City Commission of Fort Pierce v. State Ex Rel. Altenhoff

143 So. 2d 879
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 25, 1962
Docket2579
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 879 (City Commission of Fort Pierce v. State Ex Rel. Altenhoff) 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
City Commission of Fort Pierce v. State Ex Rel. Altenhoff, 143 So. 2d 879 (Fla. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

143 So.2d 879 (1962)

The CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF FORT PIERCE, Florida, a Florida Corporation, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida ex rel. John ALTENHOFF, Appellee.

No. 2579.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

July 25, 1962.
Rehearing Denied August 27, 1962.

*880 Errol S. Willes, Ft. Pierce, for appellant.

E.O. Denison and C.R. McDonald, Jr., Ft. Pierce, for appellee.

Bjarne B. Andersen, Jr., and Carlton Maddox, Jacksonville, for amicus curiae, Florida State Board of Health.

Robert T. Mann and C. Lawrence Stagg, Whitaker, Mann & Stagg, Tampa, for amicus curiae, Florida State Dental Society, Inc.

ALLEN, Acting Chief Judge.

Injunctive relief was sought below by the relator, John Altenhoff, appellee in this court, to restrain the City Commission of the City of Fort Pierce, Florida, respondent below, appellant here, from implementing a municipal ordinance directing the City Manager of the City of Fort Pierce to provide for the introduction of fluoride into the water supply of said city as directed by the State Board of Health. The complaint alleged that, under the ordinance, respondent "determined to cause the public water supply produced by the said City and furnished to the relator and the citizens of said City and others, to be impregnated with sodium fluoride in the ratio of one part sodium fluoride to one million parts of water, or more, the same being the type of fluoride and the ratio of impregnation directed by the said State Board of Health and referred to in said ordinance."

The complaint further alleged that the above described fluoridation of the water supply constitutes a nuisance under § 823.01, F.S.A.; that it is injurious to the health of those citizens supplied by the water system, particularly the relator and his family; that the ingestion of fluoride from the water supply is cumulative and productive of fluoride poisoning and intoxication which are fatal to persons afflicted with diabetes, nephritis or glandular diseases; and that sodium fluoride is an insidious poison generally injurious to the health of the citizenry. It was also alleged that fluoridation of the water system would *881 cause irreparable injury to those members of the public dependent upon it for water, for which there would be no adequate remedy at law.

It was further alleged that fluoridation of the water system, amounting to mass medication, violates the rights of the citizens guaranteed by §§ 1 and 5 of the Declaration of Rights, F.S.A.; that the ordinance (#E44) providing for fluoridation is void as an unlawful delegation of the authority delegated to the City by the Legislature in that it vests in the City Manager and/or the State Board of Health an arbitrary discretion; that the ordinance exceeds the powers granted to the City in its charter, Chap. 57-1331, Laws of Florida, 1957 (Spec.Acts), in that fluoridation is not purification but pollution of the water supply; that there has been no lawful appropriation of funds to purchase the equipment provided for in the ordinance; and that the ordinance "is violative of the constitutional guarantee against Class Legislation in that its proponents only claim it is beneficial to children of the age group of one to fourteen years; yet the mass medication must be consumed by the remaining 86% of the population regardless of the detriment to this large percent of the population of said City."

The complaint then prayed for both a temporary and permanent injunction restraining the respondent from fluoridating the water supply and purchasing any equipment designed to accomplish that end.

Respondent's motion to dismiss was denied, whereupon an answer was filed denying the material allegations of the complaint and averring that "the preservation of health and safety of the people in a community is of prime importance in the exercise of the police power of said City, and that said ordinance E-44 is designed to promote the health and welfare of the citizens * * * dependent upon the water supply furnished to them by the said City."

Paragraph 8 of the answer was stricken on relator's motion, but with leave to amend, and as amended reads in part as follows:

"1. — Further answering said Complaint this Respondent avers that public hearings were had before the Commission of the City of Fort Pierce, Florida on March 30, 1959 and April 2, 1959 and at said hearings the opponents and proponents to the fluoridation of the public water supply of the City of Fort Pierce presented evidence and arguments in support of their position; excerpts from the minutes of the said meetings of the City Commission of the City of Fort Pierce are hereto attached and by reference made a part hereof; that subsequent to said hearings, that is, on December 7, 1959, Ordinance E-44 was duly adopted by the City Commission of the City of Fort Pierce.
"2. — That the St. Lucie County Health Department being an agency of the State Board of Health, is employed by the Respondent as its health inspectors and officers; that the St. Lucie County Health Department is under the direction and supervision of Dr. Neill Miller, a deputy State Board of Health Officer; that the Florida State Board of Health has broad concern for all conditions which affect the health of the citizens of the State of Florida and has formulated general policies affecting the public health of the State of Florida; that under the general direction of the State Board of Health the State Health Officer is required to enforce rules and regulations relating to the general health of the people of the State of Florida and to cooperate with other appropriate state, county, municipal and private boards, departments or organizations for the improvement and preservation of the public health in supervising services which affect the health of the community as a whole. That the Florida State Board of Health, after a public *882 hearing held on August 20, 1955 to allow both the opponents and proponents to present any new — or to reevaluate any old — scientific evidence which might have a bearing on the desirability, effectiveness or safety of the fluoridation of the public water supplies, determined, authorized and recommended that the fluoridation of the public water supply was an urgent need for the improvement of dental health and for the control of dental caries; that this Respondent has complied with all of the policies and regulations of the State Board of Health for the fluoridation of its public water supply; that the fluoride content to be applied to its public water supply will not exceed 1.1 parts per million gallons of water which said fluoride will be impregnated into the public water supply under the supervision and direction of the State Board of Health through employees and servants of the Respondent."

Thereafter, the parties jointly filed a stipulated statement of the facts which the lower court approved in its pretrial order and which he ruled would control the subsequent course of the cause unless modified during trial to prevent manifest injustice. Said fact statement reads:

"It is stipulated and agreed by and between counsel for the respective parties to the following statement of facts to be submitted to the Court for its consideration in the determination of the above entitled cause, to-wit:
"1.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-commission-of-fort-pierce-v-state-ex-rel-altenhoff-fladistctapp-1962.