Fire District No. 1 of Polk County v. Jenkins

221 So. 2d 740
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 16, 1969
Docket37719
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 221 So. 2d 740 (Fire District No. 1 of Polk County v. Jenkins) 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
Fire District No. 1 of Polk County v. Jenkins, 221 So. 2d 740 (Fla. 1969).

Opinion

221 So.2d 740 (1969)

FIRE DISTRICT NO. 1 OF POLK COUNTY, Public Corporation, Fred O. Dickinson, As Comptroller of the State of Florida, and Hobson Strain, As Tax Collector of Polk County, a Political Subdivision of the State of Florida, Appellants,
v.
William JENKINS, Jr., Appellee.

No. 37719.

Supreme Court of Florida.

April 16, 1969.

Quillian S. Yancey, Lakeland, for appellant Fire District No. 1 of Polk County.

John H. Dewell, Haines City, for appellants Fred O. Dickinson and Hobson Strain.

Robert L. Trohn, Lakeland, for appellee.

ADKINS, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court declaring unconstitutional that portion of Section 4, Chapter 63-1824, Laws of Florida, which empowers Fire District No. 1 of Polk County to levy special assessments against mobile home rental spaces at a rate not to exceed four dollars ($4.00) per year per rental space. The Fire District was organized pursuant to the provisions of the above Special Act, Section 4 of which provides as follows:

"The said district shall have the right, power and authority to levy special assessments against each parcel of real estate situated in said district upon which there is, on January 1 of each year, situated a building or structure of any kind. The rate of such assessment shall be fixed by resolution of the board of commissioners on or before August 15 of each year and shall in no event exceed the sum of seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per dwelling or commercial unit. Mobile home rental spaces situated on any parcel of land shall be assessed not to exceed four dollars ($4.00) per year per rental space within the district. Provided, that no property which is already under fire protection by contract shall be subject to the taxes authorized herein, until such time as the district has established an accredited fire department, accreditation to be by the national board of fire underwriters."

*741 Section 8 of this Act authorizes the Board of Commissioners of the Fire District to levy annually against all taxable real property included within the district an ad valorem tax not to exceed one (1) mill. The area of the Fire District was described in Section 1 of the Act and designated "Fire District No. 1 of Polk County." The Appellee, plaintiff below, is the owner of a mobile home trailer park located just outside the City of Lakeland, Polk County, Florida, but wholly within the boundaries of the Fire District. The trailer park consists of the private home of Jenkins and more than 100 parcels or rental spaces, each approximately 40 x 100 feet in size. On each parcel is a concrete slab together with the necessary facilities to connect any mobile home placed thereon to water, sewerage and electricity. In the years 1964 to and through 1967 the Fire District levied a special assessment tax varying from four dollars ($4.00) to two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50) against each individual parcel. The taxes so levied were paid by Jenkins under protest.

Jenkins filed his complaint in the Circuit Court contending that the special assessment provisions of the Act violated Article IX, Section 13 of the Florida Constitution, F.S.A., relating to assessment of mobile home spaces and that the Act in its application to mobile home parks was arbitrary, confiscatory, discriminatory and disproportionate. Jenkins sought a refund of the assessment previously paid, plus interest, and an injunction prohibiting the Fire District from levying special assessments pursuant to the above Special Act upon his mobile home rental spaces. The lower court granted Jenkins the relief he sought, finding and holding as follows:

"1. That under the Act, a trailer space is the property to be taxed or specially assessed, and the trailer space as such derives no benefit from fire protection, the only benefit being to the trailer or mobile home, if any, situated in the space.
"2. That the Act singles out one category of commercial enterprise, that is mobile home parks, without consideration of benefit derived.
"3. That the provision of Section 4 of the Special Act creating Fire District No. 1 of Polk County insofar as it attempts to levy special assessments against mobile home rental spaces within the district at a rate not to exceed four dollars ($4.00) per rental space is arbitrary, discriminatory and disproportionate to any benefit derived by such mobile home spaces.
"4. That the plaintiff is entitled to a refund of said special assessments paid in 1964 and subsequent years under the provision of Chapter 63-1824, described in the preceding paragraph."

Chapter 63-1824 authorizes a levy not to exceed one (1) mill annually against "all taxable real property included within the district." In addition to the one (1) mill, the owner may be required to pay the sum of not more than seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per dwelling or commercial unit and the owners of mobile home rental spaces not to exceed four dollars ($4.00) per year per rental space. In other words, the trailer space receives less benefit than any type of dwelling or commercial unit, and the commissioners are authorized to assess any amount less than four dollars ($4.00) per space. In fact, this has been done.

On the question of to what extent property may be said to be specially benefited by the creation and operation of a Fire District, much may be said. Fire protection and the availability of fire equipment afford many benefits.

Fire Insurance premiums are decreased; public safety is protected; the value of business property is enhanced by the creation of the Fire District; a trailer park with fire protection offers a better service to tenants, which would reflect in the rental charge of the spaces. It is not necessary that the benefits be direct or immediate, but they must be substantial, certain, and capable of being realized within a reasonable time. Vacant or unimproved *742 lands have been declared not to be immune from special sewer assessments, the benefit of the improvement being to the realty itself and not to the buildings thereon. See Meyer v. City of Oakland Park, Florida, (Opinion filed February 26, 1969) 219 So.2d 417.

This Court in Martin v. Dade Muck Land Co., 95 Fla. 530, 116 So. 449, 464, said:

"All forms of special assessments for local public improvements or facilities must have fair relation to benefits that reasonably may be expected to accrue to the value or to the uses of the property so specially assessed; and such special assessments must not, by reason of arbitrary action or unjust discrimination or otherwise, violate the due process or equal protection or other provisions of organic law. Where the public improvements contemplated, and the method of the special assessments and the anticipated benefits, are determined by direct legislative enactment, such determinations will not be disturbed by the courts, unless an abuse of power or purely arbitrary and oppressive action is clearly shown in appropriate proceedings duly taken by parties who have not acquiesced in the action taken and have not abandoned or waived their rights, and who are otherwise entitled to complain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 So. 2d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fire-district-no-1-of-polk-county-v-jenkins-fla-1969.