JOSIE MACHOVEC v. PALM BEACH COUNTY

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 27, 2021
Docket20-1765
StatusPublished

This text of JOSIE MACHOVEC v. PALM BEACH COUNTY (JOSIE MACHOVEC v. PALM BEACH COUNTY) 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
JOSIE MACHOVEC v. PALM BEACH COUNTY, (Fla. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JOSIE MACHOVEC, CARL HOLME, KAREN HOLME, RACHEL EADE, and ROBERT SPREITZER, Appellants,

v.

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Appellee.

No. 4D20-1765

[January 27, 2021]

Appeal of a non-final order from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; John S. Kastrenakes, Judge; L.T. Case No. 50-2020-CA-006920-XXXX-MB.

Jared H. Beck, Elizabeth Lee Beck, and Victor Arca, of Beck & Lee Trial Lawyers, Miami; Louis Leo IV, Esq. of Florida Civil Rights Coalition, P.L.L.C., Coconut Creek; Joel Medgebow, Esq. of Medgebow Law, P.A., Coconut Creek; Melissa Martz, Esq. of Melissa Martz PLLC, Royal Palm Beach; and Cory C. Strolla, Esq. of The Law Office of Cory Strolla, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellants.

Helene C. Hvizd and Rachel Fahey, Assistant County Attorneys, Palm Beach County Attorney’s Office, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

Robert C. Swain, Deputy County Attorney, Gainesville, for Amicus Curiae Alachua County.

FORST, J.

Appellants Josie Machovec, Carl Holme, Karen Holme, Rachel Eade and Robert Spreitzer appeal the denial of their motion for an emergency temporary injunction to prevent enforcement of Palm Beach County Emergency Order No. 20-12 (June 24, 2020) (“EO-12”). This emergency order (a/k/a “mask mandate” or “mask ordinance”) was initially effective on June 25, 2020 and has since been extended seven times, most recently on January 19, 2021, covering a period that ends on February 19, 2021. EO-12 mandates that “facial coverings” must be worn in Palm Beach County at businesses and establishments, public places, county and municipal government facilities, and while using public transportation.

Appellants challenged EO-12 as an unconstitutional infringement on their right to privacy. The trial court upheld the mask ordinance, finding “the requirement to wear such a covering has a clear rational basis based on the protection of public health” and that the issuance of the emergency order was a “policy decision” based on “a reasonable and logical conclusion.” In the instant appeal, Appellants argue that “[r]equiring the general population to use face coverings abridges the constitutional right to refuse medical treatment” and, accordingly, the trial court erred in analyzing Appellants’ challenge to the ordinance by “rational basis review” rather than “strict scrutiny.” They request remand for a new “strict scrutiny” review.

Finding that Appellants’ argument on appeal is not supported by the record nor legal authority and that there is support for the trial court’s determination that Appellants failed to establish a substantial likelihood of success on the merits or that an injunction will serve the public interest, we affirm.

Background

On March 1, 2020, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed Executive Order 20-51, directing the Florida Department of Health to issue a “public health emergency.” Fla. Exec. Order No. 20-51, § 1 (March 1, 2020). Numerous State and Palm Beach County emergency orders followed, responding to “a severe acute respiratory illness that can spread among humans through respiratory transmission.” See, e.g., City of West Palm Beach Exec. Order 20-02 (March 21, 2020).

In June 2020, the Palm Beach County Director of the Florida Department of Health stated at two meetings of the County’s Board of County Commissioners that social distancing and the wearing of facial coverings were the best, pre-vaccine, methods to reduce the spread of the virus. EO-12. The Board voted to direct “the County Administrator to issue an additional order mandating the wearing of facial coverings in all businesses and establishments and in outdoor public spaces where social distancing is not possible.” Id. Accordingly, EO-12 was signed by the Palm Beach County Administrator on June 24, 2020 and went into effect the following day. Id. The County’s Board and Administrator are “authorized and empowered during a state of emergency . . . to make, amend, and rescind emergency orders deemed necessary to protect the health, safety,

2 and/or welfare of the people of Palm Beach County[.]” Palm Beach County, Fla., Code ch. 9, art. II, § 9-35 (2020).

EO-12 is titled “Additional Directive on Wearing of Facial Coverings.” The directive has a broad scope and requires facial coverings to be “worn by all persons, other than those specifically exempted [elsewhere in the order] while obtaining any good or service or otherwise visiting or working in any business or establishment, including entering, exiting, and otherwise moving around within the establishment.” EO-12, § 4a. (emphasis added). “Such businesses and establishments include, but are not limited to, restaurants, retail establishments, hotels, grocery stores, gyms, pharmacies, indoor recreational facilities, and vehicles for hire.” Id. The order further mandates the wearing of facial coverings “by all persons in public places where social distancing in accordance with [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”)] guidelines is not possible or not being practiced”; by “[a]ll persons utilizing the County’s Palm Tran transit services”; and by “[a]ll persons accessing . . . any Palm Beach County or municipal-owned and operated buildings.” EO-12, § 4b.–d.

Exemptions to the order’s mandate are provided for children under two and any child in a licensed childcare facility, as well as “[p]ersons who have a medical condition that makes the wearing of a facial covering unsafe such as, but not limited to, asthma, COPD, other conditions that reduce breathing or lung capacity.” EO-12, § 4e. Further notable exemptions are allowed for “[i]ndividuals while actively engaged in exercise and maintaining social distancing” and for “[p]ersons receiving goods or services from a business or establishment for the shortest practical period of time during which the receipt of such goods or services necessarily precludes the wearing of a facial covering such as, but not limited to, consuming food or beverage or receiving a facial grooming or treatment.” Id.

In addition to the liberal exemption provisions, the order also gives a broad definition of “facial covering” as “any covering which snugly covers the nose and mouth, whether store bought or homemade, mask or clothing covering including but not limited to, a scarf, bandana, handkerchief, or other similar cloth covering and which is secured in place.” EO-12, § 5. Furthermore, “persons may wear clear, plastic face shields, consisting of a piece of rigid, clear plastic attached to a headband that extends below the chin, whether store bought or homemade.” Id.

Within days of issuance of EO-12, Appellants filed a Verified Emergency Motion for Temporary Injunction. Appellants are citizens of Palm Beach County. Their motion contends that EO-12 violates their right to privacy

3 (protected by Article I, Section 23 of the Florida Constitution). Appellants argued that the trial court should apply “strict scrutiny review” to EO-12 and that an injunction was appropriate because EO-12 does not further a compelling state interest using the least intrusive means. They further argued that EO-12 violated their right to due process (ensured by Article I, Section 9 of the Florida Constitution), contending that EO-12 is vague, arbitrary, and unreasonable, and not backed by any compelling state interest.

After a hearing on the motion and a review of Appellants’ arguments and the County’s response, the trial court issued a thirteen-page order, finding that a basis for a temporary injunction had not been established, as Appellants had not shown a substantial likelihood of success on the merits and had also failed to establish that the “public interest” is served by enjoining EO-12 the latter point, the order states:

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