State v. City of Miami

7 So. 2d 146, 150 Fla. 270, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 968
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 146 (State v. City of Miami) 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 v. City of Miami, 7 So. 2d 146, 150 Fla. 270, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 968 (Fla. 1942).

Opinion

BUFORD, J.:

On appeal we review an order of the circuit court validating the City of Miami Hospital Revenue Bonds in the sum of $1,157,000.00.

The pertinent facts found from the evidence and the applicable legal principles are concisely stated in the decree from.which the appeal is taken, as follows:

“This cause coming on to be heard on the 24th day *272 of February, 1942, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A.M. of said day, at the Circuit Court Room in the Court House in the City of Miami, in the County of Dade in said Circuit upon the petition of said City of Miami (hereinafter sometimes called the ‘City’), for the validation of $1,157,000.00 Hospital Revenue Bonds of said City of Miami, pursuant to an order heretofore issued by this Court against the State of Florida, requiring it, through its State Attorney.for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, to show cause at said time and place why the said Hospital Revenue Bonds should not be validated and confirmed as was prayed in such Petition, and it appearing that copies of said Order and Petition were served upon said State Attorney, as is required by law, and that notice of said hearing directed to the taxpayers and citizens of said City of Miami was published as is required by law, and it further appearing that said State Attorney has filed an Answer as required by law, and that a taxpayer, one P. H. Arthur, has intervened and has filed an Answer to said Petition, and evidence having been introduced and the cause submitted for consideration and decision, the Court having heard and determined all of the questions of law and of fact in the cause, finds the facts as follows:
“(1). All of the material allegations in said Petition for Validation are true, and the issuance of said $1,157,000. Hospital Revenue Bonds has been duly authorized by Resolution No. 17659, passed and adopted by the City Commission of the City of Miami on January 30, 1942.
“ (2). The City owns and operates a municipal hospital in the City of-Miami (now known as the Jackson Memorial Hospital and hereinafter sometimes called *273 the ‘municipal hospital’), which hospital was constructed in the year 1916 and has at all times since its construction provided accommodations, services and facilities for the treatment not only of patients able to pay for all or a part of the services rendered and treatment received (hereinafter sometimes called ‘Pay patients’) but also of patients unable to pay for any of such services and treatments (hereinafter sometimes called ‘charity patients’), and in order to meet increasing demands for hospital services and facilities since 1916 the City has from time to time improved and extended the municipal hospital.
“(3) For the purpose of paying the cost of constructing the municipal hospital and of improving and extending the same from time to time, the City issued prior to April 1, 1935, its general obligation bonds, payable from unlimited ad valorem taxes in the aggregate amount of $694,000, and the City has heretofore expended for such purpose from the general funds of the City amounts aggregating $236,000, and, for the purpose of further extending the municipal hospital, the City issued, under date of April 1, 1935, its hospital revenue certificates, payable solely from the net revenue of the municipal hospital, in the aggregate principal amount of $236,000 and secured a grant from the United States of America in the aggregate amount of $114,000.
“ (4). The facilities of the municipal hospital have been severely overtaxed for several years by the normal requirements of the City and of the County of Dade, and the need for additional hospital services and facilities has been greatly increased in recent months, and such additional hospital services and facilities have also become necessary in order to assume *274 adequate safeguards and facilities for defense operations.
“ (5). The construction of extensions to the municipal hospital is necessary to continue the efficient operation and maintenance of the municipal hospital, to meet the constantly increasing demands for hospital services and treatment, to enlarge the usefulness of the existing hospital facilities, and to preserve the property, health and safety of the inhabitants of the City.
“(6). The execution of an agreement (hereinafter sometimes called the ‘Agreement’) between the City and the County of Dade (hereinafter sometimes called the ‘County’) in the form appended as ‘Exhibit A’ to Resolution No. 17659 hereinafter mentioned, has been duly authorized by the City Commission of the City of Miami (hereinafter sometimes called the ‘Commission’) and by the Board of County Commissioners of the County, under the provisions of which Agreement the City and the County agree in part as follows:
“The County will convey to the City by a good and sufficient deed of warranty, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances, the fee simple title to the plat of land now owned by the County, which is in close proximity to the municipal hospital, lying and being in the City of Miami and described as follows:
“The northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 26, Township 53 South, Range 41 East, excepting therefrom the following strip of land: The west twenty-five feet, the east twenty-five feet and the north thirty-five feet.
“The City will construct thereon extensions to the municipal hospital, such extensions (hereinafter sometimes collectively called the ‘extensions’) to consist *275 of: a fireproof five-story building to provide the equivalent of 300 hospital beds, completely equipped and furnished, including medical and surgical facilities, furniture for patients’ rooms, halls and corridors, medical and surgical equipment, X-Ray equipment, kitchens, diet kitchéns, and dining room equipment, a separate two-story nurses’ dormitory, completely equipped and furnished, an emergency power plant, and grading, landscaping and construction of necessary roads, walkways and parking areas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 So. 2d 146, 150 Fla. 270, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-city-of-miami-fla-1942.