1992-09-08 City's Oppos. to DCA M/Dis t
STATE OF FLORIDA
DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
CITY OF OKEECHOBEE, )
Petitioner, )
vs . ) DOAH Case No. 92-4909GM
) DCA Docket
No. 91-NOI-4701-( I)
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAIRS, )
Respondent. )
CITY OF OKEECHOBEE' s RESPONSE IN OPPOSITION
TO DCA' s MOTION TO DISMISS
Petitioner City of Okeechobee ( "City" ) , by and through its
undersigned attorneys, and pursuant to DOAH Rule 22I-6 . 016 , Florida
Administrative Code, hereby files this response in opposition to
the Department of Community Affairs ' ( "DCA" or "Department" ) Motion
to Dismiss filed on August 26 , 1992 in the above-referenced case.
In support of its response the City states as follows :
The Statute
1 . Section 163 . 3184 ( 7 ) and ( 15) (a) , Florida Statutes,
requires that each local government shall adopt its comprehensive
plan by ordinance prior to transmitting its plan to the state for
a determination of whether the plan is in compliance or not in
compliance .
2 . Under Section 163 . 3194 ( 1) (a) , Florida Statutes, after a
local government has adopted its comprehensive plan by ordinance,
the plan is legally in effect and all development undertaken by,
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and all actions taken in regard to development orders, shall be
consistent with such plan or element as adopted.
3 . Section 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) (a) , Florida Statutes, provides that if
the DCA issues a notice of intent to find a local government ' s
comprehensive plan in compliance, any affected person may file a
petition with the DCA pursuant to Section 120 . 57 within 21 days
after the publication of notice.
4 . Section 163 . 3184 ( 11) (a) , Florida Statutes, provides that
if the Administration Commission ( "Commission" ) finds that the
comprehensive plan is not in compliance, there are three courses of
action available to the Commission: (a) " [ It] shall specify
remedial actions which would bring the comprehensive plan. . . into
compliance" ; (b) " [ It] may direct state agencies not to provide
[certain] funds [to] those local governmental entities which have
comprehensive plans . . .that are determined not to be in compliance" ;
and (c) " [ It] may also specify that the local government shall not
be eligible for [certain grant and revenue sharing] programs . "
5 . There is no provision in Chapter 163 , Part II, Florida
Statutes, which requires or compels a local government whose plan
has been found to be not in compliance to adopt the remedial
actions specified by the Commission. The only sanctions which the
Commission may administer against a non-compliant local government
which refuses to adopt the specified remedial actions are those
authorized under Section 163 . 3184 ( 11) (a) .
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The Model Rules of Procedure
6 . "The Model Rules of Procedure govern administrative
hearings ' to the extent that [a referring] agency has not adopted
its own specific rules of procedure covering the subject matter
contained in [Chapter 28-5 ] applicable to that agency. ' Model Rule
28-5 . 101 . " Robert T. Benton and G. Steven Pfeiffer, "Administrative
Adjudication" , pg. 4-10 (Published in Florida Administrative
Practice, Third Edition, The Florida Bar Continuing Legal
Education) ( "Administrative Adjudication" ) .
7 . Chapter 28-5, Florida Administrative Code, is the chapter
of the Model Rules of Procedure which pertains to Decisions
Determining Substantial Interests . Model Rule 28-5 . 201, Florida
Administrative Code, is titled "Initiation of Formal Proceedings"
and provides in pertinent part: "Initiation of formal proceedings
shall be made by petition to the Agency responsible for rendering
final Agency action. "
8 . Model Rule 28-5 . 205, Florida Administrative Code, is
titled "Motions in Opposition to Petition" and provides in
pertinent part: "Motions in opposition to a petition. . . include
motions to dismiss . . . shall be filed within twenty ( 20) days of
service of the petition. "
DCA' s Rules
9 . The DCA' s rules of procedure which pertain to Decisions
Determining Substantial Interests are contained in Chapter 9-5,
Florida Administrative Code. However, rather than adopt its own
specific rules which cover particular subjects contained in the
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Model Rules of Procedure for Decisions Determining Substantial
Interests, the DCA has adopted Rule 9-5 . 001, Florida Administrative
Code, which provides that the Department "will follow and conform
to the procedures as established in the Model Rules of Procedure as
found in Chapter 28-5, F.A.C. , and all applicable sections of
Chapter 120, Florida Statutes, with respect to all proceedings in
which substantial interests are determined by the Department . . . "
10 . DCA Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1) , Florida Administrative Code,
provides that requests to hold a hearing pursuant to Section
120 . 57, Florida Statutes, shall be filed with the Clerk of the
Department . Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1 ) also provides that the Department
shall act on such requests and grant or deny them within 15 days of
filing.
11 . DCA has also adopted procedural rules which address the
Department ' s compliance review of local government comprehensive
plans . These rules govern the submission of plans to the
Department, the issuance of notices of intent concerning such plans
and requests for formal hearings in the event that the DCA issues
a notice of intent ( "NOI" ) to find a plan in compliance. See DCA
Rule 9J-11 . 012 , Florida Administrative Code.
12 . DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (a) , like Model Rule 28-5 . 201 and
DCA Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1) , also requires that the petition shall be filed
with the DCA Clerk.
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13 . DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 (8) (a) requires that each petition
satisfy eight ( 8) criteria. Only one of the criteria requires
information about the local government which has adopted the
comprehensive plan which is the subject of the Department ' s NOI .
Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (a) 6 . requires that the petition shall contain:
A statement identifying the comprehensive plan or plan
amendment(s ) which is challenged, including the name of
the local government, date of adoption, ordinance
number( s ) or other specific formal designation(s ) .
14 . DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (a) , Florida Administrative Code,
does not require that the local government which has adopted the
plan be joined as a party respondent.
15 . DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (d) , Florida Administrative Code,
provides in pertinent part:
If a petition is filed that does not substantially comply
with the requirements of subsection ( 8) (a) of this rule,
the Department shall issue an order dismissing the
petition with leave to file an amended petition complying
with the requirements of this rule. . .
16 . Unlike DCA Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1) which provides that the
Department shall act on a request for a hearing and grant or deny
it within 15 days of filing, DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (d) does not
state a period of time in which the Department will determine if
the petition substantially complies with the eight ( 8) criteria
contained in Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (a) , Florida Administrative Code.
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The City' s Petition
17 . On August 3, 1992 , the City filed a petition with the DCA
Clerk which addressed all of the eight ( 8 ) criteria contained in
Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (a) , Florida Administrative Code. (A copy of the
first page of the City' s petition for administrative hearing
showing the executed filing and acknowledgement statement of the
DCA Clerk is attached as Exhibit "A" and is incorporated by
reference herein. )
18 . With regard to the requirement of Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (a) 6 .
concerning the name of the local government which has adopted the
comprehensive plan, ¶18 of the City' s petition alleges that on
April 2 , 1992 , the Board of County Commissioners of Okeechobee
County held a public hearing on the proposed plan, and at the
conclusion of the public hearing voted to adopt Ordinance 92-05 by
which the County adopted the Okeechobee County Comprehensive Plan.
DCA' s Forwarding of the City' s Petition to DOAH
19 . On August 11, 1992 DCA forwarded the City' s Petition to
the Director of the Division of Administrative Hearings ( "DOAH" or
"Division" ) for assignment to a hearing officer. (A copy of DCA' s
cover letter of transmittal forwarding the petition to DOAH is
attached as Exhibit "B" and is incorporated by reference herein. )
In its cover letter of transmittal, the DCA stated:
By merely forwarding these petitions the Department does
not assume responsibility for complying with filing
requirements of the Division of Administrative Hearings
and does not waive any right of the Department to raise
objections to the petitions .
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20 . On August 18, 1992 , during a telephone conversation with
the undersigned attorney for the City, counsel for DCA said that
she had been instructed by a supervising attorney in the DCA Office
of General Counsel to forward the City' s petition to DOAH contrary
to her own recommendation that the Department enter an order
dismissing the petition with leave to file an amended petition as
is provided for in DCA Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (b) , Florida Administrative
Code. Counsel for DCA further said that even though the Department
may have found the City' s petition sufficient as a matter of law
under the Department ' s own Rule 9J-11 . 012 (8) (b) , counsel for DCA
was still considering whether to recommend to her supervisors that
the Department move to dismiss the City' s petition for failure to
join an indispensable party.
21 . On August 24 , 1992 , the Department filed a motion to
dismiss in the above-referenced case on the grounds that the City
failed to join an indispensable party and failed to state a cause
of action upon which relief may be granted.
ARGUMENT
THE MOTION WAS NOT TIMELY FILED WITHIN 20 DAYS
OF FILING OF THE PETITION
22 . The Department' s motion to dismiss was not timely filed.
The motion to dismiss was filed on August 26, 1992 , 23 days after
the City initiated these proceedings by filing its petition with
the DCA Clerk. The City timely filed its petition with the DCA
Clerk and served its petition upon the Department in accordance
with Section 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) (a) , Florida Statutes, Model Rule 28-5 . 201
and DCA Rules 9-5 . 002 ( 1) and 9J-11 . 012, Florida Administrative
7
Code. ' In filing its motion, the Department should be required to
act consistent with the procedural strictures of its own rules
regarding filing and initiation of proceedings, including DCA Rules
9-5 . 002 ( 1 ) and 9J-11 . 012 . The DCA has also adopted Rule 9-5 . 001
which requires that the Department follow and conform to Model Rule
28-5 . 201 regarding initiation of proceedings and filing of
petitions . Most importantly, by adopting Rule 9-5 . 001 the DCA is
required to follow and conform to Model Rule 28-5 . 205 which
requires that motions in opposition to a petition, including
motions to dismiss, shall be filed within twenty (20) days of
service of the petition. The Department did not follow or conform
to Model Rule 28-5 . 205 when it filed its motion in opposition to
the City' s petition.
23 . The fact that the DCA stated in its cover letter of
transmittal to DOAH that by forwarding the petition to the Division
the Department did not want to be construed as having "waive[d] any
right of the Department to raise objections to the petition" does
not exempt the Department from the timely filing requirement of
Model Rule 28-5 . 205 .
1 The City disagrees with the assertion of the DCA made in ¶1
of the Department ' s motion which states : "On August 11, 1992 , the
petition was filed. . .thus trigger[ing] a request for administrative
hearing pursuant to Section 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) , F. S . " The City' s petition
may have been "forwarded" to the Division on August 11, 1992 but it
was filed on August 3, 1992 at the moment the Department ' s Clerk
stamped and executed the Department ' s filing and acknowledgement
statement on the petition. See Exhibit "A" .
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24 . The Department did not file its motion in opposition
within 20 days of the filing of the petition with the DCA Clerk.
It filed its motion in opposition 23 days after said filing. DCA
was 3 days late. Therefore, the motion should be rejected as
having been untimely filed.
THE DCA WAIVED ITS RIGHT TO MOVE TO DISMISS THE PETITION WHEN IT
FOUND THE PETITION SUBSTANTIALLY COMPLIED WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF
THE DEPARTMENT' S OWN RULE 9J-11 . 012 (8) (b) .
25 . The DCA waived its right to move to dismiss the City' s
petition when the Department found that the petition substantially
complied with the requirements of its own Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (b) and
forwarded the petition to DOAH. Having chosen not to exercise any
authority it may have had under its own rules to determine that the
City' s petition does not substantially comply, the DCA should not
now be heard to object to the City' s petition before DOAH based on
theories of mandatory joinder or indispensable parties . 2 Such
2 The City does not admit that the DCA has authority under
Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) (d) , Florida Administrative Code, to find the
petition not in substantial compliance with the requirements of
subsection ( 8 ) (a) of the rule for failure to join Okeechobee County
as a party respondent. Rule 9J-11 . 012 does not contain a
requirement that the City join the County as a party respondent.
In the absence of an express joinder requirement in Rule 9J-11 . 012 ,
any interpretation by the Department of its rule as requiring
joinder of the County constitutes an impermissible interpretation
of its rule.
The City also notes that the Department has not included a
specific prayer for relief in its motion or otherwise stated
whether it seeks to dismiss the City' s petition with or without
prejudice . The Department may have omitted a specific prayer from
its motion so as to avoid committing itself in writing to an
argument which could be used to demonstrate that the DCA is
impermissibly interpreting its own rule. Because the City believes
that the Department may have filed its motion to dismiss for
improper purposes, i .e. , including attempting to enforce its non-
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theories , if applicable at all in administrative proceedings ,
should have been raised by the DCA when the petition was within the
purview of the Department ' s own jurisdiction. Nonjoinder of
parties is not a jurisdictional defect which may be raised at any
time. Valparaiso Realty Company v. City of Valparaiso, 473 So. 2d
1 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985) .
26 . Furthermore, the City argues in the alternative, that the
DCA waived its right to ask the hearing officer to dismiss the
City' s petition when the Department failed to follow its own Rule
9-5 . 002 ( 1 ) , which requires that the Department shall act on a
request to hold a formal hearing pursuant to Section 120 . 57 , and
grant or deny such request within 15 days of the filing of the
petition. DCA' s Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (d) , which is silent with regard
to the period of time within which the Department should find the
petition sufficient, should be construed in pari materia with DCA
Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1) which requires that a request for formal hearing be
granted or denied by the Department within 15 days .
27 . Finally, the City further argues in the alternative, that
even if DCA did not waive its right to request that the hearing
officer dismiss the petition, the DCA should be barred from arguing
dismissal now before DOAH because the Department did not file its
rule policy interpretation of its Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8 ) (a) as requiring
joinder of the County through adjudication and entry of an order of
dismissal, rather than rule-making as required by law, the City has
contemporaneously filed a motion for entry of an order striking the
DCA' s motion to dismiss or requiring the Department to withdraw or
amend its motion under pain of additional sanctions including
attorney' s fees . See, Good Samaritan Hospital vs . DHRS, 582 So. 2d
722 (Fla. 4th DCA 1991) .
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motion with the hearing officer within 15 days of the August 3,
1992 filing of the petition. To allow the Department to file such
a motion within 15 days of "forwarding the petition to DOAH" rather
than within 15 days of the filing of the petition with the DCA
Clerk, would allow the Department to circumvent the requirement of
Rule 9-5 . 002 ( 1) that the Department will inform persons filing
petitions with the DCA whether their petitions are granted or
denied with 15 days of filing. Persons petitioning state agencies
should be able to rely upon the commitments which the agency has
made in its procedural rules regarding the timely disposition of
requests for formal proceedings .
THE MOTION IGNORES BOTH FUNDAMENTAL ADMINISTRATIVE LAW PRINCIPLES
CONCERNING SECTION 120 . 57 ( 1) CHALLENGES TO PRELIMINARY STATE AGENCY
ACTION AND THE LIMITED INCLUSION OF COUNTY GOVERNMENTS IN THE APA' s
DEFINITION OF AGENCY
28 . The City' s petition has satisfied each and every
requirement of Sections 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) and 120 . 57 ( 1 ) , Florida
Statutes, and DCA' s rules . None of these substantive and
procedural authorities require the City to join Okeechobee County
as a party respondent . Therefore, the DCA' s motion to dismiss
should be denied because the City has done everything that it was
required to do by statute and rule.
29 . The Department' s motion should be denied because it
fundamentally ignores established legal principles concerning
challenges to preliminary agency action which have been an integral
part of Florida ' s Administrative Procedures Act ( "APA" ) , Chapter
120, Florida Statutes, since it was enacted 18 years ago.
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30 . DCA' s motion ignores both the provisions of Chapter 163,
Part II, Florida Statutes, and the plain language of the City' s
petition, which challenges only DCA' s preliminary agency action in
issuing a notice of intent to find Okeechobee County' s plan "in
compliance" . Nowhere in Section 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) (a) , Florida Statutes,
is the local government whose plan is subject to the DCA' s NOI
mentioned as a required party to the proceeding.
31 . Indeed, Okeechobee County' s action in adopting its
comprehensive plan cannot even be described as the type of agency
action normally subject to challenge in Section 120 . 57 ( 1)
proceedings . In adopting its comprehensive plan by ordinance, the
County has not taken "preliminary agency action" . The County has
taken what can best be described as final local government action.
Okeechobee County has adopted a comprehensive plan which is
presently in effect and legally operative. Once the County had
adopted its plan by ordinance, there was nothing preliminary about
the County' s action at all -- all development undertaken by, and
all actions taken in regard to development orders , was required to
be consistent with such plan or element as soon as it was adopted.
Section 163 . 3194 ( 1) (a) , Florida Statutes .
32 . Furthermore, Okeechobee County' s action in adopting its
comprehensive plan is not even the type of local government
decisionmaking which is occasionally contemplated as being subject
to Section 120 . 57 ( 1) challenges . Under Section 120 . 52 ( 1) (c) ,
Florida Statutes, "counties" are defined as "agencies" subject to
Chapter 120 "only to the extent they are expressly made subject to
12
[the APA] by general law or special law or existing judicial
decisions . " Since the relevant general law at issue in this
proceeding, Section 163 . 3184 (9 ) (a) , Florida Statutes, does not even
mention the County as a required party and expressly subjects only
DCA' s preliminary agency action in issuing a notice of intent to
find the County' s plan in compliance to Section 120 . 57 ( 1)
challenge, the City' s petition properly joined only the DCA as a
party respondent.
33 . Finally, since the City' s petition satisfies the
procedural and statutory prerequisites contained in Chapter 120 and
Chapter 163, Part II , Florida Statutes, DOAH jurisdiction in these
types of cases attaches as a matter of statutory right . The
Division' s jurisdiction should not be subject to what is in effect
a thinly veiled motion to relinquish jurisdiction parading in the
clothes of a motion to dismiss . This should be readily apparent in
view of the arguments made above concerning the DCA' s waiver of its
right to determine the petition to be not in substantial compliance
with the Department ' s own rules .
THE MOTION IGNORES THE DISTINCTION UNDER FLORIDA' S GROWTH
MANAGEMENT ACT BETWEEN THE EXERCISE OF FISCAL POWER BY THE STATE IN
APPLYING SANCTIONS AND THE EXERCISE OF POLICE POWER BY LOCAL
GOVERNMENTS IN ESTABLISHING AND IMPLEMENTING COMPREHENSIVE PLANNING
PROGRAMS TO GUIDE AND CONTROL FUTURE DEVELOPMENT
34 . In justification for its motion to dismiss for failure to
join an indispensable party, the Department asserts in ¶3 and ¶5 of
its motion that if the Administration Commission ultimately
determines Okeechobee County' s plan to be "not in compliance" , the
Commission will not be able to "require" or "order" Okeechobee
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County to amend its plan unless it has in personam jurisdiction
over the County. This assertion completely distorts the intended
legislative distinction between the exercise of fiscal power by the
state in applying sanctions to a noncompliant local government and
the exercise of the police power by a local government in
establishing and implementing a comprehensive planning program to
guide and control future development within its jurisdiction.
35 . Section 163 . 3184 ( 11) (a) , Florida Statutes, provides that
the Administration Commission only has three courses of action
available to it after finding a local government ' s plan to be "not
in compliance" : (a) " [ It] shall specify remedial actions which
would bring the comprehensive plan. . . into compliance" ; (b) " [ It]
may direct state agencies not to provide [certain] funds [to] those
local governmental entities which have comprehensive plans . . . that
are determined not to be in compliance" ; and (c) " [ It] may also
specify that the local government shall not be eligible for
[certain grant and revenue sharing] programs . "
36 . Contrary to DCA' s assertion, there is no provision
anywhere in Chapter 163, Part II , Florida Statutes, through which
the Commission may require or compel a local government whose plan
has been found to be not in compliance, to adopt the remedial
actions specified by the Administration Commission. All that is
available is the imposition of sanctions which the Commission may
administer under Section 163 . 3184 ( 11) (a) . The Florida courts have
recently recognized the distinction between specifying remedial
actions and/or imposing sanctions, and compelling a local
14
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government to adopt amendments . In Florida League of Cities et al .
vs . Administration Commission and DCA, 586 So. 2d 397 (Fla. 1st DCA
1991) , the First District Court of Appeal chose to describe fiscal
sanctions under Florida ' s Growth Management Act as a mere
"disincentive" to noncompliance. The court went on to recognize
that the Commission' s existing policy on sanctions "only poses a
substantial disincentive ' to those local government whose plans
are not in compliance for a substantial period of time. " Id. at
409 . A non-compliant local government may choose not to view the
imposition of financial sanctions as a substantial disincentive to
remaining in noncompliance. Such a local government may
legitimately choose to ignore the specified remedial actions,
legally refuse to amend its plan, suffer the pain of fiscal
sanctions and avoid Section 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) proceedings all together if
it wishes . The Department ' s theory of indispensable joinder of the
County does not hold up to a rigorous analysis of the statutory
framework.
37 . The Department ' s argument that Okeechobee County is
indispensable in these proceedings is further weakened by Section
163 . 3184 ( 13) , Florida Statutes, titled "Exclusive Proceedings"
which provides : "The proceedings under this section shall be the
sole proceeding or action for a determination of whether a local
government ' s plan, element, or amendment is in compliance with this
act. " A determination of whether a local government ' s plan is in
compliance is not a determination which mandates that a local
government shall be required to amend its plan to bring it into
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compliance.
38 . Florida ' s Growth Management Act does not preempt the
power of local governments to exercise their constitutional police
powers to establish and implement comprehensive planning programs
to guide and control future development . Nor does the act delegate
to DCA, DOAH or the Administration Commission the authority to
exercise the police power of the state to amend or change the
legislative decisions of a local government regarding a community' s
plan which has been legally adopted by the elected governing body
of a non-compliant local government. Only the elected members of
a non-compliant local government ' s governing body may make the
legislative decision of whether or not to adopt the specified
remedial actions through an amendment to its adopted comprehensive
plan which would bring the plan into compliance with the act.
39 . DCA may want Okeechobee County to be a party to these
proceedings . Okeechobee County may itself ultimately decide to
become a party to the proceedings to protect its interests in
avoiding fiscal sanctions . However, the DCA' s wish and the
County' s ultimate decision as to whether to enter this case or not
are not equivalent issues to the question presented here concerning
whether the City should be required to join the County as a party
respondent.
40 . The City submits that the proper procedure to be utilized
by DCA if it wishes the County to come in, is for the Department to
file a motion for joinder under DOAH Rule 22I-6 . 012 , Florida
Administrative Code. The City further submits that should the
16
•
County desire to come in to protect its own interests, it may do so
by filing a petition for leave to intervene under DOAH Rule 22I-
6 . 010, Florida Administrative Code.
THE AMBIGUITY IN THE MOTION SHOULD BE CONSTRUED AGAINST THE
DEPARTMENT AND SHOULD THE HEARING OFFICER DECIDE TO ENTER A
RECOMMENDED ORDER OF DISMISSAL, THE DISMISSAL SHOULD BE WITHOUT
PREJUDICE AND WITH LEAVE TO AMEND
41 . "Motions to dismiss can be and are in fact used to test
the sufficiency of a petition. Because granting such a motion with
prejudice amounts to final agency action, however, the Model Rules
provide that a ruling on such a motion shall be incorporated in a
recommended order, and can be finally disposed of only by the
Agency head. ' Fla. Admin. Code Model Rule 28-5 . 205 . " Benton and
Pfeiffer, Administrative Adjudication, supra, pg. 4-13 .
42 . DOAH Rule 22I-6 . 016 ( 3) , Florida Administrative Code,
provides that whenever a motion recommends action by the agency
head which is dispositive of a matter, it shall be incorporated in
a recommended order. Therefore, should the hearing officer decide
to grant the Department ' s motion, a recommended order back to the
Department would be required.
43 . However, the DCA' s motion to dismiss is ambiguous . The
motion does not contain a prayer for relief . Nor does the motion
state whether the Department seeks to have the City' s petition
dismissed with prejudice or without prejudice. The City asserts
that the ambiguity in the motion should be construed against the
Department who drafted it and therefore should the hearing officer
decide to enter a recommended order granting the Department' s
17
motion, it should be without prejudice and with leave to amend.
WHEREFORE, Petitioner City of Okeechobee respectfully requests
that the hearing officer enter an order denying DCA' s motion to
dismiss .
Respectful) submitted on
September i , 1992 by:
Z
Michael Wm. Morell
Attorney at Law
310 West College Avenue
Tallahassee, Florida 32301-1406
( 904 ) 425-8300
and
John R. Cook
City Attorney
City of Okeechobee
202 N.W. 5th Avenue
Okeechobee, Florida 34972
( 813) 467-0297
Attorneys for City of Okeechobee
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a copy of the above and foregoing has
provided by hand delivery to Karen Brodeen, Assistant General
Counsel, Department of Community Affairs, 2740 Centerview Drive,
Tallahassee, Florida, 32399-2100 and by U. S . Mail to John D.
Cassels, Jr. , County Attorney, Okeechobee County, 400 N.W. Second
Street, P.O. Box 968 , Okeechobee, FL 34973 on this ,k11 day of
September, 1992 .
QAC a_ II
Michael Wm. Morell
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FILING AND ACKNOWLEDGENENI
FILED, oh :Ns date,with the des+ignahed
Department Clerk, receipt or which
is hereby acknoiiiedged.
STATE OF FLORIDA �� � 1
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAI '-v eto d (/.3
Jan Bass " - , Date
CITY OF OKEECHOBEE, ) De•- tment Clerk
Petitioner, )
vs . ) DCA Docket
No. 91-NOI-4701-( I)
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAIRS, )
Respondent. )
PETITION FOR ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING
Petitioner, CITY OF OKEECHOBEE, by and through its undersigned
attorneys , hereby files this Petition for Administrative Hearing
pursuant to Sections 163 . 3184 ( 9 ) (a) and 120 . 57 ( 1) , Florida
Statutes, and Rule 9J-11 . 012 ( 8) , Florida Administrative Code. In
support of this Petition, Petitioner states as follows :
A. BACKGROUND
1 . The agency involved in this proceeding is the Florida
Department of Community Affairs (DCA) , 2740 Centerview Drive,
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2100 . The DCA docket number for this
matter is 91-NOI-4701-(I ) . The DCA is the designated state land
planning agency, pursuant to Section 163 . 3164 ( 19 ) , Florida
Statutes .
2 . The Petition is filed on behalf of the City of Okeechobee,
Florida ( "Petitioner" or "City" ) , a Florida Municipal Corporation.
Petitioner' s address is 55 Southeast 3rd Avenue, Okeechobee,
Florida 34974 .
1
Exhibit "A"
111 F
',)D
STATE OF FLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAIRS
2 7 4 0 C E N T E R V I E W D R I V E • TALLAHASSEE , F L O R I D A 3 2 3 9 9 - 2 1 0 0
LAWTON CHILES
LINDA LOOMIS SHELLEY
Governor August 11, 1992
Secretary
Sharyn Smith, Director
Division of Administrative Hearings
The DeSoto Building
1230 Apalachee Parkway
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550
Dear Ms. Smith:
The following petitions are forwarded to you for assignment of
a hearing officer pursuant to Section 163 . 3184 (9) , F.S. : City of
Okeechobee v. Department of Community Affairs; Shirley Pinder v.
Department of Community Affairs and Okeechobee County (original and
amended petitions) ; and Florida Manufactured Housing Association.
Inc. v. Department of Community Affairs. These petitions are all
related as they all challenge the Department's notice to find the
Okeechobee County plan to be in compliance, Docket No. 91-NOI-4701-
I.
By merely forwarding these petitions the Department does not
assume responsibility for complying with filing requirements of the
Division of Administrative Hearings and does not waive any right of
the Department to raise objections to the petitions.
= Sincerely,
Karen Brodeen
Assistant General Counsel
'KB/ths
Enclosures
cc: John Cassels, County Attorney
Mike More11e (w/out attachments)
Robert Kennedy (w/out attachments)
Jack M. Skelding (w/out attachments)
David D. Eastman (w/out attachments)
Patrick Phelan (w/out attachments)
Burton C. Connor (w/out attachments)
John Cook (w/out attachments)
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT• HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT• RESOURCE PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
Exhibit "B"