Blake v. City of Tampa

156 So. 97, 115 Fla. 348, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1595
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 156 So. 97 (Blake v. City of Tampa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. City of Tampa, 156 So. 97, 115 Fla. 348, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1595 (Fla. 1934).

Opinions

Davis, C. J.

The City of Tampa, a municipal corporation, filed its amended bill against Charles' F. Blake, H. Dorsey McMichael and Philip Robin, as and constituting the Trustees of Consolidated Special Tax School District *350 No. 4 of Hillsborough County, the object of the suit being to enforce, by foreclosure and sale of the affected premises, a special assessment improvement lien, imposed by the City of Tampa, Florida, on certain school property as the school district’s proportionate part of the cost incurred by the city for the making of a street improvement abutting the school premises.

A motion to dismiss the amended bill of complaint, which the Chancellor denied, gave rise to this appeal whereon is presented to us for determination, the following question of law: “Is property acquired and used for public school purposes, owned by a special tax school district under the constitution and laws of Florida, subject to be decreed in equity to be sold to pay a special assessment entered by a municipal corporation against said school property to pay what has been deterpained by the municipal authorities pursuant to statute to be the school district’s proportionate part of the cost of grading, paving and curbing an abutting street, it appearing that special statutory authority has been conferrred upon the municipality to order street improvements and to impose on abutting properties special assessments in proportion to benefits to pay the cost thereof?”

From the allegations of the amended bill it appears that in substantial accordance with the precedural requirements of Tampa Local Improvement Act (Chapter 11232, Special Acts 1925), a final assessment was made on May 3, 1927, by the City of Tampa, against certain premises owned by Consolidated Special Tax School District No. 4, upon which premises was situated a county high school used for county and special tax school district purposes.

The assessment, in the original amount of $8,095.07, represented the cost of grading, paving and curbing an abutting street known as Central Avenue. That assessment, under *351 the provisions of Chapter 15536, Acts of 1931, Laws of Florida, was reduced to the principal sum of $5,396.72, the difference being absorbed by the City of Tampa. The special assessment of May 3, 1927, as so reduced by the Act’of 1931, was by the 1931 Act undertaken to be confirmed, validated and made incontestable under a general validating provision of the statute.

Default having been duly alleged in the paying of installments of the assessment made against the school properties, the amended bill asserted the right of the city to enforce under Chapter 11232, Special Acts of 1925, an amended and reduced lien in its favor. Foreclosure of the lien and sale of the premises under decree of the court for the amount due the City of Tampa for principal, interest and attorney’s fees, was prayed.

Appellants’ motion to dismiss asserted in substance that the bill was without equity. But as special grounds for that assertion it also set up that the bill was an attempt on the part of the city, through the instrumentality of the court, to divert public school property to uses not permitted, in violation of Sections 10, 11 and 13 of Article XII of the Constitution of Florida; that Chapter 11232, Acts of 1925, insofar as' it applied to school property, violated Sections 10, 11 and 13 of said constitutional Article XII, and 'that Chapter 15536, Acts of 1931, was violative of the enumerated sections of the Florida constitution insofar as' it undertook to validate or legalize, in whole or in part, or in any amount, the alleged special assessment specified in the complainant’s amended bill of complaint.

In addition to the usual and ordinary provisions which are customarily incorporated into a municipal special improvement statute of the character of the Tampa Local *352 Improvement Act, Chapter 11232, supra, contained a particular section which reads as follows:

“Sec. 32. Hillsborough County, and any school district or other political subdivision wholly or partly within said City, shall possess the same power and be subject to the same duties and liabilities in respect of said assessments affecting its real estate that private owners' of real estate possess, or are subject to hereunder, and such real estate of said county, school districts and political subdivisions shall be subject to liens for said assessments in all cases' where the same property would be subject had it at the time the lien attached been owned by a private owner.”

Section 18 of the same Chapter reads as follows:

“Sec. 18. The said assessments shall constitute a lien upon the property so asséssed from the date of the passage of the resolution ordering the improvement, of the same nature and to the same extent as the lien for general city taxes, and shall be collectible in the same manner and with the same attorney’s fee, interest and penalties after default in payment and under the same provisions as to sale and forfeiture as city taxes are collectible. Collection of such assessments, with such interest and penalties and with a reasonable attorney’s fee, may also be made by the city by proceedings in a court of equity to foreclose the lien of assessments as a lien for mortgages is or may be foreclosed under the laws of the State, and it shall be lawful to join in any bill for foreclosure any one or more lots or parcels of land, by whomsoever owned, if assessed for an improvement ordered by the same resolution; provided that failure to pay any installment of principal or interest of any assessment when such installment shall become due shall without notice or other proceedings, cause all installments of principal remaining unpaid to be forthwith due and pay *353 able, with interest due thereon at the date of default and further interest as herein provided.”

It appears from the provisions of Chapter 15536, supra, that under the Tampa Local Improvement Act, the entire cost had in the first instance been assessed against the property deemed to be benefited, including the school property here involved. By its 1931 Act the Legislature reassessed the benefits by authorizing the City of Tampa to reduce to the extent of one-third the principal amount of such assessments and to extend the time for the payment of all such assessments as so reduced into twenty equal annual installments. Section 8 of said Chapter 15536, supra, provided that all the assessments theretofore made to the extent of sixty-six and two-thirds per cent, thereof should be and the same were thereby validated and legalized, and declared valid, binding and incontestible.

In Article XII of the Constitution of the State of Florida, by Section 1, it is provided:

“The Legislature shall provide for a uniform system of public free schools and shall provide for the liberal maintenance of the same.”

By Section 13 it is provided:

“No law shall be enacted authorizing the diversion * * * of any county or district school funds or the appropriation of any part of the permanent or available school fund to any other than school purposes.”

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 97, 115 Fla. 348, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-city-of-tampa-fla-1934.