42 Fla. 95 | Fla. | 1900
(After stating the facts) :
I. The third section of Article III of the charter act of the municipality of Jacksonville (Chapter 3775, laws 1887) empowered the mayor and city council to create such offices and to provide by ordinance for the appointment or election of all such officers as might be necessary for the good government of the city, not in conflict or interfering with the duties of officers and appointees in that act provided for whose compensation and terms of service were required to be fixed before their election. The mayor and city council were also' empowered by said section to abolish at any time any office created' by them. The charter act in terms provided for various officers and boards therein named, but the board of trustees named in the information was not created thereby nor mentioned therein. By the first section of the act of 1893, Chapter 4301, the municipal officers of the city of Jacksonville were declared to be a mayor, city council, a board of public works, a board of police commissioners, a comptroller, treasurer, recorder, füdge of the municipal court, marshal and such other officers as might be provided by ordinance. The second section provided for the election by the qualified electors of the city of the mayor, comptroller, treasurer, and city council, and required the members of the board of public works, police commissioners, judge of the municipal court, recorder and all other officers of the city to be elected by the city council. It provided that all city officers should hold office for the term of two years and until their successors were elected, unless sooner removed in the manner therein provided. It fixed the terms of all officers elected by the electors as beginning at
II. The first and second sections of Chapter 4872, laws of 1899, read as follows: Section 1. From and after the passage and approval by the Governor of this act, the board of election commissioners of the city of Jacksonville as now existing shall be abolished. The board of bond trustees of the city of Jacksonville shall have exclusive power to appoint, subject to approval by the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members of the city council, all officers not elected by the electors and all members of the police force; provided, that officers properly belonging to the department of the board of public works shall be elected by the board of public works. Three persons selected by the board of bond trustees from among the members of the said board shall be designated to perform all the duties of election commissioners in all matters relating to municipal elections. The organization, number and compensation of members of the police force and fire department shall be regulated and controlled by the board of bond trustees. The city council may, by ordinance, establish
Sec. 2. The board of bond' trustees shall have charge, management and control of the electric light plant, in addition to their present powers and duties, and from time to time fix the compensation of all employes or officers of the departments under its control, and fix the charge for water and electricity, and shall require the payment to said board from each of the departments of the city government of the reasonable value of the water and electricity used by them, based upon the prices usually paid by municipalities for water and electricity to persons or corporations furnishing the same; and all surplus revenues accruing after the most economical management of said system shall be applied semi-annually towards the payment of interest and sinking fund on account of the waterworks and improvement bonds of the city, and an itemised statements
The other sections of the act have no bearing upon the questions involved in this case. It is contended that this act is unconstitutional and void upon the grounds stated in the information. 1. As to the first objection of the act, it is sufficient to say that the board of bond trustees has a legal existence as has been shown in the preceding portion of this opinion, and it is not denied that if such board exists it can perform the duties and powers imposed upon them 'by the statute. 2. The argument upon the second objection is that the act confers power upon the board of bond trustees to appoint themseUes as their own succesors in office subject to approval of the city council, thereby making them a self-perpetuating body. It is not alleged in the information that they have ever claimed or exercised the power to supply vacancies in their own body; neither is it denied that the power given them to appoint other officers subject to the approval of the city council is valid. In the absence of a specific allegation that the respondents are assuming the right to appoint themselves as their own successors, the court is not required to enter into an investigation as to their powers to do so, even if this be the proper remedy for testing the right to exercise such power. 3. As to the third objection, the act does not attempt to create the board of trustees of the waterworks and improvement bonds, or to fix their terms of office, or to extend their terms of office as members of said board. In the clause directing them
The judgment is affirmed.