Addison v. Benedict

225 So. 2d 335, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5409
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 3, 1969
DocketNo. 68-95
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 So. 2d 335 (Addison v. Benedict) 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
Addison v. Benedict, 225 So. 2d 335, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5409 (Fla. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PIERCE, Judge.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs below, Hazel Addison and Henry Futch, from a final judgment rendered by the Lee County Circuit Court in favor of the defendant Elena Duke Benedict, and the other defendants who claim as successors in interest of Harold M. Bixby, deceased, (hereinafter referred as the Bixbys), in a suit to quiet title.

Addison and Futch filed their amended complaint in which they alleged that they are the owners of:

The North 150 feet of the South one-half of Gov’t. Lot 3, Section 35, Township 45 South, Range 21 East,

and

All of the South one-half of Gov’t Lot 3, Section 35, Township 45 South, Range 21 East, excepting the North 150 feet thereof, and the North one-half of Gov’t Lot 4, Section 35, Township 45 South, Range 21 East;

that they obtained title from Wm. Franklin Futch who purchased the land on May 16, 1941, from the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund at a Murphy Tax Sale; and that Benedict and the Bixbys assert claims to part of the above described property. They alleged adverse possession by their predecessor in title of the disputed strips of land claimed by the defendants; and prayed that plaintiffs’ title be quieted against the claims of defendants. Benedict filed her answer and counterclaim and the other defendants filed their answers and affirmative defenses. Addison and Futch filed their answer to Benedict’s counterclaim.

It appears from the record that prior to 1941 Government Lots 3 and 4 were irregular lots on Buck Key in Lee County and were owned by three separate owners, (1) Benedict’s predecessor in title, (2) one Tusch, and (3) the deceased Bixby’s predecessor in title; each having acquired title by a metes and bounds description, based upon the prior established line and sustained by monuments reflected in field notes- of prior surveyors. None of these owners returned their land to the Tax Assessor for ad valorem taxation, such failure being the then rule rather than the exception in Lee County.

Beginning prior to 1924 the Tax Assessor designated these three parcels on the tax roll as (1) Ni/2 Lot 3, (2) Sj4 Lot 3 and N% Lot 4, and (3) S% Lot 4, which abbreviated form was locally customary in describing lands on the tax roll. Taxes were paid on the Benedict and Bixby parcels regularly. Tusch did not pay the taxes assessed to him on the 1925 roll and a tax certificate was sold in 1926. Another tax certificate was issued against the Tusch land in 1933, and Wm. Franklin Futch, one of plaintiffs’ ancestors, obtained a Murphy Act deed in 1941 describing the land by the abbreviated tax roll description — SYz of Lot 3 and N% of Lot 4 — which overlaps the northern portion of the Bixby property and the southern portion of the Benedict property. In 1955 Wm. Franklin Futch deeded the north 150 feet of the SYz of Government Lot 3 to his granddaughter, Hazel Addison, and in 1959 he deeded the remainder of the property to his son, Henry Futch. They are plaintiffs in the instant suit.

Carl E. Johnson, a highly respected Registered Land Surveyor, in 1966 made the only survey that ever attempted to mark the boundaries of the South half of Lot 3 and the North half of Lot 4. The original surveyor did not run the government lot line between Government Lots 3 and 4. Johnson testified that the distance from the township and section line to the north end of the island was actually 2814 feet rather than 3465 feet as shown by the original survey. He testified that he would [337]*337set the government lot lines by proportional measurement, based upon the actual length, giving each government lot that proportion of the actual length that the length of its east line, as shown on the original survey, bore to the total length of the east line as shown on the original survey; and that he would stake the half lot lines at half of the proportional length of the east line of the lots.

At the conclusion of the trial the Court entered final judgment, finding inter alia that the apportionment of lands by linear measurement was not correct, and if the lands were to be apportioned they would have been apportioned by the Court by acreage measurement; that the plaintiffs failed to establish title by adverse possession; that the metes and bounds descriptions took precedence over the tax deed granted to plaintiffs’ predecessor in title; that the failure of the defendants or their predecessors to return the property for taxes did not relieve the tax assessor of his obligation to assess the properties upon the tax roll by proper legal description; and that the title acquired by plaintiffs pursuant to the tax deed vested in them only such title and ownership as that owned by Tusch.

The Court ordered and adjudged that Benedict and the Bixbys were the owners in fee simple of the properties described in their respective deeds; that the titles to their said lands were quieted and established; that any right, title or interest of the plaintiffs in lands adjudged to be owned by the defendants were cancelled and annulled; and the plaintiffs were enjoined from asserting or attempting to assert any right or title to said lands or any part thereof.

Addison and Futch first contend that a Murphy tax deed is not invalid because of assessment, where a portion of the land owned by one person is included in a description of a parcel assessed to a contiguous landowner, but not in the assessment to the real owner, neither party having returned the property for taxation. It must be noted, however, that the lower Court did not hold that the tax deed was invalid, but that the tax deed vested in Addison and Futch only such title and ownership as that owned by the former owner, Tusch.

Section 718; Revised General Statutes of Florida 1920, (now included in the compilations as F.S. § 193.20 F.S.A.) which was in effect at the time the Tax Assessor designated the parcels involved by the abbreviated form, provides in part:

“ * * * the county assessor of taxes may correct any errors in the description so returned, and if the owner or agent fails to make such returns, the county assessor of taxes shall assess all lands not returned, according to the government survey, and shall assess in one assessment all the lands in a section belonging to the same owner, or assessed, as ‘unknown/ * * * Provided, That when private surveys of land or descriptions by metes and bounds have taken the place of government surveys, and the land is known, designated and described only by such private surveys or metes and bounds, the description in the assessment shall be made in accordance with such surveys or descriptions as recorded in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, or by reference to deed of record, giving the book and page as appears in the office of the clerk of the circuit court. * * * ”

As stated above, Benedict, Tusch and Bixby acquired their titles by metes and bounds. The lot lines and the half lot lines of Government Lots 3 and 4 had not been marked by a government survey. In fact, the only attempt to mark these lines was made in 1966 by Mr. Johnson who testified that he would set the government lot lines by proportional measurement, and that he would stake the half lot lines at half of the proportional length of the lots. There is no indication in the record that this method of marking the lines had been adopted. Therefore, there was no way for [338]*338the tax assessor or the Benedicts and Bix-bys or their predecessors in title to know where the half lot lines would fall on the ground.

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Related

Conklin v. Jablonski
67 Misc. 2d 286 (New York Supreme Court, 1971)
Addison v. Benedict
234 So. 2d 117 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 So. 2d 335, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addison-v-benedict-fladistctapp-1969.