Rivera-Cruz v. Gray

104 So. 2d 501
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 25, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 104 So. 2d 501 (Rivera-Cruz v. Gray) 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
Rivera-Cruz v. Gray, 104 So. 2d 501 (Fla. 1958).

Opinion

104 So.2d 501 (1958)

Rafael A. RIVERA-CRUZ, Appellant,
v.
R.A. GRAY, as Secretary of State of the State of Florida, Appellee.
Verle A. POPE, Appellant,
v.
R.A. GRAY, as Secretary of State of the State of Florida, Appellee.

Supreme Court of Florida.

July 25, 1958.
Rehearing Denied August 1, 1958.

Matthews & Quinton, Miami, for appellants.

Richard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., Wilson Wright and Ralph M. McLane, Asst. Attys. Gen., and George John Miller, Miami, for appellee.

Howard W. Dixon and Alfred I. Hopkins, Miami, amici curiae.

THOMAS, Justice.

Separate suits were instituted by Rafael A. Rivera-Cruz and Verle A. Pope against the Secretary of State to enjoin him from having placed on the ballots to be used in the general election of 1958 a proposed revision *502 of the Constitution. The purpose of the litigation was to prevent the needless expenditure of public funds — needless, so it was charged, because the legislature had failed to comply with the provisions of Sec. 2 of Article XVII, F.S.A. in its procedure to present the revision to the electorate. Emphasis should be given the word "revision" which the appellants have chosen as a term for the proposals that will appear on the ballots unless the appellants prevail in this litigation.

This appeal brings here for review the decree of the chancellor holding valid the method, presently to be described, adopted by the legislature, and denying the injunction.

Sec. 2 of Article XVII relates to "Method of revising constitution." Under this portion of the Constitution the members of the Senate and House of Representatives may by a two-thirds vote determine that a revision is necessary and note the action upon their respective journals. It is specified that notice of such action be given for three months before the next election of representatives and that at the election the electors be given the opportunity to vote for or against the revision. If a majority vote favorably, the legislature is charged to provide by law for a convention to revise the Constitution.

The appellants take the position that what is intended to be submitted to the electors at the next general election is a revision of the Constitution in the guise of amendments. Of course, no attempt has been made to follow the procedure outlined in Sec. 2, Article XVII, supra.

It is the contention of the appellee that the part of the Constitution to which we have referred is inapposite and that the pertinent portion is Sec. 1 of Article XVII which contains provisions for proposal of amendments by either branch of the legislature. When these proposed amendments are "agreed to by three-fifths of the members elected to each House" they are published for a specified time and submitted to the electorate at the next general election. If a majority of voters express approval they become parts of the Constitution.

The question, then, is whether the proposals to be printed on the ballots for the impending election are amendments authorized by Sec. 1 or amount to an attempt at revision by using the more simplified procedure governing amendments, and it is complicated by the presence of the word "revision" in the section since it was amended in 1948.

At the outset we observe that Sec. 2 has not been modified since the Constitution of 1885 was adopted by the electorate while Sec. 1 remained unchanged until amended at the general election of 1948. Before that the single word used in Sec. 1 relating to the means of altering the Constitution was "amendments"; the lone word used in Sec. 2 concerning change has, since 1885, been "revision."

It was in the amendment adopted in 1948 that the word "revision" was introduced into Sec. 1. We do not discover in the language of the section as it now stands any intention to abandon or interfere with Sec. 2 dealing solely with "revision." Nor do we find after careful study of both sections that Sec. 1, after amendment, prescribed, an alternative way to revise the constitution. So we decide that two methods of changing the Constitution still obtain and that they may not be intermingled. We are convinced that in the use of the two words "revision" and "amendment" there was no intention so to distinguish them within the section that the revision contemplated by the adoption of Sec. 2 could be accomplished under Sec. 1.

Whereas Sec. 1, before amendment, contained the provision that either branch of the legislature could propose "amendments," after the adoption in 1948 either branch was empowered to "propose the revision or amendment of any portion or portions of [the] Constitution." The "revision or amendment," could affect one or *503 more subjects, but no "amendment" could consist of more than one revised article. In the second paragraph, as in the first, "revision" and "amendment" are used interchangeably and are always in the singular.

The present proposals were embodied in 14 joint resolutions of the legislature of 1957, and are intended to revise the preamble and every article of the Constitution except Article V. In each of the resolutions it is provided that the particular amendment embedded in it shall not be effective unless all amendments, of the preamble and all articles except Article V, are approved by a majority of the votes cast. In the briefs and in the decree this arrangement is called the "daisy chain" system.

Any process of changing the Constitution is cumbersome, made so purposely in order that the organic law may not be easily re-molded to fit situations and sentiments that are relatively transitory and fleeting. This probably was a compelling reason for the procedure specified in Sec. 2 of Article XVII for revision of the Constitution. Nevertheless, the complicated and protracted method of revision would not be adequate for changes of parts of the organic law to meet the needs of progress so amendments of portions were made possible by a comparatively simple procedure. Even this process is so involved that the electors in 1942 adopted an amendment, Sec. 3, Article XVII, providing for emergency alteration of the Constitution. In the Constitutions of 1861 and 1865 even amendments could not originate in the legislature for they contained provisions that "[n]o part of this Constitution shall be altered except by a Convention duly elected." Sec. 1 of the present Constitution, before and after amendment, in our opinion, was meant to deal with the change of parts, not the whole, of the Constitution. Were this not so there would seem to be no need of provisions for a convention.

Four Constitutions of the State preceded the one now in effect. In each of them, Sec. 1, Article XIV of the Constitution of 1838, Sec. 1, Article XIV of the Constitution of 1861, Secs. 1 to 3 of Article XIV of the Constitution of 1865, and Sec. 2 of Article XVII of the Constitution of 1868, were provisions for revision by convention. In the present Constitution we find the same specification for constitutional conventions, and each of the five Constitutions was framed in a convention.

We realize the confusion that would result if some of the present proposed amendments were accepted and some rejected and the practicability therefore of linking them together. But practicalities cannot, however sound, justify a circumvention of a provision of the Constitution for creation and organization of a convention. If the changes attempted are so sweeping that it is necessary to include the provisions interlocking them, then it is plain that the plan would constitute a recasting of the whole Constitution and this, we think, it was purposed to accomplish only by a convention under Sec.

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104 So. 2d 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivera-cruz-v-gray-fla-1958.