to enter a new order granting the motion to vacate. The Press Democrat is entitled to costs on appeal.
Simons, J., and Bruiniers, J., concurred.