Austin v. Town of Oviedo
Decision Date | 13 February 1957 |
Citation | 92 So.2d 648 |
Parties | Martha AUSTIN, Petitioner, v. The TOWN OF OVIEDO, Respondent. |
Court | Florida Supreme Court |
Sam E. Murrell & Sons, Sam E. Murrell, Sam E. Murrell, Jr., and Robert G. Murrell, Orlando, for petitioner.
George A. Speer, Jr., Sanford, for respondent.
By petition for certiorari petitioner Austin seeks review of an order of the Circuit Judge dismissing her appeal from a conviction in the Mayor's Court of the Town of Oviedo.
The determining point is whether the failure to file an appeal bond required by A., is a ground for dismissal of an appeal from a city court to a circuit court.
Petitioner Austin was convicted in Municipal Court of the Town of Oviedo for the offense of serving beer to a minor. She was sentenced to pay a fine of $200. She appealed the conviction to the Circuit Court. The Circuit Judge granted the Town's motion to dismiss the appeal because of the failure of the petitioner to file an appeal bond required by Section 932.52(16), Florida Statutes, F.S.A. Review of the order of the Circuit Judge dismissing the appeal is now sought.
The petitioner contends that the cited statute is directory rather than mandatory and in the alternative that if the requirement is considered mandatory, it would be unconstitutional interference with her right of appeal.
Respondent-Town has filed no brief to aid this Court in its consideration of the matter. We have on several occasions called attention to the proposition that such failure on the part of the parties-litigant places an undue responsibility on this Court to research their legal problems for them. As near as we could glean the position of the respondent from the oral argument, however, is that the cited statute is mandatory and does not place an unreasonable impediment in the way of an appeal from a city court to the circuit court.
In specifying the jurisdiction of Circuit Courts, Article 5, Section 11, of the Florida Constitution, F.S.A., provides in part:
'* * * They shall have final appellate jurisdiction * * * of judgments or sentences of any Mayor's Court * * *.'
In Ex parte Peacock, 25 Fla. 478, 6 So. 473, this Court held that the term 'Mayor's Court' is a generic expression which includes any municipal court authorized by the Legislature under Article 5, Section 34, of the Constitution.
Section 932.52(16), Florida Statutes, F.S.A., here under consideration, reads as follows:
The position of the petitioner seems to be that the privilege of obtaining a review of her municipal court conviction by the Circuit Judge is a matter of absolute right and that the requirement of the bond is an unconstitutional impediment to the exercise of that right.
The point apparently has never been specifically passed upon by this Court. Early in the history of the development of the jurisprudence of our state, however, the filing of an appeal bond was required by statute as a condition precedent to the perfecting of an appeal to the Supreme Court. Hall v. Penny, 13 Fla. 593; Webster v. Wailes, 35 Fla. 267, 17 So. 571. In both of the cases last cited this Court pointed out that the failure to file the bond required by the statute justified the dismissal of the appeal automatically operated in force the appeal automatically operated as a supersedeas but the appeal was not perfected until the bond was filed.
In McJunkins v. Stevens, 88 Fla. 559, 102 So. 756, we announced a rule governing appellate practice which has been consistently followed by this Court. It was there held in substance that while the Constitution delineates the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and of the Circuit Courts, it does not prescribe the means or manner by which such appellate jurisdiction is acquired in particular cases. It remains the responsibility of the Legislature to prescribe the means and method by which appellate review may be obtained.
In Reed v. State, 94 Fla. 32, 113 So. 630, a capital case, this Court stated the rule to be that the right...
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Booker v. State
...more. Id. at 647. Concerning the second issue, legislative restriction on the scope of rights to appeal, this Court in Austin v. Town of Oviedo, 92 So.2d 648 (Fla.1957), In McJunkins v. Stevens, 88 Fla. 559, 102 So. 756, we announced a rule governing appellate practice which has been consis......
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...granting the right of appeal inasmuch as they are considered merely regulatory of the method for exercising the right. Austin v. Oviedo, 92 So.2d 648 (Fla.). In addition, poverty or inability to procure sureties has been found insufficient to relieve an appellant, or plaintiff in error, fro......
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