Board of Public Instruction v. Boehm, Et Ux.

189 So. 663, 138 Fla. 548, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1448
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 9, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 So. 663 (Board of Public Instruction v. Boehm, Et Ux.) 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
Board of Public Instruction v. Boehm, Et Ux., 189 So. 663, 138 Fla. 548, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1448 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

*550 Buford, J. —

The appeal brings for review order denying motion to strike answer interposed to an amended bill of complaint.

The bill of complaint seeks mandatory injunction to compel the defendants to remove encroachments’ on lands, the title to which is claimed by the complainants, and to enjoin the defendants from further encroachments on the land.

The second paragraph of the answer admits that the complainants o'wned lands in the vicinity of the lands described in the bill of complaint but says that the defendants are without knowledge as to whether the complainants owned the lands described in the bill of complaint and demand strict proof thereof.

Ihe third paragraph of the answer denies that the defendants have encroached upon the property of the plaintiffs as alleged. It avers that the certificate of survey attached to the original bill of complaint and made a part of the amended bill of complaint is not a correct survey of plaintiffs’ land and avers that that portion of the land enclosed and occupied by defendants as shown by amended bill of complaint and the plat thereto attached is not the property of the plaintiffs but on the contrary is the property of and owned by the defendants.

The fo'urth paragraph of the answer is as follows:

“That no irreparable harm or damage is now resulting or will result in the future by the plaintiff being deprived of the use, control, supervision or possession of that portion of the lands described in the bill of complaint but that, on the contrary, the damage now resulting, or which may result in the future, are fully susceptible of being compensated in money, according to this well-established' principles of law and equity. That that portion of the property alleged to be occupied and enclosed by these defendants is a *551 very small portion of a large tract of land, that the said school has ample grounds for playground purposes and that ■so far as these defendants are advised the plaintiff does not now need and will not need in the future any portion of the said lands for building purposes.”

The fifth paragraph alleges facts upon which defendants rely for the equitable right to pay just compensation for the lands upon which the encroachment is alleged to exist, if the-court should find that it is the • property of the complainants rather than be required to remove the encroachments from such lands.

The sixth paragraph of the answer is as- follows:

“That these defendants have not encroached upon said lands as alleged, nor did they place the.structures upon the lands as alleged. That the building described., in the amended bill was constructed about, twenty-six years ago and has continuously remained in its present location ever since. That the building and fences were on the lands at the time these defendants purchased the same, and the lands enclosed by the fences and hedge and occupied by the said building were pointed out to and understood by these defendants to have been included in the lands purchased by them. That for a long period of time, to-wit, twenty-four years or more, the lines occupied by the building, fences and shrubbery were understood by the defendants and their predecessors in title, as well as the plaintiff and its predecessors in title, as being the true boundary line between the respective properties and the boundary lines as understood were acquiesced in by all parties interested in. the lands until about the year 1936, at which time a survey represented by a certificate attached to the original bill, was made, at which time the plaintiff first raised the question as to boundaries. * * *”

The transcript then shows the following allegation:

*552 “That at the time the alleged survey was made the plaintiff had owned and occupied the said lands for a long period of time and the improvements sought tO' be removed have been at the location described for many, many years.”

We apprehend that the word “plaintiff” in this sentence was intended to be “defendants” and that the use of the word “plaintiff” was a misprint or an error in copying and that the Chancellor so considered it. If it was so intended and the word “plaintiff” was used in the answer as filed, it should be amended to read “defendants.”

After the above quoted sentence, there is the following averment, to-wit:

“Wherefore, these defendants say that it would be inequitable and unjust to them to grant the relief prayed for in the amended bill of complaint and that the plaintiff, and its predecessor in title, have acquiesced in the said boundary lines for a long period of time and having stood by and permitted these defendants to purchase the lands and enter into the use and occupation thereof, are stopped from asserting any right to compel these defendants to remove from said lands or give up the use and occupation thereof.”

The allegations' of the answer above referred to are sufficient to present the issues, (1) whether the defendants or the plaintiff owned the lands upon which the encroachments are alleged to be; (2) that if the lands belong to the plaintiff that the injuries are readily susceptible of being fully compensated for in money damages and that a decree therefor would be equitable and just; (3) that the defendants entered upon the lands in good faith, and (4) that the lands in dispute are within the boundary lines of defendants’ lands as the boundary lines had been understood, agreed to and acquiesced in by plaintiff and the defendants and *553 tlieir respective predecessors in title for more than twenty years.

If matters contained in an answer in an equity case are relevant or of any influence in the decision as to the subject matter in controversy the answer is not impertinent and should not be stricken on motion. Hopkins v. Mills, 116 Fla. 550, 156 So. 532.

There is a well-recognized distinction between rights acquired by agreement on lines between adjoining owners and rights acquired by adverse possession. Wade v. McDougal, 59 S. Va. 113, 52 S. E. 1026. The rule appears to be that where adjoining owners themselves have agreed upon a line between their respective properties that is, and ought to be, the end of the matter. Amburgy v. Burt & Brabb Lbr. Co., 121 Ky. 580, 98 S. W. 680; 28 Ky. L. 551.

Such an agreement as to boundary is enforceable in a court of equity. Threlkeld v. Winston, 2 Ky. L. 63. It is very generally held either expressly or by clear implication that a parol agreement establishing a boundary, in order to be binding, must be followed by acquiescense and possession ; and, in the absence of an express agreement fixing the boundary if it is fixed by acquiescence and recognition there must be actual possession up to the line by the party claiming the benefit thereof for a time sufficient in duration to warrant the inference or presumption of a former agreement establishing a delinitation of the boundary. See George, et al., v. Collins, 72 W. Va. 25, 77 S. E. 356.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 663, 138 Fla. 548, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-public-instruction-v-boehm-et-ux-fla-1939.