State ex rel. Lamar v. Dillon

42 Fla. 95
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 42 Fla. 95 (State ex rel. Lamar v. Dillon) 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. Lamar v. Dillon, 42 Fla. 95 (Fla. 1900).

Opinion

Per. Curiam

(After stating the facts) :

I. The third section of Article III of the charter act of the municipality of Jacksonville (Chapter 3775, laws 1887) empowered the mayor and city council to create such offices and to provide by ordinance for the appointment or election of all such officers as might be necessary for the good government of the city, not in conflict or interfering with the duties of officers and appointees in that act provided for whose compensation and terms of service were required to be fixed before their election. The mayor and city council were also' empowered by said section to abolish at any time any office created' by them. The charter act in terms provided for various officers and boards therein named, but the board of trustees named in the information was not created thereby nor mentioned therein. By the first section of the act of 1893, Chapter 4301, the municipal officers of the city of Jacksonville were declared to be a mayor, city council, a board of public works, a board of police commissioners, a comptroller, treasurer, recorder, füdge of the municipal court, marshal and such other officers as might be provided by ordinance. The second section provided for the election by the qualified electors of the city of the mayor, comptroller, treasurer, and city council, and required the members of the board of public works, police commissioners, judge of the municipal court, recorder and all other officers of the city to be elected by the city council. It provided that all city officers should hold office for the term of two years and until their successors were elected, unless sooner removed in the manner therein provided. It fixed the terms of all officers elected by the electors as beginning at [108]*108noon of the third day after the day of election, and the terms of all officers elected by the city council as beginning at noon of the first day after the organization of each newly elected city council. The fifteenth section of this act provided that the number, powers, duties and terms of office of all the city boards and city officers, excepting only the powers and duties of the city council, might be amended and changed at any time, by an ordinance first passed by the affirmative vote of not less than three-fifths of all the members of the city council approved by the mayor or passed over his veto and subsequently approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by the qualified electors of the city at an election. The act did not create or mention the board of trustees of the waterworks and improvement Dpnds, nor is there anything in the record to show that such a board had ever been created by ordinance prior to- the passage of that act. The ordinance set out in the information was passed in 1894, after the enactment of Chapter 4301, and one of the principal contentions in the case on the part of plaintiff in error is that said ordinance Creates the office of the board of trustees of the waterworks .and improvement bonds of the city of Jacksonville, and that it is void because it undertakes to create an office the term of which is therein fixed at nine years, in violation of section 7, Article XVI of the constitution of 1885, which provides that “the legislature shall not create any office the term of which shall be longer than four years.” Under the view we take of this case, it does not become necessary for us to determine whether this clause of the constitution has any application to the creation of municipal offices. The fifteenth section of Chapter 4301, laws of 1893, authorizing the amendment and change of the numbers, powers, du[109]*109ties and terms of office of all city officers and boards (excepting- the powers and duties of the city council) extended only to such officers and boards as had been created or recognized by legislative enactment, and not to such offices as may have been created by the mayor and city council. The office of the board of trustees of the waterworks and improvement bonds had not prior to the pasage of the ordinance in question been created or recognized by any act of the legislature, nor had the mayor and city council, so far as disclosed by the record, created or attempted to' create such an office. Inasmuch as the ordinance creating- the board, passed in 1894, undertook to transfer to it a part of the duties assigned by statute to the board of public works, it was properly passed in the manner pointed out in the fifteenth section, but the ordinance does not pretend to amend or change the terms of office of any office of the city created or recognized by the legislature. It does, however, create the board of trustees of the waterworks and improvement bonds and undertake to fix their'terms of office at nine years, but the second section of the act (Chap. 4301) definitely fixed the terms of all city officers at two years, which in our judgment embraced all the officers of the city, including those created by the mayor and city council except where the terms of office of some office created or recognized by the legislature was amended or changed in the manner pointed out in the fifteenth section, which, as we have seen, is not the case here. From what has been said, it is quite apparent that as to this particular office the legislature has neither created, nor authorized the city to create, the office in question with a term exceeding four years, so that it cannot be said that the constitutional provision insisted upon has been violated by the legislature, even if it ap[110]*110plies to municipal offices. The attempt on the part of the city to make the term of office nine years is in conflict with the statute fixing the term at two years, and so much of the ordinance as attempts to fix the term at nine years is void, but we do' not think this renders the entire ordinance invalid. The constitutional provision invoked, if applicable to municipal offices, is a limitation upon the power of the legislature, forbidding it to create, or to authorize the municipality to create a municipal office the term of which shall be longer than four years, but its language is not addressed to municipalities, nor has the legislature addressed any such language to- the city of Jacksonville in reference to offices to be created by the mayor and city council. That portion of the ordinance fixing the term of office at nine years is void because it is in conflict with the statute, which fixed the term at two years, and under these circumstances the rule applied by the Supreme Court of Indiana, in Indianapolis Brewing Co. v. Claypool, 149 Ind. 193, 48 N. E. Rep. 228, cited by plaintiff in error, upon its construction of a constitutional provision similar toi the one we have quoted from ours, has no' application, even if it is a proper one to follow in cases like the one there under consideration. On the contrary, we think the rule applied by the Supreme Court of California in the case of People ex rel. Davidson v. Perry, 79 Cal. 105, 21 Pac. Rep. 423, is the proper one for us to follow in the present case, and that the invalid provision fixing the terms of office at nine years may be rejected without affecting the validity of the other provisions of the ordinance, the officers named in the ordinance holding for the terms fixed by statute. The act of 1895, Chapter 4498, passed subsequent to the ordinance in question, repeals Chapter 4301, laws of 1893, but it con[111]

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Bluebook (online)
42 Fla. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lamar-v-dillon-fla-1900.