Hayek v. Lee County

231 So. 2d 214
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 29, 1970
Docket38949
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 231 So. 2d 214 (Hayek v. Lee County) 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
Hayek v. Lee County, 231 So. 2d 214 (Fla. 1970).

Opinion

231 So.2d 214 (1970)

Will J. HAYEK, Jr., and John Savage, As Prosecuting Attorney of Lee County, Florida, Appellants,
v.
LEE COUNTY, Florida, Appellee.

No. 38949.

Supreme Court of Florida.

January 29, 1970.

*215 Charles L. Bigelow, Jr., Fort Myers, for Will J. Hayek, Jr., and Julian D. Clarkson, Fort Myers, for John Savage, as Pros. Atty. of Lee County, appellants.

Pavese, Waldrop, Shields & D'Alessandro, Fort Myers, Earl Faircloth, Atty. Gen., and T.T. Turnbull, Chief Trial Counsel, for appellee.

ON REHEARING GRANTED

DREW, Justice.

Chapter 69-565, Laws of Florida,[1] created a new Court of Record for Lee County. The act designates the State Attorney of the Circuit in which Lee County is located as the prosecutor of all felonies in said court and the County Prosecuting Attorney as the prosecutor of all misdemeanors. The Clerk of the Circuit Court of Lee County is designated therein as Clerk of said court and the Lee County Sheriff is designated as "the Chief Executive Officer of the Court."

The trial court's declaratory final judgment upheld the constitutionality of the act in litigation contending that it violated Section 11(a) (1) of Article III of the Florida Constitution, 1968, and was therefore not properly enacted under the provisions of Section 1 of Article V of the Constitution of 1885[2] permitting the Legislature to "from time to time ordain and establish" other courts than those named therein. It is from this judgment that a direct appeal has been prosecuted to this Court.[3]

The decision here turns on the simple proposition of whether Section 11(a) (1) of Article III of the 1968 Constitution of Florida[4] differs in substance or meaning from Section 20, Article III, of the 1885 Florida Constitution.[5] It is conceded by all parties that if it be determined that the 1968 constitutional provisions above referred to did not alter, change or modify the 1885 provisions, the judgment of the trial court is free of error and should be affirmed on the authority of the numerous cases of this court construing the 1885 provision.[6]

*216 Subsequent to the rendition of the original decision in this cause, November 5, 1969, from which we now recede, we have examined minutely the record of the proceedings of the Constitutional Revision Commission appointed to draft the Constitution which was adopted by the people in the General Election of 1968 and became effective January 7, 1969, and many documents relating thereto which have been collected and are now preserved in the Supreme Court Library.[7] The revelations of these various documents and a more thorough study and comparison of the language used in each constitution convince us there was no intention to change in any way the purposes to be served by such provisions.

A constitutional provision prohibiting passage of certain local and special laws appeared first in the Florida Constitution of 1868. The wording of Article IV, Section 17 of the 1868 Constitution was carried forward, with two inconsequential punctuation changes, into Section 20, Article III of the Constitution of 1885, the section remaining effective until January 7, 1969, and reading as follows: "The Legislature shall not pass special or local laws in any of the following enumerated cases: that is to say, regulating the jurisdiction and duties of any class of officers, except municipal officers * * *." (emphasis added.)

The Convention of the Constitution Revision Commission which convened in November of 1966 for the purpose of proposing a new constitution for approval by the Legislature and people, considered a preliminary draft containing the following provision: "Article 3, Section 11, Prohibited Special and Local Laws. — The Legislature shall not pass any special or local law pertaining to: (a) jurisdiction, duties, fees other than those for special county purposes, or election, including the opening and conducting thereof and the designation of places of voting, of any officers except of municipalities and chartered counties. * * *" (emphasis added.)

The Supreme Court Library collection of documents relative to drafting and passage of the 1968 Constitution contains no record of any discussion or report indicating why the wording in the above section was changed from "regulating" to "pertaining to." The words "pertaining to" are used in essentially the same manner and appear in each constitution draft by the convention and Legislature, including the final document adopted November 5, 1968. Discussion centered mainly around which subject matters should be proscribed by subsection (a), except for changes in wording describing "special" and local laws.

Article III, Section 11 of the final document presented to the Legislature by the Constitutional Revision Commission in January 1967 contained a slightly reworded section (a) with the addition of "chartered counties" to the subject matters prohibited. It read as follows: "Section 11. Prohibited Special and Local Laws. — The Legislature shall not pass any special or local law pertaining to: (a) election, jurisdiction, duties or fees of officers except officers of municipalities or chartered counties. *217 * * *" (emphasis added.) This wording of the section was introduced as a part of the proposed constitution via House and Senate Joint Resolutions for consideration at a special session of the Legislature during July 31 — August 18, 1967.

In an "Analysis of Proposed Constitution to be Introduced in the House of Representatives," prepared by the Florida Legislative Service, the following comment appears relative to Article III, Section 11: "Restates Section 20 * * *. Adds chartered counties to the present exemption of municipalities from the prohibition of special or local laws concerning the election, jurisdiction, duties, or fees of state and county officers." The following wording, including the bracketed words, appears in the copy of the House Joint Resolution labeled "As It Differs From Committee Substitute for Senate Joint Resolution 2-3 xxx(67) September 5, 1967," and was adopted in the final House Joint Resolution: "Section 11. Prohibited Special and Local Laws. — The Legislature shall not pass any [general law of local application or any] special or local law pertaining to: (a) election, jurisdiction, duties or fees of officers, except officers of municipalities or chartered counties. * * *"

The Legislature's Joint Committee on Style and Drafting, in its memorandum of September 29, 1967, reworded the provision as follows: "Section 11, Prohibited Special Laws. — (a) There shall be no special law or general law of local application pertaining to: (1) election, jurisdiction or duties of officers, except officers of municipalities or chartered counties. * * *"

Minutes of the Interim (Joint) Constitutional Revision Committee of the Legislature for October 9, 1967, indicate that the considerable discussion surrounding the section pertained to the feasibility of adding "special districts" to the exceptions in subsection (a). Minutes of the Interim Constitutional Revision Committee for October 30, 1967, show that the language of subsection (a) was amended to read as follows: "(1) Election, jurisdiction or duties of officers, except officers of municipalities, chartered counties, special districts, or authorities."

The section as contained in the Draft of the Joint Committee on Style and Drafting dated December 11, 1967, is identical to the section as it now reads in the 1968 Constitution:

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231 So. 2d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayek-v-lee-county-fla-1970.