104 Fla. 390 | Fla. | 1932
Lead Opinion
This was a statutory proceeding to exclude from the corporate limits and jurisdiction certain lands of the petitioners from a municipal corporation containing less, as it is alleged in the petition, than 150 qualified electors under the provisions of section 1916 et seq. R. G. S., 3049 C. G. L. et seq.
A demurrer was filed and sustained to the petition and petition was dismissed.
The corporation was created by the legislature under the provisions of chapter 6804, Acts of 1913.
The Act creating the corporation contained the following provisions "That the territorial boundaries of the Town of Bradley hereby created shall not be changed and shall be as follows". *391
The only question presented which we are required to determine is whether or not the language "shall not be changed" excludes this corporation from the application of sections 1916 et seq. R. G. S., 3049 et seq. C. G. L. It is contended that because this language appears in a special act of the legislature that the general act with reference to excluding territory from a municipal corporation above referred to does not apply and in support of that contention the appellees cite State ex rel. vs. City of Homestead,
The language "shall not be changed" can have no preventive force or effect. The legislature cannot prohibit a future legislature by proper enactment changing boundaries which it established. Neither can it by the use of such language as is employed here prevent a property owner from exercising the right guaranteed him under section 4 of the declaration of rights.
For the reasons stated, the judgment should be reversed with directions to overrule the demurrer and proceed further with the disposition of the cause in accordance with the law and practice pertaining to such matters. It is so ordered.
Reversed.
ELLIS AND BROWN, J.J., concur.
WHITFIELD, P.J., AND TERRELL, J., concur in the opinion and judgment.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion but not in the opinion nor the reasoning therein employed. It seems to me clear that the Legislature has ample authority to pass an act fixing the boundaries of a municipality, and also to provide therein that the boundaries as fixed in such act, shall only be subject to change by the legislature itself and not by proceedings taken under Section 3049 C. G. L., 1916 R. G. S. My concurrence in the conclusion is based upon the view that the language of the special Act in the case (Sec. 6, Chapter 6804, Acts of 1913) "That the territorial boundaries of the Town of Bradley hereby created shall not be changed and shall be as follows: (giving description)" does not operate in derogation to Section 3049, C. G. L. supra. It is the duty of the Court to give both the general law and the special Act some effect, if the apparent conflict between the two is not irreconcilable. Since both can be given effect, by holding that Sec. 6 of *393 Chapter 6084, supra, intended to refer to proceedings under Section 3048 C. G. L., 1915 R. G. S. and not to proceedings under Section 3049 C. G. L., 1916 R. G. S. I see no bar to the contemplated proceedings in this case which are solely under the latter section, and therefore I concur in the reversal. I might add that I am also of the opinion that the title is of doubtful sufficiency to cover what is embraced in the attempted restriction.