Attorney General of Florida — Opinion
December 9, 2011
RE: MUNICIPALITIES — INTERLOCAL AGREEMENTS — LAW ENFORCEMENT — authority of municipality to provide law enforcement services to adjoining municipalities. s. 166.0495, Fla. Stat.
Mr. Hayward Dykes, Jr. City Attorney City of Fort Walton Beach Post Office Box 6944 Destin, Florida 32550
Pam Bondi, Attorney General
Dear Mr. Dykes:
On behalf of the City of Fort Walton Beach, you ask the following question:[1]
Does section 166.0495, Florida Statutes, authorize the City of Fort Walton Beach to enter into an interlocal agreement to provide law enforcement services only to adjoining municipalities in the same county or may it enter into an interlocal agreement to provide law enforcement services to any municipality, adjoining or not, located within the same county in which the city is located?
In sum:
Section 166.0495, Florida Statutes, authorizes a municipality to enter into an interlocal agreement for the provision of law enforcement services with only those municipalities which adjoin the municipality and are located within the same county as the municipality.
Section 166.0495, Florida Statutes, provides:
“A municipality may enter into an interlocal agreement pursuant to s. 163.01 with an adjoining municipality or municipalities within the same county to provide law enforcement services within the territorial boundaries of the other adjoining municipality or municipalities. Any such agreement shall specify the duration of the agreement and shall comply with s. 112.0515, if applicable. The authority granted a municipality under this section is in addition to and not in limitation of any other authority granted a municipality to enter into agreements for law enforcement services or to conduct law enforcement activities outside the territorial boundaries of the municipality.” (e.s.)
Section 166.0495, Florida Statutes, was enacted by Chapter 97-62, Laws of Florida. The title to the act states that it relates to municipal government, “authorizing municipalities to enter into interlocal agreements to provide law enforcement services within the boundaries of adjoining municipalities within the same county[.]” While the title to an act is not dispositive of its effect, it may be considered in determining the intent of the Legislature.[2] The legislative history of Chapter 97-62, Laws of Florida, provides additional insight as to the Legislature’s intent in its enactment.[3] The sponsor of the bill, explaining its purpose, stated that the bill would allow municipalities to enter into an interlocal agreement with a neighboring law enforcement entity in an “adjoining community within the same county.” Further, she explained that it applied to “adjoining municipalities within the same county only,” then continued that the act did not authorize “skipping over . . .[;] it has to be an adjoining community.”[4] The language in the statute has not been amended since its enactment.
There is a rule of grammatical construction that a qualifying phrase will modify all items listed in a series unless there is no comma between the last of the series and the qualifying phrase.[5]
In this instance, however, there are two qualifying terms, “adjoining” and “within the same county,” which modify the intervening terms “municipality or municipalities” which do not appear to qualify as a “series” of terms. A “series” is “a group of usu. [usually] three or more things or events standing or succeeding in order and having a like relationship to each other.”[6] The phrase “municipality or municipalities” appears to be in the nature of a phrase representing selectivity between the singular and plural, rather than a series of choices having a like relationship to each other. Thus, the phrase “adjoining municipality or municipalities within the same county” must be read in a common sense manner to mean that any municipality entering into an interlocal agreement for law enforcement services must meet the criteria of adjoining the municipality providing the law enforcement service and be located within the same county.[7] The Legislature’s intent as expressed in the title of the legislation and in the history surrounding enactment of the bill supports this interpretation.
Accordingly, it is my opinion that pursuant to section 166.0495, Florida Statues, the City of Fort Walton Beach is authorized to enter into an interlocal agreement for the provision of law enforcement services only with other municipalities which adjoin the city and are located within the same county.
Sincerely,
Pam Bondi Attorney General PB/tals
http://wms.mapwise.com/fmo2/.