City of Fort Myers v. State of Florida

117 So. 97, 95 Fla. 709
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 117 So. 97 (City of Fort Myers v. State of Florida) 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 Fort Myers v. State of Florida, 117 So. 97, 95 Fla. 709 (Fla. 1928).

Opinion

The appellant filed its petition August 31st, 1927, in the Circuit Court of Lee County as provided by Section 3296, etseq., Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920, seeking to validate street improvement bonds in the sum of $1,250,000.00, issued pursuant to Chapter 12719, Acts of 1927, Laws of Florida, contemporary with the filing of the petition to validate, order was made on the State's Attorney and the tax payers affected requiring them to appear and show cause why the bonds should not be validated.

On the return day named in the petition the State's Attorney filed his pro forma answer announcing that no defense to the validation petition would be offered by the State of Florida. R. A. Henderson, Jr., a citizen and tax payer, intervened and filed his demurrer to the petition to validate, which was overruled. Katie Lloyd Guynne, Lucious C. Curtright, Carrie W. Langford, J. S. Wallis, Charles C. Pursley, David W. Ireland and others as citizens and tax payers filed their several answers resisting appellant's petition to validate, a demurrer being incorporated in each of said answers. Motions to strike certain portions of said answers were granted in part and overruled in part.

October 10, 1927, Southern Paving Construction Company, the successful bidder for, and having entered into contract with appellant to make the street improvement that the bonds sought to be validated were issued to pay for, filed its petition for leave to intervene and be made a *Page 711 party to the proceedings to validate. That petition was denied.

On motion of defendants below (appellees here), the chancellor required the petitioner to file with and make a part of the proceedings to validate a copy of the plans and specifications of the proposed street improvements. On November 4, 1927, after full hearing on the pleadings and testimony duly taken the chancellor entered his final decree denying the prayer of appellant's petition to validate its bonds in the amount stated. The appellant, City of Fort Myers, entered its appeal from said final decree.

It is first contended that the motion to strike each and every the answers to the petition to validate should have been sustained in toto because they question the legality of the special assessments laid for the purpose of paying principal and interest on the bonds sought to be validated which cannot be done in a proceedings of this kind.

The law seems well settled that a special assessment for local improvements cannot be collaterally attacked. Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees, 179 U.S. 472, 21 Sup. Ct. Rep.; City of Gladstone v. Throop, 71 Fed. Rep. 341; Burlington Savings Bank v. City of Clinton, Ia., 106 Fed. Rep. 269; Board of Com'rs Franklin County, Ohio, v. Gardnier Savings Inst., 119 Fed. Rep. 36; Bass v. City of Casper, 28 Wyo. 387, 205 Pac. Rep. 1008; 208 Pac. Rep. 439, Text 1016; Moore v. City of Yonkers, 149 C. C. A. 31, 235, Fed. 485, 9 A. L. R. 590; Gracen v. City of Savannah, 142 Ga. 141, 82 S.E. Rep. 453; Hamilton on Special Assessments, 726; Smith on Modern Law of Municipal Corporations, Vol. 2, Section 1198, note 384, 34 Corpus Juris 519. From these cases we deduce the rule that special assessments imposed for the purpose of paying the interest and principal on municipal bonds which are by law a direct obligation of the municipality cannot generally be attacked in a proceeding *Page 712 to validate. The reason for this rule is that the validity of such bonds depends on the power of the municipality to issue and pledge its resources and credit to protect them. If issued as directed under the terms of a valid statute they may be validated irrespective of the regularity of the assessments imposed to reimburse the city for liquidating them. A different rule would apply where the validity or status of the bond is made to depend on the validity of the assessment rather than the power of the municipality to issue them. Cases where the city merely agrees to collect and disburse the proceeds of improvement certificates authorized for specific purposes are not analagous to this and have no place in this discussion.

The Legislature evidently had in mind the foregoing rule when it enacted the City Charter of the City of Fort Myers, because Section M of Section Fifty, authorizing the bonds here brought in question in effect provides that if any special assessment made to defray the whole or any part of the street improvement made thereunder shall be in whole or in part vacated, annulled or set aside, if the city commission shall be satisfied that any such assessment is so irregular or defective that the same cannot be enforced or collected, or if the commission shall have omitted to make the assessment when it might have done so, it may make a new assessment for the whole or any part of any improvement and if the second assessment shall be annulled it may make other and additional assessments until a valid assessment is made. In this provision a direct and not a collateral attack on the assessments is contemplated if their validity is questioned.

In our view the serious questions presented here are those pertaining to the legality of the proceedings in the matter of issuing the bonds and not those affecting the validity of the special assessments. *Page 713

In Weinberger v. Board of Public Instruction of St. Johns County et al., 93 Fla. 470, 112 So.2d Rep. 235, this Court, speaking through Mr. Justice STRUM, held that in a bond validation proceeding prosecuted under Section 3296, Revised General Statutes of Florida, any matter or thing affecting the power or authority of a municipality to issue bonds or the regularity or legality of their issue, including questions of both law and fact, in so far as those matters or things could be lawfully prescribed, regulated, limited or dispensed with by the Legislature in the first instance, or subsequently cured by a validating act, may be put in repose by a decree rendered pursuant to said Section 3296 et seq., Revised General Statutes of Florida, 1920. So, also, may constitutional rights or privileges which are designed solely for the protection of the property rights of the individual concerned and which he may waive or with reference to which he may estop himself or as to which the Legislature may lawfully limit the period of time within which such right or privilege may be exercised. Thompson v. Town of Frostproof, 89 Fla. 92, 103 So.2d 118. If the resolution of other essential proceedings on which the bonds are based is a nullity because of conflict with organic law this rule as to repose would not apply. Weinberger v. St. Johns County, supra.

The bonds under consideration were issued by authority of Section Fifty of Chapter 12719, Acts of 1927, Laws of Florida, Sections B, C and J of which are as follows:

"Section B. When the Commission may determine to make any public improvement or repairs in streets or districts and defray the whole or any part of the expense thereof by special assessment, the Commission shall so declare by resolution, stating the nature of the proposed improvement, designating the district or districts, street or streets to be so improved, what part or portion of the *Page 714

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 97, 95 Fla. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fort-myers-v-state-of-florida-fla-1928.