Judges: Jim Smith Attorney General
Filed Date: 12/19/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Parks M. Carmichael City Attorney City of Chiefland Post Office Drawer C Gainesville, Florida 32602
Dear Mr. Carmichael:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on substantially the following question:
MAY THE CITY COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF CHIEFLAND ENTER INTO A CONTRACT OF LIMITED INDEMNITY AGAINST FINANCIAL LOSSES TO A PRIVATE PROVIDER OF EMERGENCY HEALTH CARE?
The City of Chiefland is interested in entering into a contract whereby the city would agree to indemnify a private, for profit, health care center for financial losses which the center might experience over a two year period of time. Under the proposed agreement, the city would agree to indemnify the private corporation for fifty percent of any loss that the corporation might incur in operating the center up to $1,500.00 per month for a period of time not to exceed 24 months. It appears from the information contained in the proposed agreement that the center in question is to be created by making certain minor renovations to an existing office of a local doctor who presumably already provides medical care to the inhabitants of the city. You state in your letter that although the emergency health care center would be located within the city, the center would serve the people within the western part of Levy County, a large portion of Gilchrist County, and all of Dixie County; thus you conclude that the city could be indemnifying the private corporation for losses the major portion of which or all of which occurred outside of the City of Chiefland.
Section 10, Art. VII, State Const., prohibits the state or counties or municipalities or any agency thereof from using, giving, or lending its taxing power or credit to aid any private interest or individual. The purpose of this constitutional provision is "to protect public funds and resources from being exploited in assisting or promoting private ventures when the public would be at most only incidentally benefited." Bannon v. Port of Palm Beach District,
Furthermore, s 1, Art. VII, State Const., impliedly limits the imposition of taxes and the expenditures of tax revenues to public purposes. See, Board of Commissioners v. Board of Pilot Commissioners,
[C]onstruction of a doctor's building by a county or hospital corporation to be leased to and operated under the supervision and control of private physicians in the private practice of medicine would probably violate the constitutional prohibition against a county's or special district's using its taxing power or credit in aid of private persons or corporations.
In the instant situation, the indemnification of a private for profit corporation would impose a new financial obligation upon the municipality which would create a municipal debt for the benefit of a private enterprise. While the public would receive some benefit from the provision of emergency medical services to the city's inhabitants, this indemnification agreement would in my opinion primarily serve a private as opposed to a public purpose, and therefore, would probably violate the constitutional prohibition against a city using its taxing power or credit in aid of private persons or corporations.
It is therefore my opinion that a municipality is prohibited by s 10, Art. VII, State Const., from agreeing to indemnify a private for profit corporation for financial losses which might be suffered over the term of the agreement in the provision of emergency medical services to the inhabitants of a three county area.
Sincerely,
Jim Smith Attorney General
Prepared by:
Craig Willis Assistant Attorney General
Markham v. State, Dept. of Revenue ( 1974 )
Nohrr v. Brevard County Educational Fac. Auth. ( 1971 )
Bailey v. City of Tampa ( 1926 )
Brumby v. City of Clearwater ( 1933 )
ORANGE COUNTY INDUS. DEVELOP. AUTH. v. State ( 1983 )
Bannon v. Port of Palm Beach District ( 1971 )