Booth v. Lenox

45 Fla. 191
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 45 Fla. 191 (Booth v. Lenox) 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
Booth v. Lenox, 45 Fla. 191 (Fla. 1903).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

Margaret A. Lenox and her husband Andrew Lenox, Elizabeth O. Swain and her husband Wilbur Swain, filed their bill in equity for partition in the Circuit Court of Duval county on the 18th day of February, 1897, against James R. Booth, Mary J. Van Loon and her husband Arthur E. Van Loon, Mabel F. Booth and Esther L. Booth, alleging that James R. Booth was, in his lifetime afid qt the time of his death, seized in fee simple of an in the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots five (5) and six (6) in block thirteen (13) of McIntosh and Reed’s addition to La Villa, according to plat duly recorded in Duval county, said land being situated in the city of Jacksonville in said Duval county; that the said James R. Booth died intestate in Duval county, Florida, on July 10th, 1886, leaving him surviving the following children: the complainants Margaret A. Lenox and Elizabeth C. Swain, and the defendants James R. Booth, Mary J. Van Loon and Mabel F. Booth, and Thomas Charles Booth, who died in infancy without issue on December 31st, 1888; that the children named are all the children born to said James R. Booth, deceased; that Mabel F. Booth is a minor; that the said lots adjoin each other and form one tract of land which does not exceed in quanity half an acre; that at the time of his death the said James R. Booth resided upon said land apd was the head of a family caring for and supporting certain members of his family mentioned herein; that said living children hold and are. seizeed in and [194]*194•of said land and premises in joint title and interest, each thereof owning a one-fifth undivided interest in the same, and that complainants desire to have their respective shares and portions of said land partitioned and set off to them in severalty; that said defendant Esther L. Booth is the widow of the decedent James R. Booth, and claims some interest' in said premises, the nature of which is unknown to complainants; that complainant Margaret A. Lenox intermarried with said Andrew Lenox prior to the year 1886; and the. complainant Elizabeth C. Swain intermarried with said Wilbur Swain in the year 1886. The bill prays that the said land may be partitioned under the order of the court, and that one-fifth thereof may be set off in severalty to each of the. complainants Margaret Lenox and Elizabeth 0 .Swain, and that if it be made to appear that said land cannot be divided without loss and prejudice to.those interested therein, then tliat the same be sold under direction of the court,-and that one-fifth of ¡he proceeds thereof be set off and paid to each of said complainants Margaret A. Lenox and Elizabeth C. Swain, and for general relief. The defendants James R. Booth : ad Mary J. Van Loon filed an answer admitting all the allegations of the bill and prayed therein that then- respective interests and shares in said land might be set off to them in severalty.

The defendant Esther L. Booth filed her separate answer to the bill in which she admitted the death of James V Booth at the date as alleged and that at the time of his death he resided on said land, and that the same was one contiguous body of less than one-half of an acre in area, and that at his death James S. Booth left surviving him his widow, the. answering defendant, and the children named in the bill; that Thomas charles Booth, wince deceased d\iring minority; unmarried and without issue, [195]*195and Mabel F. Booth, a minor, were the children of the said James R. Booth, the issue of his marriage with the answering defendant, and that the other named children were his children by a former marriage. Her answer denied that said living children hold or are seized of said land in joint title, each owning a one-ñfth undivided interest in the same, or any other share thereof. The answer then alleges that in so far as creditors or bona fide purchasers or lienors without notice are concerned i-t may not be admissible for this defendant to show that James JR. Booth did not own said land, in that this defendant may be charged with constructive notice that the deed of conveyance of the land described was in the naipe of said Janies Booth, deceased, and being so worded was recorded according to law in the public records of said county; hut, on the other hand, in so far as the complainants are concerned, it is the duty of this defendant to show the fact as to the ownership of said land, notwithstanding the record aforesaid. This defendant invested her sole and separate property in the purchase of said described land, and all the purchase price of said land was paid wholly by her sole and separate property; and the said James Booth, deceased, then living, did not invest any of his property in the purchase of said land, and did not give any consideration therefor; the whole consideration for the conveyance of said land moving solely from this defendant; that relying on her husband for the details of ¡said purchase, she was not present at its consummation or at the drafting and execution of the deed of conveyance, and for a long time thereafter was not aware of the deed being made in the name of her husband instead of being made So and in the name of this defendant as should have been, and tlsai she supposed for a long time was the case. And that so it is the said James Booth, deceased, called James R. Booib, as aforesaid, never owned said land or [196]*196any part thereof. And that for the past ten years preceding this defendant has been in the actual possession of said land, residing thereon, claiming title thereto adversely to and exclusive of said complainants. Subsequently to her answer to the original bill the defendant Esther L. Booth filed her cross-bill against all of the complainants and all, except herself, of the defendants in the original bill, in which she alleges the death of James. Booth, also called James R. Booth, and the relationship of the parties to him as alleged in the original bill, and that since the institution of the original suit, to-wit: on the 23rd day of February, 1898, the said several parties, Margaret, Mary and James, have each instituted a suit in ejectment against her on the law side of this court, each claiming in said several ejectment suits the ownership of an undivided one-fiftli share of said described land (lots 5 and 6 in block 13 of McIntosh and Reed’s Addition to LaVilla) ; that she, desirous of investing certain personal property, her sole and separate property, in the purchase of said described real estate, procured her husband, then alive, the said James R. Booth, now deceased, to purchase the said real property for her; and thereupon the said Janies Booth, then in life, purchased said real property, giving as the consideration therefor the sole and separate property of your oratrix, and upon the receipt of her sole and separate property,- and for no other consideration, the owners of said land made and delivered the deed of conveyance under which -the said complainants and the said plaintiffs in ejectment claim title; that relying upon her said husband she. left entirely with him the negotiation of purchase, the drafting, execution, recording and preservation of the said deed of conveyance, and, believing his assertion that he liad bought the said land for her with her money as aforesaid, she proceeded forthwith to take pos[197]

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Bluebook (online)
45 Fla. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-lenox-fla-1903.