Adams v. Crews

105 So. 2d 584
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 8, 1958
Docket672
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 So. 2d 584 (Adams v. Crews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Crews, 105 So. 2d 584 (Fla. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

105 So.2d 584 (1958)

Elmer V. ADAMS and Esther Weber Adams (defendants) and
Neil M. Westbrook et al. (defendants joining in appeal), Appellants,
v.
John E. CREWS et al. (plaintiffs) and
Leroy Collins et al., As Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, and the State of Florida (Intervenors), Appellees.

No. 672.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.

October 8, 1958.

*585 Clark W. Jennings, Winter Park, Frederick J. Ward, of Giles, Hedrick & Robinson, Orlando, for appellants.

Yergey & Yergey, Orlando, Richard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., Ralph M. McLane, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellees.

ALLEN, Judge.

This is an interlocutory appeal from orders striking parts of the answers of the appellants who were defendants below. The plaintiffs filed an amended complaint against Elmer V. Adams and Esther Weber Adams, his wife, Neil M. Westbrook and H. Burkett Bray, Jr. and Helen Bennett, as Tax Assessor of Orange County, Florida.

The complaint alleged that the plaintiffs are the owners of property bordering on Lake Maitland in Orange County, Florida upon which they and others similarly situated, reside; that Lake Maitland is a navigable lake; that a small island of about 20 acres near the east shore of the lake is connected to the mainland by a bridge; that another small island, twenty by sixty feet, of shallow marshy land, is located about a quarter of a mile off shore, which small island is known locally as "Picnic Island"; that the defendants, Adams and wife, claim title to the submerged lands described as successors in title to former owners of the property whose title to certain property described therein reverts to the State under the Murphy Act, Laws 1937, c. 18296, F.S.A. § 192.35 et seq. and notes; that the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, for the consideration of $75.00, conveyed the submerged land to one G.G. Michael Norman and wife by deed No. 182 recorded in Deed Book 555, page 263, public records of Orange County, Florida.

The plaintiffs allege further that the property so conveyed by tax deed was, on *586 the date sold and at all times prior thereto, submerged in Lake Maitland, Florida, containing 35 acres more or less; that on June 3, 1957, Norman and wife conveyed to the defendants Adams and wife the said 35 acres; that the 35-acre tract so conveyed was submerged land of Lake Maitland, a navigable body of water, title to which vested in the State of Florida in trust for the people of the State and that the purported deeds were void and of no force and effect; that the defendants Adams and wife contracted with Westbrook and Bray to fill in said submerged lands by dredging or pumping sand and soil from the lake bottom onto the submerged land lying eastwardly from Lot 1, which submerged land extends out into Lake Maitland a distance of nearly one-quarter mile, and at the time of filing this complaint, the fill had already extended 100 feet in the form of a peninsula jutting out into said lake; that the defendants Adams and wife have also filled in the island known as "Picnic Island" located approximately a quarter of a mile from the mainland, greatly increasing the size thereof; that the construction of said peninsula and island by dredging and filling in the submerged land has interfered with and obstructed the use of the waters for navigation, commerce, pleasure, recreation, health and other rights allowed by law in said waters.

Various motions and pleadings were filed in the case but are not important on this appeal. The trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund intervened in this suit on behalf of the State. The complaint of the intervenors asserted the invalidity of the tax title to the bottom lands of Lake Maitland as void at its inception and requested the court to declare and determine that the bottom lands of Lake Maitland are vested in the State of Florida in trust for the people of the state as sovereignty lands. Intervenors also requested that the defendants be permanently enjoined and restrained from further trespassing upon, using or removing soil from the bottom of Lake Maitland, and be mandatorily enjoined to replace and return all disturbed and removed soil to its former position.

Answers were filed to each complaint by the defendants Adams and wife to which motions to strike were directed by both the plaintiffs below and the intervenors.

The answers of the defendants to the complaint of the original plaintiffs, in effect, pled an estoppel along the following lines: That the dredging operations greatly beautified and made more healthful the area involved; that the original plaintiffs and other owners along the mainland had beautified by dredging along the lake; that on June 3, 1957, when the defendants purchased the lands, they did so in reliance on the fact that the shore of Lake Maitland had been subjected to similar dredging operations and that for more than seventy years the entire lake bottom under the waters of Lake Maitland had been conveyed and reconveyed as private property and taxed as such; that no claim has ever been made by the State, the trustees, or any one else that the land was not subject to private ownership; that the defendants Adams and wife had expended the sum of more than $32,000 in having plans drawn for their said home and for the dredging operation referred to in the complaint, all of which was spent before the plaintiffs or anyone else made any objection thereto; that Lake Maitland was not a navigable body of water; that none of the plaintiffs is the owner of any right, title, or interest in and to any lands bordering Lake Maitland other than those which said plaintiffs might own jointly with their respective wives as estates by the entireties, and had no right to bring the suit. The answer of Adams and wife to the complaint of the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund included some of the matters that were set out in the answers to the original plaintiffs' complaint as to the expenditures of the defendants Adams and wife, and in addition, alleged in paragraph 10 of such answer that when the trustees conveyed the property involved to the defendants' predecessor in title, it contained no restrictions or reservations, that the trustees determined *587 as a matter of fact that said lands were not sovereignty lands but were lands capable of private ownership, and that they are estopped by such acts to now deny the same. Paragraph 11 of the answer alleges that Section 271.09 of Florida Statutes, F.S.A. provides that riparian rights are incident to lands upon navigable waters only; that navigable waters shall not be held to extend to any waters in the form of lakes, ponds, or overflowed lands lying over and upon areas which have heretofore been conveyed to private individuals by the United States or by the State without reservation of public rights in and to said waters; that since no reservations were made by the United States or the State of Florida, Lake Maitland is not a navigable body of water; and that the trustees have no right, title or interest therein as trustee for the public. Paragraph 12 of the answer alleged that if the waters of Lake Maitland are navigable, the grant of the lands under the lake was not voidable in that the use to which the defendants have put said property has been such as not to invade or impair the public interests in said sovereign lands and does not, therefore, violate the inalienable trust doctrine, and that the intervenors are, therefore, estopped to contend that the original deed is void.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 2d 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-crews-fladistctapp-1958.