A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Stockton

138 So. 497, 103 Fla. 967
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 22, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 138 So. 497 (A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Stockton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. C. L. R. R. Co. v. Stockton, 138 So. 497, 103 Fla. 967 (Fla. 1931).

Opinion

The declaration in ejectment herein is as follows: *Page 968

"TELFAIR STOCKTON, MILLER HALLOWES DANCY and CAROLINE MARY HALLOWES, by their attorneys, sue the ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY and JACKSONVILLE AND SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD COMPANY in an action of ejectment:

Because the defendants are in possession of a certain tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Duval County, Florida, known and described as follows, to-wit:

Beginning at a point on the West line of the Seaboard Air Line Railway (formerly Fernandina and Jacksonville Railroad) right-of-way 225 feet South of the intersection of said West line of the Seaboard Air Line right-of-way and a line known as the Campbell Lawton compromise line shown in Deed Book A. I. page 291, former public records of Duval County, Florida, and running thence in a Westerly direction along a line parallel to said Campbell Lawton Compromise line for a distance of about 1497.2 feet, to the East line of Main Street, thence in a southerly direction along said East line of Main Street for a distance of 54.98 feet, thence in an Easterly direction by a straight line to a point on the West line of the Seaboard Air Line Railway right-of-way 327.17 feet South of said Campbell Lawton Compromise line; thence North along said West line of the Seaboard Air Line Railway right-of-way for a distance of about 102.17 feet to the point of beginning; excepting therefrom a long triangular piece of ground bounded on the West by Main Street, on the South by the South line of the parcel above described, and on the North by the North right-of-way line of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad main line right-of-way; containing about 2.385 acres, to which said plaintiffs claim title, and the said defendants have received the profits of said land since the 1st day of January, A.D. 1925, of the yearly value of $500.00, and refuses to deliver possession of said land to the said plaintiffs, or to pay them the profits thereof."

A demurrer to the declaration was overruled and defendants filed a plea of the general issue, not guilty, and a special plea to which latter plea a demurrer was sustained. *Page 969 Demurrers to an amended special plea and to a second amended special plea were sustained.

The court directed a verdict for the plaintiffs and rendered judgment thereon. After judgment, on motion, the verdict directed by the court was amended by the court to include a statement required by the statute that the plaintiffs "are the owners in fee simple" of the property sued for.

In the order amending the verdict it is stated:

"the jury was directed by the Court to render a verdict for the Plaintiff's, and it further appearing that the omission of the words" and that they are the owners in fee simple" was through inadvertence in the preparation of the form of the verdict under the direction of the Court, and that there has been adduced no evidence in this cause to warrant a verdict other than the verdict of the Jury as herein and hereby amended, and it further appearing from all the evidence as a conclusion of law that the plaintiffs are entitled to no other estate than a fee simple estate in the premises claimed."

The defendants took writ of error.

On October 1, 1878, Winborn J. Lawton, owner of the land, had a "Plat of W. J. Lawton's subdivision of a plat of the 'Sibbald Grant' at the junction of Trout Creek with the St. Johns River and now called "Panama Park," recorded in Book A-B, page 560 of the public records of Duval County. The map shows a plat of land divided into lots. Lots 58, 25 and 24 shown immediately above and along the southern line of the plat. Lot 57 lies above and along the northern line of lot 58 in the southwestern portion of the plat. Lot 26 lies north of lot 25 and lot 23 lies north of lot 24. The plat shows lot 58 to be 238 feet north and south at its eastern end and 195 feet north and south at its western end. Lot 57 is shown to be 200 feet north and south, and lies immediately north of lot 58. It seems that subsequent to the record of the Panama Park plat the F J R. R. (now Seaboard) track was constructed north *Page 970 and south through lots 57 and 58 and those above them near their east end leaving a small part of lots 58, 57, 56 etc., east of the railroad track.

On November 3, 1879, Lawton conveyed to Mrs. T. E. Troutman, "Lot 58, of W. J. Lawton's Subdsn. of a pt. of the Sibbild Grant * Plat recdd. in Book A-B pg. 560." Lots 23 and 24 were conveyed to Johanna McDonald. On February 15, 1882, Campbell and Griffin, owners of the "Walker Tract" lying south of "Panama Park," agreed with Lawton in establishing a compromise boundary line between the two tracts of adjoining lands, which agreed boundary line runs east and west through lot No. 57 of the Panama Park plat leaving the southern part of lot 57 and all of lot 58, south of the agreed boundary line; but the Panama Park plat was not changed, and lot 58 was referred to in subsequent conveyances, there being no other lot 58 in Panama Park or Panama Park tract. The compromise boundary line agreement refers to "the Panama Tract" as having been conveyed to Lawton. Lawton, having conveyed lot 58 to Mrs. Troutman before the agreed line was established between the Panama Park tract and the Walker tract, she conveyed to Campbell and Griffin, owners of the Walker tract, not the lot conveyed as Lot 58 as stated in the compromise line agreement between Lawton and Campbell and Griffin, but all east of the Panama road and west of the F J R. R. (Seaboard Ry.) lying south of a line running east and west 225 feet south of the agreed boundary line between the Panama Park. tract and the walker tract, and also all that portion of lot 58 lying east of F J R. R. not involved here. Campbell and Griffin conveyed to Mrs. Troutman that portion of lot 58 west of the F J R. R. (Seaboard Ry.) lying north of a line 225 feet south of the agreed line between. Panama Park tract and the Walker tract. Lot 58 Panama Park tract is shown to be partly south and partly north of the line running east and west 225 feet south of the compromise *Page 971 boundary line between the Panama Park tract and the Walker tract. Campbell and Griffin, owners of the Walker tract, conveyed to Harvey and Harvey conveyed to Charles E. Bell by the same northern boundary, viz., a line running east and west 225 feet south of the compromise line between Panama Park and the Walker tract. The land in controversy is shown to be north of the southern boundary of lot 58 of the Panama Park tract, and south of a line 225 feet south of the agreed compromise boundary line between the Panama Park tract and the Walker tract. The agreed location of the boundary line between the Panama Park tract and the Walker tract did not destroy the identity of lot 58 of the Panama Park tract, the southern boundary of which lot 58 was surveyed and located on the ground.

It was stipulated "that the title to the lands involved in this suit and described in the plaintiffs' declaration herein was vested in fee simple in Charles E. Bell on the 28th day of February A.D. 1893."

The conveyance from Harvey to Charles E. Bell, February 23, 1893, covered land lying south of a line running east and west from a point 225 feet south of the agreed dividing line between the Panama Park tract and the Walker tract. The conveyance from Bell to Telfair Stockton and Albion W. Knight contained a similar north boundary line. Albion W. Knight conveyed to Caroline M.

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138 So. 497, 103 Fla. 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-c-l-r-r-co-v-stockton-fla-1931.