City of Coral Gables v. Certain Lands Upon Which Taxes Are Delinquent

149 So. 36, 110 Fla. 189
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 149 So. 36 (City of Coral Gables v. Certain Lands Upon Which Taxes Are Delinquent) 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
City of Coral Gables v. Certain Lands Upon Which Taxes Are Delinquent, 149 So. 36, 110 Fla. 189 (Fla. 1933).

Opinions

Buford, J.

The City of Coral Gables s'ought to enforce the payment of delinquent taxes by the prosecution of a suit in Chancery Court under the provisions of Chapter 15038, Acts of the Legislature of Florida of 1931.

It is not necessary for us to quote the provisions of the Act in this opinion, as it is available in the published statutes of this State to all who are sufficiently interested to turn thereto and read the same.

It is sufficient to say that the Act provides for proceedings in rem against the property against which a tax assessment has been made, whether such assessment originated as an ad valorem assessment or as a special assessment, where such assessment, or assessments, have become a lien, or liens, upon the property.

The statute further provides that there may be included in one suit all or any part of the lands upon which tax certificates have been outstanding or taxes have remained delinquent or any special assessment or installment thereon shall have been in default for the respective periods named in the Act; and that there may be included therein all claims and demands of the Municipality against said lands or any part thereof for taxes, tax certificates and special assessment, or special assessments, or installments thereof which may be due and payable to the Municipality at the time of the institution of the suit.

The Act provides the manner in which the suit shall be brought and how jurisdiction may be obtained. That part *192 of the Act pertaining to the acquisition of jurisdiction is as follows:

“Jurisdiction of any of said lands and of all parties interested therein or having any lien thereon shall be obtained by publication of a notice to be issued as of course by the Clerk of the Circuit Court in which such bill is filed on request of the complainant, once each week for not less than four consecutive weeks, directed to all persons and corporations interested in or having any lien or claim upon any of the lands described in said notice and said bill. Such notice shall describe the lands involved and the respective principal amounts sought to be recovered in such suit for taxes, tax certificates and/or special assessments on such respective parcels of land, and requiring all such parties to appear and defend said suit on or before a rule day specified in said notice, which shall be not less than four weeks after the date of the first publication of such notice. Said notice may be in substantially the following form, with blanks appropriately filled in.”

Then follows the form of notice required.

There was a special appearance and motion to quash the process and service of process which motion challenged the jurisdiction of the court over persons other than those appearing and, second, challenged the constitutionality of the mode of procedure prescribed by the statute under which the suit was brought. The Circuit Court correctly held that by filing motion of this character the defendants filing same entered a general appearance. Another special appearance and motion to quash the process and the service of process challenged the jurisdiction of the court over the person of the movant and over the property of the movant involved in the suit. The Court held that this motion constituted a general appearance. The motion contested not only the *193 jurisdiction of the Court over the person of the defendant, but also the right of the Court to take jurisdiction over other defendants in the suit and insofar as the jurisdiction of the Court over other defendants is concerned the grounds thereof involve the merits of the case and constitute a general appearance.

Another ground of the motion filed by Coral Gables, Inc., was “because the mode of proceeding, the mode of service and the mode of constructive service are not due process' of law but are violative of the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.” This ground challenges the constitutionality of the statute prescribing the method of serving process and also the constitutionality of the mode of proceeding therein provided, which included all that the statute required to be done to authorize the foreclosure of s'uch tax liens and included not only an attack upon the service of process, but likewise an attack on all other proceedings taken in the case and the motion was, therefore, one which presented other issues than the jurisdiction of the Court over the defendant.

The holding of the Circuit Court that the filing of those motions constituted general appearances is supported by the opinions and judgments in the cases of Ortell v. Ortell, 91 Fla. 50, 107 Sou. 442; Capper et al. v. Bonbright et al., 94 Fla. 1237, 115 Sou. 540; First National Bank v. Board of Public Instruction, 93 Fla. 182, 111 Sou. 521; State ex rel. Pepper v. Atkison, 98 Fla. 996, 124 Sou. 458; and cases there cited.

This case presents no question concerning the validity of the assessment and levy of the creation of' the lien by the proper procedure on the part of the taxing officials. We are asked to consider and deal only with the questions which are presented by the challenge of the right of the City to pursue the procedure authorized under Chapter 15038, *194 supra. It is contended that the procedure prescribed by this statute results in owners and claimants of other interests in property being deprived of their property without due process of law, and the appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court which in effect holds' the Act unconstitutional on that ground.

In Fiehe v. Householder Co., 98 Fla. 627, 125 Sou. 2, we adopted the general definition found in 6 R. C. L. 446 of the essential elements of due process of law and in Tibbetts v. Olson, 91 Fla. 824, 108 Sou. 679, Mr. Justice Whitfield, speaking for the Court said:

“The Constitution is designed to prescribe and limit governmental powers and to secure individual rights against unlawful invasion by public officers or by private parties. The courts are required to adjudicate rights ‘by due course of law,’ the essence of which is that by appropriate procedure, duly prescribed, fair notice and a reasonable opportunity to be heard shall be given to interested parties before judgment or decree is rendered.”

Due process of law in connection with the enforcement of liens for taxes is not to be confused with, and measured by, the same standards as must be the requirements of due process of law when rights are sought to be enforced between individuals.

Mr. Cooley in his excellent work on Taxation, Vol. 3, Section 1326, 4th edition says:

“Very summary remedies have been allowed, in every age and country, for the collection by the government of its revenues'. They have been considered a matter of state necessity. Without them it might be possible for a party which had been defeated in its efforts to obtain possession of the government in the constitutional way, to cripple the government for the time being, and possibly to break it up altogether. If the state might be deprived of the resources *195

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 36, 110 Fla. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-coral-gables-v-certain-lands-upon-which-taxes-are-delinquent-fla-1933.