De Bowes v. De Bowes

7 So. 2d 4, 149 Fla. 545
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 20, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 4 (De Bowes v. De Bowes) 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
De Bowes v. De Bowes, 7 So. 2d 4, 149 Fla. 545 (Fla. 1942).

Opinions

WHITFIELD, J.:

A motion is made to dismiss an appeal taken November 26, 1941, from an amended final decree entered May 27, 1941, and from a decree entered April 12, 1941. In substance the contention is that the appeal was not taken in accordance with the requirements of Chapter 20441, Acts of 1941, which is as follows:

“Chapter 20441 — (No. 233). House Bill No. 493. “An Act Relating To and Affecting the Time Within Which Writs of Error Shall Be Sued Out in Actions at Law or Appeals Taken in Suits in Chancery; To Repeal Certain Statutes Relating Thereto, and Certain Statutes Saving the Time Therefor in Favor of Infants and Married Women; and To Fix the Effective Date Hereof.
"Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
“Section 1. All Writs of Error in Judgments in Civil Actions, and Appeals in Chancery whether from interlocutory orders or decrees, shall be sued out and taken within Sixty (60) days from the date of said judgment, or the entry of the order of decree appealed from.
“Section 2. That Sections 2909, 1910 and 3168 of the Revised General Statutes of Florida, A. D, 1920, *548 being Sections 4610, 4620 and 4690 Compiled General Laws of Florida 1927, be and the same are hereby repealed.
“Section 3. This Act shall take effect October 1, 1941, at 12 o’clock M.
“Approved by the Governor May 23, 1941.
“Filed in Office Secretary of State May 23, 1941.”

Section 5, Article V, of the Constitution provides:

“The Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction in all cases at law and in equity originating in Circuit Courts.”

The time and manner in which appellate proceedings may be invoked are subject to statutory regulation when the right to appeal is not thereby unduly restricted. State v. City of Coral Gables, 101 Fla. 237, 133 So. 892.

Statutes regulating the right of appeal should be liberally interpreted to preserve the right to appeal and in furtherance of justice. See Price v. Horton, 76 Fla. 537, 80 So. 305. See also Section 4, Declaration of Rights, Florida Constitution.

Parties to a suit have a right to require the due observance of statutory regulations of the manner in which appeals may be made effective. Providence S. B. & T. Co. v. Devito, 98 Fla. 1076, 125 So. 235.

In Spencer v. McBride, 14 Fla. 403, the statute limited the time in which actions may be bought in trial courts on existing causes of action. The decision was rendered in 1874 before the adoption of the Constitution of 1885 which contains the following as Section 33 of Article III:

“No statute shall be passed lessening the time within which a civil action may be commenced on any cause of action existing at the time of its passage.”

*549 In consequence of the quoted organic provision the decision in the McBride case is not controlling in original actions brought in trial courts; and all of the principles announced in the opinion in the McBride case that may conflict with the organic section e.g. headnote No. 4, are not necessarily applicable when interpreting statutes limiting the time for taking appeals.

Each statute should be interpreted with reference to controlling law, to the terms and intendments of the statute and to the object designed by the enactment. When not controlled by organic law, statutes limiting the time for taking appeals should be interpreted to afford a reasonable time for taking appeals to all parties having a right of appeal whether the judgments, decrees or orders to be appealed from were rendered or entered before or after the statute is enacted or becomes effective under Section 18, Article III, of the Constitution. See Re Est. Ollie M. Woods, 133 Fla. 730, 183 So. 10.

In Sammis v. Bennett, 32 Fla. 458, 14 So. 90, 22 L.R.A. 48, Chapter 4130, Acts of 1893, limiting the time for taking chancery appeals to six months, did not expressly repeal the prior statute allowing such appeals to be taken within two years, and under the Constitution the effective date of Chapter 4130 was August 1, 1893, sixty days after the final adjournment of the legislature on June 2, 1893. This Court held Chapter 4130 to be applicable only to appeals from orders and decrees entered after the effective date of the statute under the Constitution, the statute not making its effective date later than sixty days after the final adjournment of the legislature, as was done by Chapter 20441, Acts of 1941, in this case, *550 which though approved by the Governor and becoming a law May 23, 1941, did not take effect or become operative till noon October 1, 1941, as expressly provided in Chapter 20441, which Chapter also expressly repealed identified prior laws on the subject upon becoming effective October 1, 1941.

The brief of counsel for the motion to dismiss contains the following:

“We submit that:
“1. The new Act is retrospective, and such was the purpose of postponing its effectiveness until October 1, 1941, otherwise Section 3 of the Act is meaningless and purposeless.
“2. That all appeals from decrees more than sixty days old must be taken before October 1, 1941 (noon).
“3. That after October 1, 1941 (noon) appeals may be taken only from decrees not more than sixty days old at time of entry of appeal regardless of date of entry. For example: a decree of August 3, 1941, can be appealed up to October 2, 1941, and a decree of September 30, 1941, can be appealed up to November 29, 1941, and decrees dated after October 1, 1941, (noon) have the sixty days thereafter for appeal.
“4. Stated another way: appeals taken after October 1, 1941, come under the 1941 Act, and must be from decrees not more than sixty days old (“sixty days from date of entry”); and appeals taken before October 1 come under the 1893 Act, and may be from any decrees entered between April 2, 1941, and October 1, 1941. This is true, for the repeal clause (Sec. 2 of 1941 Act) makes us operate under the 1893 Act before October 1, 1941, and under the 1941 Act after October 1, 1941.”

*551 The manifest intent of Chapter 20441, Acts of 1941, is to provide that where a judgment is rendered or a decree or order is entered after noon on October 1, 1941, all appeals from any such judgments, decrees or orders shall be sued out and taken within sixty days from the date of the judgment or from the entry of orders or decrees appealed from; and that when such a judgment, order or decree is rendered or entered before noon of October 1, 1941, an appeal therefrom shall be sued out and taken within a period of time that is less than six months from the date of the judgment or the entry of the order or decree appealed from, including the portion of the sixty days from noon of October 1, 1941, that have expired before the appeal is entered.

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7 So. 2d 4, 149 Fla. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-bowes-v-de-bowes-fla-1942.