24 Fla. 226 | Fla. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court:
I. The first point involved in this case is whether or not a Provisional Municipality, instituted and existing under the provisions of Chapters 3606 and 3607, of the laws of 1885, can extend its territorial limits- in the manner provided by section 2, of Chapter 3163, Laws of 1879, amending the general incorporation act of February 4th, 1869, sec. 44, p. 255, McC.’s Digest.
The cities and towns to which the provisions of the above acts of 18S5 are applicable, repealing their charters, are those incorporated under the act of 1869 and having an indebtedness to the amount of $200,000 and defaulting in the payment of interest on the same. Section 5, of Chapter 3606, makes it the duty of the Governor to appoint a Board of seven Commissioners, residents of such city or town, who shall elect one of their number as President, and also a President pro tern., who shall actas President in the absence of the President, and shall exercise the powers and functions hereinafter provided and hold their office for four years. This section gives the Governor power to fill vacancies in the board, and vests the President with all the powers and charges him with all the duties of a Mayor under the Act of 1869 and the amendments thereto. Section 6 provides “that all such cities and towns for which Commissioners shall be appointed as provided for in section 5, are hereby declared to be provisional municipalities, the boundaries of which shall be coextensive with the boundaries of such defunct cities and towns, and the said Commissioners, and such officers as may be appointed, and the inhabitants within the limits of such cides and towns, shall be vested with all the powei-s and authority, rights and privileges,
The language of the act of 1885, which we have italicised, is, in itself, nothing more than a declaration of the territorial boundaries of the new municipality. There is in it, whether considered alone or in connection with the other words or parts of the statute, nothing indicating a further or other legislative intent than a designation of the territory over which a new government might be instituted under the act, nothing that shows an intent to make these boundaries permanent. They are not used for the purpose of granting or limiting the powers of the government after it should be instituted, but are only a part of the language employed in defining the territory and people over which and in whom the new government was to be instituted and vested.
No express declaration of boundaries could be in language less indicative of an intention to make them permanent or to negative the power to change them ; a declaration that the boundaries “ shall be ” followed by a detailed statement of ' the boundaries of the old city or town, would be no less expressive of the idea of permanency. To say that these words are a limitation upon the power of the new government is to give to them a meaning stronger than they naturally convey, and to apply them to a feature of the legislation which, as is evident from reading the
The Legislature must be regarded as familiar with the above statute of 1879 as to alteration of municipal boundaries. Having defined the locality over which the new government might be instituted, it proceeds to declare the powers of the new municipality, saying that: The said Commissioners, and such officers as may be appointed, and the inhabitants within the limit of such cities and towns,, shall be vested with all the powers and authority, rights and privileges, and charged with all the duties which are conferred on the aldermen and other officers and the inhabitants under the act to provide for the incorportion of cities and towns, approved February 4, 1869, and the amendments thereto, and other acts conferring powers upon municipal corporations,exceptas hereinafter provided and as may b^inconsistent with this act. Here we see a clear and positive purpose to give to the municipality, as constituted under the new act, all the powers which its predecessor had, except whore otherwise expressly provided in the new acty or as might be inconsistent with the provisions of the new.
The cardinal change made by the act was from an elective to an appointive system of municipal officials, a Board of Commissioners appointed by the Governor, and the president of this board taking the place of the former Board of Aldermen and the Mayor. It is not necessary to' detail all the changes as to constituting officials, but there is in the act no provision upon the subject of alteration of boundaries.
Knowing, as it did, the provisions of law as to alteration of boundaries, the Legislature, if it had intended to limit the new government’s power in this respect, would,.
It is further contended that the object of the act was the dissolution of municipal corporations when found to be in a certain stage of insolvency, and the providing of a temporary government for them when dissolved, and that it was the purpose of the law makers to secure, as well as could be done, bona fide creditors of such municipal corporations, by holding them in a condition of quiescence, compelling them to conserve their resources and to thus enable them to meet their just obligations. Nothing, it is argued, was further from the -intent of the Legislature than to destroy municipalities with elective governments, merely for the purpose of substituting for them municipalities with officials to be appointed by the Governor, with full power and authority to conduct their municipal governments as those which they had replaced had beeu conducted.
It is not to be denied that the statute of 1885 makes express provision and shows a clear intent as to the payment of municipal indebtedness ; it distinctly declares (sec. 12) that it shall be the duty of the Commissioners to .proceed immediately to levy a sufficient tax, in addition to the other taxes provided by law, to discharge and pay the maturing coupons of bonds and other matured .indebtedness, and to levy a special annual tax to meet the accruing annual interest of the bonds ; it being however provided that no claim against such city, in existence at the time of the ap
The question of the continuation of the system over any city or town after the expiration of four years from its institution is, we are aware, settled in the affirmative by the act of 1887, chapter 3709, but even admitting that the view of the original act taken by counsel for appellee on this point, is correct we still do not see anything in the statute inconsistent with the exercise of the power to alter the boundaries. The remedy applied by the Legislature to cities and towns so financially delinquent was one of a gov
II. The remaining point is that of the constitutionality of the act of March 4, 1879, chapter 3163, under which ^he proceedings in question annexing territory were taken.
The 29th section of the general municipal incorporation act of February 4th, 1869, chapter 1688, regulated the matter of changing corporate limits. In 1877 the Legislature passed a statute, chapter 3025, entitled “ An act to amend
The title of the act approved March 4, 1879, chapter 3163, is as follows : “ An act to amend an act entitled an act to provide for the incorporation of cities and towns and to establish a uniform system of municipal government in the State, approved February 4th, 1869, and the acts amendatory thereof, and to further provide for the organization and government of cities.” The second section of this act commences thus :‘ “ Sec. 2. That section 29 of said act, approved February 4th, 1869, as aforesaid, as amended by the act approved March 8th, 1877, be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:” The substance of the section is divided in form into three separate paragraphs, the first of which regulates the contraction of territorial limits, the second the extension of them, and the third the annexation of one city or town to another. The second and third paragraphs are numbered 2 and 3 respectively.
In 1877 the Legislature passed also an act, Chapter 3024, which was approved March 8th, and is entitled “An act to amend sections 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23 and 29 of the general municipal incorporation act of 1869.” Its first eight sections taken in their order are severally a repeal of and substitute for the 11th, 12th, 13th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 23d sections- of the act of 1869. There is in it no section repealing or standing in the place of the 29 th section, nor does it in any
The act of March 2, 1877, Chapter 3025, upon its approval became for all purposes in the future the 29th section of the general municipal incorporation act of 1869. Basnett vs. City of Jacksonville, 19 Fla., 664. It was not necessary to state iu the title of the act of 1879, Chapter 3163, the sections intended to be amended. State ex rel vs. Couuty Commissioners of Duval Co., 23 Fla., S. C. 3rd So. Reptr, 193. Where the titleof the ameudingact sets out the the title of the act to be amended, as does this, and the title sufficiently states the subject of the act to be amended, and the body of the amendatory act states, as does this, for what section of the act amended any of its own sections may be the amendment and substitute, there is a sufficient compliance with Sec. 14, of Art. IV, of the Constitution of 1868 providing that the “subject” of each law “shall be briefly expressed in the title, and no law shall be amended .or revised by reference to its title only, but in such case the act as revised or section as amended shall be re-enacted and published at length.” In so far as affecting the 29th section of the original act of 1869, as amended by the act of March 2,1877, (Chapter 3025,) the title of the act of 1879 (Chapter 3163) would have been sufficient, had it been merely entitled an act to amend the statute of 1869, referring to it by its title and date of approval, as it does. The words: “and the acts amendatory thereof” had naturally the effect to suggest to the legislative mind that the act of
The error in the body of section two (2) of act of 1879, as to the date of approval of the act of 1877, amending the 29th section is, we think, entirely immaterial. It can be regarded as only a clerical mistake or an error as to the real date of the approval of Chapter 3025, and not as an indication that the Legislature was ignorant as to what amendment had been made in 1879. The only amendment of the 29 section that had been made was one in 1877. Is it to be thought for a moment that the Legislature understood that the amendment which had been made in 1877 was other than that to be found in the act of March 2nd, or that they did not know that the 29 th section, as amended, or as it stood in 1879, when the legislation of that year was pending, was as set out in the act of March 2nd? The only legitimate conclusion is that they understood the section to be what the act of March 2nd made it, and with it as such they were dealing, and not that they thought the act of
The third section of the act of 1879 provides that after its passage no city or town shall issue bonds to secure any indebtedness unsecured, if the amount of such bonds added to any bonds outstanding, and its floating debt shall exceed eight per cent, on the assessed value of such city or town, it being declared to be the intention of the section “ to limit the bonded debt of all cities and towns to eight per cent, of their assessed value, real and personal.” The incorporation into an amendatory act of provisions as to matters properly connected with the subject affected by the act amended, but outside of the matters to which the expressly amendatory sections relate, is not prohibited by the constitution. Gibson vs. State, Supra, but even if this section three should be void we do not see how it affects the second section.
The order appealed from is affirmed.