Broward v. Mabry

58 Fla. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 58 Fla. 398 (Broward v. Mabry) 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
Broward v. Mabry, 58 Fla. 398 (Fla. 1909).

Opinion

Whitfield, C. J.

The appellee filed in the circuit court for Leon county a bill in equity alleging in brief that township 2 north, of range 1 west, in Leon county, Florida, was surveyed by James Donelson by direction of the United States government in 1824 according to the system of surveying adopted and then in use by said government; that within said township 2 and township 1 north, of range 1 west, lying to the south of township 2, was a natural lake designated on the plats of the survey as Lake Jackson, by which name it has since been generally known and called; that in surveying said township the sections bordering on said lake were made fractional sections and the line of the lake, where the said fractional sections border it, was meandered; that said lake was not at the time of the survey and has never been a navigable body of water; that sections 26 and 27 of said township 2 are, according to said survey, fractional sections bordering on said lake, and both said sections are shown by the official plat of said survey to be subdivided into lots; [403]*403that section 27 is shown to comprise hut two lots numbered 1 and 2, which are stated on the plat to contain respectively eighty and one hundred acres, but only lot 2 is shown to border on the waters of said lake; that section 26 is shown to comprise 7 lots, but only lot 5 of said section, which is stated on said plat to contain 103.50 acres, is shown to border on the waters of said lake; that in 1825 James Dickerson purchased from the United States at private cash entry lots 1 and 2 of section 27, township 2 N., R. 1 W.; that said lots, according to the official map in the Surveyor General’s office, appear to be the whole of said fractional section 27, and patents were issued to Dickerson therefor by the United States in 1826, conveying to him and his heirs the said lands, by the designated lot numbers, according to the official plat of the survey of said lands returned to the Surveyor General’s office, and without any reservation as to the submerged lands in front thereof; that likewise William Harris purchased and in 1826 received patents conveying to him and his heirs lot No. 5 of section 26, T. 2 N., R. 1. W. without reservation as to the submerged lands in front thereof; that in 1852, at the request of the Surveyor General, Township 2 North, of Range 1 West was re-surveyed by Arthur Randolph and a new meander line of Lake Jackson was made, by which additional lots 3, 4, 5 and 6 were added to fractional section 27, and an additional lot 8 was added to section 26; that the question of the title to the said additional lots of section 27, shown by the Randolph survey, was presented to the Secretary of the Interior on an application to pay for and receive a patent for the said additional lots of section 27, as shown by the Randolph survey, and the Secretary of the Interior decided that the successors in title to Dickerson were entitled under his purchase to a conveyance of all the lands embraced in the lots of the Donelson survey [404]*404according to the field notes thereof upon payment for the full area embraced therein; that a patent was issued accordingly in the name of Dickerson for the additional said lots shown as being a part of fractional section 27 and intended to be sold as part of lot 2 of said section; that at the time of the survey of 1824 the land fronted and bordered on Lake Jackson, and was bought and sold with reference to its frontage on said lake, as shown by the meander thereof; that under and by virtue of the said patents the title to the submerged lands in front of the upland described in said patents, to the middle of the said lake passed to said Dickerson in fee simple; that likewise the patent issued to Harris conveyed title to the submerged lands in front of the uplands described in his patent to the middle of said lake in fee simple; that appellee is the successor in title thereto; that a patent had been issued in 1883 to the State of Florida under the Swamp Land Grant Act of Congress of September 28, 1850, covering the unsurveyed parts of sections 26 and 27 in township 2 north, of range 1 west; that the appellants, defendants below, hold in trust the title so attempted to be conveyed to the State; that the unsurveyed parts of sections 26 and 27 so patented to the State embraced the submerged lands in front of said lots in said sections 26 and 27 to the middle of Lake Jackson; that quite recently the waters of Lake Jackson have, from natural causes not fully known, almost entirely disappeared, and the lands originally submerged are now uncovered; that upon information and belief it is alleged that propositions have recently been made to the defendant Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund to buy all of the unsurveyed lands aforesaid which front the upland acquired and owned by the complainant as stated, and the title to which from the shore to what was lately the middle of said lake is vested in complainant; that [405]*405defendants are likely to sell said lands unless enjoined; that the said patent to the State did not pass title to the submerged lands, but is a cloud on complainant’s title. Appropriate relief is prayed.

A demurrer to the bill of complaint, on grounds that complainant’s title was not shown, was overruled, and defendants answered denying that the patents issued to Dickerson “conveyed title to lands beyond the lines fixed and established by said official surveys, plats and field notes, and allege that such limitation, description and boundary so fixed and established was a reservation on behalf of the United States government of the submerged lands in front thereof, lying between the boundary line so established and fixed and stated in said patents based upon said surveys and field notes, to and including the center or thread of the lake.” A replication was filed. Subsequently the cause was submitted to the chancellor on an agreed statement of facts, stating in brief: that Lake Jackson “was at the time of said survey a natural lake,” “a body of water of irregular shape lying partly in the two townships named. At mean water it will average not over two feet in depth, except in a few basins where the water may be eight or ten feet deep. These basins are four or five in number, scattered over the lake at irregular intervals, and separated by long reaches of shallow water. They are of an average of four or five acres in extent, except the largest which may reach ten or fifteen acres. The water, except in these basins, is thick with water grasses, and cattle from adjoining plantations graze all over it from hoof to belly deep. In several places there are fords across the main body and broadest portions of the lake which are used at all seasons by persons going back and, forth between their plantations and Tallahassee, on horseback and in buggies and wagons. The lake can only be navigated at ordinary stage with flat [406]*406bottomed boats drawing from three to six inches of water, except in the basins mentioned; and in fact the only navigation is in boats, or bateaux of the character mentioned, in fishing and shooting water fowl. There are one or more subterranean outlets, or sinks, through which the waters of the lake at times escape, leaving the entire bed, except in a few of the basins mentioned, entirely dry, and at such times persons can walk dry-shod over the whole bed of the lake. This situation existed at the time the bill in this case was filed, and when the negotiations for the sale of the unsurveyed portion of said lake charged in the bill were pending.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Fla. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broward-v-mabry-fla-1909.