Judges: Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General Prepared by: Bjarne B. Andersen, Jr., Assistant Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/9/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
QUESTIONS:
Is a resident of a Sunland Training Center who has reached his eighteenth birthday eligible to register and vote in elections:
1. When there exists an outstanding order from a county or circuit court specifically declaring the resident incompetent?
2. When the resident has been received for admission pursuant to the provisions of s. 393.021, F.S.?
3. When the resident has been received for admission pursuant to the alternative s. 393.031, F.S.?
SUMMARY:
A resident of a Sunland Training Center or residential facility who has reached his eighteenth birthday and is otherwise qualified to vote is eligible to register for, and vote in, an election under the provisions of Art. VI, s. 4, of the 1968 Florida Constitution, provided such person has not been adjudicated mentally incompetent pursuant to, or in accordance with, the provisions of ss. 393.04,
No person who has been adjudicated to be mentally incompetent may vote until such disability has been removed or restoration of mental competency has been legally effected pursuant to the provisions of s. 744.31, F.S. (as amended by Ch. 73-334, Laws of Florida), or prior provisions of law relating thereto.
Admission to a Sunland Training Center under the provisions of s. 393.021 or s. 393.031, F.S., as amended by Ch. 73-308, Laws of Florida, does not disqualify any person, otherwise qualified to vote, from voting in an election unless such person has been adjudicated to be mentally incompetent in separate legal proceedings prescribed by law, as set forth in s.
AS TO QUESTION 1:
Article VI, s. 4, State Const., provides in part that "No person . . . adjudicated in this or any other state to be mentallyincompetent, shall be qualified to vote or hold office until . . . removal of disability." (Emphasis supplied.)
Previously, Art. VI, s. 4, State Const. 1885 provided in part that "No person under guardianship, non compos mentis or insane shall be qualified to vote at any election. . . ."
A comparison of the two provisions set forth above shows that the reference to persons under guardianship has been omitted and that the requirement for removal of disability for those previously declared mentally incompetent has been added to the constitutional provision. See Analysis of Proposed Revision, Draft of Proposed 1968 Constitution, at p. 24.
The phrase "until . . . removal of disability" in the 1968 Constitution, supra, refers and relates to the person "adjudicated . . . to be mentally incompetent" in the preceding clause or phrase and must mean removal of such mental disability or restoration to mental competency by some appropriate legal proceedings according to law.
The prime purpose in construing a constitutional provision is to ascertain what intent the framers and the electorate had in its adoption; and it is reasonable to assume that, in adopting the 1968 Constitution, the intent of the electorate was that the only disqualification from voting was the conviction of a felony or adjudication of mental incompetency and that such disqualification should continue until such time as such persons so convicted or adjudicated incompetent had their civil rights restored or their mental competency restored pursuant to law. In re Advisory Opinion to the Governor,
When the state's Constitution prescribes the disqualifications for voting in express self-executing terms and such provisions are not in conflict with the federal constitution, the legislature is powerless to modify such provisions or to create other disqualifications than those found in the organic law. Neither may it restrict or modify the constitutionally prescribed qualifications or requirements of electors. Riley v. Holmer,
In order to properly consider question 1, we must assume that at the time the individual was admitted to a Sunland Training Center he was admitted pursuant to a court order issued by a county judge or, after January 1, 1973, a circuit court judge, which included an adjudication or finding by such a court that the individual was in fact mentally incompetent because of retardation, and any such order would be accompanied by the judgment of incompetency. See s.
Section
"97.041 Qualifications to register. — * * * * * (5) The following persons are not entitled to vote: * * * * * (c) Persons adjudicated mentally incompetent in this or any other state and who have not had their competency restored pursuant to law."
Since former s.
However, in the case of a child committed to a Division of Retardation facility, when such child reaches the age of majorityhe shall be given an additional hearing to determine hiscompetency at that time. See s.
Since such an additional hearing on the issue of incompetencyshall be held in the case of a minor child committed to the Division of Retardation, the mandatory connotation of the word "shall" requires that the additional hearing be conducted for continued commitment, or the person is to be discharged. Neal v. Bryant,
As amended by Ch. 73-308, s.
Section 6, Ch. 73-308, Laws of Florida, further provides a caveat, that no acceptance of a mentally retarded person for residential care by the Division of Retardation before January 1, 1973, shall be deemed unlawful, but the department shall within ninety days of the enactment of s. 6 review the status of all persons presently admitted to residential care to insure that the requirements of Ch.
Under the provisions of ss. 393.01(2) and
To the extent that Ch. 73-334, supra, is a reviser's bill relating solely to the judiciary (to conform statutory language to the terminology of Revised Art. V of the Constitution) and Ch. 73-308, supra, effective October 1, 1973, relates to the Division of Retardation, the provisions of Ch. 73-308, supra, would be controlling insofar as the intent of the legislature is concerned relating to the interests of mentally retarded persons, as the reviser's bill is intended merely to purify existing statutory law rather than change the substantive law on a particular subject.Cf. Jones v. Christina,
In view of the legislative directive in s. 6, Ch. 73-308, supra, that the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services shall review the status of all persons presently admitted to residential care provided by the Division of Retardation to insure that the requirements of that statute have been fully complied with, I am of the opinion that a resident of a Sunland Training Center, under an outstanding court order adjudicating such a person to be mentally incompetent, is prohibited from registering and voting in an election under Art. VI, s. 4, State Const., and s.
AS TO QUESTIONS 2 and 3:
Pursuant to s. 2, Ch. 73-308, Laws of Florida, the procedures for voluntary admission to services and facilities provided by the Division of Retardation contained in former ss. 393.021 and 393.031, F.S., have been combined into an amended s. 393.021. Therefore, questions 2 and 3 will not be considered separately.
Sunland Training Centers and residential facilities are recognized by the legislature as facilities for the care, habilitation, and rehabilitation of retarded persons who have subaverage general intellectual functioning which originates during the developmental period and is associated with impairment of adaptive behavior. See s. 393.0111, F.S.
Under former s. 393.021, F.S., applications for admission to any of the residential facilities in this state are made to the county court judge in the county where the applicant resides. The county court judge, upon receiving the application, merely opened a file in the name of the applicant and forwarded the original and two copies of such application to the director of the Division of Retardation or his designee.
Likewise, former s. 393.031, F.S., provided an alternative method for admission in cases where the applicant is eighteen years of age or older and he or his parent or legal guardian applies for such admission.
Under the above provisions, it appears that voluntary admission is contemplated for the person in lieu of an involuntary commitment to the Division of Retardation following a judicial proceeding involving notice and hearing as provided by s.
Under the provisions of former ss. 393.021 and 393.031, supra, no judicial proceedings were involved or authority exercised beyond the opening of a file on the person or a check as to the person's age. This ministerial function of county court judges has now been eliminated by the provisions of amended s. 393.021, supra, providing for application review by an evaluation team of the Division of Retardation.
Mere admission to a Sunland facility, without any adjudication of mental incompetency, would not remove the presumption that such a person is competent. Travis v. Travis,
It should be noted here in passing that, in view of the fact that guardianship status for the minor may be created in the circumstances prescribed by the statute, it appears that when we consider the requirement for a separate hearing on a child reaching the age of majority, his admission as a child merely authorizes a guardianship situation by reason of tender age as opposed to any basis of mental incompetency adjudicated in and by a separate and distinct legal proceeding.
Therefore, in view of the above and in consideration of matters previously discussed in question 1, I am of the opinion that, although s.