RL Bernardo & Sons, Inc. v. Duncan

134 So. 2d 297
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 12, 1961
DocketC-271
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 134 So. 2d 297 (RL Bernardo & Sons, Inc. v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RL Bernardo & Sons, Inc. v. Duncan, 134 So. 2d 297 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

134 So.2d 297 (1961)

R.L. BERNARDO & SONS, INC., Appellant,
v.
Earl R. DUNCAN and Panama City, a municipal corporation, Appellees.

No. C-271.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. First District.

September 12, 1961.
Rehearing Denied November 21, 1961.

*298 Davenport, Johnston & Urquhart, Panama City, and Truett & Watkins, Tallahassee, for appellant.

William H. Sapp, Mercer P. Spear; Barron & Hilton, and Earl R. Duncan, Panama City, in pro. per., for appellees.

WIGGINTON, Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree entered by the Circuit Court of Bay County in a suit brought by Duncan as a citizen and property owner of Panama City. The purpose of the suit was manifold, but it is necessary to discuss only the grounds alleged *299 in the complaint on which relief was granted and which form the subject of this appeal.

The complaint alleges that the city entered into an improvement contract with R.L. Bernardo and Sons, Inc., whereby the latter agreed to construct certain water front improvements for a total contract price of $5,619,000, which contract was later reduced by mutual agreement to the sum of $5,324,000. The complaint alleges that prior to the actual commencement of work the city unlawfully made an advance payment to Bernardo on the contract price of a sum exceeding one-half million dollars. It was prayed by the complaint that this payment be decreed to have been unlawfully made, and that Bernardo be required to reimburse the city in the amount of such unlawful payment. It is from that part of the final decree dealing with this allegedly unlawful payment to Bernardo that this appeal is taken.

In the answers interposed by both Bernardo and the city, it is denied that the advance payment on the contract questioned by the complaint was unlawful or unauthorized, but it is affirmatively asserted that the payment was made strictly in accordance with the provisions of the specifications issued in connection with instructions to bidders pursuant to which the contract was entered into between the defendant parties. The answers of the defendants also raised the issue as to the plaintiff's right to maintain this suit, it being their contention that the complaint failed to allege that the plantiff is a taxpayer of Panama City, and that such status is indispensable to plaintiff's right to maintain the action.

Disposing of the last point mentioned above which formed an issue in the case, the chancellor recognized the law of Florida as originally enunciated in the early development of our jurisprudence which established the principle that a citizen, taxpayer and owner of property has a right to maintain a suit in equity to question the acts of public officials which tend to produce a resultant injury to the plaintiff by increasing the burden of his taxes. The rule generally recognizes the right of a citizen and taxpayer to maintain a suit to prevent the unlawful expenditure by public officials of public monies unless otherwise provided by legislative enactment.[1] The sole question presented by this issue was whether one who qualifies as a citizen and property owner living within a community will be presumed to be a taxpayer of that community within the spirit and intent of the principles announced by the decisions of the Supreme Court without specific allegations or proof regarding the amount and nature of taxes paid by him. The chancellor found from the evidence that the 1957 budget of the City of Panama City was financed to the extent of 30% by excise taxes collected from the citizens of that community, and only 25% from ad valorem taxes assessed against real estate. The chancellor reasoned that when the legal principle was first announced that a complaining party was required to occupy the status of a taxpayer was at a time when government was financed almost wholly by ad valorem taxes, and only a small extent from license taxes, but that in recent years conditions have changed to the point where government, both national, state and local, is financed to a substantial degree from excise taxes levied against all its citizens. The chancellor finally concluded that the admission by the city and Bernardo that plaintiff was a citizen and property owner of Panama City was sufficient to qualify him to maintain the action for it would be assumed that as such a citizen and property owner plaintiff was as a matter of necessity a payer of excise taxes within the community. This issue was resolved in favor of plaintiff, but it is urged on appeal that since such legal theory has not yet found its way into the jurisprudence of this state, an opinion should be written establishing such principle as a matter of law *300 for the future guidance of litigants and trial courts of Florida.

With regard to the remaining issue on appeal the evidence discloses and the chancellor found that the controlling action of the City of Panama City which governed the entire project from its inception to its conclusion, including the authority to issue revenue certificates to finance the project, the authority to prepare plans and specifications and to enter into a contract for the construction of the project, was a resolution adopted by the city on July 18, 1956. Section 2 of the Resolution provides that "the acquisition, construction and equipment of the Municipal Waterfront Improvements, referred to above, be, and the same are hereby authorized in accordance with the provisions of this Resolution and the Trust Agreement to be executed by the City in the form set forth in Section 6 hereof." Section 7 of the Resolution provides: "All of the provisions of the Trust Agreement, when executed, as authorized herein, shall be deemed to be a part of this Resolution as fully and to the same extent as if incorporated herein." Section 402, Article IV, of Section 7 of the Resolution provides: "Payment of the cost of the Municipal Waterfront Improvements shall be made from monies in the construction fund * * * Except as otherwise expressly provided by other provisions of this Trust Agreement, all payments from the Construction fund shall be subject to the provisions and restrictions set forth in this Article, and the City covenants that it will not cause or permit to be paid from the construction fund any sums, except in accordance with such provisions and restrictions."

Section 702, Article VII, Section 7, of the Resolution provides: "The City further covenants that no such contract will provide that payments thereof shall be made by the City in excess of 90% of monthly estimates approved by the consulting engineers of monies due the contractor for work performed or materials furnished during the preceding month, except payment of the final balance due under any such contract."

From the foregoing provisions of the Resolution which form the basis of the city's authority to act in connection with the contemplated improvements the chancellor found that no payment was permitted to be made the contractor from the construction fund in excess of 90% of the monthly estimates approved by the consulting engineers of monies due the contractor for work performed and materials furnished during the preceding month. It was on the basis of this Resolution that plans and specifications were prepared, bids were invited, and Bernardo bid for the contract.

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227 So. 2d 213 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1969)
R. L. Bernardo & Sons, Inc. v. Duncan
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 So. 2d 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rl-bernardo-sons-inc-v-duncan-fladistctapp-1961.