For millennia, the proper interaction between religion and government has been a topic of debate in nations around the world. In America, the debate rages perhaps strongest in the public-school context. Noting that the State compels children to attend school and that students are especially susceptible to religious indoctrination, the United States Supreme Court has been leery of permitting religious speech within public-school classrooms during school hours. However, the Court has been more willing to uphold policies providing for religious speech on school campuses after school hours, so long as such policies contain two “special ingredients.” First, the policy must provide for both religious and non-religious speech on equal terms. Second, the policy’s provisions must ensure that any resulting religious speech would be attributable to the private choices of individuals and not to the government.
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One of our greatest rights as Americans is the freedom of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment. One of our most divisive issues today concerns a woman’s choice to have an abortion, though it, too, is a recognized right. Limiting the outbreaks of violence between supporters and protesters of abortion, while at the same time preserving the free-speech rights of these opposing sides, has become an increasing problem and places courts in a Catch-22. The United States Supreme Court recently reexamined these issues and this problem in Hill v. Colorado.
The Stetson Law Review recently addressed the Florida Fifth District Court of Appeal’s decision in Pomerance v. Homosassa Special Water District. That recent development, Taxation: Pomerance v. Homosassa Special Water District, concluded that the majority in a Fifth District panel improvidently affirmed Homosassa Special Water District’s (the District) special assessment for potable waterlines “even though [the] property consists primarily of wetlands, has limited development potential, and receives a less[er] benefit than adjacent lands.” This analysis suffered from a core omission. The authors were not aware of the facts of the case, which are not apparent from the reported decision. On its facts, the Pomerance decision was in step with over one hundred years of case law that presumes that property adjacent to a linear public improvement derives a special benefit from that improvement.
In Johnson v. De Soto County Board of Commissioners, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit upheld the district court’s reliance on non-census data to conclude that blacks could not, as of the time of trial, constitute a majority of the voters in a single-member district — an essential element of a racial vote-dilution claim. The trial court credited testimony of the defendants’ experts that, based on extrapolations from current voter-registration data, demographic changes in the eight years following the 1990 census had eliminated the possibility that a majority-black district could be established in the county. Whether the estimation process employed in De Soto County will be useful to future litigants depends on the degree to which the challenged jurisdiction has experienced significant demographic changes since April 1, 2000, the date of the most recent census.
In the opening paragraph of its decision in Harris v. Moore, Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeal summarized its holding as follows: “We reverse an order requiring that a proposed referendum ballot question be stricken from the Broward County ballot in the March 14, 2000, election.” For a Supervisor of Elections, in particular the Broward County Supervisor of Elections in this case, the words “stricken from the . . . ballot” provoke anxiety and uncertainties that often go overlooked by the real parties in interest in an election dispute.
The Supervisor of Elections is the instrument to provide relief in election disputes. The Supervisor of Elections takes on a unique role in such litigation: he or she usually takes no position on the main issue or underlying dispute, but must position himself or herself as to the relief sought in such disputes. Election lawsuits frequently reach their crescendo in the days and weeks leading up to the election. In election disputes of the nature involved in Harris v. Moore, there are two issues: (1) Who is right on the merits and (2) how to effectuate relief? How to effectuate relief is frequently treated as a collateral issue, but it should be the only real issue for a Supervisor of Elections.
Having represented the Secretary of State in the matter, I felt compelled to respond to Debra Tuomey’s case comment on Harris v. Moore. The comment indicates that, unless every aspect of the proposed changes to a county charter is clear to the average voter, the citizens of the jurisdiction should be prevented from voting on the matter at all. I believe that the appropriate emphasis is on allowing members of the electorate to decide the matter for themselves, unless the ballot summary is misleading in some significant manner.
What most disturbs me about the case comment is the assertion that the ballot summary failed to explain adequately the effect of the amendment, as required by Grose v. Firestone, and that the ballot summary did not make obvious to the average voter that the county manager would be replaced by a veto wielding, strong mayor.
The only realistic limits imposed on the police in our society are those defined by the courts. In a time of fear of crimes, both real and imagined, the social climate appears distinctly to favor a more aggressive approach to law enforcement and the public attitude is seemingly more accepting of fewer controls over the police.
The facts of the false arrest case of Melvin Walker, Leila Stephens, Terrance Tignor, and Otis Tignor against the City of Pompano Beach illustrate the danger innocent citizens can face in this modern society and, more significantly, the degree to which police discretion can subject any member of society to moments of helpless terror.
In Daley v. City of Sarasota, Florida’s Second District Court of Appeal struck down a municipality’s attempt to impose an absolute ban on amplified noise emanating from unenclosed structures within certain zoning districts during specified hours of the day and night. The appellate court found that, despite the City’s laudable goal in attempting to regulate unreasonable noise, the First Amendment prohibits local governments from completely banning amplified noise. The Second District Court of Appeal’s holding extends to amplified commercial noise as well. Hence, any attempt to regulate amplified noise is “subject to strict guidelines and definite standards closely related to permissible governmental interests” and “must be sufficiently definitive as to secure against arbitrary enforcement.”
In Young v. Progressive Southeastern Insurance Company, the Florida Supreme Court held that insurance provisions excepting self-insured vehicles from the definition of “uninsured motor vehicle” violated Florida public policy. The Young decision was a significant change in insurance law, and it may raise more questions than it answers in the complicated field of uninsured motorist coverage.
This “Last Word” first reviews the basic principles and history of uninsured-motorist law in Florida, then discusses the specific facts and holding of the Young case, and finally suggests how the Young decision may impact some of the basic principles of insurance law well beyond the original parameters of the case.
In July of 1988, the American Bar Association Commission on Legal Problems of the Elderly and Commission on the Mentally Disabled convened a National Guardianship Symposium that became known as Wingspread, after the conference center of that name in Racine, Wisconsin. The 1988 Wingspread Symposium produced a set of landmark recommendations for reform of the nation’s guardianship system. Wingspan—The Second National Guardianship Conference, was convened November 30 through December 2, 2001, more than a decade after the original 1988 Wingspread Symposium, to examine the progress made in the interim, and the steps that should be recommended for the future with respect to guardianship law, policy, and practice.