Smith v. Ayres

174 So. 2d 727
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 28, 1965
DocketNos. 33948, 33948-A, 33948-B
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 So. 2d 727 (Smith v. Ayres) 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
Smith v. Ayres, 174 So. 2d 727 (Fla. 1965).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

This appeal comes directly to this Court under Article V, Section 4(2), of the Florida Constitution, F.S.A., authorizing an appeal to this Court from “final * * * decrees directly passing upon the validity of a state statute * *

These consolidated cases questioned the constitutionality of Chapter 29326, Laws of Florida, 1953, authorizing the City of Ocala to annex adjacent territory as well as the legality of the procedure adopted by the City in holding and conducting said election and declaring the results thereof. In view of our conclusion that the final decree of the able chancellor below correctly decided each issue presented and that no useful purpose would be served by an extended opinion of this Court, we quote in full the pertinent parts of said final decree:

“1. Chapter 29326, Laws of Florida, 1953, provides a method of annexation of territory by referendum to the corporate limits of the City of Ocala, Florida. The act requires the enactment of an ordinance by the city council describing the territory proposed to be annexed, the date of the election, the effective date of the annexation (if successful) and other terms and conditions. The act also requires that the ordinance provide for and call an election, and that the mayor’s proclamation containing a copy of the ordinance and calling such election be published once a week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date of such election in a newspaper of general circulation published in the City of Ocala.
“2. As required by the aforesaid act, the city council of the City of Ocala enacted Ordinance No. 238 which set forth the requirements of the election as provided by the act, and the mayor’s proclamation calling for the election was published as provided by the statute. This ordinance also contained a provision that notice of the election be given by publication in a newspaper within not less than fifteen or more than twenty days prior to the date of the election. The ordinances of the city also provided for a notice to be given in special elections published as aforesaid prior to the date of the election. Defendants’ pleadings admit that the latter (both of which were identical and to which reference was made by Ordinance No. 238) were not published.
“3. At the commencement of the final hearing defendants waived any objections to the qualifications of plaintiffs and admitted that they were competent as alleged in Paragraph I of the complaints. Plaintiffs [729]*729thereupon rested their case without presentation of testimony or further evidence, and this cause was submitted to the determination of the Court upon the pleadings and the admissions of fact and the law applicable to the issues.
“All other issues having been determined previously, there remained in this final hearing for the Court to resolve the following questions of law:
“I. Was the publication of the notice of election as prescribed in Ordinance No. 238 and as contained in the code of ordinances of the city mandatory to the extent that a failure to publish the same as provided rendered the election of March 17, 1964, and the results null and void?
“II. Is Chapter 29326, Laws of Florida 1953, unconstitutional under the constitution of the State of Florida or the constitution of the United States of America because of ambiguity in the language of the act or because of repugnancy to the due process and equal protection of the law clauses?
“III. Did the procedures adopted by Ordinance No. 238 exceed the authority of the act thereby depriving plaintiffs of the equal protection of the laws and due process of law guaranteed under the constitution of the state of Florida and of the United States of America?
“The Court has decided all other pertinent questions of law favorably to defendants, and the arguments of counsel for both parties were directed to the above numbered questions. Each of the foregoing must be answered in the negative and the relief prayed for by plaintiffs denied in both cases.

“Upon the first question, the pleadings admit (and it was not denied by plaintiffs) that the statutory requirements of notice, that' is, the publication of the mayor’s proclamation (containing a copy of the ordinance required by the act of the legislature) calling for the election was made as provided by the act of the legislature. No other notice or different type of notice was required or specified by Chapter 29326. The City of Ocala as a municipal corporation has no power to extend its boundaries in any manner other than that prescribed by legislative enactment,1 and where that power is delegated it must be exercised in strict accord with the statute conferring it. Thus, the requirements of notice calling an election provided in an act of the legislature are jurisdictional and must be strictly complied with,2 except where the legislative act specifies the date of election. In the case before the Court the publication of the mayor’s proclamation was mandatory; it provided the notice to the electors of the holding of the election in the manner, at the time, and upon the terms and conditions fully stated in the ordinance. However, these mandatory requirements are not applicable to the notice of the election as provided in the election code of the city or as contained in Ordinance No. 238, to be given in a later publication. The publication of such later notice was directory only, and if at all required, the failure to publish such notice did not render the election of March 17, 1964, a nullity and void.3

[730]*730“In the second question of law presented to the Court, plaintiffs asserted the act of the legislature under which the annexation election was held is unconstitutional because of the ambiguity of the language of the act. With this contention the Court cannot agree. It is the duty of the Court to construe this legislation to save it constitutional infirmities. The language of the statute should be so construed, if susceptible of two interpretations, to uphold the validity of the act assailed.4 Having considered all aspects and provisions of the act, the Court concludes and finds that Chapter 29326 Laws of Florida 1953 is not an unconstitutional act under the constitution of the state of Florida and of the United States of America.

“The third question of law attacks the method by which the city of Ocala applied the annexation election. Plaintiffs contended that the holding of one election called by one ordinance wherein two areas were to be voted upon in two separate ballots was not authorized and was an unconstitutional application of the act of the legislature depriving plaintiffs of the equal protection of the laws and due process of the laws under the constitution of the state of Florida and the United States of America. It was contended that the division of the area into two separate zones and the separation of the ballots deprived those in the annexed area of a vote upon the issue of annexing the other zone, while qualified electors of the city could vote upon both zones. Two separate elections might have been held under separate ordinances following the procedures of Chapter 29326 and in such case the residents of either of the zones would not be qualified electors unless the effective date had arrived which would have given them the franchise to vote.

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174 So. 2d 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-ayres-fla-1965.