On Petition for Rehearing.
Per Curiam.Chapter 4600, Acts of 1897, a general law (re-enacted as Sections 1925-1939, Revised General Statutes, 1920), and Chapter 6772, Acts of 1913, a local or special law, both relate to “municipal government” within the meaning of Section 24, Article III of the Constitution of Florida.
In Section 8, Article YIII, the Constitution merely declares that “the legislature shall have power to establish and to abolish municipalities, to provide for their government, to prescribe their jurisdiction and powers, and to alter or amend the same at any time;” but Section 24, Article III, is a command that “the legislature shall estab-, lish a uniform system of * municipal government, which shall be applicable, except in cases where local or special laws are provided by the legislature that may be inconsistent therewith.” The object of these organic provisions is to require general laws to be enacted for the government of municipalities, “which shall be applicable” to all municipalities “except in cases where local or special laws” that are enacted in the discretion of the legislature “may be inconsistent” with the general law. See Ferguson v. McDonald, 66 Fla. 494, 63 South. Rep. 915; Sanders v. Howell, 73 Fla. 563, 74 South. Rep. 802; Ex Parte Davidson, 76 Fla. 272, 79 South. Rep. 727; State ex rel. D’Alemberte, 79 Fla. 835, 85 South. Rep. 333.
Under Section 24, Article III, general laws relating to municipal government are mandatorily made applicable to all municipalities in the State, except when inconsistent with local or special-laws on the subject exists; and under *322the same section of the State Constitution, the provisions of a local or special law relating to municipal government, that are inconsistent with the provisions of a general law on the same subject, and a repealing clause contained in the subsequent special law, do not repeal the provisions of the general law, but merely operate to except the particular municipality referred to in the special law from the operation of inconsistent provisions of the general law. Stewart v. DeLand-Lake Helen Special Road & Bridge Dist. In Volusia County, 71 Fla. 158, 71 South. Rep. 42; State ex rel. Luning v. Johnson, 71 Fla. 363, 72 South. Rep. 477. In order to except a particular municipality from the operation of any general law relating to municipal government, it is necessary that an “inconsistent” local or special law be enacted covering the subject. See Chapter 4875 Acts of 1899. See Hardee v. Brown, 56 Fla. 377, 47 South. Rep. 834; Ex Parte Perry, 71 Fla. 250, 71 South. Rep. 174; Emerson v. Cobb, 86 Fla. 487, 98 South. Rep. 357; Canova v. Williams, 41 Fla. 509, 27 South. Rep. 30; State ex rel. Worley v. Lewis, 55 Fla. 570, 46 South. Rep. 630.
The provisions of a special law relating to municipal government are “inconsistent” with the provisions of a general law on the same subject so as to make the former “applicable” in a particular case to the exclusion of the latter, in obedience to the mandate of Section '24, Article III of the Constitution, only when and to the extent that the provisions of the Acts respectively are so repugnant to each other that both cannot operate together, or when the special act discloses a legislative intent that the general law shall not be “applicable” in the premises.
• The general law, in Section 1925 Revised General Statutes, 1920, empowers any municipality, under the limitations contained in the law, to “construct, purchase, *323lease or establish and maintain within its limits’ one or more plants for the manufacture or distribution of gas or electricity for furnishing light for municipal use, and for the use of such of its inhabitants as may require and pay for the same as herein provided.” The local or special law, Chapter 6772, Acts of 1913, confers upon the City of St. Petersburg power “to construct, condemn, purchase, acquire, lease or to maintain, conduct and operate * light ' plants * power plants, for the use of said city and its inhabitants, and to make a contract of whatever nature in connection therewith,” and also confers upon a city board authority “to provide for the establishment of water works, electric and other lighting plants, and all other plants necessary for the city.” Secs. 2 and 24 Chap. 6772 Acts of 1913. The Special Act expressly provides that: “the city shall also have all the powers and functions which by or pursuant of the constitution, or of the laws of this State, have been or could be granted or exercised by this city.” See.’2, Par. f. Chap. 6772. .
If there is in reality no inconsistency in the quoted grants of power, then the conditions prescribed in the general law should be complied with in exercising the granted power. The Special Act expressly secures to’the city “all the powers and functions” that “have been or could be granted or exercised by this city.” The grant of power to “any city or town” contained in the general law is coupled with conditions as to the manner of exercising the power, and no conditions are attached to the power contained in the special charter act; but the mere omission of any and all conditions from the special law does not make the special act “inconsistent” with the general law within the meaning of the constitution, Section 24, Art. Ill, in the absence of something in the special law'showing an intent that the conditions to the exercise *324of the power contained in the general law shall be excluded from operation in the particular city as was done in Chapter 4875, Acts of 1899, and in other local laws upon the subject. In the absence of an “inconsistent” special law the constitution commands that the general law “shall be applicable.” In this case the general law, considered in the light of Section 24, Art. Ill of the Constitution, shows an express intent that it shall apply to all municipalities, that are not under Section 24, Art. Ill excepted from its operation by inconsistent local or special laws; and the special charter act here involved does not contain any material provisions that are clearly inconsistent with the provisions of the general lave Nor does the special law otherwise expressly or by fair intendment manifest an ¡intent to except the city from the operation of the general law, in so far as the latter imposes conditions upon the exercise of the stated granted power; which granted power is in effect but repeated in the special law. The change made by Chap. 6772 from an aldermanic to a commission form of government for the city of St. Petersburg does not render it impracticable to substantially comply with the general law, Chap. 4600, and such change and its prescribed details show no legislative intent to exclude the operation of Chap. 4600, but on the contrary the special charter act reserves to the city all “powers and functions” that can be exercised by the city pursuant “to the laws of this State.”
' There appears to- be no real inconsistency between the provisions of the general law, Section 1925 Revised General Statutes, 1920, granting powers to all municipalities to.acquire and operate electric light plants, and the provisions of the special law, Chapter 6772, granting similar powers to the city of St. Petersburg.' The general law 'confers in more specific terms a power that is also granted *325by the special law; but the authority of the city of St. Petersburg in the premises may be considered as being in substance and not in excess of “the authority conferred in Section 1925”, Revised General Statutes, whether the authority be regarded as conferred by the general law or by the special law, or by both. The manner of the exercise of the power conferred, that is contained in the general law, is as consistent with the grant of power in the special law as with that conferred by the general law; and the requirements of the general law as to the exercise of the granted power are not negatived by any or all of the varied provisions of the special law in their application to the single city. The repealing clause in Section 115 of Chapter 6772, does not repeal any provisions of the general law; nor does it prevent the full operation of the provision of the special act reserving to the city all the “functions” that can be “exercised by the city” under' “the laws of this State.” Sec. 2, Chap. 6772 Acts of 1913.
The appellee seeks to enjoin the city from selling electric current to its inhabitants, not from using it for public municipal purposes. The city has established and is maintaining an electric plant for use of its public utilities. If the city is not authorized to sell electric current because it has not complied with the general law which alone specifically confers upon the city the power to furnish lights “for the use of such of its inhabitants as may require and pay for the same,” and the appellee is authorized to sell electric current to consumers in the city, the appellee may invoke appropriate remedy for the protection of its rights against an unlawful competitor even though the appellee has no exclusive right in the premises.
Rehearing denied.
All concur.