Here as below, Charles Childers maintains that the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) acted beyond its statutory authority in ordering his saltwater products license suspended for ninety days. He contends that section 370.092(8)(b), Florida Statutes (1995), on which DEP relied, does not authorize suspension in the absence of a criminal conviction. We agree and reverse, without reaching appellant’s double jeopardy argument.
On September 29, 1995, Mr. Childers was cited for deploying a shrimp net containing in excess of 500 square feet of mesh area, and for using three nets simultaneously, all within three miles of shore, in violation of article X, section 16 of the Florida Constitution,
In a certified letter to Mr. Childers dated July 5, 1996, DEP referred to an attached notice (which is not in the record) and stated:
Please be advised that, upon receipt of this letter, your 1996/1997 Saltwater Products License (SP-70928) is hereby[3 ] suspended for a period of 90 days....
This suspension is based upon your failure to comply with Saltwater Fisheries statutes for a conviction of a violation of Section 16, Article X of the State Constitution.
On July 11, 1996, Mr. Childers requested a hearing. After a hearing on August 23,1996, DEP entered a suspension order on September 30,1996.
At issue now, on appeal of the suspension order, is the proper construction of section 370.092(8)(b), Florida Statutes (1995), which before its recent amendment read as follows:
*964 (b) In addition to being subject to the other penalties provided in this chapter, any violation of s. 16, Art. X of the State Constitution or any rules of the Marine Fisheries Commission which implement the gear prohibitions and restrictions specified therein shall be considered a major violation; and any person, firm, or corporation convicted of such violation shall be subject to the following additional penalties:
1. For a first major violation within a 7-year period, suspension of the saltwater products license for 90 days.
(Emphasis supplied.) The order under review sets forth the agency’s assertion that appellant was properly deemed criminally convicted, even though the court with jurisdiction to convict withheld adjudication:
In the context of 370.092(8)(b), Florida Statutes, the word “conviction” was selected by the Legislature to indicate a judicial determination of sanctionable behavior, not necessarily the final resolution of any and all criminal proceedings.
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Where the court withholds adjudication of guilt, there exists sufficient and uncontested evidence on the record of that criminal proceeding to support the Department’s determination that the Petitioner has been “convicted” for purposes of this subsequent administrative action against Petitioner’s Saltwater Products License.
Effective January 1, 1997, the Legislature amended the statute, eh. 96-300, § 2, at 1311-1312, Laws of Fla., by substituting for the word “convicted,” the phrase “receiving any judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal,” to create section 370.092(4)(a), Florida Statutes (Supp.1996).
The version of a statute in effect at the time grounds for disciplinary action arise controls. See Willner v. Department of Prof'l Regulation, Bd. of Med.,
Citing Florida Cable Television Association v. Deason,
statutes authorizing the revocation of a license to practice a business or profession “must be strictly construed, and such provisions must be strictly followed, because ... penal in ... nature.” State v. Pattishall,99 Fla. 296 , 298,126 So. 147 , 148 (1930). But see DeBock v. State,512 So.2d 164 (Fla.1987).
Werner v. Department of Ins. and Treasurer,
We reject DEP’s contention that, as a conservation measure, section 370.092(8)(b), Florida Statutes (1995), need not be eon-
DEP points to the definition of conviction in the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure governing sentencing guidelines. E.g., Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.701(d)(2). See also McCrae v. State,
At one time it was a felony to sell intoxicating liquors in a dry county “having before been convicted of the like offense,” while commission of a first offense was a misdemeanor. Our supreme court decided that, for purposes of the statute, a conviction “involve[d] all the necessary proceedings from the charge to the sentence inclusive.” Smith v. State,
In short, as the Supreme Court of Florida observed last century, “numerous authorities” define conviction to mean a judge or jury’s determination of guilt, while “numerous [other] authorities ... hold the judgment or sentence to be a necessary component part of ‘conviction.’” State ex rel. Owens v. Barnes,
Although our focus is the statute before it was amended, legislative history surrounding the changes
In the “Section-By-Section Analysis,” the effect of the amendment proposed to section 370.092, Florida Statutes (1995) was described: “Imposes penalties on people ... who have received any judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal, rather than only on those entities which have been convicted of violating the constitutional net ban.” Id. at 6 (emphasis supplied). Although he received a judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal, Mr. Childers was not “convicted of violating the constitutional net ban,” within the unambiguous meaning of the statute before it was amended. “An administrative agency may not revoke [or suspend] a license or a permit for some cause not clearly within the ambit of its statutory authority.” Board of Trustees of Internal Improvement Trust Fund of State of Florida v. Barnett,
Reversed.
Notes
. Article X, section 16(b)(2) of the Florida Constitution, which was adopted in 1994, provides:
In addition to the prohibition set forth in (1), no other type of net containing more than 500 square feet of mesh area shall be used in nearshore and inshore Florida waters. Additionally, no more than two such nets, which shall not be connected, shall be used from any vessel....
. Marine Fisheries Commission Rule 46ER95-1, effective July 3, 1995, provides:
(1) No person shall operate or fish in near-shore and inshore Florida waters any trawl with a net or bag containing more than 500 square feet of mesh area.
(2)....
(a) No person shall harvest shrimp in near-shore and inshore Florida waters as a food shrimp producer with any otter trawl that has a perimeter around the leading edge of the net greater than 66 feet.
(b) No more than 2 such trawls, unconnected, shall be towed by a single vessel at any time, including a try net.
(3) For purposes of this emergency rule:
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(f) "Try net" means a small otter trawl used to test waters for the presence or size of shrimp.
.The suspension order has been stayed pending appeal, and the case is not moot. See generally City of Tampa v. Islands Four, Inc.,
. On the other hand, the substantial restatement of an old ground in a new statute authorizes disciplinary action on the preexisting ground under the new statute. See Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles v. Morea,
. Pertinent changes in the wording of the provision in question were as follows:
... any person, firm, or corporation convicted receiving any judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal of such violation shall be subject to the following additional penalties:
1. For a first major violation within a 7-year period, a civil penalty of $2,500 and suspension of all the saltwater products license privileges for 90 calendar days following final disposition shall be imposed.
Ch. 96-300, § 2, at 1312, Laws of Fla. (Deletions struck through; additions underlined.)
