State and Diver v. City of Miami

152 So. 6, 113 Fla. 280, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1742
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 152 So. 6 (State and Diver v. City of Miami) 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
State and Diver v. City of Miami, 152 So. 6, 113 Fla. 280, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1742 (Fla. 1933).

Opinions

This proceeding was brought by the City of Miami under Sections 5106-5112, C. G. L. 3296-3302, R. G. S., for the validation of certain Water Revenue Certificates proposed to be issued by it under authority of Section 3 (7) of the Charter of Miami* as amended by Chapter 16561, Acts of 1931, Laws of Florida. The lower court entered a decree confirming and validating such certificates *Page 282 and the State of Florida, statutory defendant below, and Joseph S. Diver, an intervening taxpayer, have prosecuted this, their joint appeal, from the validation decree.

The Water Revenue Certificates involved were proposed to be issued under an emergency ordinance designated as No. 1100, adopted by the City Commission as such under date of October 2, 1933. The purpose of the issue was to realize moneys to pay for constructing certain additions, replacements and improvements to the city owned water supply system. This was to be done by making the proposed certificates payable solely from the net revenue of the combined present water supply system and the proposed improvements. It is conceded on the record by all parties that the city's proposal is to issue the certificates without submitting the proposal therefor to the freeholders of Miami for approval under Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of Florida as amended in 1930.

Sections 5106 C. G. L., 3296 R. G. S., et seq., supra, provide that any municipality, desiring to incur "any bonded debt, or to issue certificates of indebtedness" shall have the right, if it deems it expedient, to determine its authority to incur bonded debt, or to issue certificates of indebtedness, and the legality of all proceedings taken or had in connection therewith, by filing a petition against the State of Florida in the Circuit Court of the County, pursuant to which a full hearing is provided for at which the municipality's authority for incurring such bonded debt, or for issuing such certificates of indebtedness, as a matter of law and fact, may be judicially investigated, and all propositions of controverted law and fact set at rest by a conclusive adjudication as to the validity of bonds, or certificates of indebtedness, prior to their issue by the affected municipality.

At the threshold of the present case the proposition is *Page 283 suggested by counsel for appellants to the effect that the statutory proceedings under the sections of our statutes above referred to are applicable only to bonded debts or certificates of indebtedness which are the legal equivalent of bonds; that inasmuch as it is contended by the City of Miami in the present case that the proposed "Water Revenue Certificates" are in no sense evidences of municipal debts or bonds, nor the legal equivalent thereof under the Constitution and laws of this State, that if such contention be sustained by this Court, that it can only result in a dismissal of the present proceeding for want of jurisdiction because the validation statute does not authorize proceedings to validate anything except bonds or certificates of indebtedness. On the other hand, it is suggested by the appellants that if the proposed "Water Revenue Certificates" are in law and in fact either "bonds" or "certificates of indebtedness' within the purview of Sections 5106 C. G. L., et seq., supra, that then the decree of validation must be reserved on its merits, because in the last mentioned circumstance, such proposed "Water Revenue Certificates" would either impose on the City of Miami a debt liability in excess of its maximum debt limit, or constitute a bonded debt not created nor authorized by the approving vote of the city's freeholders as provided in the Constitution for the "issuance" of bonds.

Our conclusion on the proposition of jurisdiction is that the statutory proceedings for validation of bonded debts and certificates of indebtedness authorized by the sections to which reference has heretofore been made, are broad enough to include every form of proposed bonded debt, as well as every form of proposed certificate of indebtedness, negotiable or non-negotiable, limited or general, which a county, municipality, taxing district, or other political subdivision *Page 284 or district may undertake to issue under purported authority of law.

The purpose of the statutory validation proceedings is to provide a forum and a course of legal procedure to which any county, municipality, taxing district, or other political district or subdivision may resort for the purpose of determining whether or not any proposed obligation in the formof a bonded debt, or in the form of a certificate of indebtedness, may be validly issued by it in the form proposed in its ordinance, resolution or other action taken under the law as the initiatory step for issuance of an obligation of that character. And in every such proceeding it is the intent of the statute that such judicial investigation of the pleaded validation proposal shall be made, that the court may determine therefrom whether or not that which is pleaded as petitioner's proposal, is within the legal authority of the petitioner to do, so that if it be adjudged valid, the validity thereof shall never again be subject to be called in question in any court of this State. See Section 5109 C. G. L., 3299 R. G. S.

Jurisdictional facts pleaded in good faith constitute the test of jurisdiction. Hutchinson v. Courtney, 86 Fla. 556, 98 Sou. Rep. 582. So whether the proposed form of bonded debt, or the proposed form of certificate of indebtedness, be actually of the character that may be validated in and by the particular validation proceedings taken under the law or not, the appropriate assertion in such judicial proceedings, of the validity of what is involved in a validation petition filed under the statute, coupled with the affirmation of petitioner's proposal to issue bonds or certificates in the form set forth, and under the circumstances narrated in the validation petition, is sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court to investigate and determine, *Page 285 as to all questions of law and fact raised or that may be raised under the pleadings, the legality of what is proposed, whether the proposal itself be ultimately adjudicated to be within the competency of the petitioner's powers or not.

Thus the statute has been held applicable to a proceeding instituted for the validation of time warrants. Hubert v. City of Vero Beach, 93 Fla. 323, 112 Sou. Rep. 52. And on a like principle, we hold that the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court conferred by the validation statute, has been properly invoked in a case like the present, where it is made to appear in the petitioner's validation petition that what are claimed to be legally authorized certificates of indebtedness, although the certificates are of a peculiar, special or limited character, are the subject of the city's prayer for validation and confirmation.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 6, 113 Fla. 280, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 1742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-and-diver-v-city-of-miami-fla-1933.