24 Fla. 281 | Fla. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court;
On the 11th day of March, 1879, a statute, chapter 3162, entitled “ An act to provide a Uniform System of Quarantine in this State,” received the approval of the (Governor. In view of its provisions and the express repeal by it of the statute formerly controlling the same subject, we need not refer to prior legislation in considering the case now before us. The first section of this act constituted the Mayor and
The act (sec. 3) authorizes any board of health to establish at any time during each year a quarantine forbidding the approach to the city or town or district covered by the board’s jurisdiction, of’any vessel upon which any contagious, infectious or pestilent disease has occurred or existed during the voyage thereto, or within thirty days preceding the arrival thereat, and forbidding the landing of any person or goods from such boat or vessel until it has performed quarantine in accordance with the provisions of this act and with the rules and regulations of the board of health. It, sec. 4, also provides that, “ any board of health ” may establish quarantine against any county or locality of which it has information as being infected with plague or other malignant, contagious or infectious disease, forbidding the approach to the town, city or district of any vessel or person from such infected country, and the landing of any such vessel, or of any person or goods thereon, until such vessel, person or goods shall have performed quarantine as aforesaid. The establishment of the above quarantine is required to be publicly posted or published in some newspaper for the space of two weeks (secs. 4, 5).
“ The board of health of any incorporated city or town” (sec. 6.) may appoint one or more Port inspectors, whose duty it makes to board any vessel approaching such city or town and ascertain if it is subject to perform proper quarantine under the 3d or 4th sections, and to order the same, if found to be so subject;, and the persons and goods on it,
If after proclamation under such 3d and 1th sections by the board of health of any city or town, any person coming-in any boat or vessel approaching the city from the high seas, shall (sec. 11) himself land, or shall land any goods from the vessel, or if any person shall go on board of such vessel previous to her inspection by a port inspector, such person, should the vessel be ordered to quarantine, shall be required to perform the same quarantine, or be fined not less than $100, nor more than $500, and be imprisoned not less 20 nor more than sixty days in the county jail.
The board of health of any city or town may make such rules for the regulation of quarantine, not inconsistent with this act, as they may deem necessary, (sec. 13.)
The hoard of any city or town may establish (sec. 15) a land quarantine when in their judgment necessary, and are empowered to make rules or regulations to prevent or restrain any or all persons or goods coming from any city or place where any infectious or contagious disease prevails or exists from entering into such city or town during the existence of such quarantine; and for the purpose of such quarantine, the jurisdiction of such city or town extends to the boundaries of the county, and in case there shall be two or more cities in any county, the jurisdiction of each on the side towards another shall extend to a line midway between, them.
In 1883 the 17th section of the act of 1879 was amended by chapter 3443 of our laws so as to permit the boards of health to fix the inspector’s and fumigation fees and also to authorize suit as, well as detention of the vessel for the same:
In 1885 an act, chapter 3603 entitled "An act to provide for the appointment of boards of health in and for the several counties of the State of Florida, and define their
Section 8 provides that every board of health thus created shall have “full power to act in regard to all matters pertaining to quarantine, public health, vital statistics and the abatement of nuisances, to appoint and suitably compensate a Port Inspector, and such other officers or agents as they may find necessary, who shall be subject to removal at the pleasure of the board.” It also provides a punishment by fine, not exceeding §1,000, of any person who shall interfere with, hinder or oppose any such agent or officer, or member of the board in the discharge of his duty.
Section 9 authorizes the board to establish, at any time, “such quarantines as in their judgment is expedient for the
The 12th section of this act amends the first section of the above act of 1879, so as to make it read as follows: “ The Mayor, Aldermen and City Physician, if there be one, of any incorporated city or town in this State, of less than three hundred registered voters, shall be and are hereby constituted a board of health for said incorporated city or town.”
It is plain that the act of 18S5 does not do away with boards of health for incorported towns — municipalities having less than three hundred registered voters — and it is also clear that there is in the act of 1885 nothing that repeals the act of 1879, except in so far as it made a board of health for such an incorporated town the board for the county. As indicated above, there was, under the act of 1879, no county board, as such, unless there was no incorporated city or-
There sire two views to be taken of the effect of the act of 1885 upon that of 1881; one is that it was intended to-take the place of it and do away with the boards of health provided by it; and the other is that it was merely to create a new or county board as an additional or third board in the quarantine or health system in this State. Had the act of 1 85 not contained the 12th section, it might have been urged with force that the intention of the Legislature was to have the county boards take the place of those of both towns and cities, but in view of the provisons of such section, -it is indisputable that such was not their intention, as to town boards, and we are not clear that it was their purpose as to city boards. It is, however, not material to settle the latter question — for whichever view is to prevail, it is plain that the general provisions of the general quarantine law of 1879 have not been repealed, but are still in foree; it and the act of 1885 are in pari materia, and to be construed together. State ex rel. vs. Palmes, 23 Fla., 620.
When the act of 1885, in its ninth section, says that a board of health created under it may at any time establish such quarantines as in their judgment are expedient, it means quarantines as authorized by the act of 1879. If, in its judgment, it is well to establish a quarantine forbidding the approach to the county of any vessel or boat upon which any contageous, infectious or pestilent disease has
The sixth section of the act of 1879 informs us what is meant by the act of 1885, when by its eighth section it gives power to appoint and suitably compensate a Port Inspector. It means an officer whose duty it shall be to board every boat or vessel approaching the county and ascertain if it is subject to perforin quarantine, and it she is order her and all persons and goods on her thrown into quarantine, and notify the board of health that she has been ordered into quarantine.
We thus see that the Legislature has regulated the matter of quarantining vessels to a certain extent. There has been no repeal of these provisions, and we are satisfied that in the grant of power alluded to, made by the act of 1885 to county boards, it was meant that they should exercise similar powers as to counties, or rather should conform to these regulations. In the matter of land quarantines it will be perceived that the Legislature has not gone, into such detailed regulations. There was good reason for the course pursued as to the former feature of the subject. Its purpose was not only
Under the regulation before us the vessel is to be detained and the United States officers delayed until not only the n spection has been made but also until the report and release of the vessel. If she is not liable to quarantine, any such detention of the vessel or the United States officials, is contrary to the policy of our statute, and in view of it, as well as in itself, unreasonable.
There is another feature in which we think the regulation is unauthorized. As it appears before us it is one that is intended to be in operation and effect although no quarna
If there is any other regulation.of the board of health of Escambia county that operates as a limitation upon the one before us, it does not appear in the record, nor can we take judicial notice of its existence. Freeman vs. State, 19 Fla., 552. The proceedings taken against the plaintiff in error do not allege the establishment and existence of any quarantine, and in the absence of both an explanatory rule and the allegation mentioned, we think they are insufficient.
The result is that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to discharge the plaintiff in error, and it will be so ordered.