State ex rel. Cordrey v. Holter
Decision Date | 28 September 1973 |
Docket Number | No. 72--286,72--286 |
Citation | 283 So. 2d 139 |
Parties | The STATE of Florida on the Relation of Mary CORDREY, Appellant, v. Charles E. HOLTER et al., Appellees. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
William R. Hapner, Jr., of Rood & Hapner, Tampa, for appellant.
W. Douglas Baird of Esteva, Chumbley & Baird, St. Petersburg, for appellees.
Appellant sought by mandamus to compel the town officials of Redington Beach to enforce an ordinance allegedly prohibiting the allowing of dogs upon the beaches in the town. She appeals an order denying issuance of the peremptory writ. We affirm.
A copy of the ordinance in question was introduced into evidence and the material portions thereof, including apparent deletions, read as follows:
'It is unlawful and prohibited for any person . . . to use or operate . . . upon any beach or shoreline . . . within the town limits . . . any . . ..'
As indicated, the word 'bicycle' was marked through with pen and ink and the bracketed phrase relating to dogs and cats was also marked through with pen and ink. A marginal notation reads:
'deletion on second and third readings by order of Council--recorded in minutes 8--6--57. G.B.'
The relative portion of the minutes of '8--6--57' was also introduced in evidence and it provides that:
'. . . Discussion of prohibition of Bicycles on the beach brought the decision to eliminate same from Ordinance and Ordinance was accepted on first reading with this correction . . ..' (Italics ours)
So, it appears, the foregoing marginal notation, and the minutes, refer only to the bicycle deletion. No documentary evidence or minute book entry relating to the apparent deletion of the prohibition against dogs or cats was introduced. The principal question in the case, therefore, is whether the ordinance, at the time of its enactment, prohibited the allowance of dogs or cats on the beaches. Stated otherwise, the question herein is whether the apparent deletion relating thereto was validly made prior to enactment of the ordinance, and thus never became a part thereof, or whether it was unofficially made subsequent to enactment, in which case it is an enforceable provision thereof.
Bearing on this issue, and as noted, the minutes of the Town Commission are silent as to when the apparent deletion relating to dogs and cats was made. However, former City Commissioner Schaefer who had served as Councilman in 1957 when the ordinance was enacted was permitted to testify that the aforesaid prohibition of the ordinance relating to dogs and cats had, in fact, been expressly deleted from the ordinance Prior to its final passage in September of 1957. It is this testimony of the witness Schaefer which forms the basis of this appeal. Appellant contends that permitting such testimony is contra to the general rule that a city or town speaks only through its records and not through individual officers. The minutes, she says, are the best evidence of what Council did, and a witness cannot speak when the minutes are silent.
We disagree. The cases relied upon by appellant 1 are substantively different factually from that before us. The question in those cases was what was Intended to be done by the city officers, not what was in fact done As expressly shown by the minutes. We agree that the testimony of officers as to what was Intended is inadmissible as against the minutes undisputedly reflecting what was done in fact. But here, the minutes are Silent as to what was done, if anything, on the relevant deletion; and silence ought not, per constitute conclusive proof of the non-existence of a fact. Certainly, the minutes of a City or Town Commission are no more sacrosanct nor unamenable to completion or correction of patent imperfections by parol than are the records of a court; and it has always been that court records are amenable to extrinsic evidence to make them speak the truth when, as to the truth, they are silent or imperfect. 2
Our Supreme Court considered a problem similar to ours in Ramsey v. City of Kissimmee. 3 Parol was expressly held Admissible in that case to establish an action actually taken by the Town Commission but not reflected in imperfectly kept records. Likewise here. The trial court permitted the witness Schaefer to testify As to what actually occurred when, as to that, the minutes are silent. He was correct.
Having admitted such testimony then, any conflict arising between such testimony and the other circumstances of the case, including the nonexistence of a relevant minute entry, became a matter to be resolved by the trier of fact, the trial judge here. The latter obviously relied on Mr. Schaefer's testimony, as he had a right to do, and from the four corners of the record we cannot articulate that his determination cannot be sustained. Accordingly, the order appealed from must be, and the same hereby is, affirmed.
Relator Mary Cordrey seeks review of an order dismissing alternative writ of mandamus to enforce Ordinance No. 73 of the Town on Redington Beach, prohibiting dogs on the public beaches of the Town.
On October 12, 1971, Mrs. Cordrey filed a petition for writ of mandamus against the Board of Commissioners, Mayor, and Chief of Police of the Town, praying for an order enforcing Ordinance No. 73 by prohibiting persons from bringing, having or allowing dogs upon the beaches in the Town.
A copy of the ordinance was introduced into evidence, the first paragraph of which reads as follows:
The word 'bicycle' was marked through with pen and ink, and the phrase 'or to bring or have or allow thereon any dog or cat' was also marked through with pen and ink, and enclosed in brackets. A marginal notation reads: 'deletion on second & third readings by order of Council--recorded in minutes--8--6--57. G.B.'
Some twelve years later a firm employed to codify the city's ordinances prepared a draft in which the ordinance carried the prohibition against does and cats on the beaches. At a meeting of the Council on October 7, 1969, a resolution was adopted to post signs on the beaches stating: 'Dogs not allowed on beach, Order Police Department.' A copy of the minutes of this meeting was introduced into evidence.
During the hearing the lower Court permitted the witness Schaefer, who had been a City Councilman in 1957, to testify as to the discussion at the 1957 Council meetings regarding the deletion of the phrase prohibiting dogs and cats on the beaches.
It is well settled that when a city ordinance appears on its face to have been regularly enacted, all presumptions will be indulged in favor of its validity; and that the one attacking its validity has the burden of establishing its invalidity. State v. City of...
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Paragon Group, Inc. v. Hoeksema
...function here was to determine if ordinance 82-14 properly reflected the action taken by the county commission. In Cordrey v. Holter, 283 So.2d 139 (Fla. 2d DCA 1973), this court considered whether an apparent deletion in an ordinance was validly made before enactment of the ordinance. We h......