City of Miami Beach v. Crandon

35 So. 2d 285, 160 Fla. 439, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 766
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 7, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 285 (City of Miami Beach v. Crandon) 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 Miami Beach v. Crandon, 35 So. 2d 285, 160 Fla. 439, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 766 (Fla. 1948).

Opinion

SEBRING, J.:

The 1847 session of the legislature enacted chapter 24468, Special Acts of Florida 1947. The act is entitled “An Act Requiring the County Commissioners of Dade County, Florida to Submit to the Electors of Said County at the Second Primary Election to be Held in May, 1948 the Question of Whether or not Joint Resolution No. 407 Consolidating the County of Dade and the City of Miami Shall be Submitted to the Electors of the State of Florida at the General Election to be Held in November, 1948.” The act provides, in part, as follows:

“Section 1. The County Commissioners of Dade County, Florida shall submit to the electors of Dade County, Florida at the Second Primary Election held in May, 1948 the following question:
*441 “ ‘Shall there be submitted to the electors of the State of Florida at the General Election to be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1948 for ratification or rejection Joint Resolution No. 407 relating to the consolidation of the County of Dade and City of Miami ?’
“Section 2. The results of said election shall be determined by the Canvassing Board as is now provided by law and the same shall be certified by the Supervisor of Registration to the Secretary of State of the State of Florida within ten days after said election. If a majority of the qualified electors as herein provided shall have voted in favor of submitting said Joint Resolution No. 407 to the electors of the State of Florida at the General Election to be held in November, 1948, then the Secretary of State shall place said Joint Resolution No. 407 on the ballot to be voted on at the General election to be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1948, for ratification or rejection.”

Eighteen municipalities of Florida located in Dade County, and P. L. Watson, a citizen, resident and taxpayer of Dade County, have instituted a suit in equity against the members of the Board of County Commissioners of Dade County seeking to restrain the Board from submitting the question contained in Chapter 24468, supra, to the electors of Dade County at the second primary election to be held in May, 1948.

The bill of complaint in the suit recites that the Board proposes to submit the question to the electors of Dade County in accordance with Chapter 24468, supra, but that the threatened action on the part of the Board is illegal, and the act under which the Board purports to be authorized to perform its alleged duty thereunder is void and unconstitutional, because (1) the purported act imposes a duty upon the Board which it is forbidden by law to exercise; (2) the question to be submitted to the electors under the act is vague, indefinite, uncertain and misleading in that it fails to note the exceptions to the effectiveness of the act as created by Joint Resolution No. 407; (3) the Joint Resolution is violative of Section 1 of Article XVII, Constitution of Florida, in that it requires the submission of the resolution to the electors of Dade *442 County as a condition precedent to it being submitted to the electorate of the State at large in the General Election; (4) the Joint Resolution contains amendments to several sections of the Constitution of Florida and is, in effect, a series of separate amendments and is not being submitted separately to said electors, as required by section 1 of Article XVII of the Constitution of Florida; (5) the Joint Resolution attempts to set up a separate and autonomous sovereignty in Dade County with the power to enact laws contrary to the provisions of the Constitutions of the State of Florida and of the United States; (6) the provisions of the Joint Resolution are severally violative of Section 20 of Article III of the Constitution of Florida; (7) the provisions of the Joint Resolution as affected by chapter 24467, Special Acts 1947, are unconstitutional in that it mandatorily requires the adoption of a charter by the people of Dade County at the expense partly of the people of Dade County and contrary to the expressed will of the people of Dade County.

The prayer of the bill is that the Court will construe the meaning and effect of said chapter 24468, supra, and the amendment to the Constitution proposed under Joint Resolution No. 407, and will issue a temporary injunction restraining the defendant Board from submitting the question to the electorate of Dade County or holding an election for the purpose of balloting upon said question.

In due course the. defendant County Commissioners filed an answer to the bill of complaint and incorporated in their answer a motion to dismiss the bill. When the matter came on for hearing before the chancellor the parties to the suit stipulated that there were no facts in dispute requiring the submission of testimony and that as only matters of law wére involved the hearing should be a final hearing and the ruling of the court should operate as a final decree. Upon the stipulation and the pleadings the chancellor entered a final decree finding the equities of the cause to be with the defendants, and upon such finding denied the application for injunction and dismissed the bill of complaint at the cost of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs have taken an appeal from the decree.

Several questions with respect to the validity of Joint *443 Resolution No. 407 were raised by the parties at the final hearing and answered by the chancellor in the final decree appealed from. The same questions have been propounded by appellants in briefs filed in this court upon the appeal. However, we are unable to see the relevancy or materiality of these questions in this litigation wherein the only real issue between the parties is whether or not the Board of County Commissioners should be restrained from proceeding, under chapter 24468, supra, to submit the question contained in the act to the electors of Dade County as directed by the legislature. Our view is that the only proper question arising out of this issue is whether chapter 24468, Special Acts of Florida, 1947, is unconstitutional and void because it requires the Board of County Commissioners of Dade County to submit to the voters of the only county to be affected by a proposed constitutional amendment, at a primary election, the question of whether or not such proposed amendment shall be placed upon a state-wide ballot for ratification or rejection by the electors of the State at large at the general election.

The appellants contend that the question should be answered in the affirmative, because of the fact that chapter 24468, supra, requires the Board of County Commissioners to perform a duty which they are forbidden by law to exercise, and contemplates the illegal expenditure of tax money for such purpose.

We fail to see wherein the act is subject to the ground upon which it is assailed. Section 1 of Article III of the Constitution of Florida vests the lawmaking power in the legislature of the State.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 285, 160 Fla. 439, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-miami-beach-v-crandon-fla-1948.