City of Miami Beach v. Austin Burke, Inc.

185 So. 2d 720, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5280
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 26, 1966
DocketNo. 64-907
StatusPublished

This text of 185 So. 2d 720 (City of Miami Beach v. Austin Burke, Inc.) 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 of Miami Beach v. Austin Burke, Inc., 185 So. 2d 720, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5280 (Fla. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

CARROLL, Judge.

This appeal by the City of Miami Beach, the members of the city council and certain other city officials who were defendants in the court below, is from a declaratory decree which held invalid the provisions of Chapter 7 of the Code of the City of Miami Beach, enacted for the purpose of regulating liquidation and distress goods sales by merchants.

The appellee Austin Burke, Inc. was convicted in the city court of violating the ordinance by advertising a sale of the kind regulated thereby without having applied for and obtained a license thereunder. The appellee then sought and obtained a declaratory decree holding the ordinance invalid and enjoining enforcement.

Sales covered by the regulatory ordinance were defined therein under its section 7.1, as follows:

“(a) The sale, or offer to sell, by any person to the public of goods in stock, on order, or in transit, with a declared advertised purpose that such sale is anticipatory to the termination, closing, liquidation, revision, windup, discontinuance, conclusion or abandonment of the business, or any part thereof, or any line of goods, or any one store of a group of stores in connection with such sale, and it shall include any and all sales advertised in such manner as to reasonably convey to the public the impression that upon the disposal of the goods advertised, or on hand, the business will permanently cease and be discontinued; and
“(b) The sale, or offer to sell, by any person to the public of goods in stock, on order, or in transit, with a declared advertised purpose that such sale is anticipatory to the temporary closing or temporary discontinuance of the business for the purpose of alterations or remodelling of the premises, or for the purpose of moving to another location; and
“(c) The sale, or offer to sell, by any person to the public, of goods so ad[722]*722vertised as to reasonably convey to the public that such goods are damaged or altered by fire, smoke, water, hurricane, flood, explosion or other means; and
“(d) The sale, or offer to sell, by any person to the public, of goods advertised in such a manner as to reasonably cause the public to believe that the goods to be sold, or any part thereof, have been involved in any business failure, or have been derived from a business which has failed, been closed, discontinued or liquidated, or where such advertising indicates a business failure or emergency affecting the seller or any previous holder of the goods to he sold.”

Section 7.7 of the ordinance set out matter pertinent to this case as follows:

“The City Clerk shall not issue the license provided for in Section 7.5 hereof, if any one, or more, of the following facts or circumstances are found:
“(a) That applicant was granted a license for a sale as defined herein within two (2) years preceding the date of the filing of the application.
“(b) That applicant has heretofore been convicted of violation of this chapter, or has had a license issued to him pursuant to this chapter revoked within a five (5) year period immediately preceding the date of filing of application.
“(c) That the inventory includes goods purchased by the applicant, or added to the stock, in contemplation of such sale and for the purpose of selling the same at such sale. For the purpose of this subsection, any unusual addition to the stock of goods made within sixty (60) days prior to the filing of such application shall be prima facie evidence that such addition was made in contemplation of such sale and for the purpose of selling the same at such sale.
“(d) That applicant in ticketing, pricing or marking of the goods to be offered for sale has misrepresented the retail price as listed in the inventory required under Section 7.3(e) hereof, or the value thereof, or the quality, kind or quantity of such goods, or the country of origin of said goods.
“(e) That any lease, or sublease, held by applicant was formerly held by a corporation of which the applicant was an officer, director or stockholder or by any member of applicant’s immediate family, and that such corporation, or member of applicant’s immediate family, was granted a license provided for in Section 7.5 hereof within two (2) years preceding the date of the filing of application.
“(f) That any representation made in the application is false.”

Section 7.9 provided for payment of a $25 license fee, and elsewhere the ordinance fixed conditions and requirements for such sales.

The provision of the ordinance which grants discretion to the city clerk as to issuance or denial of applications is § 7.5, which reads as follows:

“Upon receipt of such application and payment of the fee prescribed by Section 7.9 hereof, the City Clerk shall cause the same to be investigated. If, after such investigation, the City Clerk is satisfied as to the truth of statements contained in said application, and as to the form and language content of the proposed advertising matter, he may, in his discretion, issue a license permitting the advertising and conduct of such sale for a period of not more than thirty (30) consecutive days, Sundays and Legal Holidays included, following the issuance thereof, provided that, in addition, for a sale as defined in Section 7.1 (a) hereof applicant shall surrender all occupational licenses held for said business as a prerequisite to issuance of such license.”

In the decree appealed from the chancellor held that the ordinance violated state and federal constitutional provisions against [723]*723free speech, due process, and equal protection of the laws, in certain respects and on certain grounds, as follows:

(1) That the city was without power to regulate such sales, in that such regulation of sales violates constitutional guarantees.

(2) For conferring unlimited discretion on the city clerk to grant or deny applications for licenses thereunder.

(3) Because the ordinance exempts, subject to certain conditions, sales by a merchant in anticipation of seasonal or vacation temporary closings.

(4) Because a bond is required for the defined sales other than sales for liquidation or going out of business, hut is not required as to the latter.

(5) Because the ordinance provides for a two-year period between applications (a provision which applies equally to all of the defined sales).

(6) Because the ordinance provides that no such sale shall be licensed to one who has been convicted of violating the ordinance or had a license thereunder revoked within the preceding five years.

The power of the City of Miami Beach to regulate sales such as those defined in the ordinance is well established by law and is provided for expressly in the Charter of the City of Miami Beach, and the chancellor was in error in holding otherwise. Supervision and regulation of such sales and the special licensing thereof upon designated conditions is proper action by a municipality, under the police power, as a means of protection of the buying public from false or misleading advertising and deception. Greenleaf & Crosby Co. v. Coleman, 117 Fla. 723, 158 So. 421, 427; State ex rel. Lawson v. Woodruff, 134 Fla. 437, 184 So. 81. In the latter (184 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 So. 2d 720, 1966 Fla. App. LEXIS 5280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-miami-beach-v-austin-burke-inc-fladistctapp-1966.