Paxon v. State Ex Rel. Dillion

165 So. 661, 122 Fla. 470
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 So. 661 (Paxon v. State Ex Rel. Dillion) 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
Paxon v. State Ex Rel. Dillion, 165 So. 661, 122 Fla. 470 (Fla. 1936).

Opinion

Ellis, P. J.

In June, 1935, a peremptory writ of mandamus was issued directed to J. L. Paxson and others as County Commissioners of Dade County and E B. Leather-man as Clerk of the Court for that county upon an action brought by Charlie Dillon, as Constable of the Second Justice of the Peace District of the county, requiring them to issue a warrant payable to Dillon in the sum of $912.51 for his services as constable in certain criminal cases.

The respondents took a writ of error from this Court to the judgment.

The single assignment of error is that the trial court erred in its judgment granting the peremptory writ.

Charlie Dillon is a Constable for the Second Justice of the Peace District for Dade County and on the 14th day of May, 1935, preseiited to the County Commissioners a certain statement for services which had been performed by him in that capacity. The statement of the account was audited and approved by the County Commissioners but they refused to issue a warrant for the amount to Dillon because they said that funds were not available under the county budget of Dade County for the fiscal year 1934-1935 to pay the bill.

The alternative writ which was issued upon the petition of Dillon alleged that there was in the Fine and Forfeiture Fund of Dade County the sum of approximately $125,000.00, which the relator alleged should be disbursed according to law and which the law contemplates should be used for the payment of such bills as those presented by Dillon.

The respondents answered that there was an unexpended balance in the Fine and Forfeiture Fund of approximately $107,569.89 in excess of the budget requirements for the *472 fiscal year 1934-1935 as of the date of the answer, but they say that only such part of that fund as is set up in the county budget for the fiscal year named as remains under the item “Constables” is available for the purpose of paying the bill, and that the balance to the credit of the item “Constables,” as shown by the budget, has been reduced to the sum of $304.08, and that there have not been sufficient funds to the credit of that item- in the Fine and Forfeiture Fund since the date of the approval of the relator’s bill.

The respondents contend that under the provisions of the budget law, Chapter 15934, Laws of Florida, 1933, which is applicable to Dade County, they are prohibited from paying the bill. The answer incorporated a demurrer to the alternative writ A motion for a peremptory writ was granted notwithstanding the answer.

Counsel for the relator Dillon states in his-brief that as a constable is required by the Constitution to be elected in each Justice District and is required to perform such duties as may be prescribed by law, Section 23, Article V, Constitution, and that the Legislature is required by law to provide for the care and custody of all county funds and shall provide the method of reporting and paying out all such funds, Section 6, Art. VIII, Constitution, and that the legal costs and expenses including fees of officers shall be paid by counties where the crime is committed under such regulation as shall be prescribed by law, and all fines and forfeitures collected under the penal laws of the State shall be paid into the county treasuries of the respective counties as a general county fund to be applied to the legal costs and expenses in criminal cases prosecuted in the name of the State when the defendant is insolvent or discharged, Section 9, Article XVI, Constitution, it therefore follows that Chapter 15934, supra, is unconstitutional and void, because *473 it is not within the power of the Legislature by Statute to create a county agency with power to limit the appropriation for the prosecution of persons charged with crime when there are funds available in the Fine and Forfeiture Fund to meet the expense.

In the case of Sparkman v. County Budget Commission, 103 Fla. 242, 137 South. Rep. 809, the Court had under consideration Chapter 14678, Laws of Florida 1931, an Act in all essential respects similar to the Act now under consideration, Chapter 15934, supra, and held the same to be valid under an attack that the statute authorized the budget commission to determine reasonable expenditures by county officers for employeee’s salaries and expenses of offices. The court said in substance that an administrative tribunal is authorized to determine what is a reasonable amount to be paid for office assistants and expenses; that'the determination, however, shall be upon due consideration of appropriate data relating to the reasonable requirements for the help and other expenses in the particular office and such determination of reasonableness is subject to judicial review in appropriate proceedings.

Mr. Justice Buford dissented in that case, making the point that in his judgment the Legislature by the terms of the Act delegated to an administrative agency the power to at least indirectly so curtail or limit the expenses which may be incurred by constitutional county officers in the discharge of their official duties as to render it impossible for them to efficiently discharge such duties. The Court therefore had for consideration by it the substance of the objection to the Act now under consideration as made by the relator.

The Advisory Opinion to the Governor, reported in 114 Fla. 520, 154 South Rep. 154, is not analogous as in that *474 opinion the Justices merely expressed the view that a statute which fixes the amount of salary a constitutional or statutory officer shall receive, to which he is entitled monthly on his requisition, is itself an appropriation of the necessary funds to pay such salaries under the provision of Section 3, Article XVI, of the Constitution, directing the salary of each officer to be paid monthly upon his own requisition; that the constitutional provision and the statute fixing the salary together constitute an appropriation for the purpose stated irrespective of the amount named or specified in the general appropriation Act.

Chapter 15934, supra, does not undertake to vest in the budget commission the power to diminish an officer’s salary as fixed by statute. The total amount of fees which some county officers, constables included, may receive are not and cannot be definitely ascertained at the beginning of the fiscal year. The yearly amount which they may receive or the amount which they may earn during any definite period is necessarily variable according to the work which during such period they may be called upon by the requirement of their office to perform. Neither is the constable entitled to receive the fees he may earn upon his own requisition.

The county budget system now so generally used and universally popular is an evolution from the heretofore casual, indefinite, uncertain method of estimating county expenses for an ensuing year and the rapid development of new social demands which increased the uncertainty or fortuitous character of the yearly estimates for community expenses. A method was adopted called the budget system by which a more careful or exact basis might be laid for the levy of taxes for county .expenses.

The^ provisions of the Act under consideration .when care *475

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Related

Cary v. State Ex Rel. Cauthen
190 So. 49 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 661, 122 Fla. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxon-v-state-ex-rel-dillion-fla-1936.