State Ex Rel. Davis v. Town of Lake Placid

147 So. 468, 109 Fla. 419
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 13, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 147 So. 468 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. Town of Lake Placid) 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. Town of Lake Placid, 147 So. 468, 109 Fla. 419 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

In 1925 about four or five hundred people lived in a community, town, or settlement in Highlands County east of Lake Stearns about a mile and a half, and about four miles west of the lower end of Lake Istokpoga. The northern edge of the area occupied by the community of people rested upon an arm of Lake Stearns which extended into the Southwest quarter of Section 30 of Township 36 South, Range 30 East. The area of land occupied embraced about a half Section, approximately three hundred and twenty acres lying partly in Section 36 of Township 36 South, Range 29 East and partly in Section 31, Township 36 South, Range 30 East. The built-up portion of the town consisted of approximately two business blocks.

The Legislature of 1925, by Chapter 11586, approved December 5, 1925, in Extraordinary Session undertook to create a municipality of that community defining boundaries covering an area of more than twenty-eight square miles, an acreage of approximately 17,800 acres with a population capacity, exclusive of the area covered by lakes, of approximately 25,000 people on the basis of two persons average per acre. The boundaries covered an area of three and a half miles north and south by eight miles east and west. The name of the municipality was The City of Lake Stearns.

*421 . Th 1927, about a year and á half afterward,' the Legislature presumably acting under the' Eighth Article of the Constitution; Section Eight, providing that the Legislature shall have the power to establish and to abolish municipalities, repealed the Act of 1925, Chapter 11586, supra, and erected in its place, or attempted to do so, a municipality called “Lake Placid,” covering an; area of approximately seventy-three square miles overlapping the area of former City of Lake Stearns' and adding thereto an area of approximatel^/fo'rty-five square miles. Its total area embraced approximately^47,000 acres. Its far flung boundaries extended approximately nine miles east and west and nine and a half miles north and south. Its area, on the basis of the sárne average of inhabitants per acre, afforded room for about 100,000 people. It is. one .and a half times greater in area than Richmond County, New York, with its 160,000 population; nearly four times greater in area than New York County, with its 1,800,000 population; greater than King’s County with its 2,500,000 population; twice as great in area as Bronx County with its 1,125,000 population. The area is greater than any Florida city of 20,000 inhabitants or more, and greater than the District of Columbia or the- City of Atlanta.

These facts, gleaned from the allegations of the information, in quo warranto lodged by-the Attorney General in the Circuit Court for Highlands County, throw some light upon the other allegations in the ¿information relating to the purpose to be accomplished by such an extraordinary exercise b.y the Legislature of the power to establish municipalities in this State.

A demurrer to the information was sustained and the information was dismissed to which final order a writ of error was tákén by the Attorney General and Co-Relators.

*422 ! Among the allegations of the information admitted by the demurrer were that certain corporations, owning eighty per cent of the land embraced within the boundaries of the municipality, entered into contract with the Lake Placid 'Club Company, a corporation, whereby the later Company would establish upon 3,000 acres of land, to be donated to that Company by the others, a health and recreation resort designed to attract visitor's and residents to the community; •that all the corporations would co-operate to procure legislation to reorganize the municipality of Lake Stearns by changing its name to Lake Placid, change the name of lakes and creeks in the vicinity, altering the plan of government, extend the boundaries by adding a much larger area of land •than existed within the boundaries .of Lake Stearns, and the protection of the parties to the agreement in the “taxing of outlying lands embraced within the new municipality.”

■ The purpose shown by a recital in the agreement was to enhance the value of the lands of the parties to the enrichment of the property owners who were parties to the agreement.

The Legislature afterwards enacted Chapter 12990 Special Acts, 1927. The charter providing that of the five commissioners constituting the governing body of the municipality three are to be elected by the voters, and two commissioners, who need not be residents of the town, one of whom to be selected by the tax payers “representing the majority in value of the assessments of property” situated “within the East district” and the other commissioner to represent the territory lying west of Lake Childs chosen in the same manner. 'Each commissioner to have the same powers, privileges and authority. Three commissioners constituted ■a quorum, except where the charter or ordinances requires more than .three., affirmative votes to take action. All. ordi *423 nances and resolutions or votes for levying taxes or special assessments for issuing bonds or incurring indebtedness require five affirmative votes.

The powers conferred upon the municipality were varied and numerous, among others to “in general define, prohibit, abate, suppress and prevent all things detrimental to town health, morals, comfort, - safety, convenience or welfare, or to its reputation as, a carefully protected resident park for cultivated Christian people.” It had power to exerñpt property from taxation which the commission deemed of “importance” to the welfare of the town.’

Since the Act, Chapter 12990, supra, was enacted the corporations promoting the enterprise have transferred practically all their “holdings” to the Lake Placid Land Company, one of the five corporations which entered into the contract with the Lake Placid Club Company. The corporations own property in the built up portion of the town.

The five corporations own approximately forty-two sections of approximately seventy-three sections of land included within the boundaries of the town, and the lakes— Stearns, Francis, Henry, Clay, Huntly, Childs and other small ones lying within the boundaries of the town — cover about sixteen sections. The Co-Relators own about seven sections lying in the extreme northeastern part of the territory, the nearest part of their holding lying about two miles eats of the “built up” portion of the town. The voting population of this territory is about 115. The Co-relators were not parties to the contract with the five corporations and the ■Lake Placid Club Company.

The property of the Co-relators is not reached by any improvements contemplated by the town, the lands are rural and far removed from the advantages of city life. The same may be said of the land owned by the six promoter corpora *424 tions of the enterprise. Indeed, according to the map, which was made a part of the information, the entire area including the lakes embraced within the boundaries, exclusive of the so-called “built up” portion of the town covering about one mile square, consists of rural lands and the lands covered by the waters of the lakes.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 468, 109 Fla. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-town-of-lake-placid-fla-1933.