McConihe v. State, ex rel. McMurray

17 Fla. 238
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 17 Fla. 238 (McConihe v. State, ex rel. McMurray) 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
McConihe v. State, ex rel. McMurray, 17 Fla. 238 (Fla. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wesicott

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding by mandamus. The relators are registered voters and actual residents of the city of Jacksonville. Without narrating at length all of the allegations contained in the alternative writ, it is sufficient to say that a failure upon the part of the mayor and aldermen of the city to call an election for their successors in office in accordance with an ordinance 'of the city regulating the subject, is alleged.

It is unquestionably true that if the ordinance claimed to be in force is operative that the respondents have failed to perform their duty in the matter as alleged. They, however allege that the ordinance providing for an election of their successors at the time stated is not in force, having been repealed, as they say, by subsequent legislative" afction affecting the corporation of the city in such manner that it is in no wise their duty to call sucji an election.

* The city of Jacksonville, it is not denied, was a corporation under and by virtue of the “act to provide for the incorporation of cities and towns, and to establish a uniform system of municipal government in this State,” approved February 4, 1-869. Nor is it denied, if that act is now in force as to the city of Jacksonville, that the ordinance directing the election to be held was the ordinance controlling that subject, or that it was the duty of the officers of the corporation to call the election, which it is the piirpose of -the relators here to compel them to call. The defence relied upon principally arises out'of-the act approved March 4, 1879> being an act to amend the act of February 4, 1869, and the acts amendatory thereof, “and to further vide for the organization and government of cities”

Section 4 of the act of 1879 provided “that all cities organized under the act approved February 4, I860, which now have or may at any time hereafter have sixteen hundred or more registered voters, may have powers and exercise any or all of the special rights, powers and privileges in this section hereinafter granted, in addition to the general powers and privileges granted under the said act approved February 4, 1869, as aforesaid, and the several acts amendatory thereof, so far as they are consistent herewith.” The special rights, privileges and powers granted thereafter in this section were, to some extent, organic in their character, and to some extent, they appertained to such matters as are usually regulated by ordinances of the city under a grant of general powers.

The 9th subdivision of the 4th section of tlie act of 1879 provided that any city now containing sixteen hundred or more registered voters which .may elect to accept the provisions of this section, so far as the same may change in any manner - its existing form of municipal organic ition, .and the election of its municipal officers, shall, before the date of its first anmial election as now provided by any ordinance of said city, declare such acceptance by ordinance duly passed according to law, whereupon such change shall take effect on and after Us first anmial election thereafter to be held ón the second Tuesday in December, as hereinbefore provided. It was threinbefore provided, that the regular annual election should be had on the second Tuesday in December.

If the act of 1879 is not in conflict with the Constitution, postponing as it does the annual election until December, then a failure of the mayor and aldermen to call an election until that time is justified by the law. If, on the other hand, the power of the Legislature is so limited as to. render this -postponement in conflict with the Constitution, and the ordinance, adopted under the legislation of Í869 is in force, then they have violated the law in the failure to call an election; and if the right exists in the relators to compel them to call an election and a mandamus is a remedy appropriate to that end, they can and should be held to the performance of the duty. We first examine the constitutional questions, postponing the consideration of such other questions as we think involved to the determination of this, the most important matter connected with the cause.

The Constitution of this "State provides (Art. IV., Sec. 17,) “that the legislature shall not pass special or local laws in any of the following enumerated cases,” * * * “regulating county, township and municipal business; regulating the election of county, township and municipal officers.” “In all cases enumerated .in the preceding section, and in all óther cases where a general law can- be mqde applicable, all lhws shall be general and of uniform operation throughout the State.” (Art. IV., See. 18.) “The Legislature shall establish a uniform system of county, township and municipal government.” • Sec. 21, Art. IV.)

The amendatory act here changes in many very important respects the organic law of cities having, or which may have at- any time thereafter, sixteen hundred or more registered voters. These modifications were not to operate, . however, unless the city accepted them before" the date of its next annual election.

Under the act of 1869 municipal corporations were classified into cities and towns,, the city to contain three nun-dred registered voters, the town less than that number. Their powers were different, not, however, to any great extent, the difference being principally in the matter of authority to issue bonds; the city having .such power, while the town did not. Under the act of 1879 a new class, that, is cities having sixteen hundred or more registered, voters, _ [73]*73was created, and the powers conferred on this class were different from those conferred on the other two. It is thus apparent that the Legislature authorized by its action in these two statutes, first, a municipal corporation known as a city, to contain at least three hundred voters; second, a municipal corporation, known 'as a town, to contain less than three hundred voters; and thi^d, cities containing sixteen hundred or more registered voters, and that each class had different powers. It is also apparent that the existence of any municipal corporation of the third class depended, first, upon its being being before that time incorporated as a city; second, that it contained 1,600 or more registered voters; third, that it accepted the modifications proposed in its organic law by the act of 1879; and fourth, that it declared this acceptance before its first annual election as then fixed by ordinance. As to the first and second classifications, the Legislature has fixed their powers and duties. The power of each municipal subdivision'is the same. It is uniform. Each city has the same power. Each town has like authority, and each city and town is controlled in the exercise of its subordinate legis-ltaive discretion by like limitations, as well as by like grants of power. Under the act of 1879 each town retains the government it had before, but it is left discretionary with each city having 1,600 registered voters to retain its government under the act of 1869, or to accept the now government provided by the act of 1879, and all cities with a registered vote below 1,600 are held to the government of 1869.

We have stated the limitations and provisions of the Constitution. It cannot be doubted that the act of 1879 is an act “regulating municipal business.? (Sec. 16, Art IV.) Nor can it be doubted that such an act must bo a general law of uniform operation throughout the State, (Sec. 18, Art. IV.,) as well as such a law as conforms to the mandate to the Legislature that it “sliali establish a uniform system of municipal government.” (Sec. 21, Art.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Fla. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconihe-v-state-ex-rel-mcmurray-fla-1879.