Court Opinion

ID: 9928334
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-31 16:05:25.302467+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:45:01.136341
License: Public Domain

Third District Court of Appeal
                               State of Florida

                       Opinion filed January 31, 2024.
       Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

                            ________________

                             No. 3D23-1082
                        Lower Tribunal No. 23-2633
                           ________________

                            Jay R. Chernoff,
                                  Appellant,

                                     vs.

                 City of North Miami Beach, et al.,
                                 Appellees.

     An Appeal from a non-final order from the Circuit Court for Miami-
Dade County, Peter R. Lopez, Judge.

      Reiner & Reiner, P.A., and David P. Reiner, II; Kuehne Davis Law,
P.A., and Benedict P. Kuehne, Michael T. Davis, and Johan Dos Santos;
Michael A. Pizzi, Jr., P.A., and Michael A. Pizzi, Jr., for appellant.

     Brodsky Fotiu-Wojtowicz, PLLC, and Benjamin H. Brodsky and Max
Eichenblatt, for appellee, Commissioner Michael Joseph.

Before HENDON, MILLER, and LOBREE, JJ.

     HENDON, J.
        Jay R. Chernoff, Commissioner for the City of North Miami Beach

(“Appellant” or “Commissioner Chernoff”), seeks to vacate the order of the

lower court and remand with directions to approve the decision of the City

Commission to remove Commissioner Michael Joseph (“Commissioner

Joseph”) from office for violation of the required attendance rule. We affirm.

        In February 2023, Commissioner Chernoff filed a complaint against

Commissioner Joseph seeking to remove him from office. Commissioner

Chernoff alleged that Commissioner Joseph failed to attend a regular

commission meeting for a period of 120 days, from October 2022 to

February 2023, and his seat was thus automatically vacated pursuant to

section 2.5 of the City Charter.1 In an amended complaint filed on March

13, 2023, Commissioner Chernoff added Commissioner Fleurimond to the

1
    Section 2.5 of the North Miami Beach Charter provides:

        Sec. 2.5 - Quorum and Attendance of the City Commission.
        A quorum of the City Commission at any regular or special
        meeting shall consist of five members. Except as otherwise
        provided herein, the affirmative vote of a majority of the quorum
        present shall be required upon any matter submitted for
        consideration of the Commission. If any Commissioner has
        failed to attend a meeting of the City Commission for a period of
        one hundred and twenty (120) days, the seat of such
        Commissioner shall automatically become vacant.

https://library.municode.com/fl/north_miami_beach/codes/code_of_ordinan
ces?nodeId=PTICH.

                                       2
action and sought his removal based on the same section of the Charter. 2

Commissioners Joseph and Fleurimond filed a joint counterclaim in

response, arguing that the Charter language “failed to attend” starts the

120-day period from the first non-attended meeting. They argue that as

there was no meeting in November, and because Commissioner Joseph

missed the December 20, 2022 meeting because of illness, the 120-day

period began from the missed December meeting. 3

     Commissioner Chernoff and Mayor DeFillipo sought to hold a vote at

the May 16, 2023 Commission meeting to determine if Commissioners

Joseph and Fleurimond had vacated their seats pursuant to the Charter.

2
  Commissioner Chernoff claims that despite Commissioner Fleurimond’s
attendance at the Commission meeting on December 20, 2022, this
attendance should not count because he left the meeting before a final vote
on the City Attorney’s termination. Commissioner Chernoff claims that this
should not count as an “attended” meeting because, in his view,
Fleurimond violated the City’s Code of Ordinances requiring commissioners
to remain at meetings barring an emergency. Using the same application of
the Charter provision, Commissioner Chernoff sought summary removal of
Commissioner Fleurimond for “failure to attend” a meeting from October 18,
2022 to March 13, 2023.
3
  Commissioner Fleurimond did not attend the January 17, 2023 meeting
for the same reasons as Commissioner Joseph, in protest of the continued
tenure of Mayor DeFillipo and to prevent a vote to oust the City Attorney.
Both Commissioners Joseph and Fleurimond attended commission
meetings in February, March, and April 2023.

                                    3
Commissioners Joseph and Fleurimond 4 filed an emergency motion for

injunctive relief, seeking to enjoin the commission from so voting. The trial

court denied relief without prejudice.

      On May 16, 2023, the City Commission met; six of the seven

commission members were present at the meeting. Commissioner

Chernoff and Commissioner Fleurimond recused themselves from the

meeting prior to public discussion on the vote due to conflict of interest,

leaving only four commission members present. After public discussion,

the remaining members of the City Commission voted three-to-one in favor

of vacating Commissioner Joseph’s seat, effectively removing him from

office.

      Commissioner Joseph filed a renewed emergency motion for

temporary injunction to enjoin the City from wrongfully excluding him from

his elected office and from holding a special election to replace his seat.

The trial court held an evidentiary hearing, concluded that Commissioner

Joseph had established all of the elements required for a temporary

injunction, and granted relief. In its order, the trial court determined that a

quorum of commissioners did not exist at the May 16, 2023 vote regarding

4
  On May 19, 2023, Commissioner Chernoff voluntarily dismissed his
claims against Commissioner Fleurimond, with prejudice, and
Commissioner Fleurimond voluntarily dismissed his counterclaims against
Commissioner Chernoff, with prejudice.

                                         4
Commissioner Joseph’s seat. Of the six commissioners present, only four

commission members voted on the issue as two commissioners had

recused themselves for conflict of interest, and the City Charter provides

that a quorum “shall” consist of five members. The trial court concluded

that, “the recusal/disqualification of two Commission members in this case

did not reduce the number of Commission members needed to satisfy the

quorum requirement. Due to the lack of a quorum, the May 16, 2023 vote

on whether Commissioner Joseph had vacated his position is VOID and of

no effect.” The trial court further determined that the Commission had no

legal authorization to vote on the issue, and the vote was of no effect

anyway as the Charter provides that a 120-day absence results in an

automatic vacation of the commission seat.

     Finally, the trial court concluded that the Commission’s calculation of

the 120-day time period was incorrect. City procedural precedent provided

that the proper start time for calculating the 120-day period was from the

date of the first missed meeting: in 2018, the Commission that existed at

that time determined that another commissioner, Commissioner Pierre, had

vacated his position for failure to attend a meeting for a 120-day period

based on the recommendation of the City Attorney, who used the day

                                    5
Commissioner Pierre first failed to attend a regular City Commission

meeting to calculate the 120-day period.

      The trial court found that neither the City nor its citizens are

irreparably harmed by the temporary injunction; that Commissioner Joseph

will be irreparably harmed without injunctive relief; Commissioner Joseph

has no adequate remedy at law; the balance of all factors favor

Commissioner Joseph; and public interest favors the relief ordered. The

court ordered Commissioner Joseph to post a $1,000.00 bond.

Commissioner Chernoff appeals.

      "[T]he standard of appellate review with respect to the interpretation

of a charter or ordinance is de novo." Lacayo v. Versailles Gardens I

Condo. Ass'n, Inc., 325 So. 3d 295, 297 (Fla. 3d DCA 2021) (quoting

Martinez v. Hernandez, 227 So. 3d 1257, 1259 (Fla. 3d DCA 2017)). To the

extent the decision to enter a temporary injunction involves an exercise of

discretion, we defer to the trial court unless it has abused its discretion. See

id. at 1258; Fla. Dep't of Health v. Florigrown, LLC, 317 So. 3d 1101, 1110

(Fla. 2021). Further, when there are no factual disputes in the record, the

only issue for the appellate court to determine is the trial court’s legal

conclusion, which is reviewed de novo. Gainesville Woman Care, LLC v.

State, 210 So. 3d 1243, 1258, 1265 (Fla. 2017).

                                       6
Discussion

     A quorum did not exist for the May 16, 2023 vote on Commissioner

Joseph’s seat.     Six commissioners were present for the May 16

commission meeting, but two of them – Commissioner Joseph and

Commissioner Chernoff – were obligated to recuse themselves from the

vote on Commissioner Joseph’s seat vacancy issue based on a conflict of

interest, as both were named parties in the underlying lawsuit to determine

that very issue. That left four voting commission members. The Charter

specifically provides that a quorum of the City Commission at any regular

or special meeting shall consist of five members. It is significant that the

two non-voting commission members were recused, and did not merely

abstain from voting. As recused commission members, they were not

entitled to vote. As such, the remaining four voting-eligible members did

not comprise a quorum.

     Commissioner Chernoff argues that "members of a board abstaining

from voting are counted for purposes of a quorum … although they may not

necessarily by [sic] counted in determining whether an issue has been

accorded a sufficient vote to constitute the action of a board," quoting

Shaughnessy v. Metropolitan Dade County, 238 So.2d 466, 468 (Fla. 3d

DCA 1970) (emphasis added). Commissioner Chernoff also cites an

                                     7
Attorney General opinion that states in the body of the opinion the

exception that “members of a legislative body vote on matters coming

before them unless they have a conflict of interest,” citing section 286.012,

Florida Statutes, as amended by Ch. 75-208, Laws of Florida (effective

October 1, 1975) (emphasis added). 5 See 67A C.J.S. Parliamentary Law §

5
    See Attorney General Opinion AGO 2008-39, which advises:

        This office has issued a number of opinions considering voting
        requirements when officials abstain from voting or are
        prohibited from voting. In Attorney General Opinion 74-160, this
        office concluded that where only four members of a five-
        member town commission are present at a meeting of that
        body, the adoption of a resolution requires the affirmative vote
        of three members irrespective of the fact that one of the
        members present abstained from voting. That opinion stated
        that "[t]he fact that one member abstained from voting has no
        effect on the statutory provision that the adoption of a resolution
        requires that affirmative vote of a majority of the members
        present."

        The conclusion in Attorney General Opinion 74-160, however,
        was based on the provisions of section 286.012, Florida
        Statutes, read together with section 112.3143, Florida Statutes,
        which, prior to the 1984 amendments to these statutes did not
        mandate a voting abstention in the case of a conflict, but
        afforded the officer a choice as to whether to abstain from
        voting or to vote and file a memorandum within 15 days
        disclosing the nature of his interest. The statute, prior to its
        1984 amendment, did not prohibit a public officer from voting in
        any situation; after the 1984 amendment, a local public officer
        was prohibited from voting on those measures which inure to
        his special gain or which, to his knowledge inure to the special
        gain of any principal by whom he is retained.

                                        8
5 (“Members disqualified because of interest cannot be counted for the

purpose of making a quorum or a majority of the quorum.”).

      In the case at hand, the difference between recusal and abstention is

dispositive. The two commission members who recused themselves did not

have the legal right to vote on an issue directly related to the litigation they

were party to; they did not merely abstain from voting while retaining the

right to vote. This distinction, in combination with the Charter’s specific

mandatory provision for a five-member quorum, makes a difference in the

legal determination of the validity of the commission’s four-member vote.

      In Attorney General Opinion 85-40, this office considered the
      effect of the 1984 amendment to section 112.3143(3), Florida
      Statutes. The amendment prohibited, rather than requiring a
      mere abstention, a public officer from voting in his official
      capacity on a matter in which he had a personal, private or
      professional interest and which inured to his special private
      gain or that of a principal by whom he or she was retained. The
      opinion discusses the meaning of the term quorum and
      concludes that "a quorum is a certain number of a governing or
      legislative body who are legally entitled to act." (e.s.) The
      opinion considers a scenario in which all five members of a
      municipality are present at a meeting but two members are
      prohibited by statute from voting on the matter under
      consideration. Thus, only three members of the town council
      are present who are legally entitled to act. Relying on the
      definitions of "quorum," the opinion concludes that the effect of
      the prohibition in section 112.3143, Florida Statutes, is to
      preclude those members who are prohibited from voting from
      being considered to be part of the quorum for that matter.

https://www.myfloridalegal.com/ag-opinions/council-of-childrens-services-
taxation-voting (footnotes omitted; emphasis added).

                                       9
We conclude on de novo review of this issue that there was no quorum and

the vote was invalid.

      We next determine that the Commission’s calculation of the start of

the 120-day period was in error based on the plain language of the Charter.

Section 2.5 of the Charter provides, in relevant part, that “[i]f any

Commissioner has failed to attend a meeting of the City Commission for a

period of one hundred and twenty (120) days, the seat of such

Commissioner shall automatically become vacant.” (Emphasis added). As

the trial court explained,

      It is undisputed that Joseph attended a Commission meeting on
      October 18, 2022. In November of 2022, no Commission
      meeting was held. On December 20, 2022, a meeting was held
      and Joseph did not attend. He attended the March 20, 2023
      Commission meeting. If, as contended by Commissioner
      Chernoff and the City, the 120-day period began to run the day
      after October 18, 2022, the last meeting that Joseph attended,
      then 120 days would have elapsed and Joseph’s position would
      have become vacant. However, if the 120-day period began to
      run on December 20, 2022, the day of the first meeting that
      Joseph failed to attend, then 120 days did not elapse and his
      position would not have become vacant. The City Commission,
      in voting that Joseph vacated his position, necessarily
      calculated the period using the day after the last meeting that
      Joseph attended. This contradicts the plain language of Section
      2.5 which requires a failure to attend a meeting, as one cannot
      fail to attend a meeting that does not exist.

                                    10
After a full examination of the record and the Charter language, we

conclude that the 120-day window starts to run from the date of the

meeting that a commissioner failed to attend.

     We decline to address the remaining issues on appeal. Accordingly,

we affirm.

     Affirmed.

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