Florida Livestock Board v. Hygrade Food Products Corp.

145 So. 2d 535, 1962 Fla. App. LEXIS 2842
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 17, 1962
DocketNo. D-217
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 So. 2d 535 (Florida Livestock Board v. Hygrade Food Products Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Florida Livestock Board v. Hygrade Food Products Corp., 145 So. 2d 535, 1962 Fla. App. LEXIS 2842 (Fla. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

WIGGINTON, Judge.

This appeal is from a summary final judgment by which appellee, Hygrade Food Products Corporation, was awarded a money judgment for amounts paid by it under protest to the Florida Livestock Board as fees for inspecting frozen meat, together with an amount representing the value of a quantity of meat which spoiled as a result of the required inspection. The facts are not in dispute and the questions involved are only of law. After the inspection fees in question were paid, but [536]*536prior to the institution of this action, this court affirmed without opinion an interlocutory order entered by the Circuit Court of Leon County which found under circumstances identical with those involved in this case that the Board was not lawfully authorized to inspect Federally inspected frozen meat entering the State of Florida for resale, or to charge a fee therefor.1

This suit was instituted by Hygrade against the Board and the Comptroller, Ray E. Green. Upon motion the suit was dismissed as to the Comptroller and proceeded to final judgment only against the Board. The principal point on this appeal involves the construction placed by the trial judge on F.S. Section 215.26, F.S. A., which provides for repayment of monies paid into the state treasury as a result of overpayment, error, or where the amount paid was not due.2

It is the Board’s position that the statute above mentioned provides the administrative procedure which controls Hygrade’s right to relief in the premises. The Board contends that before Hygrade may resort to the courts for relief, it must first have exhausted the administrative remedy provided by the cited statute which requires written application for refund to be filed with the Comptroller within eighteen months after the right to refund has accrued, in default of which the right shall be barred. Since no application for refund was filed in this case by Hygrade within the eighteen months limited by the foregoing statute, it is the Board’s position that Hygrade is now barred from seeking relief in the courts against either the Comptroller or the Board.

In disposing of the Board’s contention the trial judge recited in the judgment appealed that the statute is susceptible to the construction placed upon it by the Board, but held that the case is controlled by a decision of the Supreme Court which held that F.S. Section 215.26, F.S.A., is not of general application but one in relation to claims against the Comptroller. The trial judge thereupon held that since the cause had been dismissed as to the Comptroller for failure of the complaint to state a cause of action against him, that it would now be illogical and inconsistent to hold that Hygrade’s claim is. one against the Comptroller so as to bring the case within the statute under consideration as construed by the Supreme Court. We understand this recitation and finding of the trial judge to mean that the pertinent statute now under consideration is applicable to the claim for refund asserted by Hygrade, but because the complaint fails to allege that an application for refund was filed with the Comptroller within the eighteen months period limited by the statute, no cause of action was alleged [537]*537as would entitle Hygrade to relief against the Comptroller. Since the Comptroller was dismissed from the case, the trial judge found no impediment to Hygrade’s right to proceed for recovery of a money judgment against the Board for the amount of inspection fees illegally exacted of it, as well as for the value of its meat which spoiled as a result of the unauthorized inspection. This ruling obviously permits Hygrade to do indirectly that which it ■could not lawfully do directly.

The, decision of the Supreme Court referred to by the trial judge is the case of State ex rel. Tampa Electric Co. v. Gay.3 That suit was brought by the Electric Company to recover from the Comptroller certain intangible taxes paid by it under protest on bonds issued outside the State of Florida. Application for refund of the taxes was made by the Electric Company to the Comptroller and denied, such application having been filed pursuant to the re•quirements of F.S. Section 215.26, F.S.A., which is the statuté now under consideration. The court held the tax to have been illegally exact and ordered the Comptroller -to refund that part of the tax for which application had been timely filed. In so holding the Supreme Court made the following statement on which the trial judge relied in the case we now review: “Section 215.26, supra, is not of a general application but one in relation to claims against the Comptroller.” Just what the author of the opinion meant by the quoted statement is not entirely clear. However we do not interpret it to mean that one may ignore with impunity the procedure provided by law for securing a refund of money paid into the state treasury through overpayment or error, and avoid the consequences thereof by the mere expedient of omitting the Comptroller as a party defendant in a suit brought directly against the state agency to whom payment was made. If the claimant’s right to a refund from the Comptroller is barred by the non-claim provisions of the statute, then he has no right to assert a claim for judgment in the amount of such refund from the state agency who collected the payment in question.

It is our construction of F.S. Section 215.26, F.S.A., that it is intended to provide an administrative procedure by which a person may secure a refund of monies paid by him into the treasury of this state, if such payment was made under any of the conditions specified in the statute. The inspection fees paid -under protest by Hygrade to the Board were paid into the state treasury as a result of an erroneous assumption by the Board that it possessed the lawful power to exact the inspection fees so charged and paid. The payment came within that provision of the statute which authorizes refund of any payment made into the state treasury in error, it being immaterial whether the error be one of law or of fact.

F.S. Section 215.31, F.S.A., provides that all revenues, including licenses, fees, imposts, or exaction collected or received under the authority of the laws of the state by each and every state official, * * *, board, * * * or undertaking of the state shall be promptly deposited in the state treasury, and immediately credited to the appropriate fund as provided by law, and no money shall be paid from the state treasury except as appropriated by law.4 F.S. Section 215.32, F.S.A., provides that all monies deposited in the state treasury shall be segregated into five designated funds, one of which is the state agencies’ fund which shall consist of all monies collected under the authority of the laws of this state from taxes, licenses, fees, and charges levied and collected for the operation of regulatory boards, commissions or other similar agencies or for a specific purpose of such agency.5 The authority [538]*538for making refunds is vested in the Comptroller under Section 215.26, which provides that if money paid into the treasury under any of the specified conditions entitling one to a refund has been credited to an appropriation, such appropriation shall at the time of making the refund be charged therewith. The statute appropriates from the proper respective funds from time to time such sums as may be necessary for such refunds.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 2d 535, 1962 Fla. App. LEXIS 2842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-livestock-board-v-hygrade-food-products-corp-fladistctapp-1962.