State Ex Rel. Adams v. Lee

166 So. 249, 122 Fla. 639
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 27, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 166 So. 249 (State Ex Rel. Adams v. Lee) 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 Ex Rel. Adams v. Lee, 166 So. 249, 122 Fla. 639 (Fla. 1935).

Opinions

Davis, J.

Relators and có-relators, all of whom are ad valorem taxpayers' of the State of Florida, by an information in the nature of quo warranto (not joined by the Attorney General because he represents the respondent Comptroller, a State officer) challenge the warrant of authority of the respondent, J. M. Lee, as Comptroller of the State of Florida, to enjoy, exercise and perform the franchises, functions and powers attempted to be vested in him by Chapter 16848, Acts 1935, an Act of the last session of the Legislature otherwise referred to in these proceedings as Senate Bill No. 724.

Since the gist of the complaint asserted by petitioners is the alleged total invalidity of the legislative Act thus brought into controversy in these proceedings, and since the predominant question of constitutionality of the involved enactment is otherwise properly in issue before this Court in companion cases which have been argued, considered and decided in connection with this case, we pass sub silentio the respondent’s objections to the availability of quo warranto as the legal form of legal remedy authorized to be employed by the relators in their proceedings against respondent, and give our attention and consideration to the substance of petitioners’ complaint against the legislative Act whose enactment has occasioned this litigation.

*643 At the 1934 general election, the people of Florida ratified a proposed constitutional amendment completely exempting homesteads of the value of $5,000.00 (and under) from all ad valorem taxation insofar as it was competent for the State of Florida to accomplish such purpose within the limitations' of the Federal Constitution. Under Article XII of the Constitution of Florida the primary source of revenue for the maintenance of Florida’s comprehensive system of public free schools was therefore derivable from a limited ad valorem tax levy authorized in the several counties and special tax school districts of the State. The effect, therefore, of the adoption of the homestead tax exemption amendment was to materially reduce the public free school revenues realizable from real estate taxation, and to SO' reduce them as to raise grave doubts whether 1he public free schools could be efficiently operated in the future in the absence of a grant thereto of materially increased state financial aid which, by amended Section 9 of Article XII of the Constitution, the Legislature was' given power to provide by means of any appropriate exercise of the State’s revenue producing power to add to the county school fund resources.

We therefore have before us a situation wherein the Supreme Court is called upon in this case to adjudicate the limits of the constitutional power vested in the Legislature to contrive and put into operation a revenue producing excise tax measure designed to raise for the aid of the public free schools of Florida a new source of school revenue estimated to amount to approximately $4,500,000.00 in addition to the sources already provided. That Chapter 16848, Acts 1935, supra, is in its essence such a revenue producing measure contrived to provide for the relief of the public free schools of the State of Florida by raising reve *644 nue for the County School Fund through the imposition of a special tax upon the privilege of operating a store or stores within the State, etc., according to classifications of 1 he affected store operations' for taxation purposes, as specified in the title of the Act, has been asserted by counsel for the State appearing at the bar of this Court during the oral argument of this case, and is accepted by us as true for the purposes of this decision.

• That every separate tax scale set forth in Section 4 of said Act was intended by the Legislature which enacted it to be a joint and several separable act of taxation against the affected businesses, insofar as the same could be jointly or Severally, or jointly and- severally, sustained as being within the Legislature’s constitutional power to tax, can scarcely be gainsaid in the light of the history of the Act in the Legislature and the sweeping language employed in Section 18 of the Act. This is so, because that section not only authorizes, but directs, this Court, if possible and permissible, to uphold and enforce all such part or parts as shall “be deemed and held to be valid” in and of themselves even though other “unconstitutional, inoperative or invalid” parts or provisions may have to be deleted therefrom. In short, the effect of Section 18 of Chapter 16848, supra, is' to evidence a pronouncement that it was and is the “legislative intent to pass this (such) Act” despite the fact that it may embrace “unconstitutional, inoperative or invalid” parts which, if so adjudicated by this Court, will necessarily have to- be deleted from the statute as a condition to allowing the remainder of the Act, not infected with any s'uch vices, to stand and be enfoixed.

Provisions such as are found set forth in Section 18 of this Act are common in our modern legislative practice, especially in connection with revenue measures. And, when *645 capable of being given a definite and reasonable operation in the course of practical judicial review, and where in so doing, no absurd results will likely be brought about through their application, s'uch provisions are ordinarily to be extended recognition and upheld as valid by the Courts, as an alternative to the bringing about of the necessity for a re-convention of the Legislature to accompish that which the Legisature itself has anticipated, set forth, determined and declared in advance it would do if actually required to be called back to perform its own act of amendment. By such means the Legislature may renounce in advance provisions that are likely to be judicially declared to be beyond the s'cope of constitutional exercise of legislative power, when, at the time of the law’s enactment the powers of the Legislature in the premises are undefined. * See: City of DeLand v. Florida Public Service Co., 119 Fla. 819, 161 Sou. Rep. 735, 740.

Since the State Courts, in dealing with the question of the constitutionality of an Act of the Legislature, are entitled to take judicial notice of all local factual considerations apparent to the legislative department of the State government out of which the impulse for its enactment in a particular form arose (Dominion Hotel Co. v. Arizona, 249 U S. 265, 63 L. Ed. 597, 39 Sup. Ct. Rep. 273), we proceed now to a consideration of the validity of Florida *646 Chapter 16848, Acts of 1935, in the light of the following circumstances of which this Court may properly take judicial notice as having entered into the consideration concerning, and as having influenced the passage of, the challenged law comprehending the classifications herein objected to:

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 249, 122 Fla. 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-adams-v-lee-fla-1935.