Orange County v. Fordham

34 So. 2d 438, 160 Fla. 259, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 655
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 5, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 438 (Orange County v. Fordham) 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
Orange County v. Fordham, 34 So. 2d 438, 160 Fla. 259, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 655 (Fla. 1948).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, J.:

Chapter 9311, Acts of 1923, Laws of Florida, designated and established State Road No. 22 extending from Orlando to Indian River City, via Ft. Christmas; also from Orlando to Crystal River via Winter Garden, Clermont, Mascotte, Grove-land, Bushnell and Inverness. The Act provided further that Road 22, with many other named and numbered Roads, shall constitute the system of State Roads of Florida, and when located and constructed by the State Road Department shall become the property of the State of Florida. Section 7 of Chapter 9313, Acts of 1913, Laws of Florida, defines a State Road as a road or part of road which has been established or designated by the State Road Department or the Legislature as a State Road and the location thereof duly authorized. State Road No. 22 has recently been renumbered as State Road No. 50.

*261 The State Road Department of Florida on May 16, 1946, by appropriate resolution, functioning in behalf of the public interest, approved a location and survey of a part of State Road No. 22 situated in Orange County extending from Minerville 8.658 miles to junction with Road No. 2 in the City of Orlando. A map of such location and survey supra was duly certified by the officials of the State Road Department and filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Orange County, Florida. The resolution, in part, recited “that it is the judgment of the department that the construction of said portion of said section is necessary, practical and to the best interest of the State and that it is necessary that the right of way for the road bed, ditches and borrow pits for said portion of said section be acquired.”

The State Road Department authorized and requested the County of Orange, at its own expensé, to secure by gift, purchase or condemnation the lands necessary for the right of way for the road bed for said portion of said section consisting of 8.659 miles and identified in the record as Section 7505. The Board of County Commissioners of Orange County, on June 6, 1946, pursuant to the request of the State Road Department, by a resolution acceded to said request and undertook to acquire at the expense of Orange County the road bed for the construction of the 8.658 miles of State Road situated in Orange County, although a part or portion of the road bed was situated in the City of Orlando. The resolution of the Commissioners authorized its acquirement by gift, purchase or by condemnation proceedings in the name of Orange County, Florida.

The Board of County Commissioners of Orange County, pursuant to its previous adopted resolution and in accordance with its agreement with the State Road Department, caused to be filed in the Circuit Court of Orange County its petition in condemnation for the purpose of acquiring title to described lands situated within the City of Orlando to be used as a part of State Road No. 22, identified in the record as a part of Section 7505. The described lands are situated along Colonial Drive, a street running east and west through the City of Orlando. The described lands were necessary for *262 rights of way and easements for State Road No. 22 through the City of Orlando along Colonial Drive as located by the State Road Department in behalf of the public interest and was so declared by the resolution adopted by the State Road Department of Florida and the Board of County Commissioners of Orange County prior to the institution of the suit. The trial court dismissed the petition in condemnation, thereby holding that Orange County was not authorized, as a matter of law, to maintain the condemnation suit seeking to acquire the described lands for road purposes situated in the City of Orlando, but entered judgments for attorneys’ fees against the petitioners in behalf of each defendant, and the plaintiff below appealed.

The separate answers of the defendants to the petition in condemnation as presented by the Honorable Claude L. Gray are identical except as to the description of the lands sought to be condemned. Paragraph 2 of the answers denies the allegation of the petition in condemnation to the effect that the acquisition of the described property by the County of Orange in behalf of the State Road Department of Florida for the improvement of State Road No. 22 along Colonial Drive in the City of Orlando was in the public interest or for the best interest of the people of Florida.

Paragraph 3 of the answers sets out that the described property is situated with the city limits of the City of Orlando and does not abut any street which has been designated by lawful authority as a connecting link for the proposed highway. State Road No. 22 through the City of Orlando has heretofore been designated and the route established and as designated has by the State Road Department been maintained for a period of four years, and more, prior to the institution of the present suit. The State Road Department having once exercised the power and authority conferred by statute in the location and designation of State Road No. 22 as it passes through the city limits of Orlando has exhausted its power and authority conferred by statute and for this reason the plaintiff and the State Road Department of Florida do not now have any lawful power or authority to alter, change or interfere with the previous designation of Road *263 No. 22 as it now passes along the streets of the City of Orlando.

Paragraph 4 of the answers sets out that the proposed change in the connecting link of State Road No. 22 — along Colonial Drive through the city of Orlando — has not been lawfully designated by competent authority. The State Road Department is without statutory authority to designate Colonial Drive as a connecting link through the City of Orlando and said city has not adopted an ordinance or resolution approving the proposed connecting link, and therefore the County of Orange cannot maintain the case at bar. The County of Orange is without power to expend public funds, property of the taxpayers of Orange County, to pay for the property sought to be condemned. It affirmatively appears that the case at bar was not brought in good faith. The expenditure of the taxpayers’ money for the described property is not a county purpose for which public funds can be lawfully expended. The City of Orlando is the only party in law authorized to maintain the condemnation suit for the acquisition of the lands for the improvement of State Road No. 22 through the city of Orlando.

Paragraph 5 of the answers sets out that the defendants, as a matter of law, are entitled to have the real party in interest maintain the case at bar for the reason that they are entitled to a judgment against the petitioners for the value of their property and the present proceeding is wholly invalid to condemn the property situated within the City of Orlando and described in the answer, even though a valid enforceable agreement now exists between the County of Orange and the City of Orlando providing for the funds with which to pay for the described property. The trial court sustained paragraphs 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the answers supra against motions to strike and demurrer.

Presented here is the quaere: May Orange County, at the request of the State Road Department of Florida to furnish it a right of way for widening and reconstruction of a city street as a part of its highway system and as a connecting .link of State Road No. 22 (renumbered No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 438, 160 Fla. 259, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-county-v-fordham-fla-1948.