Silvio Membreno v. City of Hialeah , 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 3564 ( 2016 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed March 9, 2016.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D14-2603
    Lower Tribunal No. 11-33223
    ________________
    Silvio Membreno and Florida Association of Vendors, Inc.,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    The City of Hialeah, Florida,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto,
    Judge.
    Institute for Justice, and Justin Pearson and Robert Peccola, for appellants.
    Lorena Bravo, City Attorney; Akerman LLP, and Michael Fertig and
    Jennifer Cohen Glasser, for appellee.
    Before ROTHENBERG, SALTER, and LOGUE, JJ.
    LOGUE, J.
    Silvio Membreno and the Florida Association of Vendors, Inc. (collectively,
    “the Street Vendors”) appeal the decision of the trial court upholding the
    constitutionality of the City of Hialeah’s 2013 amendments to its ordinance
    governing street vendors. We affirm on all points raised. In light of Estate of
    McCall v. United States, 
    134 So. 3d 894
    (Fla. 2014), we write to clarify the scope
    of the rational basis test used to review whether laws violate the substantive due
    process provision of Florida’s Declaration of Rights.
    FACTS
    The Street Vendors challenge two provisions of the City of Hialeah’s Code
    of Ordinances. The first challenged provision states, in pertinent part, that “[n]o
    peddler or itinerant vendor[1] soliciting or conducting sales on foot can permanently
    stop or remain at any one location on public property; or private property (unless
    allowed for by zoning).” Hialeah, Fla., Code § 18-302 (2013). The second
    challenged provision states, in pertinent part, that vendors “soliciting or conducting
    sales on foot may display, with the intent of soliciting sales, only as much of the
    goods, merchandise or wares as the . . . vendor can carry on [his or her] person.”
    Hialeah, Fla., Code § 18-304 (2013).
    1 The Code defines “peddlers and itinerant vendors” as including “all persons
    going from place to place for the purpose of selling or offering for sale, any goods,
    merchandise or wares for immediate delivery of the goods, merchandise, or wares
    at the time the order is taken, whether or not using a wagon, pushcart or other
    vehicle.” Hialeah, Fla., Code § 18-301 (2013).
    2
    In whereas clauses, the City Commission made the following legislative fact
    findings:
    [S]treet vending contemplates a transaction between the street vendor
    afoot and the driver or occupant of a motor vehicle while the vehicle
    is on the traveled portion of the roadway and is not legally parked.
    ....
    [T]he street vendors presently store and display their merchandise
    openly in the public rights-of-way and on private property without
    regard to the intended use of the public rights-of-way, safety of the
    pedestrians using the public rights-of-way, or the general requirement
    in the City’s zoning code in all commercial and industrial districts that
    all storage of products and materials be entirely within a building and
    the specific prohibition against the operation of open air markets,
    bazaars and flea markets in the City’s retail commercial district;
    [S]treet vendors in the conduct of their lawful business activity should
    enjoy co-terminous rights on private property as would the owners
    themselves to display or store merchandise.
    Hialeah, Fla., Ordinance 13-01 (Jan. 9, 2013).
    Silvio Membreno is a street vendor who sells flowers. His business model is
    to set up his display of flowers in a private parking lot near the corner of an
    intersection in Hialeah. Although he sells flowers to people who walk or drive into
    the parking lot, he mainly carries flowers out into the street and sells them to cars
    waiting in the lanes of traffic at red lights. He testified that the Ordinance provision
    prohibiting him from vending in one location impacts his business because his
    usual customers will not know where to find him. He asserts that it also endangers
    him because it is safer for him to enter the lanes of traffic where he knows the
    3
    traffic patterns. In addition, the Ordinance provision that limits him to displaying
    only inventory that he can carry impacts his business because he loses sales when
    his customers cannot direct him to bring items from a larger display. As another
    vendor with a similar business model testified, a customer might see the flowers
    she was carrying, but ask her to go and get flowers of a different color from the
    larger display on the roadside.
    The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court
    granted the City’s motion and denied the Street Vendors’ motion. The court
    entered a judgment stating, “[i]n accordance with the rational basis standard . . . the
    Court finds that there are legitimate interests supporting the challenged Ordinance
    provisions and that the challenged Ordinance provisions are rationally related to
    such legitimate government interests.” This appeal followed.
    ANALYSIS
    A. The Street Vendors’ Arguments: Florida Supreme Court Abandoned
    the Traditional Rational Basis Test.
    The Street Vendors attack these Ordinance provisions on a narrow basis. If
    successful, however, their arguments would herald a sea change in Florida
    constitutional law. They argue the Ordinance fails the rational basis test under the
    due process clause of article I, section 9 of the Florida Constitution. In doing so,
    they contend that the Florida Supreme Court has abandoned the traditional rational
    basis test. While Florida’s rational basis test might once have been identical to the
    4
    federal rational basis test, they argue that after McCall, Florida’s rational basis test
    is different from the “watered-down, highly deferential version of the federal
    rational basis test.”
    “[T]he Florida rational basis test,” they maintain, “is more stringent than the
    federal rational basis test.” The federal test is “loosey goosey” because it permits
    “courts [to] speculate about whether a law could be rationally related to its stated
    purpose.” In contrast, the Florida test puts the burden squarely on the government.
    And that burden is to prove “there is a reasonable relationship between the
    restrictions and their purported purpose based on record evidence of their actual
    effects (or lack thereof) in advancing that purpose—not speculation about those
    effects.”
    In short, the Street Vendors claim McCall portended a revolution in Florida
    substantive due process. Unless the government succeeds in establishing an
    evidentiary predicate for a law, the Street Vendors maintain, judges are free to set
    aside legislative judgments regarding whether a law is needed and, if so, how best
    to address that need. Without expressly saying so, the Street Vendors read McCall
    as essentially reviving the discredited, substantive due process jurisprudence of
    Lochner v. New York, 
    198 U.S. 45
    (1905), and its progeny.
    5
    B. Overview of Opinion.
    While some language in the plurality opinions in McCall can be read to
    support the Street Vendors’ arguments, we conclude that the Florida Supreme
    Court has not abandoned Florida’s traditional rational basis test.
    Essentially the same as the federal rational basis test, the Florida rational
    basis test has played a central role in the separation of powers under the Florida
    Constitution for decades. The federal rational basis test, from which the Florida
    test is derived, was adopted to defuse a great constitutional crisis created by the
    same subjective substantive due process standard the Street Vendors claim the
    Florida Supreme Court is adopting. To avoid that sort of subjectivity, however, the
    Florida Supreme Court adopted a substantial body of law governing the rational
    basis test. This body of law focuses on five essential principles: (1) “reasonable”
    means “fairly debatable”; (2) the party challenging the constitutionality of a law
    bears the burden of proof; (3) legislative findings are not subject to courtroom fact
    finding and may be based on rational speculation unsupported by evidence or
    empirical data; (4) legislation can be based on nothing more than experiment; and
    (5) the Constitution does not prohibit the legislature from enacting unwise or unfair
    laws. The McCall decision, which is comprised of two distinct plurality opinions,
    does not contain the type of express and direct overruling of precedents that would
    mark the end of such a large, important, and long-standing body of black letter law.
    6
    C. The Florida Rational Basis Test is the Same as the Federal Test.
    1. Statement of the Florida Rational Basis Test.
    When a law regulating business or economic matters, which does not create
    a suspect class or infringe upon a fundamental right, is challenged as violating the
    substantive due process protected by Florida’s Declaration of Rights, the law must
    be upheld if it bears a rational basis to a legitimate government purpose.
    This authoritative statement of the rational basis test has been recognized by
    the Florida Supreme Court repeatedly. For example, in considering whether a
    statute “violates the due process clauses of the United States and Florida
    Constitutions,” the Court stated: “the proper standard by which we must evaluate
    the Legislature’s exercise of the police power in the area of economic regulation is
    whether the means utilized bear a rational or reasonable relationship to a legitimate
    state objective.” Belk-James, Inc. v. Nuzum, 
    358 So. 2d 174
    , 175 (Fla. 1978).
    Similarly, in an opinion authored for the majority by Justice Lewis, the
    Florida Supreme Court expressly quoted and approved a decision in which a
    statute had been challenged as violating “the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and Article I, section 9 of the
    Florida Constitution” and upheld the statute because it “bears a rational
    relationship to [its] legislative objectives.” McKnight v. State, 
    769 So. 2d 1039
    ,
    1039 n.1 (Fla. 2000) (citation omitted).
    7
    Moreover, the rational basis test under Florida due process is the same as the
    rational basis test under Florida equal protection,2 and in the context of equal
    protection, “there are two prongs to the rational basis test, requiring the Court to
    consider both whether the statute serves a legitimate governmental purpose and
    whether the Legislature was reasonable in its belief that the challenged
    classification would promote that purpose.” 
    McCall, 134 So. 3d at 918-19
    (Pariente, J., concurring in result).
    2. Essential Similarity Between Florida and Federal Rational Basis Tests.
    As these authorities indicate, the Street Vendors’ statement that “the Florida
    rational basis test is more stringent than the federal rational basis test” is incorrect.
    No one disputes that the Florida rational basis test is “based on precedent from the
    United States Supreme Court.” 
    McCall, 134 So. 3d at 921
    (Pariente, J., concurring
    in result). The due process provisions of the Florida and federal constitutions from
    which the rational basis tests derive use virtually identical language,3 the two tests
    2 State v. Robinson, 
    873 So. 2d 1205
    , 1214 (Fla. 2004) (“The rational relationship
    test used to analyze a substantive due process claim is synonymous with the
    reasonableness analysis of an equal protection claim.”); United Yacht Brokers, Inc.
    v. Gillespie, 
    377 So. 2d 668
    , 671 (Fla. 1979) (“The determination in our equal
    protection analysis that the statute bears a reasonable relationship to a permissible
    purpose similarly satisfies the requirements of this due process test.”); State v.
    Walker, 
    444 So. 2d 1137
    , 1138 (Fla. 2d DCA 1984) (noting that the test for equal
    protection and substantive due process claim “is essentially the same where no
    fundamental rights are at stake”); see also Warren v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co., 
    899 So. 2d 1090
    , 1096 (Fla. 2005) (holding, in a case involving Florida’s
    equal protection and due process provisions, that “[t]he analysis involved in the
    due process determination closely resembles that of the equal protection analysis”).
    8
    are stated the same way,4 and, in Belk-James and McKnight, the Florida Supreme
    Court used the same test and the same analysis to resolve challenges brought under
    both federal and Florida substantive due process. The two different constitutional
    provisions establish one, identical rational basis test.
    This has been the law of Florida for over 50 years. In 2004, for example, the
    Florida Supreme Court analyzed a challenge to a statute based on the rational basis
    test of the due process provisions of article I, section 9 of the Florida Constitution
    and the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Haire v. Fla.
    Dep’t of Agric. & Consumer Servs., 
    870 So. 2d 774
    , 781 (Fla. 2004). After quoting
    both provisions in full, 
    id. at 781
    n.6, Justice Pariente, writing for the majority,
    treated these distinct constitutional due process provisions as presenting a single,
    identical rational basis test:
    3Article I, section 9 of the Florida Constitution provides that “[n]o person shall be
    deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” The Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution similarly
    provides that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty or property without
    due process of law.”
    4 The modern federal rational basis test under federal substantive due process is
    that a law is valid if it bears a rational relation to a legitimate government purpose.
    See, e.g., City of Dallas v. Stanglin, 
    490 U.S. 19
    , 23 (1989); Restigouche, Inc. v.
    Town of Jupiter, 
    59 F.3d 1208
    , 1214 (11th Cir. 1995). This language is virtually
    identical to the language of Florida’s rational basis test under Florida substantive
    due process as stated by the Florida Supreme Court in Belk-James and McKnight.
    9
    Under this standard of review, referred to as either the reasonable
    relationship or the rational basis test, a state statute must be upheld . . .
    if there is any reasonable relationship between the act and the
    furtherance of a valid governmental objective. (emphasis supplied). . .
    . [T]he burden is on the one attacking the legislative enactment to
    negate every conceivable basis which might support it.
    
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 782
    (citations and quotations omitted). A line of cases so
    holding extends back at least to 1974.5
    To interpret identical language in a virtually identical context in an identical
    manner is only common sense. It encourages the maintenance of an active and
    informed citizenry by causing the law to be less obscure, less arbitrary, and more
    comprehensible to the Florida community at large. This result is not changed
    because the Florida rational basis test, like the federal test, once had additional
    language.6
    5 See Shands Teaching Hosp. & Clinics, Inc. v. Mercury Ins. Co. of Fla., 
    97 So. 3d 204
    , 212 (Fla. 2012) (holding that the “substantive due process rights under the
    Florida and United States Constitutions” are analyzed under one, single, identical
    rational basis test); Ilkanic v. City of Fort Lauderdale, 
    705 So. 2d 1371
    , 1372 (Fla.
    1998) (reviewing a challenge under the “due process provisions of the United
    States and Florida constitutions” under the identical rational basis test); Lite v.
    State, 
    617 So. 2d 1058
    , 1059 (Fla. 1993) (holding that the rational basis test under
    “both substantive due process and equal protection under the Florida and U.S.
    Constitutions,” requires “a state statute must bear a reasonable relationship to a
    permissible legislative objective”) (citations omitted); Lasky v. State Farm Ins.
    Co., 
    296 So. 2d 9
    , 17 (Fla. 1974) (holding that a law “comports with the
    requirements of due process of law” under the federal and Florida constitutions
    because “the act before us is reasonably related to a permissible legislative
    objective”).
    6 The Street Vendors seize on the fact that Florida’s rational basis test was once
    stated in a formula that included, not only the language of the modern Florida
    10
    3. The Cornerstone of Modern Separation of Powers.
    In deciding whether McCall changed this law, we cannot overlook the
    importance of the rational basis test. It is a critical component of the modern
    rational basis test, but also the additional language “and is not discriminatory,
    arbitrary, or oppressive.” See, e.g., 
    Lasky, 296 So. 2d at 15
    , 17 (including this
    additional language at one point but leaving it out at another). So did early versions
    of the federal test. See, e.g., West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 
    300 U.S. 379
    , 398
    (1937) (stating the requirements of due process are satisfied if the challenged laws
    “have a reasonable relation to a proper legislative purpose, and are neither arbitrary
    nor discriminatory”). The most recent statements of the Florida and federal tests
    dropped this additional language. See, e.g., City of 
    Dallas, 490 U.S. at 23
    ; 
    McCall, 134 So. 2d at 918
    (Pariente, J., concurring in result); 
    Belk-James, 358 So. 2d at 175
    ; 
    McKnight, 769 So. 2d at 1040
    n.1.
    These additional words were dropped for the simple reason that they added
    no meaning. A law bearing a rational basis to a legitimate legislative purpose is, by
    definition, not discriminatory, arbitrary, or oppressive, as those words are used in
    the test. Conversely, a law that is discriminatory, arbitrary, or oppressive cannot,
    by definition, bear a rational basis to a legitimate legislative purpose.
    Indeed, the Street Vendors failed to point us to, and our own research has
    failed to disclose, any Florida case that treats the additional language as reflecting
    any meaning other than that the law must bear a rational basis to a legitimate
    government purpose. See 
    Lasky, 296 So. 2d at 17
    (holding, after stating the test as
    including the additional language, that the test was satisfied because “the act before
    us is reasonably related to a permissible legislative objective”).
    The words are best understood as a rhetorical flourish conveying not
    content, but only emphasis, even as lawyers sometimes use the redundant
    expressions “cease and desist” to mean “stop,” “last will and testament” to mean
    “will,” and “unreasonable and arbitrary” to mean “unreasonable.”
    11
    framework for the proper separation of powers between the judicial branch and the
    political branches.
    This framework for separation of powers recognizes that the judicial
    branch’s power and responsibility to determine whether a law violates substantive
    due process and equal protection are at their maximum regarding laws that
    establish suspect classes (e.g., race or ethnicity) or infringe on fundamental rights
    (e.g., speech or religion). In these areas, courts also have at least a modicum of
    guidance from existing constitutional rules and constitutional policies whether a
    legislative choice should be replaced by a judicial choice. For these sorts of laws,
    courts undertake a demanding examination of the need for the law or action and
    whether the law or action actually serves that need. This examination is called
    “strict scrutiny.” In such cases, “[t]he legislation is presumptively unconstitutional.
    . . . [T]he State must prove that the legislation furthers a compelling State interest
    through the least intrusive means.” N. Fla. Women’s Health & Counseling Servs.,
    Inc. v. State, 
    866 So. 2d 612
    , 625 n.16 (Fla. 2003). In this review, courts scrutinize
    legislative findings and judgments. 
    Id. Under this
    same modern understanding of the proper separation of powers,
    however, courts’ power and responsibility to determine whether a law violates
    substantive due process and equal protection are at their absolute minimum
    concerning laws, such as business and economic regulations, that do not establish
    12
    suspect classes and do not infringe fundamental rights. In these areas, courts have
    little or no guidance from pre-existing constitutional rules and constitutional
    policies as to whether to replace a legislative choice with a judicial choice. For
    such laws, courts undertake only a limited review that is highly deferential to the
    legislature’s choice of ends and means. This review is the rational basis test. As
    discussed in more detail below, this test places the burden of proof on the
    challenger to the law. And the burden is very heavy indeed. See, e.g., 
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 782
    . This framework for the separation of powers was the product of over
    a half-century of conflict between the judicial and political branches of
    government.
    D. Origins of the Rational Basis Test in the Constitutional Crisis of the
    Lochner Era.
    1. The Crisis of Lochner Subjective Due Process.
    “In order to know what [the law] is,” Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
    famously wrote, “we must know what it has been, and what it tends to become.”
    Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Common Law 1 (1881). The federal rational basis
    test was the result of the constitutional crisis that erupted during the Lochner era. A
    review of the history that produced the rational basis test suggests that the Florida
    Supreme Court would not abandon it lightly.
    The Lochner era, which ran from approximately 1870 to 1937, witnessed the
    emergence of economic and social problems resulting from ongoing urbanization,
    13
    industrialization, and the organization of business at a national level through trusts
    and monopolies. Confronted with problems legislators had never previously faced,
    Congress and state legislatures began regulating the free market in new and
    startling ways. Among other things, legislatures enacted unproven and largely
    experimental laws setting minimum wages and imposing maximum working hours.
    Judges who had come of age during the previous era, when the common law
    policies reflected a commitment to rugged individualism and laissez-faire
    capitalism, were dismayed by these blatant efforts to manipulate free markets.
    Faced with unprecedented, and in their view, one-sided enactments, both federal
    and state courts began holding that these business regulations violated substantive
    due process. From 1905 to 1937 alone, over 200 state laws regulating business in a
    pro-worker and pro-consumer manner were declared unconstitutional because they
    violated this broad concept of substantive due process. Erwin Chemerinsky,
    Substantive Due Process, 15 Touro L. Rev. 1501, 1503 (1999).
    In Lochner, the case that gave its name to this discredited jurisprudence, the
    United States Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law that set maximum
    working hours for employees of bakeries at sixty hours per 
    week. 198 U.S. at 64
    .
    As the dissent observed, the law was based on the legislative finding that the
    bargaining positions of the employer and employee were not equal. 
    Id. at 69
    (Harlan, J., dissenting) (referring to the legislature’s “belief that employers and
    14
    employees in such establishments were not upon an equal footing, and that the
    necessities of the latter often compelled them to submit to such exactions as unduly
    taxed their strength”).
    The justices in the majority believed, however, that the only consistently
    reliable way to resolve such employer and employee disputes was the free market.
    Based on their sincere and profound convictions in this regard, they reweighed,
    reevaluated, and rejected the legislature’s basis for the law. The employees, the
    court reasoned, are “equal in intelligence and capacity to men in other trades or
    manual occupations” and were “in no sense wards of the state.” 
    Id. at 57.
    The
    maximum hour law violated substantive due process, the majority concluded,
    because it consisted of nothing more than “mere meddlesome interference,” 
    id. at 61,
    with “the freedom of master and employee to contract with each other in
    relation to their employment.” 
    Id. at 64.
    This approach to judicial review continued in cases like Adkins v.
    Children’s Hosp. of the D.C., 
    261 U.S. 525
    , 560 (1923), where the Court held that
    an act of Congress establishing a minimum wage in the District of Columbia for
    low-paid women violated the substantive due process clause. The Court refused to
    accept the legislature’s conclusion that there was a rational connection between the
    legitimate purpose of helping women caught in poverty and a mandatory higher
    15
    wage, even though the conclusion was supported by a substantial legislative
    record:
    A mass of reports, opinions of special observers and students of the
    subject, and the like, has been brought before us in support of this
    statement, all of which we have found interesting, but only mildly
    persuasive. That the earnings of women are now greater than they
    were formerly, and that conditions affecting women have become
    better in other respects, may be conceded; but convincing indications
    of the logical relation of these desirable changes to the law in question
    are significantly lacking. They may be, and quite probably are, due to
    other causes.
    
    Id. at 560
    (emphasis added). As this language indicates, the Court assumed for
    itself the power to reweigh and reevaluate Congress’s legislative judgment. The
    Court felt free to set aside any legislative findings which were only “mildly
    persuasive.” The depth of the sincere feelings of the majority on this point is
    captured by the passionate rhetoric they used: a minimum wage law for poor
    women was “so clearly the product of a naked, arbitrary exercise of power that it
    cannot be allowed to stand under the Constitution of the United States.” 
    Id. at 559.
    Unsurprisingly, this encroachment by the judiciary into the domain of the
    political branches drew a predictable political backlash. Theodore Roosevelt,
    Robert La Follette, and William Jennings Bryan were only a few of those who
    conducted national campaigns attacking the judiciary. The Democratic Party
    Platform of 1936 went so far as to call for a Constitutional amendment “clarifying”
    that “the legislatures of the several States and . . . Congress of the United States . . .
    16
    [have] the power to enact those laws . . . [as they] find necessary, in order
    adequately to regulate commerce, protect public health and safety and safeguard
    economic security.” Democratic Party Platform of 1936 (June 25, 1936), reprinted
    in Henry Steele Commager, Documents of American History 538, 540 (5th ed.
    1949).
    The political assault on the judiciary climaxed in 1937 with President
    Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s court packing plan. Roosevelt had just won by the
    fourth largest electoral margin in American history, taking every state but Vermont
    and Maine, and adding to his party’s already lopsided majorities in the House and
    Senate. Setting aside his party’s platform calling for a constitutional amendment
    limiting judicial review, he demanded Congress immediately adopt a statute
    providing for an additional member of the Supreme Court for every sitting justice
    over seventy years of age.
    While the Senate judiciary committee was debating the measure, the Court
    issued the opinion of West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 
    300 U.S. 379
    (1937), which
    Harvard Law Professor (later Justice) Felix Frankfurter described as a
    “somersault.” In West Coast Hotel, the Supreme Court reversed itself and upheld a
    minimum wage law for women virtually identical to the one overturned in Atkins.
    It did so on the basis that laws do not violate substantive due process if they “have
    a reasonable relation to a proper legislative purpose,” thereby establishing the
    17
    rational basis test. 
    Id. at 398.7
    This adoption of the rational basis test, along with
    other measures taken by the Court, defused the crisis. It is this traditional rational
    basis test, whose adoption played such an important role in turning a political tide
    threatening to engulf the judiciary, that the Street Vendors claim the Florida
    Supreme Court has abandoned.
    2. The Nadir of Judicial Competence.
    “[T]he very word ‘Lochner’ is for legal insiders synonymous with judicial
    overreach.” Akhil Reed Amar, America’s Unwritten Constitution 273 (2012).
    Chief Justice Rehnquist compared the damage Lochner inflicted on courts to the
    damage caused by the Dred Scott decision. William H. Rehnquist, The Supreme
    Court 115 (2d ed. 2004). “Lochner,” Justice Scalia wrote, is “discredited.” Coll.
    Sav. Bank v. Fla. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd., 
    527 U.S. 666
    , 690
    (1999). Justice Souter labeled Lochner’s subjective substantive due process the
    American judiciary’s “nadir of competence.” Seminole Tribe of Fla. v. Florida,
    
    517 U.S. 44
    , 166 (1996) (Souter, J., dissenting). “No one wants to replay that
    7 This formulation traces back to Justice John Marshall Harlan’s dissent in
    Lochner. 
    Lochner, 198 U.S. at 68
    (Harlan, J., dissenting) (“If the end which the
    legislature seeks to accomplish be one to which its power extends, and if the means
    employed to that end, although not the wisest or best, are yet not plainly and
    palpably unauthorized by law, then the court cannot interfere.”). As occurred in
    Plessy v. Ferguson, 
    163 U.S. 537
    (1896) and the Civil Rights Cases, 
    109 U.S. 3
    (1883), Justice Harlan’s dissent shaped the course of American constitutional law
    more than the majority opinions.
    18
    discredited history,” Justice Breyer has written. Stephen Breyer, Active Liberty:
    Interpreting Our Democratic Constitution 41 (2005).
    The error of this jurisprudence, it is sometimes said, was to constitutionalize
    free market economics. This criticism slightly misses the mark. If any economic
    model deserves to be elevated to a constitutional plane, it would surely be the free
    market system, which holds a uniquely central position in American society.
    Rather, the problem of Lochner’s subjective due process is that it elevated to
    a constitutional height any economic theory or, for that matter, any social theory,
    thereby allowing judges to use a non-constitutional policy to replace the choices
    made by the legislature. As Justice Holmes pointed out in his famous dissent, the
    “Constitution is not intended to embody a particular economic theory, whether of
    paternalism and the organic relation of the citizen to the state or of laissez faire. It
    is made for people of fundamentally differing views, and the accident of our
    finding certain opinions natural and familiar, or novel, and even shocking, ought
    not to conclude our judgment upon the question whether statutes embodying them
    conflict with the Constitution of the United States.” 
    Lochner, 198 U.S. at 75-76
    (Holmes, J., dissenting).
    A competent judge can certainly analyze an economic regulation and
    identify the way different parties and classes are benefited or injured. But absent
    fundamental rights or suspect classifications, which provide at least a degree of
    19
    constitutional direction, the choice of how to balance competing economic interests
    is a policy question that is largely political in nature because no pre-existing
    neutral principles exist to govern the judge’s decision. At the end of any such
    analysis, the judge is left with little more guidance than the very same subjective
    political convictions a person would use if he or she were voting as a legislator
    during a roll call or a citizen at the polls. A decision of this sort may be well-
    intentioned, even admirable, but it is not judicial. In the final analysis, the defect in
    Lochner’s economic due process is that it bids a judge to replace legislative
    choices with judicial choices based on nothing more than what the judge believes
    is the public good.
    E. The Five Principles of Florida’s Traditional Rational Basis Test.
    1. “Reasonable” and “Rational” Means “Fairly Debatable.”
    To limit the subjectivity that may lurk in any rational basis analysis, the
    Florida Supreme Court, over several decades, has adopted five principles. First, as
    Justice Pariente noted for the majority in Haire, under the rational basis test, “a
    state statute must be upheld . . . if there is any reasonable relationship between the
    act and the furtherance of a valid governmental 
    objective.” 870 So. 2d at 782
    (citation and quotation omitted). It is the burden of the party challenging the law to
    prove that “there is no conceivable factual predicate which would rationally
    support the [law].” Fla. High Sch. Activities Ass’n v. Thomas, 
    434 So. 2d 306
    , 308
    20
    (Fla. 1983) (emphasis added). This is “a deferential standard.” 
    McCall, 134 So. 3d at 921
    (Pariente, J., concurring in result). In fact, “rational basis scrutiny is the
    most relaxed and tolerant form of judicial scrutiny.” Kuvin v. City of Coral Gables,
    
    62 So. 3d 625
    , 632 (Fla. 3d DCA 2010) (citation and quotations omitted).
    Under this relaxed and tolerant standard for rationality, a law will be upheld
    if it is “fairly debatable;” meaning that it is fairly debatable whether the purpose of
    the law is legitimate and it is fairly debatable whether the methods adopted in the
    law serve that legitimate purpose. See, e.g., Gallagher v. Motors Ins. Corp., 
    605 So. 2d 62
    , 70 (Fla. 1992) (holding that a tax statute withstood a challenge under the
    substantive due process provisions of the federal and state constitutions because “it
    is ‘at least debatable’ that a rational relationship exists between the premium tax
    and the objective of increased regulatory control”). “The fact that there may be
    differing views as to the reasonableness of the Legislature’s action is simply not
    sufficient to void the legislation.” Warren v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    899 So. 2d 1090
    , 1096 (Fla. 2005). “Even if the wisdom of the policy be regarded as
    debatable and its effects uncertain, still the Legislature is entitled to its judgment.”
    West Coast 
    Hotel, 300 U.S. at 399
    . “It is enough that there is an evil at hand for
    correction, and that it might be thought that the particular legislative measure was a
    rational way to correct it.” Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla.. Inc., 
    348 U.S. 483
    ,
    488 (1955).
    21
    This standard is not only designed to be lenient, it is intended to be
    objective. The rational basis test does not license a judge to insert courts into a
    disagreement over policy or politics. It merely requires a judge to decide if
    reasonable people might disagree. If we are intellectually honest, we will admit
    that most legislation easily passes this test.
    This lenient and objective test applies because:
    The legislature is vested with wide discretion to determine the public
    interest and the measures necessary for its achievement. The fact that
    the legislature may not have chosen the best possible means to
    eradicate the evils perceived is of no consequence to the courts
    provided that the means selected are not wholly unrelated to
    achievement of the legislative purpose. A more rigorous inquiry
    would amount to a determination of the wisdom of the legislation, and
    would usurp the legislative prerogative to establish policy.
    Fraternal Order of Police, Metro. Dade Cty., Lodge No. 6 v. Dep’t of State, 
    392 So. 2d 1296
    , 1302 (Fla. 1980) (internal citations omitted). “In applying this
    standard of review, a court must remain cognizant of the legislature’s broad range
    of discretion in its choice of means and methods by which it will enhance the
    public good and welfare.” 
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 782
    (citation and quotation
    omitted).
    2. The Party Challenging the Constitutionality of the Law Has the Burden
    of Proof.
    Under the rational basis test, “[t]he burden is on the one attacking the
    legislative enactment.” E. Air Lines, Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    455 So. 2d 311
    , 314
    22
    (Fla. 1984). See also Lite v. State, 
    617 So. 2d 1058
    , 1060 (Fla. 1993) (“Under the
    rational basis standard, the party challenging the statute bears the burden of
    showing that the statutory classification does not bear a rational relationship to a
    legitimate state purpose.”); Fla. High Sch. Activities 
    Ass’n, 434 So. 2d at 308
    (“The burden is upon the party challenging the statute or regulation to show that
    there is no conceivable factual predicate which would rationally support the
    [law].”).
    3. Legislative Findings and Judgments are Not Subject to Courtroom Fact
    Findings and May Be Based on Rational Speculation Unsupported by
    Evidence or Empirical Data.
    Justice Pariente, writing for the Court, stated the next principle as follows:
    “under a rational basis test, a legislative choice is not subject to courtroom fact-
    finding.” 
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 787
    (citation and quotation omitted). Legislative
    choices in economic regulations are not subject to courtroom fact finding because
    such laws “may be based on rational speculation unsupported by evidence or
    empirical data.” City of Fort Lauderdale v. Gonzalez, 
    134 So. 3d 1119
    , 1121 (Fla.
    4th DCA 2014). See also Lucas v. Englewood Cmty. Hosp., 
    963 So. 2d 894
    , 896
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2007); Zurla v. City of Daytona Beach, 
    876 So. 2d 34
    , 36 (Fla. 5th
    DCA 2004); Hudson v. State, 
    825 So. 2d 460
    , 468-69 (Fla. 1st DCA 2002).
    Courts deal in findings of concrete facts concerning past events based on
    record evidence subject to strict standards of reliability, codified in the rules of
    23
    evidence and procedure. So it is understandable that a court might attempt to
    import concepts of record-based fact finding into their review of the legislative
    process. But this attempt constitutes error. While courts deal with record-based
    facts of past events, legislatures generally do not.
    When enacting laws, legislatures are not normally looking at the type of
    concrete facts found in courtrooms by judges and juries. Consider a legislature
    debating whether to enact rent control. Does an emergency exist that justifies
    capping rents? The question of the existence of an emergency is not so much an
    empirical fact as a value judgment. Even the decision of what criteria to use to
    decide whether an emergency exists (e.g., rent for middleclass families,
    displacement in older neighborhoods, availability of affordable housing for the
    working poor, or the number of homeless) rests not on concrete facts, but on a
    community’s attitudes and shared vision relating to that particular problem. A
    situation viewed as perfectly acceptable in one community may be viewed as a
    crisis in another. The legislative choices in such matters are not driven by the sort
    of finding of historical facts regarding past events which occurs in a courtroom.
    They are based instead on legislative findings that are more akin to value
    judgments than judicial fact finding. In our system of government, only
    democratically elected representative bodies are competent to form the sorts of
    legislative judgments upon which these legislative choices are based.
    24
    Earlier decisions suggest that legislative findings might be subject to an
    evidentiary challenge in court. See, e.g., Seagram-Distillers Corp. v. Ben Greene,
    Inc., 
    54 So. 2d 235
    , 236 (Fla. 1951) (“If the subject upon which the legislature
    makes findings of fact is one which is fairly debatable, the presumption of
    correctness attaches and remains extant until and unless such findings are
    challenged and disproved in an appropriate proceeding.”). But such cases are in
    direct conflict on this point with later cases like Haire which expressly hold “under
    a rational basis test, a legislative choice is not subject to courtroom 
    fact-finding.” 870 So. 2d at 787
    (citation and quotation omitted).
    They are also in direct conflict with cases like Gallagher which concluded
    laws should be upheld under rational basis where “the legislature rationally could
    have believed that the challenged statutory scheme would promote the asserted
    legislative objective. Whether the statutory scheme in fact would promote the
    legislative objective is not 
    dispositive.” 605 So. 2d at 70
    (emphasis added). “It is
    likewise clear that where there is a plausible reason for a legislative enactment, it is
    constitutionally irrelevant whether this reasoning in fact underlay the legislative
    decision.” 
    Id. at 69
    (citation and quotations omitted).
    Cases like Seagram-Distillers are also at odds with the overwhelming tide of
    federal and state decisions on this point. See, e.g., Fed. Commc’ns Comm’n v.
    Beach Commc’ns, Inc., 
    508 U.S. 307
    , 315 (1993) (“[A] legislative choice is not
    25
    subject to courtroom fact-finding and may be based on rational speculation
    unsupported by evidence or empirical data.”). In sum, they have lost their authority
    as precedent on this point because they directly and expressly conflict with a
    subsequent and larger body of Florida Supreme Court cases. See, e.g., Haire;
    Gallagher; Gonzalez; Lucas; Zurla; and 
    Hudson, supra
    .
    Indeed, a court conducts hearings to determine facts only if there is a good
    faith dispute of material fact. In a rational basis review, however, once a court
    determines there exists a good faith conflict over facts, some of which support the
    legislative finding, the court must uphold the finding because the law must be
    upheld if “it is at least debatable.” 
    Gallagher, 605 So. 2d at 70
    . See also Nat’l Paint
    & Coatings Ass’n v. City of Chicago, 
    45 F.3d 1124
    , 1127 (7th Cir. 1995) (“Even
    in litigation about torts and contracts, a court holds evidentiary hearings only when
    necessary to resolve material disputes of fact. [Under rational review], to say that
    such a dispute exists—indeed, to say that one may be imagined—is to require a
    decision for the state. Outside the realm of ‘heightened scrutiny’ there is therefore
    never a role for evidentiary proceedings.”).
    Thus, although courts should not act as rubber stamps when analyzing a law
    under the rational basis test, neither should the courts presume to second guess the
    legislature by purporting to conduct a courtroom-style evidentiary hearing
    26
    regarding a legislative finding that is really more of a value judgment than a
    historical fact.
    4. Legislation Can Pass the Rational Basis Test Even if Purely
    Experimental.
    The rejection of courtroom fact finding as a basis to conduct a rational basis
    review of legislation is not grounded solely on the difference between judicial and
    legislative decision making. It is also grounded on the plain truth that “[m]ost laws
    dealing with economic and social problems are matters of trial and error.” Am.
    Fed’n of Labor, Ariz. State Fed’n of Labor v. Am. Sash & Door Co., 
    335 U.S. 538
    ,
    553 (1949) (Frankfurter, J., concurring). For this reason, “Legislative bodies have
    broad scope to experiment with economic problems.” Ferguson v. Skrupa, 
    372 U.S. 726
    , 730 (1963). On this point, Justice Breyer observed that the essential
    “failing of Lochner” was that it “depriv[ed] the people of the democratically
    necessary room to make decisions, including the leeway to make regulatory
    mistakes.” Stephen Breyer, Active Liberty: Interpreting Our Democratic
    Constitution 41 (2005) (emphasis added).
    Many legislative experiments fail, but in failing, provide the experience
    needed to draft a more effective law. To give just one example, the current Federal
    27
    Deposit Insurance Laws were developed out of state experiments that initially
    failed. Am. Sash & Door 
    Co., 335 U.S. at 553
    n.10. Another experiment that bore
    good fruit was the decision by the Florida Supreme Court to allow courtroom
    proceedings to be televised.
    The United States Supreme Court rejected a due process challenge to the
    Florida Supreme Court’s decision to allow cameras in the courtroom specifically
    on the basis that states must be allowed to conduct such experiments: “Dangers
    lurk in this, as in most experiments, but unless we were to conclude that television
    coverage under all conditions is prohibited by the Constitution, the states must be
    free to experiment. We are not empowered by the Constitution to oversee or
    harness state . . . experimentation.” Chandler v. Florida, 
    449 U.S. 560
    , 582 (1981).
    This was true even in the absence of empirical or scientific evidence that the
    experiment would be a success. 
    Id. at 576.
    In upholding the Florida Supreme Court’s decision to allow courtroom
    proceedings to be televised, the United States Supreme Court summoned the spirit
    of Justice Lewis Brandeis, who advised: “Denial of the right to experiment may be
    fraught with serious consequences to the nation. It is one of the happy incidents of
    the federal system that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve
    as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the
    rest of the country.” New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 
    285 U.S. 262
    , 311 (1932)
    28
    (Brandeis, J., dissenting). Because democracy needs the leeway to experiment, the
    “Court is not a tribunal for relief from the crudities and inequities of complicated
    experimental economic legislation.” Sec’y of Agric. v. Cent. Roig Ref. Co., 
    338 U.S. 604
    , 618 (1950).
    5. The Constitution Does Not Prohibit Legislatures from Passing Unwise
    Laws.
    Under the rational basis test, courts recognize that the legislature has the
    discretion to enact economic laws based on legislative value judgments, reasonable
    hypotheses, and even experiments. For errors in the exercise of such powers, again
    provided no fundamental right or suspect classification is involved, the legislature
    is largely not answerable to, or subject to correction by, courts through judicial
    review. This is true even if the law strikes a judge as unwise or unfair.
    “The wisdom, policy, or motives which prompt a legislative enactment, so
    far as they do not contravene some portion of the express or implied limitation
    upon legislative power found in the Constitution, are not subject to judicial
    control.” Scott v. Williams, 
    107 So. 3d 379
    , 385 (Fla. 2013) (citation omitted). See,
    e.g., 
    Belk-James, 358 So. 2d at 177
    (“[A]rguments . . . which essentially question
    whether the best means of regulation has been chosen, can be seen as directed
    more to the wisdom of the legislation . . . [and are] inappropriate for our judicial
    function.”). Instead, for such errors the legislature is answerable directly to the
    people at the polls through the democratic process. Am. Sash & Door Co., 
    335 29 U.S. at 556
    (“[A] democracy need not rely on the courts to save it from its own
    unwisdom.”) (Frankfurter, J., concurring). As Justice Thurgood Marshall often
    cautioned his colleagues on the court, “[t]he Constitution does not prohibit
    legislatures from enacting stupid laws.” N. Y. State Bd. of Elections v. Lopez
    Torres, 
    552 U.S. 196
    , 209 (2008) (Stevens, J., concurring).
    F. McCall Does Not Overrule this Well-Established Law and Abandon the
    Traditional Rational Basis Test.
    The Street Vendors argue that McCall overruled this well-established law. In
    McCall, the Florida Supreme Court declared that the cap on non-economic
    damages in medical malpractice claims contained in section 766.118, Florida
    Statutes (2005), violated the rational basis test of the equal protection provision of
    Florida’s constitution as applied to a wrongful death case. This holding reflects the
    judgment of five of the seven justices. It is the law of Florida. The five justices,
    however, did not agree on a rationale for this holding. Instead, two of the five
    joined one opinion and three a different opinion. We reject the Street Vendors’
    contention that the two plurality opinions should be read together as heralding a
    revolution in the law of Florida substantive due process.
    Admittedly, Justice Lewis’ plurality opinion gives the appearance of a
    willingness to depart from the traditional rational basis test. This impression stems
    from the manner that the opinion sets aside the Legislature’s judgment “that
    Florida was in the midst of a bona fide medical malpractice crisis.” McCall, 
    134 30 So. 3d at 909
    (plurality opinion). The opinion forthrightly admits that “in 2012 one
    medical malpractice insurance company . . . charged obstetricians in Miami–Dade
    County more than $190,000 for $1 million of coverage . . . [and] charged
    orthopedists in Miami–Dade County more than $115,000 for $1 million of
    coverage.” 
    Id. at 914
    n.10 (plurality opinion). These facts alone appear to make the
    existence of a malpractice crisis at least fairly debatable. Nevertheless, after
    undertaking its own reevaluation of data culled from both inside and outside the
    legislative record, the opinion rejects the Legislature’s judgment “that Florida was
    in the midst of a bona fide medical malpractice crisis” because it is “not fully
    supported by available data,” “is most questionable,” and “is dubious and
    questionable at the very best.” 
    Id. at 906-07,
    909 (plurality opinion).
    This plurality opinion delves into the legislative debate and reweighs the
    Legislature’s findings. Its reasoning is reminiscent of the manner in which the
    Lochner era decision in Atkins set aside legislature findings because they were
    only “mildly 
    persuasive.” 261 U.S. at 560
    . For authority to set aside legislative fact
    findings, the plurality opinion actually cites the 1924 Lochner era case of
    Chastleton Corp. v. Sinclair, 
    264 U.S. 543
    (1924). 
    McCall, 134 So. 3d at 913
    (plurality opinion).
    We do not need, however, to determine whether Justice Lewis’ plurality
    opinion intended to modify the traditional rational basis test because only one other
    31
    justice joined the opinion. Justice Pariente’s separate plurality opinion, which was
    joined by two other justices, is labeled “concurring in result,” signaling its intent
    not to adopt Justice Lewis’ reasoning. If there is any doubt on this point, Justice
    Pariente’s plurality opinion expressly declines to join Justice Lewis’ rationale
    because “there is simply no precedent for this Court to engage in its own
    independent evaluation and reweighing of the facts and legislative policy findings,
    as done by the plurality, when conducting a rational basis analysis.” 
    Id. at 921
    (Pariente, J., concurring in result).
    At the same time, Justice Lewis’ opinion declined to adopt the reasoning in
    Justice Pariente’s opinion based on their view that the “concurring in result opinion
    argues that only a single decision [St. Mary’s Hosp., Inc. v. Phillipe, 
    769 So. 2d 961
    , 971 (Fla. 2000)] which does not set forth a proper analysis be applied.” 
    Id. at 905
    (plurality opinion). Thus, neither of the plurality opinions garnered a majority
    of the Court.
    Admittedly, McCall’s holding conflicts with the decision of the Eleventh
    Circuit Court of Appeals involving the same parties which held that the limitation
    on non-economic damages at issue did not violate the federal rational basis test.8
    8 Estate of McCall v. United States, 
    642 F.3d 944
    , 951 (11th Cir. 2011) (“The
    Florida legislature could reasonably have concluded that such a cap would reduce
    damage awards and in turn make medical malpractice insurance more affordable
    and healthcare more available. We therefore conclude that Florida’s statutory cap
    on noneconomic damages for medical malpractice claims does not violate the
    Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution.”).
    32
    This federal decision was relied upon by the dissent.9 But neither of the two
    plurality opinions in McCall discusses the discrepancy between the holding of the
    Florida Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit. In light of this silence, we
    attribute the different result to the reality that judges can disagree over the
    application of a legal test—not to the idea that Florida has adopted a more
    subjective test. And, of course, regarding the interpretation of the Florida
    Constitution, the Florida Supreme Court’s word is final.
    Most importantly, neither of the plurality opinions in McCall expressly
    indicates an intent to overrule cases like Haire, Lite, Lasky, Belk-James,
    McKnight, Shands, Gallagher, or Warren. We cannot assume the Court intended to
    silently overturn such well-established, long standing, black letter law. Puryear v.
    State, 
    810 So. 2d 901
    , 905 (Fla. 2002). We are particularly wary of jumping to
    such a conclusion when to do so would undermine the rational basis test, a
    centerpiece of modern separation of powers, which was developed to resolve a
    constitutional crisis that resulted from a subjective substantive due process test.
    Thus, unless and until the Court signals in a more overt manner an intent to
    overrule the great body of law established by these precedents, we are bound to
    apply the Court’s holdings in Haire, Lite, Lasky, Belk-James, McKnight, Shands,
    Gallagher, and Warren, which treat the Florida rational basis test as the same as the
    9   McCall, 
    134 So. 3d 894
    (Polston, J., dissenting).
    33
    federal rational basis test, and use the five principles discussed above that the
    Court has adopted to guide its application.
    G. The Challenged Ordinance Provisions Pass Florida’s Rational Basis
    Test.
    Applying the traditional rational basis test to the two challenged Ordinance
    provisions, we conclude that they are constitutional. The burden of proof was on
    the Street Vendors as the ones attacking the laws. 
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 782
    . They
    had to prove that “there is no conceivable factual predicate which would rationally
    support the [law].” Fla. High Sch. Activities 
    Ass’n, 434 So. 2d at 308
    . They have
    failed to meet that burden because it is at least debatable that the challenged
    Ordinance provisions bear a rational relationship to a legitimate government
    interest. 
    Gallagher, 605 So. 2d at 70
    .
    Protecting pedestrians, vendors, and vehicles in the streets from accidents is
    obviously a legitimate government purpose. Reasonable people might believe that
    limiting the vendors to selling in the lanes of traffic only the inventory that they
    can carry will lessen the accidents that might otherwise arise from vendors taking
    orders from cars stopped in the lanes of traffic at red lights, crossing traffic to the
    sides of the streets to obtain product from inventories displayed there, and then re-
    crossing traffic to deliver the order before the light turns green.
    34
    Enforcing the provisions of the City’s zoning code is also a legitimate
    government purpose. Reasonable people might believe that restricting vendors to
    displaying and storing inventory on public or private property in the same way the
    owners of such property would be restricted serves that purpose. They might also
    believe that prohibiting vendors from permanently stopping or remaining on public
    or private property, “unless allowed for by zoning,” would serve a similar purpose.
    Because we are applying Florida’s traditional rational basis test, we decline
    the Street Vendors’ argument that they are entitled to a trial on whether or not any
    of these considerations can be established or disproven by evidence admitted in a
    court of law. “[U]nder a rational basis test, a legislative choice is not subject to
    courtroom fact-finding.” 
    Haire, 870 So. 2d at 787
    (citation and quotation omitted).
    “A rational relationship exists where, as here, it is found that the legislature
    rationally could have believed that the challenged statutory scheme would promote
    the asserted legislative objective. Whether the statutory scheme in fact would
    promote the legislative objective is not dispositive.” 
    Gallagher, 605 So. at 70
    (emphasis added).
    Finally, we reject the Street Vendors’ argument that the Ordinance is
    unconstitutional because other wiser, fairer, or better ways exist to accomplish the
    City Commission’s goals. “[A]rguments . . . which essentially question whether the
    best means of regulation has been chosen, can be seen as directed more to the
    35
    wisdom of the legislation . . . [and are] inappropriate for our judicial function.”
    
    Belk-James, 358 So. 2d at 177
    . Where, as here, no suspect class or fundamental
    right is implicated, “[t]he wisdom, policy, or motives which prompt a legislative
    enactment, so far as they do not contravene some portion of the express or implied
    limitation upon legislative power found in the Constitution, are not subject to
    judicial control.” 
    Scott, 107 So. 3d at 385
    (citation omitted).
    CONCLUSION
    McCall did not grant Florida courts a license to overturn economic laws
    based upon a judicial reweighing and reevaluating of legislative findings. We
    affirm the trial court’s judgment which stated “[i]n accordance with the rational
    basis standard . . . the Court finds that there are legitimate interests supporting the
    challenged Ordinance provisions and that the challenged Ordinance provisions are
    rationally related to such legitimate government interests.”
    Affirmed.
    36
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 3D14-2603

Citation Numbers: 188 So. 3d 13, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 3564, 2016 WL 889178

Judges: Rothenberg, Salter, Logue

Filed Date: 3/9/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (37)

Secretary of Agriculture v. Central Roig Refining Co. , 70 S. Ct. 403 ( 1950 )

Chandler v. Florida , 101 S. Ct. 802 ( 1981 )

State v. Robinson , 873 So. 2d 1205 ( 2004 )

Lasky v. State Farm Insurance Company , 296 So. 2d 9 ( 1974 )

West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish , 57 S. Ct. 578 ( 1937 )

Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida , 116 S. Ct. 1114 ( 1996 )

Chastleton Corp. v. Sinclair , 44 S. Ct. 405 ( 1924 )

New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann , 52 S. Ct. 371 ( 1932 )

Puryear v. State , 810 So. 2d 901 ( 2002 )

Belk-James, Inc. v. Nuzum , 358 So. 2d 174 ( 1978 )

St. Mary's Hospital, Inc. v. Phillipe , 769 So. 2d 961 ( 2000 )

Ferguson v. Skrupa , 83 S. Ct. 1028 ( 1963 )

Federal Communications Commission v. Beach Communications, ... , 113 S. Ct. 2096 ( 1993 )

College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary ... , 119 S. Ct. 2219 ( 1999 )

Restigouche, Inc. v. Town of Jupiter , 59 F.3d 1208 ( 1995 )

Lochner v. New York , 25 S. Ct. 539 ( 1905 )

Warren v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. , 30 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 197 ( 2005 )

National Paint & Coatings Association v. City of Chicago , 45 F.3d 1124 ( 1995 )

Eastern Air Lines, Inc. v. Dept. of Revenue , 1984 Fla. LEXIS 3106 ( 1984 )

Zurla v. City of Daytona Beach , 876 So. 2d 34 ( 2004 )

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