Clements v. Starbird

12 So. 2d 578, 152 Fla. 555, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 971
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 19, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 578 (Clements v. Starbird) 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
Clements v. Starbird, 12 So. 2d 578, 152 Fla. 555, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 971 (Fla. 1943).

Opinion

*557 BROWN, J.:

Plaintiffs below, appellants here, brought suit in ejectment against the appellees to recover the possession of certain described land, attaching to the declaration a bill of particulars stating that plaintiffs would rely at the trial upon a certain tax deed executed to the plaintiffs on January 6, 1941, attaching as an exhibit a copy of the tax deed. The defendants filed a plea of not guilty and also filed a motion that the court declare the tax deed null and void. The motion set forth six grounds but the 1st, ■ 2nd and 5th grounds were evidently abandoned and have not been argued in the briefs. So they may be treated as having been abandoned.

' In support of the motion the parties submitted to the court an agreed statement of facts, consisting of four paragraphs. The 3rd paragraph relates to a matter not mentioned in the motion, but it might' have been considered by the court. That paragraph stated that the tax assessor did not extend and calculate the amount of taxes to be raised for the different governmental purposes, but that an employee in the office of the tax collector made such extension and calculated the amount of taxes to be raised against the said lands for such governmental purposes and that this was done before the tax assessor had completed his assessments for the year 1936.

The Court granted the defendants’ motion and held the tax deed null and void and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit, but in its order the court did not state which ground or grounds of the motion his order was based on. Whether the court considered the matter of the extension of the taxes by an employee of the tax 'collector before the tax assessor had completed his roll does not positively appear. Nor does it appear from the Agreed Statement of Facts whether this was done at the request of the tax assessor and was ratified by him by his signing of the roll. It is not alleged that the extensions were erroneously made. In the opinion of this Court in the case of State ex rel. v. Board of Commissioners of the Everglades Drainage District, 135 Fla. 559, 190 So. 712, it is stated in the opinion that the extension of taxes on the tax roll are ministerial duties only. And in the case of Suits v. *558 Hillsborough County, 150 Fla. 115, 7 So. 346, it was stated that “When the assessed valuation is determined, the matter of extending the taxes is more or less perfunctory.” Undoubtedly this is a ministerial duty and in the larger counties of the State it is one that is usually performed by some employee of the tax assessor, and if nothing is clearly shown to the contrary, the signing of the roll by the tax assessor will be deemed to amount to approval and adoption by him of the extension of the taxes appearing on the tax roll at the time he signed it. In this connection see City of Tampa v. Mugge, 40 Fla. 326, 24 So. 494.

We might also eliminate here the last ground of the motion, to the effect that the meeting of the county commissioners when they met to hear complaints, and to receive testimony as to the value of property, was not held in the clerk’s office but in the county commissioners’ room, which was in accordance with the published notice. It does not appear that at the meeting in question the assessment on defendants’ land was increased, or that he was in any way injured by reason of the board holding its meeting in the county commissioners’ room, especially in view of the fact that the notice of said meeting which was published stated that such meeting would be held in the county commissioners’ room. No valid departure from the spirit and purpose of Sec. 929 C.G.L. is made to appear. City of Tampa v. Mugge supra. As this point is not insisted upon in the brief, we apprehend that the court did not base its action upon this particular ground of motion.

We will now take up the two remaining questions which counsel for the respective parties have emphasized in their briefs. The first of these is based on the 3rd ground of the motion. The Agreed Statement of Facts shows that the trustees of the special tax school district in which the lands are located did not certify to the board of county commissioners the millage voted for the maintenance of the special tax school district for the year 1936, or for any of the subsequent years for which the lands were supposed to be delinquent for taxes, but notwithstanding this the county commissioners levied taxes for the maintenance and support of *559 said district, and the tax assessor assessed the same, for said years. There is attached as an exhibit to the agreed statement of facts a copy of the resolution of the board of county commissioners fixing the millage for the year 1936, including the special tax school districts within the county. In this resolution it is recited that the millage of the various special school districts were fixed in accordance with the millages set forth in a letter from the board of public instruction. A copy of that letter dated July 8, 1936, is also attached as an exhibit. The letter is addressed to the board of county commissioners of Orange County and informs the board that “You will note below the millages voted by the freeholders of the various special tax school districts of Orange County for the purpose of operating the free public schools of these districts for the years 1936-1937.” The letter also sets forth the millages estimated by the county board of public instruction to be necessary to meet the budget requirements of each of the districts during that period, and also the millages estimated to be necessary to meet the budget requirements for interest and sinking funds for each of said districts for said years and gives appropriate instructions as to the levy of the taxes. The letter shows that these millages and estimates were made by the board of public instruction, but the letter is signed “Judson B. Walker, Superintendent and Secretary of the Board of Public Instruction for Orange County, Florida.” The motion does not allege that any of these figures were incorrect. The burden of the motion was that the trustees of the Special Tax School District had not certified to the board of county commissioners the millage voted to be assessed and collected upon the taxable property within the district as required by Sec. 712-713 C.G.L. Appellants contend that the foregoing two Sections of Compiled General Laws were superseded or repealed by implication by Chapter 16838, Laws of 1935. Appellants contend that under said act the governing authority or board of a taxing district in this State is the county board of public instruction. Also, that Sec. 709 C.G.L. provides that “The powers of trustees shall not be those of control, but of supervision only, and shall extend to all the.public *560 schools within the Special Tax District.” And that Section 710 C.G.L. provides that all public schools conducted within a special tax district shall be under the direction and control of the county board of public instruction and county superintendent as in other districts. From this it is argued that the board of public instruction is the governing authority or board of the district and that under Chapter 16838, Acts of 1935, the board of public instruction was the proper body to furnish the school budget for the particular district in question here, as was done in this case. We cannot agree that Chapter 16838 superseded or impliedly repealed Sections 712-713 C.G.L.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 578, 152 Fla. 555, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-v-starbird-fla-1943.