CITY OF ST. PETERSBURG v. BRUCE WRIGHT ( 2018 )


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  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    CITY OF ST. PETERSBURG,          )
    )
    Appellant/Cross-      )
    Appellee,             )
    )
    v.                               )                   Case No. 2D16-3361
    )
    BRUCE WRIGHT,                    )
    )
    Appellee/Cross-       )
    Appellant.            )
    ________________________________ )
    Opinion filed February 14, 2018.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pinellas
    County; Kathleen T. Hessinger, Judge.
    Kenneth W. MacCollom, Assistant City
    Attorney of the Office of the City
    Attorney, St. Petersburg, for Appellant/
    Cross-Appellee.
    Kirsten Anderson and Jodi Siegel of
    Southern Legal Counsel, Inc.,
    Gainesville, and Alice K. Nelson of
    Nelson Law Group, Tampa, for
    Appellee/Cross Appellant.
    Paul M. Crochet of Weber, Crabb &
    Wein, P.A., St. Petersburg, for Amicus
    Curiae First Amendment Foundation, Inc.
    NORTHCUTT, Judge.
    The Reverend Bruce Wright filed a lawsuit seeking injunctive relief and a
    declaratory judgment against the City of St. Petersburg, alleging among other things
    that St. Petersburg's city council had violated Florida's Government in the Sunshine
    Law, section 286.011 (2012). On Wright's motion for summary judgment, the circuit
    court ruled that the council did not break the law during a private strategy session with
    the City's attorneys, known in common Sunshine Law parlance as a "shade" meeting.
    But the court held that the council members did violate statutory notice requirements
    when, upon emerging from their shade meeting with the attorneys, they took up and
    voted to approve an ordinance amendment that had been discussed during that
    meeting. The court voided the amendment on that ground.
    The City has appealed the final summary judgment, and Wright has cross-
    appealed. Without further comment, we affirm the judgment insofar as it held that the
    council violated the notice requirements. We reverse the holding that the City did not
    violate the Sunshine Law during the private attorney-client session.
    The offending shade meeting was precipitated by developments in federal
    litigation filed under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , by four homeless plaintiffs who challenged the
    constitutionality of the City's trespass ordinance. The federal district court dismissed all
    of the plaintiffs' claims. Catron v. City of St. Petersburg, 
    658 F.3d 1260
    , 1264 (11th Cir.
    2011). The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of all but two of the
    claims. 
    Id. at 1273
    . The court concluded that the plaintiffs had pleaded a viable claim
    that section 20-30 of the trespass ordinance, regarding the issuance of trespass
    warnings, violated procedural due process because it did not provide a "way to contest
    the trespass warning or at least the scope of the warning." 
    Id. at 1269
    . The court also
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    held that the district court should not have dismissed the plaintiffs' claim that the City's
    policy of enforcing the ordinance on public sidewalks violated the plaintiffs' right to
    intrastate travel and freedom of movement under the Florida Constitution. 
    Id.
     at 1270-
    71. The court remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings.
    The Eleventh Circuit issued its Catron opinion on September 28, 2011.
    Thereafter, the shade session at issue was placed on the agenda for the city council's
    meeting on October 13. It was to be attended only by the council members, the mayor,
    the city attorney, two assistant city attorneys, and a court reporter. During the private
    session, an assistant city attorney advised the council that if it amended the trespass
    ordinance to correct the complained-of deficiencies before the Catron case returned to
    the district court, the City could seek to the have the suit dismissed as moot. In that
    event, the City would argue that the plaintiffs were not prevailing parties entitled to
    recover attorney's fees.
    As mentioned, when the council emerged from the shade session and
    resumed the October 13 public meeting, it approved an amendment to the trespass
    ordinance on first reading. On October 18, the City petitioned the Eleventh Circuit to
    rehear the Catron case en banc. While that petition was pending, on November 3 the
    city council voted final approval of the trespass ordinance amendment. The Eleventh
    Circuit denied rehearing en banc on November 29 and issued its mandate on December
    13. Three days later, the City filed in the district court a motion to dismiss the Catron
    lawsuit on the ground that the recent amendment of the trespassing ordinance rendered
    the case moot. The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed.
    -3-
    Wright filed the instant proceeding in November 2013, contending among
    other things that the trespass warning section of St. Petersburg's trespass ordinance is
    invalid because it was conceived at the October 13, 2011, nonpublic shade session in
    violation of Florida law. We agree.
    The purpose of Florida's Government in the Sunshine Law is the
    protection of the public's right to be present and to be heard during all phases of
    enactments by government boards and commissions. Sch. Bd. of Duval Cty. v. Fla.
    Publ'g Co., 
    670 So. 2d 99
    , 101 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996). It functions "to prevent at non-
    public meetings the crystallization of secret decisions to a point just short of ceremonial
    acceptance." Monroe Cty. v. Pigeon Key Historical Park, Inc., 
    647 So. 2d 857
    , 860 (Fla.
    3d DCA 1994) (quoting Town of Palm Beach v. Gradison, 
    296 So. 2d 473
    , 477
    (Fla.1974)). Section 286.011(1), Florida Statutes (2011), mandates:
    All meetings of any board or commission of any state agency
    or authority or of any agency or authority of any county,
    municipal corporation, or political subdivision, except as
    otherwise provided in the Constitution, including meetings
    with or attended by any person elected to such board or
    commission, but who has not yet taken office, at which
    official acts are to be taken are declared to be public
    meetings open to the public at all times, and no resolution,
    rule, or formal action shall be considered binding except as
    taken or made at such meeting. The board or commission
    must provide reasonable notice of all such meetings.
    The supreme court has observed that the "obvious intent [of the legislature] was to
    cover any gathering of the members where the members deal with some matter on
    which foreseeable action will be taken by the board." Bd. of Pub. Instruction of Broward
    Cty. v. Doran, 
    224 So. 2d 693
    , 698 (Fla. 1969).
    -4-
    As we discussed in Anderson v. City of St. Pete Beach, 
    161 So. 3d 548
    ,
    552 (Fla. 2d DCA 2014), there is a limited exemption from the open meeting
    requirement for meetings between a public body and its attorney. Section 286.011(8)
    states in pertinent part:
    Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1), any board
    or commission of any state agency or authority or any
    agency or authority of any county, municipal corporation, or
    political subdivision, and the chief administrative or executive
    officer of the governmental entity, may meet in private with
    the entity's attorney to discuss pending litigation to which the
    entity is presently a party before a court or administrative
    agency, provided that the following conditions are met:
    (a) The entity's attorney shall advise the entity at a public
    meeting that he or she desires advice concerning the
    litigation.
    (b) The subject matter of the meeting shall be confined to
    settlement negotiations or strategy sessions related to
    litigation expenditures.
    (Emphasis supplied.) "As is plain from the language of the statute, the exemption is
    limited to discussions involving the actual settlement of presently pending litigation."
    Anderson, 161 So. 3d at 553.
    Here, the transcript of the October 13, 2011, shade meeting reflects that
    the participants did not limit themselves to discussing settlement or litigation
    expenditures in the Catron case. To the contrary, there was only a brief discussion of
    how the City might avoid paying attorney's fees to the plaintiffs. The great majority of
    the discussion involved the specifics of a proposed amendment to section 20-30 of the
    trespass ordinance and of the need to quickly resume issuing trespass warnings. An
    assistant city attorney involved in the Catron litigation presented a draft amended
    ordinance that would allow for appeals of trespass warnings. He described the
    workings of the appellate process envisioned in the amendment, including its prescribed
    -5-
    clear and convincing standard, and he indicated that the amendment was a means of
    complying with the ruling in Catron. The attorney advised the city council that he had
    met with various city personnel, including the chief of police, to inform them that they
    must temporarily refrain from enforcing section 20-30, but that this was going to be a
    short-term situation that would be quickly rectified. The attorney stated: "We need to
    get back out and enforce 20-30. The chief of police is very eager to have us do that."
    He advised: "[T]he taxpayers, the constituents, the people out there are most
    concerned about . . . the panhandling, the sleeping, lying, reclining, the outdoor storage
    of tents, all that stuff."
    One city council member stated:
    Yeah, this is a really big issue. Because, you know, as far
    as the homeless goes, we could probably just go ahead and
    arrest them for open containers then if we had to. But as far
    as other things like our recreation centers, I don't want to
    have people smoking dope in front of our rec centers. And
    I've had it at just about every one I've ever been at and
    we've had to trespass people for it. And that's . . . going to
    be a big problem if we can't do that. It's really, really
    important to find a way.
    The attorney advised: "If you-all don't pass it, then we can't enforce 20-30. Like
    Counselor Kornell was saying, if somebody is smoking pot out in front of the rec center,
    you can charge them with that but you're not going to trespass." The mayor stated: "I
    think it should be passed." Another assistant city attorney told the city council that
    "what we're recommending is that you pass this on the first reading." At one point in the
    discussion a council member moved to approve the ordinance and had to be reminded
    that the council could not do so during a shade session. At the end of the meeting, the
    assistant city attorney who had offered the draft ordinance amendment told the council,
    -6-
    "I just wanted to not only present the ordinance but just give you an update of where the
    litigation was and where it had come from and where it had gone."
    The transcript of the shade meeting conclusively reflects that it was not
    "confined to settlement negotiations or strategy sessions related to litigation
    expenditures," as required by the Sunshine Law exemption set forth in section
    286.011(8)(b). Rather, the attorneys and council members reviewed the terms of the
    draft amendment, discussed the urgency of and policy reasons for passing the
    amendment so that the City could resume enforcement of section 20-30, and expressed
    their consensus in favor of the amendment. In short, the shade meeting was used to
    crystallize a secret decision to a point just short of ceremonial acceptance, in violation of
    Florida's Sunshine Law. Wright was entitled to summary judgment holding such. We
    reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this decision. See
    Anderson, 161 So. 3d at 554.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    KELLY and CRENSHAW, JJ., Concur.
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-3361

Filed Date: 2/14/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/14/2018