Barco v. Fennell

24 Fla. 378
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 24 Fla. 378 (Barco v. Fennell) 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
Barco v. Fennell, 24 Fla. 378 (Fla. 1888).

Opinion

The Chief-Justice

delivered the following opinion :

The plaintiffs below, children of Alfred T. Barco, brought [380]*380an action of ejectment against his widow and A. 'IVL Pennell, whom she married after the decease of her former husband, to recover certain lands of which he was seized at the time of his death. A plea of not guilty .was filed, but subsequently abandoned to give place to another plea under an order of court made on motion of plaintiffs requiring an election between the two. It is alleged for error that the court should not have allowed the second plea to be filed.

This plea is that the plaintiffs claim title to the land described in the declaration as the heirs of Alfred T. Barco. That letters of administration were issued to Mary A. E. Pennell, when she was still unmarried and the widow of said Barco, on the estate of said Barco before the commencement of this action; and that at the time of the commencement of the action she was and is now the administratrix of said estate, and that the said estate remains unsettled.

It does not appear that any resistance was made to the filing of this plea, but that on the same day the plaintiffs made their motion to put the defendant to an election between this aud their plea of riot guilty. The plea was intended as a defense to the whole action, and was an improper plea, inasmuch as in an. action of ejectment the matters set up, if good as a defense, could have been introduced in evidence under the plea of not guilty ; and the court has power in such case to strike out the additional plea ; (Wade vs. Doyle, 17Fla., 522) and we think it was its duty to do so, that the issue might be reduced to “ one simple plea adapted to the-trial of the merits with more facility and certainty.” It is probable the leave to file the plea was given without attention -being drawn to its character in the particular action, the liberal practice under our rules ordinarily allowing additional pleas, without question, if [381]*381good in substance, and not mere repetition in different words of the substance of those already in. But the plaintiffs instead of moving to strike out the plea, moved that defendants be required to make election between the two ; and this motion having been granted, the plea of not guilty was abandoned and the additional plea chosen for the defense.

The next step was a demurrer of plaintiffs to this plea. The court overruled the demurrer, and this is assigned for the second error. We then have the question presented involving the sufficiency pf the plea as a defense to the action. It is apparent that the pleader had in his mind the idea that ejectment would not lie at the suit of heirs against the representative of the deceased ancestor to recover lands left as a part of his estate while the lands were still held for purposes of administration. Lands under our law being assets in the control of the representative of the deceased for the payment of debts, this idea is a correct one, and so long as the estate remains unsettled the representative cannot be disturbed in the possession except by some proceeding connected with the administration itself, by which it may be shown that the lands are not needed for the purpose for which the law committed them to his or her possession. But does the plea meet the requirements of the case? In view of other law applicable to estates, we think it does not.

Under the Constitution of 1868 when a person died leaving lands on which he had a homestead, that part of the estate was not subject to administration. Baker vs. The State, 17 Fla., 406. Not being assets for the executor or administrator, the heirs were entitled to it, subject to dower, immediately upon his death. It is, therefore, necessary that an executor or administrator claiming to hold lands .of the deceased in a representative capacity, should [382]*382show that they are lands he can hold as assets; and a pleading based on such claim which does not allege this is defective. In the case before us this is not done. The plea simply sets up that the lands sued for are claimed by the plaintiffs as heirs of A. T. Barco, that defendant, Mrs. Pennell, is administratrix of said Barco, and that the administration is unsettled, without any allegation that the lands are subject to administration. If they are not the plea is bad, for it should assert everything to show that they are held in rightful possession. If instead of a trial on this special plea, the case were tried under the general issue, and the matter of the plea introduced in evidence, as it might be, it would not avail unless supported by evidence that the lands were such as the administratrix was entitled to hold as subject to administration. She can be in no better position because she has chosen to rest the defence on the special plea ; and in doing that she should make her allegations as broad as the proofs required to render the defence complete. As this is not done, we think the demurrer to the plea should have been sustained.

For error in overruling the demurrer the judgment must be reversed, aud here we might close our opinion. But as the case will be for trial again, it may be well to express our views of other questions that followed the overruling of the demurrer.

The plaintiffs filed two replications. The first alleges that the lands mentioned in the declaration were not in the ' possession of the defendants by virtue of letters of administration to Mary A. E. Fennell on the estate of A. T. Bar-co, but the defendants held andclaimed the same as the absolute property of the said Mary. The second alleges that a'portion of said lands comprise the homestead of A. T. Barco, and the plaintiffs are his heirs.

[383]*383The defendants demur to both replications — to the first, on the ground that such allegation would not entitle the plaintiffs to recover. If the defendants got possession of the lands by virtue of the administration on the estate of A. T. Barco, and that estate is still unsettled, it makes no difference what other claim they may make to title, so far as any rights of the plaintiffs are concerned, if there has been no change in the status of the title by reason of any legal proceeding in the course of administration to effect it, they would still be held to such disposition of the land as upon settlement of the estate, or intervening order in accordance with law, the proper court might direct. Ejectment, therefore, would not be an appropriate action to ascertain and determine the rights of the parties, and for this reason ive think the demurrer to the first replication was properly sustained.

To the second replication the demurrer objects. 1st, Because a portion of the land described therein (160 acres) includes 122J acres, described in the declaration as having been set aside as the dower of Mrs. Eennell (formerly Bar-co). This is an allegation of fact not clearly appearing from the declaration and replication, and is not proper matter for demurrer; but the second cause of demurrer to this replication is more to the point, viz: That it is not alleged that the 160 acres mentioned in the replication has been set aside as required by law, or that the plaintiffs are entitled to the same as the heirs of A. T. Barco, or otherwise. The replication is defective in the latter particular, though it is to be inferred that it was the intention of the pleader to rely on the fact of title through such heirship.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Frase v. Branch
362 So. 2d 317 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1978)
Cape Sable Corporation v. McClurg
74 So. 2d 883 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1954)
Shelfer v. American Agricultural Chemical Co.
152 So. 613 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
Williams v. Guthrie
137 So. 682 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
Smith v. Caravasios
118 So. 10 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1928)
Shone v. Bellmore
78 So. 605 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1918)
Bass v. Ramos
58 Fla. 161 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1909)
Demps v. Hogan
57 Fla. 60 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1909)
McKinnon v. Johnson
57 Fla. 120 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1909)
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Crosby
53 Fla. 400 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1907)
Finlayson v. Love
44 Fla. 551 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1902)
Little v. Bradley
43 Fla. 402 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1901)
Walker v. Redding
40 Fla. 124 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1898)
Rose v. Withers
39 Fla. 460 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1897)
Hedick v. Hedick
38 Fla. 252 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1896)
Godwin v. King
31 Fla. 525 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Fla. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barco-v-fennell-fla-1888.