City of Jacksonville v. Wilson

27 So. 2d 108, 157 Fla. 838, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 861
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 2, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 108 (City of Jacksonville v. Wilson) 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 Jacksonville v. Wilson, 27 So. 2d 108, 157 Fla. 838, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 861 (Fla. 1946).

Opinion

SEBRING, J.:

Suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Duval County by Carrie Wilson and Charles Wilson, her husband, to procure an injunction against the City of Jacksonville, its police department and its police officers on the ground that the city and its agencies named in the bill were unlawfully interfering with the plaintiffs in the conduct of their business, to the great injury of the plaintiffs.

It is alleged in the sworn bill of complaint that the plaintiff, Carrie Wilson, is the owner, operator and manager of the Lucky Start restaurant in Jacksonville, Florida; that she is the holder of the requisite licenses to sell beer and wines on the premises, and lawfully engages in such business; and that the plaintiff, Charles Wilson, aids and assists his wife in the operation of the said business. It is alleged further “That for a period of several months next last past, police officers of the Police Department of the City of Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida, have invaded the said premises . . . usually ... in the night time . . . making a loud and noisy commotion and without the permission of the plaintiffs. That on such occasions . . . they have not been armed or provided with a warrant'or other writ entitling them to so enter upon the said premises, *841 and on no occasion of any such visits have the said police officers had knowledge of any violation of the law occurring upon the said premises previous to their entry upon said premises and that the said visitations have been wholly illegal and in violation of the plaintiffs’ rights. That said officers come upon said premises ... and search the said premises, pretending to search for intoxicating liquors; that said police officers pretend that the plaintiff, Charles Wilson, is the owner and operator of said business and that the said plaintiff has been repeatedly arrested upon false, faked and pretended charges of violations of the liquor law upon said premises. That on the 16th day of March, A. D. 1946, such police officers so entered upon the said premises and finding no intoxicating liquor there, entered upon a barber shop nearby and claiming to find whiskey in said barber shop arrested the plaintiff upon the utterly trumped up, false and pretended charge that he was the owner of said liquor and violating the law in some manner in connection with said whiskey and plaintiff was arrested and taken into custody and carried to the police station where a charge of some sort involving said whiskey was placed against him; that similar utterly trumped up, faked, false and pretended charges have been so made against the said plaintiff repeatedly in the past and to such an extent that his constitutional rights as a citizen have been interfered with and he has never had any security in his said premises, always being under the apprehension that some police officer of said city may jerk him up upon some such faked, false and pretended charge. That on many of the raids made upon plaintiff’s said premises patrons . . . have been placed under arrest and imprisoned in the City Jail merely because they were in and upon said premises; that the said conduct of the said police officers has continued from time to time and to such an extent as to ruin the plaintiffs’ said business. That by reason of the premises, said business has acquired a reputation as being unsafe for patronage and that patrons who would otherwise patronize the said business have been deterred from doing so by reason of the hazard that they might be exposed to similar treatment by such police officers; that the said conduct of such police officers constitutes a *842 nuisance; that plaintiffs can never know when police officers may descend upon them at any hour of the day or night and an illegal entry made by them upon said premises.”

Based upon these sworn allegations, the chancellor denied a motion to dismiss the bill of complaint interposed by the defendants, and entered a temporary restraining order without bond, commanding that the defendants, their agents, servants, employees and police officers “shall not enter upon the premises . . . except in the lawful and orderly discharge of your duties and you are hereby enjoined from molesting the plaintiffs, or either of them in the lawful conduct of the business . . . and from arresting or imprisoning the plaintiffs, or either of them, without due process of law and without proper legal authority, and from molesting, arresting or imprisoning the patrons and employees of said business, or either of them, without due process of law and without proper legal authority.”

The defendants have brought this interlocutory certiorari proceeding to review the order so entered. We are of the view that the allegations of the bill of complaint fail to make out a case for injunctive relief, and that consequently the motion to dismiss the bill should have been granted.

The State Beverage Law prescribes that “Licensees, by the acceptance of their license agree that their place of business during business hours shall always be subject to be inspected and searched without search warrant by the . . . police officers. See Sec. 562.03 Florida Statutes, 1941, F.S.A. In view of this statute, it is not a ground for injunctive relief that the police officers of a municipality of this state enter upon the premises of a licensed purveyor of beer and wines at retail located within a municipality, to inspect the premises or conduct a search during business hours, without having first secured permission from the owner or having procured a search warrant or other writ for such purpose. Neither is it necessary that the officers have knowledge of violations of the law occurring on the premises before they can lawfully make such search or inspection. Furthermore, the fact that such a visitation may occur in the nighttime does not render a search made without warrant unlawful, provided, of course, the search is made *843 during business hours — as we must assume was the case in each instance delineated in the bill of complaint, there being no allegations in the pleading to the contrary.

The allegations of the bill of complaint to the effect that certain personal constitutional rights of the plaintiff, Charles Wilson, have been infringed on by reason of repeated arrests by the police officers for charged violations of the liquor laws of the state, both on and off the premises, does not afford a right to injunction, for it is well settled that a court of equity will not ordinarily relieve against criminal prosecutions no matter how often repeated; the arrested person being deemed to have an adequate remedy at law by habeas corpus or other proceeding. Stocks v. Lee, 144 Fla. 627, 198 So. 211. But even if this were not the general rule, the allegations of the bill on this phase of the controversy are not sufficiently clear and positive to warrant the issuance of an injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 108, 157 Fla. 838, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-jacksonville-v-wilson-fla-1946.