Judges: Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General Prepared by: Rebecca Bowles Hawkins, Assistant Attorney General, and Gerald L. Knight, Legal Research Assistant
Filed Date: 2/20/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
QUESTION:
Does Ch. 29438, 1953, Laws of Florida, as amended, creating the Indian Rocks Special Fire Control District, authorize said district to adopt and enforce fire prevention and fire safety codes and ordinances?
SUMMARY:
The Indian Rocks Special Fire Control District is not authorized by its enabling legislation, expressly or by necessary implication, to adopt and enforce fire prevention and fire safety codes and ordinances. However, the fire marshal of such district is an ex officio agent of the state fire marshal and may exercise all powers and duties applicable to such position under Ch.
It is a general rule that the police power of municipal corporations, as derived from the state, includes the power to enact such regulations as are necessary for the prevention of fires. Such power usually exists by reason of an express grant or a necessarily implied statutory or constitutional delegation. [See] 62 C.J.S. Municipal Corporations s. 254, p. 605; Lester v. City of St. Petersburg,
However, this office has previously ruled that the Municipal Home Rule Powers Act, Ch. 73-129, Laws of Florida, does not apply to special taxing districts, since such districts are not "municipalities" within the meaning of the act. Attorney General Opinion 073-442. This holding adheres to the long-settled principle that special taxing districts are not municipalities, but are statutory entities created for definitely restricted purposes. Attorney General Opinions 069-130, 073-261, 073-314, and 073-374. In AGO 073-374, it was stated that special taxing districts "possess only such powers as are expressly given, or necessarily implied because essential to carry into effect those powers expressly granted." State v. Smith,
Against this background, therefore, it is necessary to examine the specific statutory provisions in issue here to determine whether the Indian Rocks Special Fire Control District may adopt and enforce fire prevention and fire safety codes and ordinances. In order to adopt and enforce such codes and ordinances, authority to do so must be expressly granted in the enabling act or necessarily implied from an express grant of authority.
In this regard, s. 1, Ch. 29438, 1953, Laws of Florida, creates the Indian Rocks Special Fire Control District (hereinafter referred to as district) as a "public municipal corporation." However, a single statutory reference to, or characterization of, a special taxing district as a public municipal corporation does not make it one or enlarge its lawful authority beyond that granted by the legislature. Attorney General Opinions 069-130 and 073-314. Chapter 29438 then enumerates the specific powers and duties which the district may perform in carrying out its purposes. Nowhere among those enumerated powers and duties is found the express authority to adopt and enforce fire prevention and fire safety codes and ordinances. Neither, in my opinion, do the express grants of power in the enabling act necessarily imply such authority. See AGO 073-374.
The particular provisions to which you refer are ss. 10, 11, and 12 of Ch. 29438, supra. Section 10 provides in pertinent part as follows:
"The said Board of Commissioners of the District . . . shall have authority to hire a Fire Marshal, one or more special deputies and one or more firemen to operate the fire fighting equipment, to inspect all property and check for fire hazards."
Section 11 provides in pertinent part as follows:
"The Board of Commissioners may adopt such rules and regulations as it may deem necessary in and about the transaction of its business and in carrying out the provisions of the Act."
Section 12 provides in pertinent part as follows:
"The Board of Commissioners of said District shall appoint a Fire Marshal who shall . . . be required to inspect all places of business, apartment houses, hotels, motels, and other buildings where large groups of people might congregate to see that they have the proper fire extinguishers and fire escapes. . . ."
These provisions contemplate the inspection of all property for fire hazards and certain buildings for proper fire extinguishers and fire escapes. This inspection function may be performed, as indicated below, in the absence of fire prevention and fire safety codes enacted by the district; such codes, therefore are not essential in carrying out the express inspection authority. In order to imply the power to enact and enforce such regulations, such implied power must be essential or indispensable to the declared objects and purposes of the district. See AGO 073-374. Moreover, even if it were assumed that enactment and enforcement of fire prevention and fire safety codes were necessarily implied from this inspection authority, there are no provisions in the act creating the machinery for the enforcement of such codes or empowering the district to impose any penalties to carry such regulations into effect. Section 11, as it relates to the enactment of rules and regulations by the district, refers only to the district's business and to carrying out provisions of the act, and does not create enforcement machinery or establish additional express grants of authority. See Lewis v. Florida State Board of Health,
However, the absence in the enabling act of express or necessarily implied authority for the district to adopt and enforce fire prevention and fire safety codes and ordinances does not mean that the district is without some power to enforce duly promulgated state fire prevention codes or regulations. Chapter
It has been held in a previous opinion of this office that the chief of a county fire control district was included within the purview of s.