Ex Parte Lewis

135 So. 147, 101 Fla. 624, 1931 Fla. LEXIS 1786
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 135 So. 147 (Ex Parte Lewis) 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
Ex Parte Lewis, 135 So. 147, 101 Fla. 624, 1931 Fla. LEXIS 1786 (Fla. 1931).

Opinion

Davis, J.

The warrant under which petitioner was arrested charges that petitioner, O. S. Lewis, then and there being, did then and there unlawfully take fish or attempt to take fish in the fresh waters of Calhoun County, Florida, to-wit: in a portion of the Dead Lakés in said County, it then and there being closed season on taking or attempting to take fish in said fresh waters.

Section 71A, of Chapter 13644, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1929, provides as follows:

“The Board of County Commissioners of any county in this State shall have authority to provide by resolution, for a closed season on the taking of fresh-water fish from the fresh waters of this State, which closed season shall not exceed sixty consecutive days in length from the time of the beginning of same, and which closed season shall be observed, when so prescribed, in lieu of any closed season upon fish prescribed in this Act. Resolutions fixing a closed season on the taking of fresh-water-fish, when passed under this Act, shall be published in a newspaper published in the county for not less than four consecutive issues after the adoption of the resolution and prior to the time fixed for the taking effect of the closed season prescribed, and a certified copy thereof shall be filed with the State Fresh *627 "Water Fish and Game Commissioner- on or before the effective date of the same. Resolutions passed under authority of this section revising the closed season on the taking of fish shall be limited to the particular season specified in such resolution, and no resolutions shall be passed at any one time covering more than one season. The County Commissioners shall provide for the printing and posting of copies of any resolution passed under this section at such public places as they may deem advisable to give notice to the public that the closed season has been fixed for fresh-water fish under this section. It shall be unlawful for any person to take any fresh-water fish during the period of any closed season fixed under authority of this section. In the case of waters forming a part of a county line of any ad- . joining county, no closed season on fishing shall be prescribed in such waters, except by the concurrence of the Board of County Commissioners of each county of which said waters form a part of the boundary, and like proceeding shall be followed in waters lying in two or more counties.

The petition alleges, and the accompanying exhibits show, that the fresh waters referred to in the warrant of arrest lie in two or more counties, namely, the adjoining counties of Gulf and Calhoun.

It was therefore necessary in order to prescribe a closed season in these waters, that there should have been a concurrence of the Boards of County Commissioners of each of the above named counties in a resolution adopted by them for that purpose. The brief for the State admits that there was no such concurrence, and for this reason the prisoner is entitled to his discharge, because the conditions necessary to give effect to the statutory provision for closing the waters is shown not to have existed at the time petitioner was arrested, and therefore the statute could not have been violated.

*628 But the principal ground urged by the petitioner for his discharge is that the statute under which he was arrested is unconstitutional as an unauthorized delegation of legislative power to the Boards of County Commissioners of the several counties to enact a closed season for fishing such counties.

We are not unmindful of the general rule that where a case can be disposed of on objections other than constitutional grounds that the court will not pass upon or discuss the validity of a statute which is under attack. Roriek v. Stillwell, decided at the present term, and cases cited.

But it is also true that this court, as well as the Supreme Court of the United States, has at times given its opinion concerning matters of great importance involving important principles of constitutional law affecting the powers and duties of public officials, even though a decision on the constitutional points in the particular case was unnecessary to dispose of it.

For an example of this practice see the holding of this court in the case of State ex rel. R. R. Commrs. v. So. Tel. & Const. Co., 65 Fla. 67, 61 So. 119, where this Court emphasized the fact that the case then before it embraced grave questions affecting the authority and duties of the Railroad Commissioners, which the public had an interest in having determined on the legal points raised, and accordingly refused to dismiss the writ of error, altho any decision on the constitutional points raised in that case was wholly unnecessary to the • rendition of judgment by the appellate court to dispose of it.

Likewise the case of Florida v. Mellon, 240 U. S. 342, 60 L. Ed. 679, is an example of a similar practice followed by the Supreme Court of the United States. There the Federal Supreme Court, after holding that- the State of *629 Florida had no standing in that court to maintain a case to challenge the constitutionality of a Federal Inheritance tax deduction statute as applied to Florida, nevertheless, proceeded to deliver a lengthy opinion on the merits and to hold the Federal Statute to be entirely constitutional as against the objections urged by the State which the Court said had no right to make them because of a lack of interest to be affected adversely by the Federal Law. Such opinion has been adhered to in at least one subsequent case.

So in this case we feel warranted, though we discharge the prisoner on other grounds, in passing upon the serious constitutional question argued because of its importance to the protection of one of the great natural resources of the State — its fish, as well as to form a precedent for the future guidance of officials and citizens in their conduct with reference to the power given by the Statute. The case on the constitutional point has been fully and exhaustively briefed for the petitioner, and a decision on the subject by this Court under the circumstances is by no means ex parte insofar as petitioner and others similarly situated may be concerned.

Furthermore, the reason for the rule that Courts will not pass upon the constitutionality of statutes when cases can be decided on other points, is that the courts must always preserve the attitude of respect and deference which is due by the judicial department to the legislative, in the light of which the courts invariably treat all statutes as being constitutional and within the legislative power until the contrary appears beyond any reasonable doubt, making it unavoidable for the courts to declare otherwise, in order to prevent an unconstitutional statute from over-riding the constitution.

*630 And in the case at bar if onr conclusions on the constitutionality of. the statute were adverse to its validity, we would, for the reasons just referred to, hesitate to so declare in.view of the fact that this case might be disposed of on other grounds which would render such declaration unnecessary.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 147, 101 Fla. 624, 1931 Fla. LEXIS 1786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-lewis-fla-1931.