Redman v. Kyle

80 So. 300, 76 Fla. 79
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 2, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 80 So. 300 (Redman v. Kyle) 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
Redman v. Kyle, 80 So. 300, 76 Fla. 79 (Fla. 1918).

Opinions

Love, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree of 'the Circuit Court from Broward County, sustaining a demurrer to the amended bill of complaint and [81]*81dismissing such bill. The suit was brought by appellant to enjoin the collection of a. uniform tax of twenty-five cents per acre levied upon all of the lands within the Napoleon B. Broward Drainage District, by the Supervisors of such District, for the purpose of paying certain preliminary expenses to be incurred as designated in the Act creating such District; and appellant, further, assails the constitutionality of the Act upon several grounds stated in his bill and argued in the brief of counsel. This District was established directly by the Legislature by Chapter 7430, Acts of 1917, and its territorial boundaries therein definitely prescribed, embracing land lying within the Counties of Broward and' Dade. A governing body, consisting of three members designated as a Board of Supervisors, was created, and its members specifically named in and by the Act; and, as the bill alleges, the appellees qualified as such Board of Supervisors and are acting in that capacity. It is further alleged that the said Board, immediately after the organization of the said District, without notice to the owners of land' within the District, levied a uniform tax of twenty-five cents per acre upon each acre of land within the District, under the provision of Section 7. of said Act, which prescribes that the Board of Supervisors of the District, as soon as organized, shall levy a uniform tax, not exceeding fifty cents per acre, upon each acre of land within the District, which tax shall' become a lien upon the land upon which it is assessed from the date of its assessment. Said amended bill charges that the land in the District varies in value; that a large part of the land in the iDstrict will receive greater benefits from the drainage and reclamation work contemplated than other parts, of which latter, the land owned' by complainant in the District, is a part; that [82]*82other large parts of such laud will be damaged by such work, while still other land in the District will receive no benefit therefrom; that complainant’s land is less valuable than much of the other land in the district, and that because of location and natural condition, complainant’s land will not receive such benefit from the prosecution of the reclamation work provided for in the Act, as other lands in the District; that the tax in question has been levied against every acre in the District as a uniform tax, without regard to relative value or to benefits and damages resulting from the prosecution of the proposed work, and that defendants are threatening to foreclose said lien and to cause complainant’s land to be sold to satisfy same. It is further charged in the bill that the said Act does not provide for notice to be given to the owners of land in the District prior to the levy of such uniform tax; that no notice was given to such owners before such tax levied and assesed and that such owners have been afforded no opportunity to object to such assessment, to contest its fairness or question the amount to be raised for the purposes .stated in the Act, and that thereby the said Act authorizes the taking of property without due process of law.

Section 7 of the Act in question provides as follows:

“The said Board of Supervisors, as soon as 'organized, shall levy a uniform'tax of not exceeding fifty cents per acre upon each acre of land within the District to be used for the purpose of paying the expenses incurred, or to be incurred in making surveys of the District and assessing benefits and damages and to pay other expenses necessarily incurred, as may be estimated by the said Board and Chief Engineer before said Board shall be empowered by subsequent- provisions of this Act to pro[83]*83vide fund's to pay the total costs of work and improvements of the District. Such tax shall be due and payable as soon as assessed and shall become delinquent ninety days thereafter. It shall become a lien upon the land against which it is assessed from the date of assessment, and shall be collected in the same manner as the annual installment of tax. In case the sum received for such assessment exceed the total cost of items for which the same has been levied, the surplus shall be placed in the general fund of the District and used to pay cost of construction. Provided, that if it shall appear as necessary to obtain funds to pay any expense incurred or to be incurred before a sufficient fund can be obtained by the collection of said uniform tax, the Board of Supervisors may borrow a sufficient amount of money to meet emergencies at a rate of interest not to exceed eight per cent, per annum, and may issue negotiable notes or bonds therefor, signed by the members of the Board, and may pledge any and all assessments made under the provisions of this section for the repayment thereof, said Board of Supervisors may issue to any person or persons, performing work or services or furnishing anything of value in the initial operation of said' District, negotiable evidence of debt, bearing interest at not exceeding six per cent.”

Section 20 of the Act provides for the enforcement of the lien on land for delinquent taxes in chancery, and such proceedings and any judgment rendered therein shall be enforced solely against the land by sale thereof. Notice of the pendency of the suit is required to be given by publication in a newspaper published in the County where such suit may be pending, once each week for four consecutive weeks, before judgment for the sale of said’ land may be entered. It is further provided that [84]*84the pleadings,' process, proceedings, practice and sale in cases'arising under said Act shall, except as therein provided, be the same as in an action tor the enforcement of other liens or mortgages upon real estate. By Section 21, it is provided that in such suits “no informality or irregularity in holding any of the meetings provided herein, or valuation or assessment of the lands, or in the name of owners, or the number of acres therein, shall be a valid defense.”

The purposes for which this uniform tax is to be levied, as stated in Section 7 of the Act, are “for paying the expenses incurred or to be incurred in making surveys of the District, assessing benefits and damages accruing to the lands in the District as a result of the reclamation plan and to pay other expenses necessarily incurred, all of which may be designated as preliminary expenses, before any of the actual work of drainage and reclamation shall be undertaken. There is no provision in the Act as to’the method or manner in which the amount of such preliminary expenses are, even approximately, to be ascertained by the Supervisors. Upon the assumption that the assessment or tax provided for in Section 7 of th'e Act, is legal and valid, there is ample authority as far as the Act is concerned, for the Supervisors to fix such tax at any amount up to fifty cents per acre on the lands within said District, and this may do without any inquiry or investigation, arbitrarily and in secret, if they choose, without notice to any person or affording an opportunity for a hearing of the land owners in the District, who may be required to pay these expenses, and who, it is to be presumed, are not only materially and vitally interested in the result of the drainage and reclamation plan to be adopted and followed, but who are also equally interested in seeing that these preliminary ex[85]*85•penses are no greater than the necessities of the case require.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 300, 76 Fla. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redman-v-kyle-fla-1918.