Baya v. Ulrich

209 So. 2d 702, 1968 Fla. App. LEXIS 5684
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 24, 1968
DocketNo. 67-128
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 209 So. 2d 702 (Baya v. Ulrich) 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
Baya v. Ulrich, 209 So. 2d 702, 1968 Fla. App. LEXIS 5684 (Fla. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

PIERCE, Judge.

Appellants herein, plaintiffs below, bring this appeal from a final decree dismissing their second amended complaint.

Over the past seventeen years, the status of the road involved has been disputed between Baya and other property owners. Until 1962, the dispute apparently was in the form of mere bickering among neighbors. Since 1962, when the first complaint was filed this dispute has, in one form [703]*703or another, been almost continually before the Courts of this State. In fact, on three previous occasions, there has been a reported decision by this Court on varied aspects of the dispute. See Baya v. Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District, Fla.App.1964, 166 So.2d 846; Baya v. Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District, Fla.App.1966, 184 So.2d 501; and Baya v. Williams, Fla.App.1966, 184 So.2d 675.

It seems that appearance of the Flood Control District in the styles of the cases, supra, was purely incidental and came about solely because a suit for declaratory decree by the Flood Control District was the catalyst that triggered the squabble into a full scale legal battle. Throughout this lengthy litigation and despite numerous side issues raised, the only real basic question involved is whether appellees, defendants below, have a right of access to property owned by the Williams Heirs, via a road traversing the property of Baya.

For the sake of clarity we quote at length from Baya v. Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District, 166 So.2d 846:

“We are confronted with a most voluminous record of twelve volumes, with many exhibits, which have been carefully examined inasmuch as the real point on appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the decree of the chancellor.
“The pleadings are extensive and complex. The Court consolidated a suit by Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District requesting declaratory decree against the appellees Zibe Williams and others referred to as the Williams Heirs and their lessee, Barber, with a suit by the Williams Heirs and Barber seeking an injunction and other relief against the Flood Control District. The Williams Heirs counterclaimed against the Flood Control District and cross-claimed against the appellants Baya. The Williams Heirs also sought affirmative relief against both the Flood Control District and Baya. The appellants Baya crossclaimed against the Williams Heirs seeking to enjoin the use of a certain roadway, the subject matter of this lengthy litigation. We are now concerned only with the portion of the final decree by which the appellants Baya were permanently enjoined from obstructing or interfering with the use of the road by the Williams Heirs since no appeal was taken from the other matters determined by the chancellor.” (Emphasis supplied).
* * * * * *
“The disputed road runs southerly from State Road 70 in Highlands County traversing the lands of the appellants Baya in Sections 28 and 33, Township 37 South, Range 33 East, and continues into Section 4, Township 38 South, Range 33 East in Glades County terminating at the common boundary line of the Williams Heirs and Baya.”

There followed in the opinion some discussion of two fences with gates, one installed by the Williams Heirs where the “road” intersects State Road 70, and the other built by Baya on the line dividing his property and that of the Williams Heirs. This Court then held that, although the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of public dedication or public easement by prescription, the lower Court was correct in finding that a “common law way of necessity exists in favor of appellees.” In a per curiam opinion on rehearing, this Court while adhering to its position that there was no public easement, decided that “ * * * the Williams Heirs had established a private prescriptive right in the disputed road” in addition to the “way of necessity”.

The cause was remanded and a modified final décree pursuant to the mandate of this Court was entered on September 18, 1964. No appeal was taken from the modified decree.

Although not entirely clear, it appears that subsequent thereto Baya effectually denied use of the road to the defendants by locking the gate between his property and their property. Apparently defendants in[704]*704stituted contempt proceedings against Baya. Although the contempt proceedings were dismissed, another order was entered on January 22, 1965, from which the Bayas took an interlocutory appeal, wherein We held (Baya v. Central and Southern Florida Flood Control District, Fla.App.1966, 184 So.2d 501):

“The order appealed (1) denies Baya’s request to tax as costs against the Williams heirs attorneys’ fees and other expenses incurred by the Bayas in resisting a contempt rule allegedly botained (sic) by the Williams heirs through fraud and malice; (2) denies the Bayas’ motion for an order further modifying the final decree by striking certain phrases and entering an injunction restraining the Williams heirs from interfering with any gate or lock maintained; by the Bayas; and (3) partially denies Baya’s motion to tax as costs against the Williams heirs the full cost ($1554.55) c)f the transcript of record used on the prior appeal by requiring the Williams heirs to pay only half ($777.28) such expense.”

In affirming the order appealed, this Court found (1) there was no fraud and malice sufficient to sustain taxing of costs against the Williams Heirs; (2) “it would be contrary to prescriptive right to injunc-tively order it (the gate) to be kept locked”; and (3) that inasmuch as the order appealed was affirmed in part and reversed in part, apportionment of costs was proper.

Meanwhile, on March 26, 1965, the Bayas filed an amended complaint seeking an injunction and other relief against the defendants, and on May 13, 1965, second amended complaint was filed. From an order denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss and granting in part their motion to strike portions of the second amended complaint, plaintiffs filed an interlocutory appeal. The interlocutory appeal was disposed of on March 18, 1966 in Baya v. Williams, Fla.App., 184 So.2d 675. Although Ulrich was named in the style and body of the amended complaint and the style only of the second amended complaint, there is no mention of her in the interlocutory appeal, which was subsequent to granting of her motions for summary judgment and to strike her name from the complaint. In affirming the lower Court’s order striking portions of the complaint, this Court said at p. 676:

“The subject of the present interlocutory appeal is a subsequent suit filed by plaintiffs against the Williams heirs and others alleging unlawful and wilful extension and misuse of the road and seeking an injunction against them. The complaint also alleges facts which plaintiffs conclude amount to a forfeiture or abandonment of the easement by defendants because of alleged misuse. Among other things, the complaint alleges in Paragraph Three that the chancellor in modifying his original decree in 1964 failed to strike the words ‘together with existing ditches and shoulders’ in describing defendants’ easement. The chancellor struck certain portions of the complaint including Paragraph Three and those paragraphs relating to forfeiture and abandonment of the easement. Other portions of the complaint, including those seeking the injunction, were allowed to stand.

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Bluebook (online)
209 So. 2d 702, 1968 Fla. App. LEXIS 5684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baya-v-ulrich-fladistctapp-1968.