Carroll v. State

361 So. 2d 144
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 20, 1978
Docket49342
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 361 So. 2d 144 (Carroll v. State) 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
Carroll v. State, 361 So. 2d 144 (Fla. 1978).

Opinion

361 So.2d 144 (1978)

Ray CARROLL, Dolores Savarese, and Lilyan Schlesser, Appellants,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. 49342.

Supreme Court of Florida.

July 20, 1978.

*145 Max B. Kogen, Miami, for appellants.

Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., and Sidney M. Pertnoy, Asst. Atty. Gen., Miami, for appellee.

ADKINS, Justice.

This is a direct appeal from the Circuit Court of Dade County which held that Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975), (the bingo law) was constitutional. We have jurisdiction.

Appellants, hereinafter referred to as defendants, were charged in an 18-count indictment alleging various violations of the lottery laws. By motion to dismiss defendant attacked the constitutionality of Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975). The motion was denied and the court directly passed upon the constitutionality of the statute.

After a non-jury trial, the defendants were found and adjudged guilty. Defendant Savarese was found guilty under one count of the indictment and sentenced to pay a fine of $1,000. Defendants Carroll and Schlesser were convicted under several counts of the indictment and by general sentence, Carroll was fined $1,500, and Schlesser was fined $900.

The statute under attack is constitutional. Statutes are presumed to be constitutional until the contrary is shown; and it is only when they manifestly infringe some provision of the Constitution that they can be declared void for that reason. Greater Loretta Improvement Association v. State ex rel. Boone, 234 So.2d 665, 669 (Fla. 1970). As we stated:

When the Legislature has once construed the Constitution, for the courts then to place a different construction upon it means that they must declare void the action of the Legislature. It is no small matter for one branch of the government to annul the formal exercise by another of power committed to the latter. The courts should not and must not annul, as contrary to the Constitution, a statute passed by the Legislature, unless it can be said of the statute that it positively and certainly is opposed to the Constitution. This is elementary. (Greater Loretta Improvement Association v. State ex rel. Boone at p. 670)

The defendants contend that the exclusionary privileges granted to non-profit and veterans' organizations by Section 849.093 constitute class legislation that is discriminatory, arbitrary, and without any reasonable relationship to the police power of this state. To support this contention, defendants have relied solely on the 1953 Indiana Supreme Court case of Fairchild v. Schanke, 232 Ind. 480, 113 N.E.2d 159 (1953).

The statute which the court was confronted with in Fairchild v. Schanke, supra, was titled "An Act concerning the crime of gambling, and providing penalties therefor." The Indiana Court found that the exception of bona fide religious, patriotic, charitable, or fraternal clubs from this gambling statute rendered the law unconstitutional. The Court held that the anti-gambling enactment was not based upon a substantial distinction with reference to the subject matter of the act.

In contrast to the Florida Statute now under consideration, the Indiana law permitted religious, patriotic, charitable, and fraternal clubs to engage in all forms of gambling. Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975) permits non-profit and veterans' organizations to play bingo and guest games only. The difference between the exclusionary privileges granted the Indiana organizations and the Florida organizations is therefore abundantly clear.

*146 In holding the statute unconstitutional, the court in Fairchild v. Schanke, supra, further observed that the exclusion created by the statute didn't embrace all within the class to which it was related. As the court stated:

In determining the construction of the act here in question this court will take judicial notice of the fact that there are many social clubs and service clubs in Indiana which do not come within the excluded class in the act, but which are by their nature related to those excluded and are similarly situated as to organization and general purpose. These clubs are subject to the act. They cannot, with immunity, operate gambling devices or conduct lotteries or gambling enterprises at any time or for any purpose, while the excluded clubs are exempt from the provisions of the act, thereby extending to them privileges and immunities which, upon the same terms, are not granted to other clubs and individuals similarly situated. The exclusion does not embrace all within the class to which it is related. Fairchild v. Schanke, at pps. 164-165.

Defendants assert that this is equally true in the case at bar. It is not.

Subsection (1) of Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975) permits non-profit and veterans' organizations which have been in existence for three years and which are engaged in charitable, civic, community, benevolent, religious or scholastic works or other similar activities to conduct bingo or guest games provided the proceeds are donated to their respective endeavors. Subsection (2) of Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975) permits any other non-profit organization, not engaged in efforts of the type set out in subsection one, to conduct bingo or guest games, provided all of the proceeds are returned to the players in the form of prizes. Taken together, subsections (1) and (2) permit non-profit or veterans' organizations to conduct bingo or guest games so long as the purpose is either to raise money for certain broad categories of social welfare or for the pure recreation and enjoyment of their members. In contrast, then, to the Indiana statute, the Florida law is broad enough to cover any group not organized for profit. The many social clubs and service clubs which did not come within the excluded class in the Indiana Act are all encompassed within the excluded class in the Florida statute. The exclusion does embrace all within the class to which it is related.

Defendants contend that Section 849.093, Florida Statutes (1975) is without any reasonable relationship to the police power of the state to regulate the morals, public health, or welfare of the citizens of this state. This argument is without merit.

Police power is the sovereign right of the state to enact laws for the protection of lives, health, morals, comfort, and general welfare. State ex rel. Municipal Bond and Inv. Co. Inc. v. Knott, 114 Fla. 120, 154 So. 143, 145 (1934). It is generally accepted that the state is the primary judge of, and may by statute or other appropriate means, regulate any enterprise, trade, occupation, or profession if necessary to protect the public health, welfare, or morals, and a great deal of discretion is vested in the legislature to determine public interest and measures for its protection. Burnsed v. Seaboard Coastline Railroad Company, 290 So.2d 13, 18 (Fla. 1974). When a particular attempted exercise of the police power by a state, or under its authority, passes the bounds of reason and assumes the character of a merely arbitrary fiat, it will be stricken down and declared void. Burritt v. Harris, 166 So.2d 168, 172, 173 (1st DCA Fla. 1964). However, every reasonable doubt must be indulged in favor of the act. If it can be rationally interpreted to harmonize with the Constitution, it is the duty of the court to adopt that construction and sustain the act. Holley v. Adams, 238 So.2d 401, 404 (Fla. 1970).

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