Ray Michael LOCKLEAR, Appellant,
v.
FLORIDA FISH & WILDLIFE CONSERVATION COMMISSION, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*327 James F. Cummins, Inverness, for Appellant.
Charles L. Shelfer, Deputy General Counsel and Elise M. Matthes, Assistant General Counsel, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
PLEUS, J.
Ray Locklear appeals from a final order of the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission ("the Commission") imposing sanctions (monetary fine and license suspension) upon him following his convictions in county court for certain illegal gill net fishing-related offenses. Locklear contends that the administratively imposed sanctions constitute a double jeopardy violation and further are grossly disproportionate to the violations committed.
Review of these legal issues is de novo. See State v. Glatzmayer,
Locklear was convicted in Citrus County Court for violations of section 370.021(3), 370.092(2), 370.06(2), Florida Statutes, and Rule 68B-4008(2)(b), Florida Administrative Code, occurring on August 30, 2001. These violations related to illegal gill net fishing activities. Locklear was fined $517.00 and given probation and community control.
Locklear was thereafter convicted in Pinellas County Court of additional gill net violations which occurred on February 17, 2002. He was fined $700.00, placed on six months probation and ordered to complete 50 hours of community service. The Commission then notified Locklear that given this additional violation, it was suspending his commercial salt water fishing license for 12 months and imposing a fine of $5,000.00, pursuant to section 370.021(3)(b), Florida Statutes. Locklear requested a hearing and following the hearing, the sanctions were sustained.
Locklear argues that the Commission's assessment of a fine and license suspension following his convictions and punishments in county court for the underlying misconduct amounts to a double jeopardy violation. He maintains that the administrative action does not qualify as a civil or remedial sanction but rather is entirely punitive in nature.
In a case involving the interplay between administrative sanctions and a criminal prosecution for the same conduct, the United States Supreme Court explained in Hudson v. United States,
Locklear's fine and suspension were imposed by the Commission pursuant to section 370.021(3)(b)2, Florida Statutes, which provides:
(3) PENALTIES FOR USE OF ILLEGAL NETS.
(b) In addition to being subject to the other penalties provided in this chapter, any violation of s. 16(b), Art. X of the State Constitution, or any rules of the commission which implement the gear prohibitions and restrictions specified therein shall be considered a major violation; and any person, firm, or corporation receiving any judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal of such violation shall be subject to the following additional penalties:
....
2. For a second major violation under this paragraph charged within 7 years of a previous judicial disposition, which results in a second judicial disposition other than acquittal or dismissal, a civil penalty of $5,000 and suspension of all saltwater products license privileges for 12 months shall be imposed.
The legislature, by using the term "civil penalty" intended the fine and license suspension to be civil, not criminal, sanctions. In fact, section 370.021(12) provides:
LICENSES AND ENTITIES SUBJECT TO PENALTIES. For purposes of imposing license or permit suspensions or revocations authorized by this chapter, the license or permit under which the violation was committed is subject to suspension or revocation by the commission. For purposes of assessing monetary civil or administrative penalties authorized by this chapter, the person, firm, or corporation cited and subsequently receiving a judicial disposition of other than dismissal or acquittal in a court of law is subject to the monetary penalty assessment by the commission that the license or permit has been cited in a major violation and is now subject to suspension or revocation should the license or permit be cited for subsequent major violations.
The fine assessments and license or permit suspensions are matters for the Commission to determine and are administrative, not criminal sanctions. See State v. Bowling,
Further, the sanctions are not so punitive as to render the statute criminal. Generally the revocation of a license is deemed free of punitive criminal intent, the purpose instead being the protection of the public welfare. See Bowling,
Locklear, relying on criminal law decisions, additionally argues that citizens are protected by the Eighth Amendment from extreme sanctions which are grossly disproportionate to the crime charged. See Harmelin v. Michigan,
It is an elementary principle of administrative law that so long as a penalty imposed by an administrative agency is within the permissible range of statutory law, an appellate court will not disturb the penalty unless the administrative findings are reversed in whole or in part. Florida Real Estate Commission v. Webb,
Locklear's claim that the combined penalties violate the Eighth Amendment lacks merit. In Hall, the Florida Supreme Court explained that the Eighth Amendment does not require:
strict proportionality between crimes and sentences. Rather, it forbids only extreme sanctions that are `grossly disproportionate' to the crime. Harmelin,501 U.S. at 1001 [111 S.Ct. 2680 ] (Kennedy, J. concurring). Moreover, `outside the context of capital punishment, successful challenges to the proportionality of particular sentences have been exceedingly rare.'
Locklear does not explain how a $5,000 fine following his second conviction for illegal gill net fishing activities is grossly disproportionate to the crime. Well-settled Florida decisional authority provides that a statutorily authorized civil fine will not be deemed so excessive as to be cruel or unusual unless it is so great as to shock the conscience of reasonable men or is patently and unreasonably harsh or oppressive. Amos v. Gunn,
AFFIRMED.
ORFINGER and TORPY, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Indeed, the penalty is within the range set by the legislature in section 370.021. Under such circumstances, the wisdom of the penalty assessed is a matter entirely within the ambit of the Commission. See Wax v. Horne,
