Strickland v. Leon County

159 So. 2d 213
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 18, 1963
DocketNo. 32334
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 So. 2d 213 (Strickland v. Leon County) 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
Strickland v. Leon County, 159 So. 2d 213 (Fla. 1963).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice;

This is a direct appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Leon County, Florida, in which the chancellor held that certain acts of the legislature we will discuss seria-tim were constitutional. They all deal with the prosecuting attorneyship of Leon County, a position now held by the appellant who initiated the attacks. The particular question posed in the complaint for declaratory decree was the amount of compensation to which the appellant was entitled for his services subsequent to 1 July 1961.

Chapter 14,828, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1931, established the office of Prosecuting Attorney for the County Judge’s Court of Leon County, and provided for the appointment by the Governor of a prosecutor to serve until the next general election at which time the office should be filled for a term of four years. The act specified the duties of the officer and fixed the compensation at $300. a year and five dollars for each conviction and plea of guilty, both to be taxed as costs.

In 1961 the legislature enacted three laws dealing with the subject. Chapter 61-581 was an act applicable to counties having a population of 74,200 to 76,000 and provided that prosecuting attorneys in such counties should be compensated in the amount of $7800. annually. The act further “authorized” boards of county commissioners in such counties to pay prosecuting attorneys an additional sum of $4500. for office expenses. Moreover it was specified that the .act should not be construed to affect “Section 125.04, Florida Statutes, or any other law now in effect or subsequently enacted providing for taxing of conviction [sic] fee of five dollars ($5.00) as part of the cost of each case in which conviction shall be had in the county judge’s court and such fee shall be so taxed to the same extent as if this act had not been enacted.”

When we turn to Sec. 125.04, supra, we find the provisions that an attorney employed by the county commissioners to conduct prosecutions in a county in which there is

no county court, criminal court of record,, -or court of record shall be paid not less-than $300. or more than $600. annually and "in addition thereto * * * shall receive”' the same fees for convictions allowed in county courts. Under Sec. 34.11, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., such prosecutors in county courts are required to be paid $800 yearly, five dollars for each conviction, and a percentage of bond estreatures. We have italicized certain words in the quotations for reasons that will become plain as we proceed in our analyses of the pertinent acts. And before we go further we should note that Sec. 125.04 concludes with the provision that the compensation and fees are payable out of the fine and forfeiture fund of the county.

We record now that although in Chapter 61-581 the legislature was at pains not to disturb Sec. 125.04, it did not incorporate the provisions of. the latter law with reference to the payment of the conviction fees to the prosecuting attorney, but only stipulated that they be taxed as costs.

We are not at liberty to supply the language that would result in payment of these fees to the prosecuting attorney if, indeed, the legislature so intended it. So far as we know it may have been meant to build up the fine and forfeiture fund with the conviction costs against the flat amount of $7800. which was substituted for an original compensation of $300. plus the conviction fees.

In any event, giving the language its ordinary meaning and assuming for the time being that Chapter 61-581 withstands the attack upon it, the prosecuting attorney of Leon County was to receive beginning 1 July 1961, the effective date of the act, $7800. and the Board of County Commissioners could have, if they chose, paid his-office expenses in an amount “not to exceed $4500. * *

The same year by another act, Chapter 61-1133, the Board of County Commissioners of Leon County was “authorized” to-pay the prosecuting attorney $4500. for of[215]*215fice expenses. The period to which this expense allowance would apply was not stated but, curiously enough, it was provided that the payment should be made in “equal monthly installments.” It was further provided in that act that in addition to the unclassified office expense the commissioners were permitted to pay costs of telephone services rendered his office.

Although the chancellor recited in his decree that the validity of Sec. 1 of Chapter 61-1133 was assailed we do not find an express ruling in the decree in respect of the constitutionality vel non of this part of the act. The assault upon it was grounded on the attempt by it to regulate by local law the fees of a county officer contrary to the provisions of Secs. 20 and 21 of Article III of the Constitution, F.S.A. The appellant implies that a ruling on this act was unnecessary had the court decided that it had no application after 1 July 1961. Apparently it was here that the subject of costs of a telephone for the prosecuting attorney’s office was introduced and it is obvious from the second section that it was designed to validate such expenditures before then defrayed by the Board of County Commissioners. In view of this situation and the content of the act. which introduced nothing new save the provision for telephonic expenses we will concentrate on the' other two acts, namely 61-581 and 61-1493, with some attention to Chapter 14,828.

In 1961 the legislature again dealt with the subject by the enactment of Chapter 61-1493 which amended Chapter 14,828, the 1931 Act, by specifying a yearly compensation of $7200. instead of $300. as originally fixed. This act took effect 1 July 1961, whereas Chapter 61-1133 had become effective 7 May 1961. The later law reiter-áted the language of Chapter 61-1133, supra, with reference to the ‘authorization’ to pay not more than $4500. for office expenses but did not mention an allowance for telephonic services. This leads us to a conclusion that the earlier law was primarily one of validation, as we have said, and the omission of references to the cost of telephonic services convinces us that such expenses were intended in the future to be included in the $4500. expense allowance. Here again, as in Chapter 61-581, provision for the taxing of conviction fees as costs was preserved and any provision for paying them to the prosecuting attorney was omitted.

In essence, the appellant insists that two of the laws enacted in 1961, namely, Chapters 61-581 and 61-1493, supra, are unconstitutional because they offend Secs. 20, 21 and 27 of Art. Ill prohibiting the regulation of fees of State and county officers by local law and mandating the legislature to provide for the election by the people or appointment by the Governor of all State and county officers, not otherwise specified in the Constitution, and the fixing of their compensation and duties.

In the complaint he also assailed . Sec. 1 of Chapter 61-1133 but in view of what we have already said in respect of that law and further considering the comment in his brief that it was the intention of the legislature that the law have no effect after 1 July 1961 and that it should not be necessary to determine the constitutionality of that part of the act we will not again comment upon it.

With reference to Chapter 61-581 we find reason for much concern. As the appellant charges, the population range gauged in the light of the purpose to be accomplished stamps the act as a local one applicable only to Leon County.

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 2d 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-leon-county-fla-1963.