STATE EX REL. SARASOTA CTY. v. Boyer
This text of 360 So. 2d 388 (STATE EX REL. SARASOTA CTY. v. Boyer) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Florida ex rel. SARASOTA COUNTY, Etc., Relator,
v.
Chief Judge Tyrie A. BOYER et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*389 Richard E. Nelson, Richard L. Smith and Leslie Telford, of Nelson, Hesse, Cyril & Weber, Sarasota, for relator.
Parker D. Thomson and Robert T. Wright, Jr., of Paul & Thomson, Miami, for respondents.
*390 BOYD, Justice.
Sarasota County has suggested[1] that a writ of prohibition be issued to the First District Court of Appeal in a case[2] pending there. After a "show cause" order was issued and a return received, oral arguments were held. We have decided that the peremptory writ should not be issued.
The facts of the case are contained in relator's suggestion and the parties' briefs. General Development Corporation is developing Myakka Estates, an 8,000 acre planned residential community in the City of North Port in Sarasota County. By virtue of its substantial impact on the health, safety or welfare of citizens of more than one county, the development is a DRI (development of regional impact), as defined within the Environmental Land and Water Management Act, Chapter 380, Florida Statutes.[3] The Act sets out an approval process for a DRI to be located within the jurisdiction of a local government that has adopted a zoning ordinance.
That process was followed in this case. General Development submitted to the City an application for development approval. The application laid out a master plan for the full development and requested approval to develop four units. The application was approved by order of the City. But the City stated in the order that, as to each increment of units beyond the initial one, a new application for development approval would have to be submitted. An application for the first additional increment of units (units 5, 6 and 7) was subsequently submitted to the City. Following hearings on the application the City entered a conditional order approving it. The Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council and the Division of State Planning appealed the second order, as they are entitled by the Act to do, to the Land and Water Adjudicatory Commission.
The Commission appointed a hearing officer to hear preliminarily the matter. At this juncture Sarasota County was allowed to intervene. On October 6, 1975, following a pre-hearing conference, the hearing officer ordered that the final hearing on the appeal would be a de novo hearing, and General Development Corporation would present its entire case for approval of units 5, 6 and 7. The officer stated in the order that he was aware of the proceeding held before the City for approval of the master plan. But, he stated, he had reviewed the transcript and had found the proceeding not to have been conducted in compliance with the Administrative Procedures Act. He ordered, therefore, that a full formal hearing was required[4] as to approval of the three units comprising the first additional increment.
General Development moved that the final hearing be postponed for consideration of the question whether approval of a DRI could be broken into a master plan approval and increment approval to follow. The motion was heard and on January 14, 1976, the hearing officer entered a comprehensive pre-hearing order. The order set down the time and place of the final hearing and, once again, declared the scope of the hearing would not be limited by the initial order of approval for the master plan. Furthermore, as in the October 6th order, it ordered General Development to open the hearing with a presentation of its entire case for approval of units 5, 6 and 7.
On February 6, 1976, General Development, under authority of the APA,[5] petitioned the District Court of Appeal for review of the Comprehensive Prehearing Order. Its argument against the order was that the hearing officer had erred in interpreting the APA as it applied to the proceeding before the City on the initial development application and that the error was *391 forcing it to participate in a hearing that would be much more expensive and complex than necessary. The expense and complexity would be generated, it argued, because approval of the master plan for the additional units would have to be gained. If the hearing were limited as General Development wanted, it would have to show only that the additional units were in compliance with the master plan. Sarasota County moved to dismiss the petition for two reasons. One was that an adequate remedy would be provided by review of the final agency decision. (Nonfinal agency action is not reviewable if review of the final decision provides an adequate remedy. See Section 120.68, Florida Statutes.) The second was that the petition was untimely since the issues raised were first decided in the October 6th order. The District Court refused to dismiss the petition.
By way of the suggestion for prohibition Sarasota County renews its claim that the District Court lacks jurisdiction to consider General Development's petition. Under traditional notions of prohibition, a superior court's prohibition power is properly invoked where it has appellate or supervisory jurisdiction over an inferior tribunal about to act beyond its jurisdiction.[6] But, General Development contends, whether the traditional test for prohibition is met or not, this Court's prohibition power, as to district courts of appeal, may be applied only in an extremely narrow class of cases. The Constitution confers on this Court jurisdiction to "issue writs of prohibition to courts and commissions in causes within the jurisdiction of the supreme court to review." Article V, Section 3(b)(4), Florida Constitution. General Development traces the history of this Court's decisions on prohibition power under the 1885 Constitution and concludes that, under the present Constitution, as to decisions of district courts of appeal, our prohibition power is confined to cases that fall within the jurisdiction conferred by Section 3(b)(1) of Article V. That section confers jurisdiction to review district court decisions "initially and directly passing on the validity of a state statute or federal statute or treaty, or construing a provision of the state or federal constitution." We will not adopt such a severely restricted view of our power of prohibition. We have not done so in practice in the past. If prohibition is to remain a preventive remedy, to adopt such a construction would leave us with no prohibition power whatsoever, and, therefore, would make the constitutional provision meaningless.
These are a few of the occasions when we have entertained suggestions of prohibition directed to district courts of appeal, on a basis other than the one urged by General Development, and have found our prohibition power to have been invoked properly: to enforce dismissal of an untimely petition for review of agency action,[7] one of the bases for Sarasota County's suggestion in this case; to consider the taking of an appeal when the notice was prematurely filed;[8] and to consider acceptance of a transfer of an appeal from a sister court with whom the appeal had been filed mistakenly.[9] None of the cases involved the validity of statutes or treaties or a constitutional construction. Were we to adopt General Development's viewpoint we would lose not only our prohibition authority over the above-mentioned cases, but over nearly every other case in the district courts, as well.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
360 So. 2d 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sarasota-cty-v-boyer-fla-1978.