On April 26, 1945, the Town of Lake Placid filed its bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of Florida in and for Highlands County, which bill of complaint was amended on January 30th 1946, wherein it sought to foreclose alleged municipal tax liens under the provisions of Chapter
The bill of complaint as amended showed that the greater portion of the lands upon which tax liens were sought to be foreclosed were located beyond the boundaries of the Town of Lake Placid as fixed by Chapter 18643, Special Acts of 1937, and constituted a part of those lands which had been ousted from the jurisdiction of the Town of Lake Placid in the suits of State ex rel Davis v. Town of Lake Placid
The owners of some of the lands described in the bill of complaint and which were located within the present corporate limits of the Town of Lake Placid as defined by Chapter 18643, supra, filed an answer which does not appear in the record, and also filed a motion to dismiss the bill of complaint on the ground, as appears to us from the record, that these owners believed that the municipality had no authority to levy any taxes whatever prior to the enactment of Chapter 18643, Acts of 1937, because of the holding of this Court in the ouster proceedings, supra. The Court on motion struck the answer and the counter-claim of that group of petitioners whose lands lie beyond the corporate limits of the Town and also struck the answer and denied the motion to dismiss of the owners whose property was located within the Town.
Each group of owners applied here for Certiorari to review the respective orders of the Circuit Court. We have considered both petitions and have reached the conclusion that the petition of those owners of lands lying within the present corporate limits as fixed, supra, should be denied on authority of our opinion and judgment in the case of State v. Town of Lake Placid,
It may be stated as elementary that a tax levy made to procure funds with which to pay bonded indebtedness which was incurred while the lands against which the levy is made *Page 183 were prima facie within the corporate limits will be presumed to be valid, although the lands upon which the levy is made were thereafter ousted from the jurisdiction of the municipality, but this is a presumption which may be overcome.
The question of the validity of the bond issue and the question of the availability of the taxing power against certain lands to raise money to pay off the bonds do not necessarily involve identical legal principles or like facts.
In the case of State v. Town of Holly Hill,
"All taxable property within boundaries of original town of Holly Hill was subject to tax, to meet interest and principal payments on refunding bonds, and town officers were required to impose taxes on all such property, notwithstanding some of refunding bonds had been reduced to judgment and statute had been enacted materially reducing territorial limits of town, where all bonds sought to be refunded were issued prior to passage of Act reducing town limits."
However, in the body of that opinion attention is called to the fact that no suggestion appeared in that case that the lands eliminated from the jurisdiction of Holly Hill were not proportionately benefitted with the property remaining in the town.
In the case of State ex rel. Harrington et al. v. City of Pompano,
"Although unimproved areas unsuited for municipal purposes are included within limits of municipality by statute for purposes of municipal taxation without present or prospective compensation benefits to lands or to their owners, such statute will be presumptively valid until duly adjudged to be invalid in whole or in part because of improper inclusion of unimproved lands.
"37. Although quo warranto judgment may oust municipality of its prima facie and presumptively de jure jurisdiction over lands illegally included in municipality, city may have de facto jurisdiction over lands covered by judgment of ouster if circumstances authorize application of doctrine of de facto jurisdiction, but such application cannot operate to deprive any one of property rights without due course of law. *Page 184
"38. Where quo warranto judgment ousting presumptive de jure jurisdiction of a de jure municipality over unimproved lands improperly included by statute in municipal limits does not duly adjudge that none of lands covered thereby can be taxed under any de facto jurisdiction of municipality, question of right to tax may be adjudicated by due course of law in appropriate judicial proceedings under Declaration of Rights."
It is our opinion that the disposition of the present case is ruled by our opinions and judgments in the cases of Hugh Richmond v. Town of Largo,
It, therefore, follows that the answer set up a good defense to the bill as to those lands which had been ousted from the jurisdiction of the corporation and which had never received any municipal benefits and were so situated that they were not susceptible of receiving or having municipal benefits and the petitioners owning those lands are entitled to have this question forever settled and to that end to have a permanent injunction against the levy of any future taxes for such purposes on such lands. *Page 185
For the reasons stated, certiorari is granted, the orders of the Circuit Court striking the answers and counterclaims of the owners of those lands lying outside the limits of the present municipal boundaries and which are alleged to be non-susceptible of having or receiving any municipal benefits are quashed. The cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
THOMAS, C. J., ADAMS and BARNS, JJ., concur.