HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council and Mayor-1978 �sr a$H
STATE OF FLORIDA
/ ! ) DEPARTMENT OF LEGAL AFFAIRS
s' FFL097 OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
THE CAPITOL
ROBERT L. SHEVIN TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA 32304
Attorney General
March 2 , 1978
078-31
Mr. Gary E. Massey
City Attorney for the City
of Winter Springs
Winter Park Federal Building
355 East Semoran Boulevard
Altamonte Springs, Florida 32701
Re: MUNICIPALITIES--CITY COUNCIL AND MAYOR--
under municipal charter vesting all power
in city council and authorizing mayor to
appoint a member of council to supervise
and direct any particular phase of city
government, such appointments of council-
men by the mayor are not subject to
approval of council. Art. IV, Charter of
City of Winter Springs, Ch. 72-718 , Laws of
Florida.
Dear Mr. Massey:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the
following question:
UNDER THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF WINTER
SPRINGS, WHO HAS THE AUTHORITY TO APPOINT
COUNCILMEN TO HEAD THE DEPARTMENTS OF THE
CITY?
As a general rule, the council or other governing body of a
municipal corporation is the general agent of the corporation
for all purposes and exercises all the corporate powers not
expressly committed by law to other boards or officers.
078-31
Mr. Gary E. Massey
Page Two
63 C.J.S., Municipal Corporations, §153 , p. 313 . With
respect to the power of appointment to municipal boards or
agencies, the general rule is that in the absence of a
charter provision authorizing the mayor or some other officer
to exercise such power, the council or governing body is the
only agency which may exercise the power to appointment.
Ex Parte Stone, 192 P. 71 (Cal. 1920) ; City of Princeton v.
Woodruff, 104 N.E.2d 748 (Ind. 1952) ; Foti v. Montero, 146
So. 2d 789 (La. 1962) . Thus, unless the charter so directs ,
the mayor has no authority to appoint municipal officers.
The mayor, on the other hand, is generally deemed to be the
chief executive officer of the city. 63 C.J.S., Municipal
Corporations, §542 , p. 998. However, the actual functions
and powers of the mayor are derived from and depend entirely
on the municipal charter; the mayor possesses only those
powers expressly granted or necessarily implied therefrom.
Cf. , Municipal Court, City of Fort Lauderdale v. Patrick,
241 So. 2d 195 (Fla. 1970) , aff'd 254 So.2d 193 (Fla. 1971) ,
in which the court held that a city charter provision autho-
rizing the mayor to take command of the police force and
govern by proclamation under the direction of the city com-
mission during times of grave public emergency, did not confer
authority on the mayor to establish a curfew in an area of the
city affected by riot, in view of another provision of the
city charter which vested the legislative power in the council
and required that enactments of a penal nature be effected by
ordinance. The mayor' s functions as prescribed in the munici-
pal charter differ in various municipalities. The mayor' s
power may be legislative, executive or judicial, according to
the particular governing law. In some cities, the mayor as
chief executive has supervision over the minor officers of the
municipality not expressly made subject to the control of other
officers or boards, while in others his powers are primarily
executive and administrative and, as the executive head of the
municipality, he has general supervision over all the depart-
ments of the city government. See 63 C.J.S. , Municipal
Corporations, §543 (a) , p. 999.
It would appear that an important factor in considering the
relationship of the mayor to the city council , and the alloca-
tion of legislative and executive power between elected munici-
pal officers, is the form of city government which is
contemplated by the city charter. In McQuillan, Municipal
Corporations, §912 , p. 643 , the author lists various types
Mr. Gary E. Massey 078-31
Page Three
of municipal government, the most common of which are the
mayor-and-council or aldermanic plan; the commission-manager
plan; and the commission plan. Each of these plans compre-
hends different powers and functions of the mayor and the
governing body.
In the mayor-and-council system, the executive and adminis-
trative affairs of the municipality are in the hands of the
mayor, while the legislative power is vested in the council.
McQuillan, Municipal Corporations, §9.17, p. 655. The munici-
pal charter generally gives to the mayor the power of appoint-
ment of all principal officers, except those who are elected. Id.
In the commission form of government, the commissioners or
members constitute a municipal board and exercise all municipal
powers, including legislative, executive, administrative and
judicial. McQuillan, Municipal Corporations, §9.18, p. 661.
The commission plan has been held constitutional in most states,
the courts reasoning that constitutional principles of separation
of powers are not applicable to municipalities. Id; and also
see Kaufman v. City of Tallahassee, 94 So. 697, 699 (Fla. 1923) .
In some cities possessing the commission form, the electors vote
by name for an individual commissioner to take charge of a
department; in others, the commissioners as a body assign the
commissioners to various departments. Id. at 667. Each commis-
sioner then serves as the head of, and administers, the depart-
ment for which he is responsible. Id.
The commission-manager form of government places the executive
and administrative functions in the hands of a city manager.
McQuillan, Municipal Corporations, §9. 21, p. 678. 63 C.J.S. ,
Municipal Corporations, §543 (b) , p. 999 . The commission con-
stitutes a legislative or policy-making body which generally
supervises the city manager. See, Bryant v. City of Lakeland,
28 So. 2d 106 (Fla. 1947) . The city charter may authorize the
city manager to appoint department heads. See, Glendinning
v. Cherry, 14 So.2d 794 (Fla. 1943) .
An examination of the Winter Springs City Charter (Ch. 72-718 ,
Laws of Florida) reveals that the form of government provided
therein does not exactly approximate any of the three forms
discussed above. The charter provides for a five-member city
council and a mayor. Art. IV, §§4. 01 , 4 . 05 . The general powers
and duties of the council are set forth at Art. IV, §4 . 06:
Mr. Gary E. Massey 078-31
Page Four
All powers of the city shall be vested in
the council, except as otherwise provided
by law or this charter, and the council
shall provide for the exercise thereof and
for the performance of all duties and obliga-
tions imposed on the city by law. (e. s. )
In addition, Art. VII, §7. 01 states that the council
"may establish city departments, officers
or agencies in addition to those created
by this charter and may prescribe the
functions of all departments, offices and
agencies. " (e.s. )
The powers and duties of the mayor are provided in Art. IV,
§4 . 05 :
At each regular election, a mayor shall be
elected for a term of two years. He shall
preside at meetings of the council , shall
be recognized as head of the city govern-
ment for all ceremonial purposes, and be
the governor for purposes of military law.
the mayor of the city shall be the
chief executive officer of the city and
shall act and serve as chairman of the city
council. The mayor shall not vote except
in case of a tie vote of the council. The
mayor may appoint a member of the city
council to supervise and direct any partic-
ular phase of the government of the city.
Within ten days after the adoption of any
ordinance by the city council , the mayor
shall have the power to veto said ordinance
and return it to the council at the next
regular meeting with a written message.
It shall require a two-thirds vote of the
city council to pass the ordinance after
the mayor' s veto. (e. s. )
Other duties of the mayor are set forth in other parts of the
charter and include, inter alia, the authority and duty,
subject to the approval of the council , to appoint a city
clerk (Art. IV, §4 . 10) and appoint a city attorney (Art. VII ,
Mr. Gary E. Massey 078-31
Page Five
§7 . 02) , and to prepare the city' s budget (Art. VIII, §8.02)
for submission to the city council.
It should be noted that under Art. VI, of the charter, the
city council is authorized, but not required, to appoint a
city manager who shall be "chief administrative officer" of
the city. However, I have been informed that the city council
has not appointed a city manager; the town is currently governed
by the mayor and council.
When Art. IV, §54 .01 and 4. 05 of the charter are read together,
it is apparent that all power (executive, legislative and ad-
ministrative) is vested in the city council, except as other-
wise provided by law or the charter. Thus, although the mayor
is designated "chief executive officer, " in reality the mayor
possesses only those executive powers which have been expressly
granted him; the council is vested with all other executive
powers. Cf. , Art. VI, §6. 03 , Ch. 72-718 , Laws of Florida,
providing, inter alia, that the city manager shall be respon-
sible to the city council for all administrative affairs placed
in his charge by or under the charter, and perform such other
duties as may be required of him by the council.
It appears, therefore, that the charter (absent implementation
of Art. VI , §§6. 01-6. 03, of the charter by the city council by
appointment of a city manager) essentially contemplates a
commission form of government, where the mayor is authorized to
determine which councilman shall administer a particular phase
of the municipal government. There is no provision in the
charter which makes the mayor' s assignment or appointment of
the councilmen to supervise and direct particular phases of
city government subject to the approval of the council; there-
fore, the council is not authorized to approve or disapprove
the mayor' s choices. Cf. , Indyk v. Klink, 297 A. 2d 5 (N.J.
1972) , holding that where a governing statute provided that
all administrative functions were to be allocated to one or
another of the municipal departments with the head of each
department appointed by the mayor, the town council was unau-
thorized to appoint a city attorney or city manager. Moreover,
it might further be noted that the authority of the mayor to
appoint a councilman to supervise and direct any particular
phase of the city government relates to the form of government
and the distribution of powers among elected officers. See
§166 . 021 (4) , F.S. Changes in the form of municipal government
and the distribution of powers among elected officials cannot
078-31
Mr. Gary E. Massey
Page Six
be made by the city council pursuant to its home rule powers
under Ch. 166 , F.S. , without approval by referendum of the
city' s electors as provided in §166. 031 , F.S. In the absence
of such approval, the cited provisions of the charter act
govern and control both the city council and the mayor in
this regard.
The foregoing analysis of the City of Winter Springs Charter
harmonizes and gives effect to each of the subject provisions
of the charter and further permits the mayor and the council
to each possess their own "lawful spheres of operation. " See
generally, Alsop v. Pierce, 19 So. 2d 799 (Fla. 1942) .
Your question is answered accordingly.
S U M M A R Y
A municipal charter which vests all powers of the city in
the governing body, and which authorizes the mayor "to
appoint a member of the city council to supervise and direct
any particular phase of the government of the city . . . " con-
templates a commission form of government wherein executive
and legislative power is vested in the city council. Under
such charter, the mayor is authorized to select a councilman
and assign or appoint him to supervise and direct a particu-
lar phase of the municipal government.
Sincerely, 1
ROB'RT L. SHE IN
AT ORNEY GENERAL
Prepared By:
Patricia Oti� 4/4. G son
Assistant Attorney General
RLS/PRG/acb