Potter v. Lainhart

44 Fla. 647
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 44 Fla. 647 (Potter v. Lainhart) 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
Potter v. Lainhart, 44 Fla. 647 (Fla. 1902).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

The county commissioners of Dade county proposed and undertook to carry out the scheme of bonding the county for $150,000 to build! roads and erect a court house and jail. Appellant, a resident taxpayer of Dade county, filed a bill in chancery against the county commissioners, the trustees of county bonds, appointed by the commissioners, and two banks, alleged purchasers of the bonds, the appellees here, and sought to arrest by injunction the further execution of the scheme, and also to have declared void and canceled the bonds executed or issued by the commissioners on various grounds alleged in the bill. The defendants jointly and severally answered the bill and upon a hearing on bill and answer the court dismissed the bill and complainant appealed.

As grounds insisted on in this court for relief the bill alleges that at a meeting of the board of commissioners held on the fourth day of September, 1900, a resolution was introduced proposing that the question of bonding the county for the purpose of raising funds to build a court hQuse and jail and roads should be submitted to the voters of Dade county, but so far as appears by the [652]*652official minutes of the board said resolution was never seconded, passed or voted on, nor was there any resolution at any other time passed by the board proposing to submit said question to.the voters of the county. It is stated that the resolution as it appears on the minutes of the board was published as required by section 592. Revised Statutes. It is further alleged that at the following October meeting of the board the minutes of the previous meeting were approved, and that the board at said October meeting, acting as though said resolution had been passed, appointed polling places, inspectors and clerks for an election to be held on the sixth day of November folloAving on the question of issuing said bonds. The resolution is made a part of the bill. The answer alleges that the resolution recorded upon the minutes of the board at the September meeting was signed officially by all the members of the board present as shoAvn by the record, and further that while the minutes do not expressly show that the resolution .was passed, yet such was the fact, and that previous and subsequent minutes show it in particulars mentioned. It is averred that the minutes of a previous meeting show the adoption of a resolution that at the next regular meeting steps would be taken to call an election to determine whether or not bonds should be issued in the sum of $150,000 for the purpose of constructing roads, court house and jail. The statute, section 591, Revised Statutes, as amended in 1899 by Chapter 4711, provides that “whenever the board of county commissioners of any county in this State shall deem it expedient, or to the best interest of such county, to issue county bomdfe of their county, for the purpose of constructing paved, macadamized, or other hard surfaced [653]*653highways, or erecting a court house or jail, and funding the outstanding indebtedness of the county, or for any of such purposes, they shall determine by resolution, to be entered in their records, what amount of bonds is required for such purpose, the rate of interest to be paid thereon, and the times when the principal and- interest of such bonds shall be due anid! payable.” The resolution recites that the commissioners deemed lit expedient to issue bonds, for the purpose of constructing paved macadamized or other hard surfaced highways and erecting a court house and jail in Dade county and it was therefore resolved by the board of county commissioners of said county that one hundred and fifty thousand dollars was required for such purpose, fifty thousand for said buildings and one hundred thousand for road purposes. The resolution also fixed the rate of interest on the bonds to be issued, when and "where the bonds and interest were to be payable, and that the resolution be published as required by the statute. Also, the sixth day of November, 1900, was appointed for holding an election at which the question should be submitted to the legal voters of the county whether the bonds should be issued, and the form of the ballot to be used was “for bonds” or “against bonds.” This resolution recorded upon the minutes of the board was duly published and the election held thereunder. The recoridl of the resolution in the minutes of the board signed by all the members present in pursuance of the previous recorded resolution was a sufficient compliance with the statute and no valid objection to the election exists on the ground stated. The bill contains allegations that at the meeting of the board in October, 1900, two of the members present at the Septem[654]*654ber meeting and a new member approved the minutes of the September meeting and thereby ratified such minutes, and that subsequently, in May, 1901, a new board' was appointed on which only two of the old members were retained, and! that it was not competent for the new board to amend the minutes of the September meeting when the resolution in reference to the bond issue was recorded. The objection sought to be insisted on by such allegations is that the minutes of the September meeting were not sufficient to show the adoption of the resolution and after its approval in October it is not competent for a new board to amend said minutes, even if it be according to the facts then existing. It is not made to appear that either the old or new board passed any resolution or took any action in opposition to the election or the bond ¡soheme, but, on the contrary, it appears from all that was dlone both boards proceeded to carry out the scheme. The conclusion that the record of the resolution on the minutes of the board at the September meeting was a sufficient compliance with the statute obviates the necessity of making any further reference to the allegations of the bill about amending the minutes.

It is further alleged in the bill that the act of 1899, Chapter 4711, amending section 591 Revised Statutes, oy extending authority to counties' to issue bonds for the construction of paved ,macademized or other hard surfaced highways is unconstitutional because it embraces more than one subject and that the matter expressed in the act is not properly connected therewith, and because nothing was said as to how the section was to be amended!. The title of this act is, “to amend section 591 of the Revised Statutes .of the State of Florida, defining [655]*655the purpose for and prescribing and regulating the manner in which county bonds may issue.” The subject of the section in the Revised Statutes is county bonds, the purposes for which they may issue and resolution of the commissioners. The section was amended by the substitution of. a new section with the amendatory matter added. The designation of the subject matter expressed in the title of the amendlatory statute, sufficienty states the subject of the act. State ex rel. Turner v. Hocker, Judge, 36 Fla. 358, 18 South. Rep. 767; Webster v. Powell, 36 Fla. 703, 18 South. Rep. 441. Under the statute as amended the county commissioners had authority to provide for the issue of bonds to construct pavedl, macadamized, or other hard surfaced highways as well as to build a court house and jail, and fund the outstanding indebtedness of the county.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Fla. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-lainhart-fla-1902.