Burkart v. City of Fort Lauderdale

168 So. 2d 65
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 7, 1964
Docket33107
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 So. 2d 65 (Burkart v. City of Fort Lauderdale) 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
Burkart v. City of Fort Lauderdale, 168 So. 2d 65 (Fla. 1964).

Opinion

168 So.2d 65 (1964)

Oliver R. BURKART and Mabel C. Burkart, husband and wife, Petitioners-Appellants,
v.
CITY OF FORT LAUDERDALE, a municipal corporation, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 33107.

Supreme Court of Florida.

October 7, 1964.
Rehearing Denied November 6, 1964.

Patterson & Maloney, Fort Lauderdale for petitioners.

C. Shelby Dale, James E. Edwards and William J. Lee, Fort Lauderdale, for respondent.

MASON, Circuit Judge.

Petitioners, plaintiffs in the trial court and appellants in the District Court of Appeal, Second District, filed their petition in this court for a writ of certiorari to be directed to the latter court to have reviewed a decision of that court affirming a decree of the Circuit Court in and for Broward County, in equity, in favor of respondent herein, defendant and appellee below. We granted the writ both on jurisdiction and *66 merits, being of the view that the petition reflects possible conflict between the decision of the District Court of Appeal and a prior decision of this court insofar as the decision affirmed that part of the lower court's decree which lodges exclusive riparian rights in the respondent-defendant City of Fort Lauderdale.

The facts of the case are extensively set out in the majority opinion below and no good purpose will be served to repeat them here, except as is necessary to point up the problem which confronts us in determining whether there is conflict between the decision below and prior holdings of this court, and if such conflict exists, to assist us in deciding the case on the merits. For a statement of such facts we refer the reader to the decision and opinion of the District Court of Appeal, Second District, 156 So.2d 752, filed October 9, 1963.

For the purposes of this review it is sufficient to relate that in 1921 the owner of certain property located on New River Sound, a navigable body of water in Broward County, recorded a subdivision plat of the land, which plat contained a dedication with pertinent portions as follows:

"The riparian rights in and to the waters of New River and New River Sound opposite each lot or parcel of land fronting or abutting upon Ocean View Drive are hereby reserved to the New River Development Company, its successors, legal representatives or assigns, owners of said abutting lots or parcels of land. The streets, avenues and Ocean View Drive, shown hereon are hereby dedicated to the perpetual use of the public as thoroughfares, reserving to the New River Development Company * * * the reversion or reversions thereof, whenever discontinued by law." (Emphasis supplied)

Petitioners, through mesne conveyances from the subdivider, obtained various lots, with the reserved riparian rights, in the subdivision. These lots face east and abut the west side of Ocean View Drive, which runs along and borders upon New River Sound lying to the east of said Drive. This street runs generally in a north and south direction.

Petitioners' complaint below asserted ownership of riparian rights in respect of the lands subsequently formed by accretion and lying easterly across Ocean View Drive opposite their lots in the subdivision, by virtue of their ownership of the underlying fee in Ocean View Drive, and by virtue of the reservation of riparian rights in the dedication by the dedicator to itself and its assigns. The complaint further alleges that under the provisions of the Riparian Rights Act of 1856, and amendatory and supplementary statutes enacted thereafter, petitioners have the right to fill in the submerged land lying in front of their lots and to the east of Ocean View Drive, to the channel of the Sound. The petitioners prayed that they be declared the owners of this land, free and clear of any claim, right or title of the respondent City, and that the City be enjoined from interfering with their use or disposal of said land. Petitioners also allege that at the time of the recording of the plat there existed a certain parcel of land between the street and the water fee title to which was in the dedicator and which passed to them by mesne conveyances, and that as to this parcel they have outright ownership, and that the City of Fort Lauderdale has no rights therein, riparian, or otherwise. The City answered and asserted that there was no such land lying east of the Drive when the plat was recorded and that the dedication of the street to the public by petitioners' predecessor in title operated to relinquish to the public, and to merge in the public right, the dedicator's, and its assigns' individual and private rights and right of access to the open navigable waters in front of the dedicator's uplands. It also contended that under its charter it has the power to regulate and control all the streets, waterways and public ways within the City *67 limits, and has adopted ordinances to that effect.

The suit was filed in 1946 but was not determined until 1960. The chancellor dismissed the suit upon final hearing, denying the petitioners the relief sought. The District Court of Appeal affirmed, one member dissenting. In affirming the court first concluded that the chancellor was correct in holding that the "easterly boundary of Ocean View Drive, as shown on the plat, was intended to be and was the waters of New River Sound" and that any accumulated deposits against Ocean View Drive were a part of the dedicated street. The District Court of Appeal found "the words on the face of the plat, dedicating the Drive as a public thoroughfare and reserving riparian rights, when considered in the light of all the circumstances * * * are clearly inconsistent" and "therefore, the plat and its dedication must be construed in favor of the public and against the reservation by the subdivider and his successors in title." Hence, the court construed the dedication as "operating to relinquish to the public, and to merge in the public right, the dedicator's individual riparian rights to the navigable waters."

As to the holding of the District Court of Appeal that the "easterly boundary of Ocean View Drive, as shown on the plat, was intended to be and was the waters of New River Sound," we find no conflict, as applied to the facts in the case, between it and the decisions of this court in Brickell v. Town of Ft. Lauderdale, 75 Fla. 622, 78 So. 681, or that of this court in Earle v. McCarty, Fla., 70 So.2d 314, relied upon by petitioners to give this court jurisdiction on the ground of conflict. In both of these cited cases the principle was set forth that where a street is shown on a plat of a subdivision to run along a navigable stream, and the plat itself shows the side of the street furthest from the stream to be denoted by a straight line, while the side nearest the stream is marked by undulating or wavy lines, presumably indicating the irregular line of the waters of the stream, these facts are taken to define a street lying on the water, with nothing between it and the water, in the absence of anything appearing to the contrary on the plat or in the dedication. The chancellor below resolved an apparent conflict between the oral testimony taken at the final hearing and the lines of the street as shown on the plat, and concluded that the latter was intrinsic evidence in the plat itself indicating that the maker of the plat showed no land lying between the street and the water at the time the plat was made and recorded. And having so resolved this conflict, he concluded that the easterly boundary of Ocean View Drive, as shown on the plat, was intended to be and was the waters of New River Sound.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 2d 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burkart-v-city-of-fort-lauderdale-fla-1964.