LEGAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSISTANCE FOUNDATION, Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION аnd Pinellas County, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
Andrew Jubal Smith of the Legal Environmental Assistance Foundation, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
C. Anthony Cleveland and Segundo J. Fernandez of Oertel, Hoffman, Fernandez & Cole, P.A., Tallahassee, for Appellee Pinellas County.
Cynthia K. Christen, Tallahassee, for Appellee Department of Environmental Protection.
KAHN, Judge.
Appellant, Legal Environmentаl Assistance Foundation (LEAF), appeals an order entered by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) finding that LEAF had no standing to intervene in the underlying administrative proceeding under either the substantial interest test of section 120.57, Florida Statutes (1995), or under the liberalized provisions of section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes. LEAF is a nonprofit corporation organized under the laws of Alabama, has a certificate of authority to conduct business in Florida, and has Floridians among its members. Because DEP correctly construed section 403.412(5), and because LEAF does not contend that it is entitled to participate in these proceedings by virtue of a substantial interest, we affirm the order on appeal.
The statute dispositive of this case provides:
In any administrative, licensing, or other proceedings authorized by law for the protection of the air, water, or other natural resources of the state from pollution, impairment, or destruction, the Department of Legal Affairs, a political subdivision of municipality of the state, or a citizen of the state shall have standing to intervene as a party on the filing of a verified pleading asserting that the activity, conduct, or product to be licensed or permitted has or will have the effect of impairing, polluting, *1353 or otherwise injuring the air, water, or other natural resources of the state. § 403.412(5), Fla. Stat. (1995) (emphasis added).
Relying upon Florida Wildlife Federation v. State Department of Environmental Regulation,
We cannot agree with LEAF's contention. The rights, duties, and privileges of a foreign corporation holding a valid certificate of authority are not always identical to those of a Florida corporation. See National Rifle Ass'n v. Linotype Co.,
The Legislature enacted section 403.412 to extend standing to private and corporate citizens of Florida without any showing of special injury as required by the traditional rule of standing. See Florida Wildlife Fed'n v. State Dep't of Environmental Regulation,
AFFIRMED.
ERVIN, J., concurs.
BENTON, J., dissents with written opinion.
BENTON, Judge, dissenting.
The verified second amended petition the Legal Environmental Assistance Foundation, Inc. (LEAF) filed below seeking to intervene in proceedings on Pinellas County's application for the issuance of certain underground waste disposal permits would have entitled a domestic corporation to intervene. As a corporation authorized to do business in Florida, LEAF has the same intervention rights that a domestic corporation has.
As a practical matter, today's decision may have minimal effect beyond the present controversy, considering the ease with which citizens of any state can form a Florida corporation. But the statutory scheme is clear and comprehensive. To forestall constitutional problems that might attend treating foreign and domestic corporations disparately, the Legislature has categorically decreed that a foreign corporation holding a valid certificate of authority to conduct business in Florida is, insofar as pertinent here, to have "the same but no greater rights and ... the same but no greater privileges as ... a domestic corporation of like character." § 617.1505(2), Fla. Stat. (1995).
Explicitly among the rights section 617.0302, Florida Statutes (1995), confers on Florida corporations not for profit is the right to "sue and be sued and appear" as if they were natural persons.
Every corporation not for profit organized under this act, unless otherwise provided in its articles of incorporation or bylaws, shall have power to:
....
(2) Sue and be sued and appear and defend in all actions and proceedings in its *1354 corporate name to the same extent as a natural person.
§ 617.0302, Fla. Stat. (1995). A Florida not for profit corporation's right to "appеar" includes the rights conferred by section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes (1995).
A Florida corporation not for profit would have been entitled to intervene as a party below, merely by filing a verified pleading alleging that the underground waste disposal for which Pinellas County sought permits from the Department of Environmental Protectiоn would impair or pollute groundwater "or other natural resources of the state." § 403.412(5), Fla. Stat. (1995). Section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes (1995), provides:
(5) In any administrative, licensing, or other proceedings authorized by law for the protection of the air, water, or other natural resources of the state from pollution, impairmеnt, or destruction, the Department of Legal Affairs, a political subdivision or municipality of the state, or a citizen of the state shall have standing to intervene as a party on the filing of a verified pleading asserting that the activity, conduct, or product to be licensed or permitted has or will have the effеct of impairing, polluting, or otherwise injuring the air, water, or other natural resources of the state.
Section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes (1995), is the only basis for intervention which LEAF has asserted on appeal. A decision of our supreme court has construed this provision to apply to domestic corporations not for profit.
Section 617.021, Florida Statutes (1979), states that nonprofit corporations have the power to sue and be sued to the same extent as natural persons. Additionally, most courts which have considered the question have concluded that corporations are citizens for the purpose of pursuing rights granted to citizens. See In re Advisory Opinion to Governor,243 So.2d 573 (Fla.1971) (discussing the holdings from numerous jurisdictions). We agree with the Fourth District Court of Appeal that, by enacting section 403.412, the legislature has declared the protection of the environment to be a collective responsibility and that to treat corporations as citizens is consistent with that declаration.
Florida Wildlife Fed'n v. State Dep't of Environmental Regulation,
Instead, invoking the familiar rule of statutory construction that "а specific statute covering a particular subject area always controls over a statute covering the same and other subjects in more general terms," McKendry v. State,
At least insofar as pertinent here,[1] the certificate of authority issued to LEAF by the Florida Department of State places it on the same footing as any domestic corporation not for profit, by virtue of section 617.1505(2), Florida Statutes (1995), which provides:
A foreign corporation with a valid certificate of authority has the same but no greater rights and has the same but no greater privileges as, and except as otherwise provided by this act is subject to the same dutiеs, restrictions, penalties, and liabilities now or later imposed on, a domestic corporation of like character.
As a foreign corporation not for profit holding a valid certificate of authority to do business in Florida,[2] LEAF has the same rights as a domestic corporation not for profit to *1355 аssert standing under section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes (1995). LEAF's right to intervene follows ineluctably from the decision in Florida Wildlife Federation.
When it enacts a statute, the Legislature is presumed to be aware of existing law. See, e.g., Holmes County Sch. Bd. v. Duffell,
The Legislature took the language of section 617.1505, Florida Statutes (1995), which it originally enacted as chapter 90-179, section 96, Laws of Florida, from a provision it had enacted the year before pertaining to corporations for profit. Ch. 89-154, § 140, Laws of Fla. The latter provision, now codified as section 607.1505, came verbatim from section 15.05 of the Model Business Corporation Act (1984), 4 Model Bus. Corp. Act Ann. (3d ed. Supp.1996). Official Comment[3] to section 15.05, at 15-74, states:
Section 15.05(b), by granting to qualified foreign corporations all of the rights and privileges enjoyed by a domestic corporation, avoids discrimination that might otherwise be subjеct to constitutional challenge.
Along the same lines, the Model Business Corporation Act's historical background section, at 15-75, states further:
The power of the state over foreign corporations qualified to transact business in the state was originally a matter of controversy and the subject of litigation. Thе principles have now been widely accepted as they are codified in section 15.05 and described in the Official Comment.
Florida has not escaped controversy and litigation of the kind adverted to in the background section.[4]See, e.g., Lewis v. B.T. Inv. Managers, Inc.,
The major legal premise that should control today's decision is Florida Wildlife Federation's holding that, along with natural persons, domestic corporations not for profit have standing under section 403.412(5), Florida Statutes (1995). The requirement thаt corporations organized under the laws of other states be treated like domestic corporations once they obtain Florida certificates of authority does not depend on any particular concept of corporate citizenship or residency. However defined,[5] neither LEAF's corporate *1356 citizenship nor its corporate residency justifies disparate treatment here.
This analysis treads the same logical path the Supreme Court of Arizona traveled in Lawrence's Estate v. Lawrence,
a trust company incorporated under the laws of Arizona may be an executor `as if it were a natural person.' A foreign corporation whose articles empower it to act as executor, and which has qualified to act in Arizona, `shall have and enjoy the same rights and privileges' as a domestic corporation `as if it were a natural person.' Thе statute does not require such foreign corporation to be a resident of Arizona ... [in order to do business there]. A domestic corporation has no other residence than the state where organized, although all or its principal business may be conducted in another jurisdiction. When the statute authorizes а domestic corporation to act as executor, it is implicit, of course, that its residence is in Arizona, and when the statute says a foreign corporation, by complying with certain requirements, shall enjoy the same rights and privileges as a like domestic corporation, it is implicit in the language used that the foreign corporation is only required to conform with the law in order to exercise and enjoy such rights and privileges.
I respectfully dissent.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The question before us has nothing to do with "regulat[ing] the organization or internal affairs of a foreign corporation authorized to conduct its affairs in this state." § 617.1505(3), Fla. Stat. (1995).
[2] As a foreign corporation, LEAF cannot lawfully conduct business in Florida at all without a valid certificate of authority issued by the Department of State. § 617.1501(1), Fla. Stat. (1995).
[3] Official commentary of this kind is an appropriate source оf guidance in construing section 617.1505, Florida Statutes (1995), to the extent there is any question about the plain meaning of the statutory language. See Winner v. Cataldo,
[4] The majority's contention that National Rifle Ass'n of America v. Linotype Co.,
[5] Notably by citation to In re Advisory Opinion to Governor,
