State Ex Rel. Dos Anigos, Inc. v. Lehman

131 So. 533, 100 Fla. 1313
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 22, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 131 So. 533 (State Ex Rel. Dos Anigos, Inc. v. Lehman) 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. Dos Anigos, Inc. v. Lehman, 131 So. 533, 100 Fla. 1313 (Fla. 1930).

Opinion

Terrell, C. J.

On September 2, 1930, this Court granted its alternative writ of mandamus directed to the City-Commission of the City of Sanford, Florida, commanding said Commission to convene without delay and revise its budget for the fiscal year 1930-31 so as to include therein and to appropriate for the payment thereof, a sum equal to all past due principal and interest of the bonds and certificates of indebtedness of said City as described in said alternative writ including all principal and interest of said *1316 bonds and certificates of indebtedness which will mature and accrue prior to the end of said fiscal year and to levy on all the taxable property, within said City a tax sufficient to produce the sum so appropriated.' The alternative writ further commands the Mayor, City Clerk, Tax Assessor, and Tax Collector of said City to do and perform all other acts and deeds- required by law to carry out the commands of said writ.

October 2, 1930, on motion of Relator, the alternative writ was amended to forbear the levy of any tax to cover the principal of bonds or certificates of indebtedness past due or to mature prior to September 30, 1931, but in lieu thereof to require the levy of a tax sufficient when collected to pay, (1) All past due interest represented by coupons on said bonds and certificates of indebtedness, (2) All interest represented by coupons becoming due and payable during the said City’s fiscal pear commencing October 1, 1930, and (3) All interest at the contract rate from their respective dates of maturity to September 30, 1931, on bonds and certificates of indebtedness of said City which are now past due and which will mature during, the fiscal year ending September 30, 1931 (the said last named interest not represented by coupons).

To the alternative writ as amended the Respondents filed their joint and several return to which the Relator has demurred and has moved to strike designated portions thereof. The cause now comes on to tbe disposed of on the issue raised by the demurrer to and motion to strike portions of the return to said alternative writ.

The demurrer to and motion to strike portions of the return to the alternative writ raised two primary questions, the first of which is, that parties other than the Relator have brought suits in the United States District Court *1317 for the Southern District of Florida challenging the validity of the bonds described in the alternative writ.

It is a well settled general principal of law, that the plea of a prior action pending' .will abate a later action or suit in the same Court or other Court of like jurisdiction if the parties are the same and both suits are predicated on the same cause of 'action, T C. J. 45 and cases cited, 1 R. C. L. 10. The rule is also well settled that the pendency of a prior suit in a Federal Court is not ground for the abatement of a like suit in a State Court even though both suits are. brought in the same State by the same parties and for the same" cause. 1 C. J. 87, 1 R. C. L. 18.

On the basis of the second rule as thus detailed the plea of a prior action pendiing must fall because the prior action was brought in the Federal Court while the instant cause was initiated in this Court. The said plea falls before the first rule for the following reasons: (1) The parties to the suit in State and Federal Courts are different, (2) It is not shown that the suits in the State and Federal Courts are brought for the same purpose, and (3) No facts are set up on which the nature or the purpose of the Federal suits may be determined. For these reasons and others apparent on the record the defense of another suit pending is without merit. Horter v. Commercial Bank and Trust Company, 99 Fla. 678, 126 So. R. 909; Davant v. Weeks, 78 Fla. 175, 82 So. R. 807; Michigan Railway Company v. Detroit Railway Company, 178 Mich. 230, 144 N. W. R. 696, affirmed in 240 U. S. 564, 36 Sup. Ct. R. 424, 60 L. Ed. 802; International and G. N. R. Company v. Barton, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 122, 57 S. W. R. 292; Holmes County Mississippi v. Burton Construction Company, 272 Fed. R. 565; Kesterson v. Southern Railway Company, 146 N. C. 276, 59 S. E. R. 871; Kline v. Burke Con *1318 struction Company, 260 U. S. 226, 67 L. Ed. 226, 43 Sup. Ct. R. 79.

The second primary question raised by the pleadings herein may be stated as follows: Is the fact that misfortune or poverty have befallen a municipality any defense for it to refuse to levy a tax sufficient to pay the principal and interest on its outstanding bonds as they mature when the statute authorizing them requires that this be done, and has this Court the power to modify the duty imposed on the city by such statutes.

The bonds and certificates of indebtedness on which Relator seeks to require the levy of a tax sufficient to pay current and past due-interest aggregate more than six and one-half ¡million dollars, were negotiated over that term of years from 1910 to 1928 as provided by the city charter of Sanford (Chapter 9897 Acts of 1923 Laws of Florida), and Chapter 9298 Acts of 1923 Laws of Florida (Section 3022 Et. Seq. Compiled General Laws of 1927) and Chapter 11855 Acts of 1927 Laws of Florida, authorizing the issuance of refunding bonds by cities and other governmental entities. The past' due and current interest represented by coupons attached to these bonds and certificates of indebtedness aggregate more than eight hundred thou-■sand dollars and the assessed valuation of the City of Sanford is ten million nine hundred thousand dollars.

As a defense to the command of the alternative writ to levy a tax to pay current and past due interest, Respondent's say that additional large levys have been made to meet operating expenses of the city government and to pay outstanding obligations of the City previously incurred, that t'he assessed valuations in the City have fallen from more than twenty-one and one-half ¡million dollars in 1927 to their present valuation of ten million nine hundred thousand dollars, that the percentage of tax eollec *1319 tions during t'he past ten years has run from 56 to 97 per cent., that the population of Sanford is now ten thousand whereas in 1926 it was thirteen thousand, that only one thousand one hundred and ninety-six of its citizens are taxpayers, that the City of Sanford is in Seminole County, Florida, wherein it is assessed sixty-eight and one-half mills State and County tax on a valuation of three million dollars, that the City of Sanford as a municipality has suffered a loss of more than one million dollars and its people individually have suffered losses aggregating five million dollars through bank failures the last three years, that many of its business firjms have gone into bankruptcy, others háve withdrawn from business in Sanford, a number of homes and apartment houses have been sold at foreclosure and others have been razed with a view of reducing taxes. It is also alleged that within six blocks of the post office .at Sanford there are sixty-six vacant stores and that in Sanford proper there are four hundred vacant homes, that the various stocks of merchandise in Sanford have been decreased fifty per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 533, 100 Fla. 1313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dos-anigos-inc-v-lehman-fla-1930.