Alfred H. Wagg Corp. v. F. L. Stitt Co., Inc.

116 So. 637, 95 Fla. 748
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 116 So. 637 (Alfred H. Wagg Corp. v. F. L. Stitt Co., Inc.) 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
Alfred H. Wagg Corp. v. F. L. Stitt Co., Inc., 116 So. 637, 95 Fla. 748 (Fla. 1928).

Opinion

*749 Buford, J.

This is an appeal from an order made by Honorable Elwyn Thomas, Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twenty-first Judicial Circuit of Florida, presiding in lieu of Judge C. E. Chillingworth, alleged to have been disqualified. The appellant had filed a petition to be allowed to intervene to contest the legality of the sale of certain lands the property of the proposed intervenor in foreclosure of a lien for delinquent drainage district tax.

On March 1, 1926, an order was made allowing Alfred H. Wagg Corporation to intervene by petition to oppose the confirmation of sale of certain lands and the making and delivering of a deed conveying the lands to F. L. Stitt & Company, Inc., a Corporation, under the provisions of a final decree of foreclosure of the drainage district tax lien and, thereafter, on April 30, 1926, Judge Thomas made an order as judge pro hac vice vacating the order of March 1st and directing the .Special Master to execute, acknowledge and deliver the deed to F. L. Stitt & Company, a Corporation. It is from this order that appeal was taken.

It is insisted that the order made by Judge Thomas was void because there appeared no disqualification of Judge Chillingworth and, therefore, that Judge Thomas was without authority to make any order in the case. The certificate of disqualification of Judge Chillingworth is in the following language:

‘,‘1, the undersigned, C. E. Chillingworth, Circuit Judge of the Circuit Court of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit of Florida, do hereby certify that subsequent to the institution of the above suit and subsequent to the entry of final decree therein I became the owner by purchase of land in the Lake Worth Drainage District, the same being land involved in the above and foregoing suit and that I have therefore become disqualified as judge in said cause.

“Dated March 26, 1925.”

*750 We can conceive a condition under which the facts set out in this certificate could be true and yet the conclusion that the judge is disqualified be erroneous. On the other hand, we can conceive a condition under which the state of facts set out in the certificate being true would disqualify the judge to further proceed in the cause and, therefore, we must assume that the latter condition existed and that the conclusion of the judge was warranted by the facts and was a correct conclusion, there being nothing in the record requiring a contrary holding.

The petition to intervene interesse suo alleged that the petitioner was the owner of the real estate upon which the drainage district tax lien had been foreclosed by a final decree and which had been ordered sold to satisfy such decree. That at the time of the institution of the suit the owner of the land was not made a party defendant and that neither the owner of the land at that time nor any of his successors in title had been made a party to the suit. That Alfred H. Wagg Corporation was a purchaser without notice pendente lite in good faith and for valuable consideration. That Alfred H. Wagg Corporation was not bound by the final decree. That the report of the Special Master showing a sale of the property so owned by Alfred H. Wagg Corporation was made and filed only four days before the petition was filed to enjoin the confirmation of the sale and that this report of the Special Master was the first notice, either actual or constructive, which had come to Alfred H. Wagg Corporation or its predecessors in title concerning the foreclosure of the alleged lien.

There are other allegations in the petition which are not needful to be considered at this time.

One of the provisions of the legislative act under which the tax lien is sought to be foreclosed is,

“Notice of the pendency of such suit shall be filed and *751 recorded as in other suits of foreclosure of liens in this State.”

This language must be construed to mean that in such suits Section 2853, Revised General Statutes of Florida must be complied with, if purchasers in good faith, pendente lite, are to be bound by the final decree. This section is as follows:

“No suit at law or in equity shall operate as a lis pendens as to any property involved therein until there shall have been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the county where the property is situated, and shall have been recorded by him in a book to be kept by him for the purpose, a notice of the institution of such suit, containing the names of the parties, the time of the institution of the suit, the name of the court in which it is pending, a description of the property involved, and a statement of the relief sought as to such property.”

Section 3076, Revised General Statutes, requires the Clerk of the Circuit Court to keep a docket in which should be recorded all notices of lis pendens.

The allegations of the petition to intervene being taken as true, we find that as to the property here involved the owner was not made a party. Neither were his successors in title to and including the Alfred H. Wagg Corporation, purchasers pendente lite in good faith and for valuable consideration, ever made parties to the suit or served with notice, either actual or constructive, of its pendency. No notice of lis pendens was filed and recorded as required by Section 2853, supra. We must hold, therefore, that the final decree was not binding on Alfred H. Wagg Corporation.

Persons purchasing or acquiring interests in property during the pendency of litigation without notice thereof,, either actual or constructive, are wholly unaffected by any *752 judgment which may subsequently be rendered in the action. 17 R. C. L. 1018; 38 Corpus Juris 11, Sec. 10; Wood v. Price, 79 N. J. Equity 620; Statterfield v. Malone et al., 35 Fed. 445; Romeu v. Todd, 51 Law Ed. 1093.

It is true that the legislative act under which the suit to - foreclose the lien is brought provides that:

“Master shall deliver to the purchaser or purchasers at said sale or to the Board of Supervisors in case said property be bid in in the name of said district as hereinafter provided, a certificate showing such purchase, and said certificate shall show on its face that the same is subject to redemption within one year, and shall make a report of such sale or sales to the court from time to time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 So. 637, 95 Fla. 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-h-wagg-corp-v-f-l-stitt-co-inc-fla-1928.