Deparment of Transportation v. Florida Coalition of Rail Passengers, Inc.
This text of 466 So. 2d 403 (Deparment of Transportation v. Florida Coalition of Rail Passengers, 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.
Opinion
The Department of Transportation (Department) appeals from a circuit court declaratory judgment in which the court found that the Silver Palm, a passenger train operating to and from Tampa and Miami, was entitled to continue to be funded by the State beyond November 20, 1984.1 The circuit court withheld issuance of a coercive writ upon the assumption that the Department would abide by the court’s ruling and continue funding. We find that the circuit court erred and reverse.
The Silver Palm, a rail service development project2 under Section 341.301(2), Florida Statutes, provides a train service governed by Section 403(b) of Public Law 91-518 (the AMTRAK law) under which AMTRAK runs the train and finances a portion of the expenses with the state also bearing a portion of the expenses. The [405]*405Silver Palm has been providing daily service since November 1982.
In 1984 the Legislature, through the enactment of Chapter 84-333, Laws of Florida, created Sections 341.301-341.303, Florida Statutes,3 which attempted to articulate the Department’s role with respect to the rail component of the state transportation plan for which plan the Department was responsible under the previously enacted 1978 Florida Public Transit Act (Sections 341.011-341.061, Florida Statutes),
In the 1984 Appropriations Act, Chapter 84-220, Laws of Florida, line item 1593 [406]*406appeared as follows with the following condition:
AID TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MASS TRANSIT MATCHING GRANTS
FROM GRANTS AND DONATIONS TRUST FUND . 110,000
FROM WORKING CAPITAL TRUST FUND. 39,900,313
Of the funds provided in Specific Appropriation 1593 for the operation of the Silver Palm passenger train, $576,000 is contingent upon CS/SB 869 or similar legislation, extending transit service development beyond two years, becoming law.
The bill referred to as CS/SB 869 was indeed enacted and became Chapter 84-333, supra. The particular provision thereof which spawned the instant litigation is Section 341.303(4)(d) which provides:
(d) Any service development project funded under this section shall continue to be eligible for such funds in the third year of operation only if the project reaches an operating ratio of 60 percent or more during the second year. All intercity and commuter rail service development projects shall be limited to 3 years.
The Department, having determined that the Silver Palm failed to reach the statutorily provided 60% operating ratio, announced that it would cease funding the Silver Palm effective November 20, 1984. The Florida Coalition of Rail Passengers, Inc. (Coalition)4 filed a suit for mandamus and injunctive relief by which the Coalition sought to force the Department to continue funding the Silver Palm. The Coalition contended that the Department was erroneously applying the statute in determining the Silver Palm’s operating ratio by not including the federal AMTRAK contribution. After an evidentiary hearing, the circuit court decided to treat the Coalition’s suit as one for declaratory judgment and entered final judgment in favor of the Coalition finding that the Department improperly excluded federal AMTRAK funds in determining the Silver Palm’s operating ratio.
An agency's construction of a statute it administers is entitled to great weight and is not to be overturned unless clearly erroneous. Department of Insurance v. Southeast Volusia Hospital District, 438 So.2d 815, 820 (Fla.1983); Pan American World Airways, Inc. v. Florida Public Service Commission, 427 So.2d 716, 719 (Fla.1983); Kirk v. Weston Contracting Corporation, 216 So.2d 503 (Fla. 1st DCA 1969).
The parties agree that “operating ratio” is revenues divided by costs. The dispute is over whether the federal AMTRAK subsidy should be included as revenue in the operating ratio. At the final hearing in the lower court, the only testimony or evidence offered was that introduced by the Department. The evidence showed that the Department construed the term “operating ratios” in such a way as to exclude consideration of federal subsidies. The evidence further showed that in 1979 the Department, pursuant to Section 341.041(3) of the Florida Public Transit Act,5 developed the [407]*407Florida Transit System Performance Measures and Standards. Within these standards the Department defined “operating ratio” as total revenue/total operating expenses. The term revenue was defined as including that which was earned by the actual transit system operation. Included were certain classes of revenue as defined in the manual developed by the federal government to comply with Section 15 of the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964. Excluded from the definition of revenue is consideration of any federal subsidies. According to the evidence presented, this view of the meaning of operating ratio is also consistent with the Department’s use of the term in other transit matters and studies and with the term’s customary industry usage.
Careful review of Chapter 341 reveals that this is not a case in which one can determine from the statutory provisions whether the legislature intended the term “operating ratio” to include AMTRAK subsidies;6 if it were such a situation and the language of the statute were clear and not illogical, we would have no problem with the trial court’s judgment. See Vocelle v. Knight Brothers Paper Company, 118 So.2d 664 668 (Fla. 1st DCA 1960).
However, not only is the legislative intent not apparent from a review of Chapter 341, but also the Coalition has failed to present competent substantial evidence supporting the construction it urged in the lower court. This is a textbook case for application of the principle, cited earlier, that deference is to be accorded to an agency’s construction of a statute which it is charged with administering. The Coalition having failed to demonstrate that the Department’s interpretation of the term operating ratio was clearly erroneous, the judgment must be reversed.
In view of our holding on this issue, we need not address the collateral dispute over whether the statutory phrase “reaches an operating ratio of 60 percent” requires that such level be maintained beyond simply one or two months. The evidence shows that, without the inclusion of the AMTRAK subsidy in the operating ratio, the Silver Palm never reached the statutorily required level.
REVERSED.
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466 So. 2d 403, 10 Fla. L. Weekly 812, 1985 Fla. App. LEXIS 13165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deparment-of-transportation-v-florida-coalition-of-rail-passengers-inc-fladistctapp-1985.