State Ex Rel. Davis v. Rose

122 So. 225, 97 Fla. 710
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 122 So. 225 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. Rose) 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. Davis v. Rose, 122 So. 225, 97 Fla. 710 (Fla. 1929).

Opinions

Ellis, J.

Upon information lodged in this Court by the Attorney General in behalf of the State and K. R. Murrell, a citizen, a writ of quo warranto was issued directed to Rose, Hammond and Rannie to answer by what warrant or authority they claim to have or exercise the office and powers of Florida Real Estate Commissioners.

The respondents demurred to the information.

The writ charges that it appears from the petition (information) that the respondents usurped and assumed to exercise the office under “Chapter 11336, Laws of Florida, Extraordinary Session 1925, and also House Bill Number 469, Laws of Florida, 1927, which said chapter and laws are averred to be unconstitutional and void for reasons specified in said petition. ’ ’ House Bill Number 469 is Chapter 12223, Laws of Florida, 1927.

Something is mentioned in the information about Murrell being a real estate broker and his business coming within the provisions of the statute attacked, and being required to pay ten dollars on account of charges and expenses.

Among other - things, the information alleges that the *717 respondents, acting under authority of the two statutes, have accumulated and now have on hand approximately Twenty Thousand Dollars which should be paid into the State Treasury, to be disposed of as the law now, or may hereafter, provide. The information seeks the removal of the respondents from office, an accounting of the monies in their possession, and the payment of the same into the State Treasury.

Aside from the double purpose of this proceeding, which is an anomaly, it is not clear why if the chancery powers of the court may be exercised to require an accounting from the respondents it should be limited to the money they now have on hand.

Joining K. R. Murrell as a so-styled relator, or as one in whose behalf the information was filed, was unnecessary. So were the allegations as to his occupation and the effect irpon it which the enforcement of the provisions of the statute would have. This Court has said heretofore that the authority to bring the information, as well as the responsibility for it, is the Attorney General’s. Mr. Murrell’s grievance as citizen or real estate broker adds nothing to such authority and takes nothing from the responsibility. See State ex rel. Moodie v. Bryan, 50 Fla. 293, 39 So. R. 929.

In' that ease the Court treated the information as brought in the name of the State upon the relation of the Attorney .General, though in a somewhat informal manner, “considering the mention of the so-styled relators as mere surplus-age and in no way affecting the validity of the information, nor in any way affecting the absolute control of the case by the Attorney General in his official capacity,” who, the Court said, was responsible for filing the information, for its form, nature, and contents, including all its allegations, and that such responsibility could not be delegated by him to any person, or even cast upon this Court.

*718 There is no brief here from the Attorney General’s office to aid this Court in determining the many questions sought to be presented involving the constitutionality of the statutes under the authority of which the respondents are serving as the Florida Real Estate Commission.

The brief filed in behalf of the “Relators” discusses at length the many provisions of the Constitution against which the information alleges the statutes offend. We should have liked to have had the benefit of the Attorney General’s views upon at least a few of such questions. The brief of able counsel for the relators, while helpful, might have been less general and more specific in its attack upon the statutes. It is a rule, very generally observed at the bar and invariably followed by this Court, that one who asserts the unconstitutionality of a statute should show beyond all reasonable doubt that the statute inevitably conflicts with some designated provision of the Constitution. See Neisel v. Moran, 80 Fla. 98, 85 So. R. 346; Board Com’rs of Everglades Drainage District v. Forbes Pioneer Boat Line, 80 Fla. 252, 86 So. R. 199.

The information attacks two statutes. The brief discusses several. The two statutes which the information attacks are the same as those mentioned in the writ, Chap. 11336, Laws 1925, and Chap. 12223, Laws 1927, supra. The latter Act is entitled:

An Act to Define, Regulate and Register Real Estate Brokers and Real Estate Salesmen, and to Regulate their Relations with the Public; to Create the Florida Real Estate Commission, Provide for Its Organization, Succession and the Payment of its Expenses, Prescribing its Powers, Duties and Privileges, and the Supervisory Control by, and Ancillary Powers of, the Courts Touching the Subject; and to Prescribe Penalties for the Violation of the Act.

*719 That Act was intended to be, and is, a complete revision of the subject of the former. Although it contains no repealing clause, the Act of 1925 is repealed by the Act of 1927 by implication. See Jernigan v. Holden, 34 Fla. 530, 16 So. R. 413; Sparkman v. State ex rel. Bank of Ybor City, 71 Fla. 210, 71 So. R. 34; Dees v. Smith, 55 Fla. 652, 46 So. R. 173.

If Chap. 12223, Laws of 1927, is valid it will be unnecessary to consider Chap. 11336, Laws of 1925. The subject dealt with by Chap. 12223, supra, is defined in the first few words of the title: "To Define, Regulate and Register Real Estate Brokers and Real Estate Salesmen, and to Regulate Their Relations with the Public.” The subject of Chap. 11336, supra, was the same although expressed in fewer and different words.

The information attacks the Act of 1927, Chap. 12223, as being in violation of many of the provisions of both the Constitution of the United States and of the State of Florida. Thirty of the forty-eight sections of the Act are attacked as violating some specific section or provision of one or both Constitutions. Seven sections of the Declaration of Rights, Art. Ill, Sec. 16; Art. V, Secs. 17 and 35, Constitution of Florida; Art. I, See. 10; Art. IY, Sec. 2; Art. Y of the Amendments, and the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, are asserted to be violated by the Act under consideration. According to the information, the Legislature would seem to have taken no account of constitutional limitations, Federal or State, but upon the other hand to have ignored the organic law in no less than seventy-two instances in thirty of the forty-eight sections of the Act. It remains to be ascertained whether as a matter of fact or law either Constitution has been violated in a single provision of the Act, and if so whether such invalid portion may be eliminated and the valid portions of the Act retained.

*720 It may be appropriate to observe that the subject with which the Act deals, viz: the business of buying or of selling real property upon commission for a percentage of the agreed price or a specific fee to be paid by the purchaser or seller, has not been attacked by the information as being without the scope or range of police regulation, but the brief assails the Act upon that ground.

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Bluebook (online)
122 So. 225, 97 Fla. 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-rose-fla-1929.