City Gas Co. v. City of Coral Gables

22 Fla. Supp. 23
CourtCircuit Court of the 11th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Miami-Dade County
DecidedJuly 22, 1963
DocketNo. 63-C-5169
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 Fla. Supp. 23 (City Gas Co. v. City of Coral Gables) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 11th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Miami-Dade County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Gas Co. v. City of Coral Gables, 22 Fla. Supp. 23 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

JOE EATON, Circuit Judge.

Final hearing in this matter was had on June 28, 1963. At the outset of the hearing the court observed that there appeared from the pleadings no bona fide dispute, no genuine adversary proceeding to be heard by the court by way of declaratory decree. Thereupon the defendant city moved to amend its pleadings to take the position that its April 9, 1963, franchise election was invalid; that the proceedings by the city commission between the dates of February 19, 1963, and April 9, 1963, which led to the election, were invalid; that because of such alleged invalidity the city refuses to issue any permits to the plaintiff or to take any steps to grant a franchise to the plaintiff pursuant to the affirmative election results. The court allowed such ore tenus amendment and thereupon proceeded to take testimony on the bona fide dispute before the court. Subsequent to the hearing the court satisfied itself that there is ample authority in Florida for the rendition of a declaratory decree in these premises.

The city’s position by way of its amended pleading is that an ordinance previously defeated upon referendum was re-submitted to the voters; that the city did not validly re-enact ordinance 1309 (the one previously submitted to the electors); that the passage of ordinance 1318 “re-submitting” ordinance 1309 was invalid. In short, the city says that ordinance 1309 was dead and that the subsequent approval of such ordinance by the electors could not breathe life into a dead ordinance. Therefore, the city says, it has no authority to issue permits to the plaintiff or to grant the plaintiff a franchise.

The plaintiff petitions the court to inquire into the commission’s actions; to determine whether or not the ordinance accepted by the electors of Coral Gables on April 9th is valid; to determine whether or not it has a contract with the city to provide services to the residents of Coral Gables.

[25]*25Pertinent provisions of the city charter are the following — section 8(16), section 14, section 21(a), and section 21(f). As to section 8(16), the city says there was no valid ratification by the electors upon which it can grant a franchise to the plaintiff. Section 14 provides that no ordinance shall be passed until it has been read on two separate days or until the requirement of such readings has been dispensed with by a four-fifths vote of the members of the commission (it is unrefuted that the ordinance giving rise to the April 9th election was not read on two separate days and it is also unrefuted that the requirement for such reading was dispensed with unanimously by the commission). As to section 21(a), the city apparently takes the position that the provision “but no measure granting or amending any public utility measure or amending or repealing any measure adopted by the electors at the polls shall be regarded as an emergency measure” refers to section 14 having to do with the requirement of reading on two separate days. In other words, by its argument before the court, the city seems to take the position that the ordinance giving rise to the April 9th vote was passed as an emergency measure, the commission having dispensed with the “separate days” reading requirement, and that such cannot validly be done under the city charter. Section 21 (f) is pertinent here for reasons which will he later discussed by the court.

What we are really considering then is whether or not the actions of the commission on February 19th and the proceedings subsequent thereto were void, or, if there were irregularities in the commission’s February 19th acts and the proceedings subsequent thereto, whether such irregularities would be such as to invalidate the proceedings and the subsequent election.

The court has concluded after careful consideration that there was no substantial irregularity; that the February 19th proceedings, the notice compliance, and the April 9th election were valid. If there was irregularity, it was in the nomenclature of the ordinance voted upon on April 9th. This is a matter of form and, for reasons later stated, is inconsequential in considering validity or non-validity here.

The following general statements of basic municipal corporation law are so elementary as to require no citation—

A. When an ordinance is passed relating^ to a matter that is within the legislative power of a municipality, all presumptions are in favor of its validity; if doubt exists as to the power of the municipality to adopt an ordinance, all presumptions are in favor of invalidity. (In the latter instance, all presumptions are in favor of the individual citizen and against the municipality.)
[26]*26B. A disregard of mandatory charter requirements or matters of substance will vitiate an election. A disregard of directory requirements, that is, mere irregularity which does not prevent a full and free expression of voter opinion and does not affect the result of the election will not invalidate an election.
C. An ordinance which a municipality has no power to enact (example: one levying taxation for a purpose not authorized by the charter) is an act of usurpation and all proceedings under it are void; where the city has the power to pass an ordinance but exercises that power in an unauthorized manner, the ordinance is valid and binding until the party asserting invalidity has overcome, to the court’s satisfaction, the presumption of validity.
D. Of course, if an ordinance is void on its face, this means that there is no jurisdiction to pass it in the first instance. (In our case the city had the power to do what it did and the ordinance is valid on its face.)

In considering the questions before us, we must keep in mind that there has been an election and that the people have voted to grant the franchise. The reason for the ruling having to do with mere irregularities is that the courts are anxious rather to sustain than to defeat popular will. As Mr. Justice Terrell expressed it in Willets v. North Bay Village, 60 So.2d 922 — “The people who approved the charter, so far as the record shows, are satisfied. It is their business, and since they are not complaining, we think the election was legally held .... Under our form of government sovereignty resides in the people, and since they are not complaining, why should anyone else be heard to complain?” In that case the court found that the election call was irregular, but since the people went to the polls and voted it served the same purpose as if it had been regular. The North Bay Village charter called for a council of five and prescribed that three councilmen constituted a quorum and the presence of three was necessary to transact business. At the time the election was called, North Bay Village had three councilmen and no more and two of them called the referendum.

If there was an irregularity in the proceedings leading up to the April 9th election, the test as to the validity of the election (as has been handed down in many cases) is found in the following language — “An election will not be set aside on technical grounds where no fraud is established and where no voter was prevented from expressing his views or where it is not shown that, but for the acts complained of, the result would have been different,.” The burden upon the'city (the city challenges the validity) is to establish that the election was void because of failure [27]

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22 Fla. Supp. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-gas-co-v-city-of-coral-gables-flacirct11mia-1963.