Hillsborough County v. Temple Terrace Assets Co.

149 So. 473, 111 Fla. 368
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 So. 473 (Hillsborough County v. Temple Terrace Assets Co.) 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
Hillsborough County v. Temple Terrace Assets Co., 149 So. 473, 111 Fla. 368 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Buford, J.

The appeal in this case is from an order sustaining demurrer to an amended bill of complaint, the purpose of which amended bill of complaint was to foreclose certain so-called paving certificates which were issued pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 9316, Acts of 1923, as attempted to have been ratified and confirmed by Chapter 10137, Acts of 1925, and Chapter 12207, Acts of 1927. Chapter 9316, supra, constitutes whatever basis there is and *369 whatever legal authority there is, or was, for the board of county commissioners to make the assessment upon which the certificates were issued and to issue the certificates involved here.

In the City of Orlando v. Giles, 51 Fla. 442, 40 Sou. 834, this Court said :

“This Court has held in several cases that the Legislature has power to validate and legalize assessments and levies of. taxes which but for such legalizing action would be irregular and invalid. Smith v. Longe, 20 Fla. 697; City of Jacksonville v. Basnett, Id., 525; Parker v. City of Jacksonville, 37 Fla. 342, text 353, 20 Sou. Rep. 538. In Middleton v. City of St. Augustine, 42 Fla. 287, 29 South Rep. 421, second headnote, the law is thus stated: ‘The rule in respect to statutes curing defects in legal proceedings where they amount to mere irregularities, not extending to matters of jurisdiction, and in the absence of constitutional limitations, is that if the thing wanting or which failed to be done and which constitutes the defects in the proceedings, is something the necessity for which the legislature might have dispensed with by prior statute, then it is not beyond the power of the Legislature to dispense with it by subsequent statute; and if the irregularity consists in doing some act, or in the mode or manner of doing some act, which the Legislature might have made immaterial by prior law, it is equally competent to make the same immaterial by a subsequent law.’ Potter v. Lainhart, 44 Fla. 647, 33 South. Rep. 251; Givens v. Hillsborough County, 46 Fla. 502, 35 South. Rep. 8; Gooley’s Const. Lim. (7th ed.) 544; Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2nd ed.) 945 and notes — 946.
“In the case of People v. Goldtree, 44 Cal. 323, the court on page 325 says: ‘It will readily be conceded that the Legislature possesses the power to pass curative .Acts, by *370 which the various acts and proceedings of the officers and Board charged with the levying and assessing of taxes are rendered valid and legal, notwithstanding that irregularities and errors have intervened; and the cases are quite harmonious on the point in other states as well as this. There are, however, defects which are mostly either of a jurisdictional character, or those which become such by reason of some constitutional provision, which are beyond the reach of curative acts. It is impossible to draw a well defined line between the classes of defects which may, and those which may not, be remedied by curative legislation; nor are the authorities on the subject reconcilable. There are defects which, under our Constitution, are incurable by any subsequent legislation — such as an assessment of property situated without the Assessor’s county or district; an assessment made by the Board of Equalization; the exemption of particular property or a particular person’s property from taxation; the levying of different rates of taxation upon different species of property; and a judgment for the recovery of taxes rendered in a case in which the court had not acquired jurisdiction of the person assessed; and the enumeration might be extended. In those instances the defects consist of a want of power or jurisdiction in the officer or tribunal assuming to act in the matter; and we think it may safely be laid down as a rule in these matters, that whenever the officer had no power or jurisdiction to do the act in question, and not that in its performance he did not pursue the law in respect to the' time, mode or some other particular, the act is void, and subsequent legislation cannot cure the defect.”

In South Ottawa v. Perkins, 24 Law Ed. 154, Mr. Justice Bradley delivering the opinion for the Supreme Court of the United States, said:

*371 ' “When the cases now under consideration came on for trial in May, 1874, the defendants below offered to prove, by the Journals of each house of the Legislature that there was no entry in the same of the passage by the Senate of the Act of February 18, 1857. The testimony was objected to and ruled out. Substantially the same questions were raised by demurrer to a plea. The ground of this decision seems to have been, that the holder of the bonds was a. bona fide purchaser of them without notice of any objection to their validity; that the first installment of interest was paid at maturity; and, therefore, that the defendant was estopped from offering any evidence to show that the Act was not passed, the same having been duly published among the printed statutes as a law, and being, therefore, prima facie a valid law; in other words, that although the Act might not have been duly passed, the town, under the circumstances of the case, was estopped from denying its passage. We cannot assent to this view. There can be no estoppel in the way of ascertaining the existence of a law. That which purports to be a law of a state is a law or it is not a law, according as the truth of the fact may be, and not according to the shifting circumstances of parties. It would be an intolerable state of things if a document purporting to be an Act of the Legislature could thus be a law in one case and for one party, and not a law in another case and for another party; a law today and not tomorrow; a law in one place and not a law in another in the same State. And whether it be a law or not a law is a judicial question, to be settled and determined by the courts and the judges. The doctrine of estoppel is totally inadmissible in the case. >It would be a very unseemly state of things, after the courts of Illinois have determined that a pretended statute of that State is not such, having neither *372 been constitutionally passed, for the Courts of the United States, with the same evidence before them, to hold otherwise.”

Chapter 9316, Acts of 1923,- was repealed by Chapter 10139, Acts of 1925, but Section 2 of the Act purported to continue the Act in force in all cases where a petition had already been presented to the board of county commissioners as required by Chapter 9316, and to confirm and validate all proceedings pursuant to such petition. Chapter 12207, Acts of 1927, again purported to repeal Chapter 9316, but to confirm and validate all acts theretofore done under that chapter.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 473, 111 Fla. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillsborough-county-v-temple-terrace-assets-co-fla-1933.