Brooker v. Smith

108 So. 2d 790
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 4, 1959
Docket772
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 108 So. 2d 790 (Brooker v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooker v. Smith, 108 So. 2d 790 (Fla. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

108 So.2d 790 (1959)

Tom BROOKER, for himself and on behalf of all other taxpayers in the City of Naples, Florida, similarly situated, Appellant,
v.
W. Roy SMITH, individually, and as Mayor of the City of Naples, Florida, a municipal corporation, Appellee.

No. 772.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

February 4, 1959.

*791 John W. Wright, Daniel Neal Heller, Herbert M. Klein, Miami, for appellant.

Sheppard & Woolslair, Fort Myers, for appellee.

ALLEN, Judge.

This is an interlocutory appeal from two orders in a suit for an accounting and other equitable relief. Such orders deal with a number of motions made by the parties, but only portions thereof, as hereinafter shown, are pertinent to this interlocutory appeal. Plaintiff appeals.

Tom Brooker, as a taxpayer in the City of Naples, brought suit against W. Roy Smith, individually and as Mayor of the City of Naples, to require defendant to account for certain sums of money allegedly received by defendant, while mayor, contrary to law.

Basically, plaintiff's complaint alleged that the City of Naples, contrary to its charter and the statutes of Florida, dealt with business firms in which defendant had an interest, and that defendant, contrary to said charter, received certain perquisites. Defendant's amended answer denied the illegality alleged, set out the various sums received by him while in office, and set out his relationship with the various business firms involved.

Plaintiff moved for a summary decree on the issue of liability, and defendant filed an affidavit in opposition to such motion. In his affidavit, defendant denies all impropriety except that he admits certain group insurance premiums were improperly paid by the city for his benefit and that he received one monthly paycheck, in the amount of thirty five dollars, too much. Plaintiff's motion was denied by the chancellor's order dated May 19, 1958.

Defendant filed a petition alleging that plaintiff came into the involved suit with unclean hands, the basis for such allegation being that plaintiff filed said suit solely for the purpose of defeating defendant in his attempt to obtain re-election as mayor in an election held February 4, 1958, this suit having been filed January 22, 1958. The petition then requested that such issue be determined in a separate trial prior to final hearing or trial of the main suit. Plaintiff moved to strike and to quash defendant's petition as not being proper under the Rules of Civil Procedure. The chancellor, in said May 19, 1958, order, granted defendant's petition and denied plaintiff's motion to strike and to quash.

Finally, plaintiff moved to have defendant cited for contempt and for other related relief because of alleged failure of defendant to respond adequately to a subpoena duces tecum. The chancellor, in an order entered July 1, 1958, deferred ruling on the motion and held as follows:

"3. That the Court holds that Rule 1.28 and Rule 1.34 of the 1954 Rules of Civil Procedure are in pari materia and the production of documents for *792 discovery by subpoena duces tecum under Rule 1.34 of a party, as distinguished from a witness not a party, may not be compelled without the showing of good cause required by Rule 1.28."

Plaintiff's first point on appeal, in effect, questions the propriety of that portion of the chancellor's order of May 19, 1958, which denied plaintiff's motion for summary decree as to defendant's liability.

Before going to the merits of plaintiff's first point, we are impelled to recognize a question of procedure raised by defendant. Though we cannot agree with defendant that the defect hereinafter discussed warrants affirmance without consideration of the merit of plaintiff's first point, we do feel that such defect requires some comment. Without quoting the point in question, we would explain that plaintiff has fallen into the error so frequently committed by attorneys filing briefs before this court, that is, formulation of the point to be argued by the statement of factual or legal premises which can obviously form a basis for only one legal conclusion, the one sought by appellant. Seldom it is that such an approach is proper, for in the great majority of appeals, if not in all, the very question to be determined is the existence or effect of one or more of the premises assumed by the appellant.

Turning now to the merits of plaintiff's first point, we shall first quote the pertinent sections of the charter of the City of Naples, Sections 10 and 11, Chapter 26044, Sp.Laws 1949:

"Section 10. The affairs of the City shall be administered by a Council composed of four Councilmen and a Mayor, Manager, Clerk, Chief of Police, Tax Assessor, Tax Collector, and Treasurer, and such other officers as the Council may from time to time deem necessary.
"The Mayor shall be elected from the qualified electors of said City for a period of two years or until his successor is duly elected and qualified. He shall be paid $35.00 per month and shall not be entitled to any perquisites. The present Mayor shall continue in office until the next general election and the expiration of his present term.
"The Council members shall be elected from the qualified electors of said Town for a term of four years. The present members of the Council shall continue in office until the expiration of their respective terms. Councilmen shall be paid $7.50 per month salary.
"The Manager, Clerk, Tax Assessor, Tax Collector and Treasurer, shall be appointed annually by the Council at the first meeting held after the first Tuesday in February of each year. Either one or more of said offices may be combined. All officers shall hold office at the pleasure of the Council, except as otherwise herein provided. Where any of such officers are under contract annual appointment will not be required.
"Section 11. The Mayor and members of the City Council shall possess the general qualifications of a City elector, and shall possess such other qualifications as the Council shall from time to time prescribe by ordinance. (Neither the Mayor nor any member of the Council shall be personally interested, directly or indirectly, in any contract with the City, or in the sale to the City of any land, material supplies, or services.) This provision shall not prevent or preclude the City from making loans or any financial arrangements arrangements [*]sic with any incorporated bank notwithstanding the membership of any of its officers as stockholders or officers in such bank."

As above mentioned, defendant admitted in his answer that he had received a perquisite prohibited by the applicable *793 charter provision, first above quoted, in the form of certain group insurance premiums and that he received one monthly pay check too many during his tenure as Mayor of the City of Naples. The effect of these admissions is that defendant concedes liability as to these sums, and the chancellor erred in failing to grant plaintiff's motion for summary decree as to liability for such sums. This error is quite understandable in view of the position taken by the able trial judge herein as to the question raised by plaintiff's Point II, discussed below.

Defendant's answer also admitted that he sold certain logs or pilings to the City of Naples while acting as Mayor.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 2d 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooker-v-smith-fladistctapp-1959.