Calder v. Hillsboro Land Company

122 So. 2d 445
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 5, 1960
Docket1515
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 122 So. 2d 445 (Calder v. Hillsboro Land Company) 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
Calder v. Hillsboro Land Company, 122 So. 2d 445 (Fla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

122 So.2d 445 (1960)

Stephen A. CALDER et al., Appellants,
v.
HILLSBORO LAND COMPANY, a Florida Corporation, et al., Appellees.

No. 1515.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

August 5, 1960.
Rehearing Denied August 26, 1960.

*446 C.L. Chancey and Paris G. Singer, Fort Lauderdale, for appellants.

English, McCaughan & O'Bryan, Fort Lauderdale, for appellees.

SMITH, D.C., Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree entered in a suit to quiet title. The Chancellor ruled for the plaintiff below and the defendants bring this appeal.

The land involved is located near Pompano Beach, in Broward County, Florida, and is described as Government Lot 3 and Government Lot 4, in Fractional Southwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 48 South, Range 43 East, and lies just west of the present right-of-way of the Intercoastal Waterway, the Hillsboro River at this point. All of Township 48 South, Range 43 East was surveyed by the United States Government in the year 1870, with all interior lines having been run by M.A. Williams, deputy surveyor. The official field notes of the survey, as certified by M.A. Williams, and the official plat of the survey prepared from the field notes, were filed in the General Land Office. Certified copies of both the field notes and the official government plat were received in evidence. The government township plat showed three lots existing in said Fractional Southwest Quarter of Section 20 — Lots 3, 4 and 5. This case involves only Government Lots 3 and 4. *447

*448 The plaintiff, Hillsboro Land Company, was admittedly the owner of the lands comprising Government Lot 3, wherever such lands may be. The defendants and counter-claimants, Stephen A. Calder and A.H. Burket, were admittedly the owners of the lands comprising Government Lot 4, wherever such lands may be, except a portion of Lot 4 not involved in these proceedings. The official government plat shows that Government Lot 3 contains 22.55 acres and that Government Lot 4 contains 30 acres.

The plaintiff acquired Government Lot 3 in 1952. At such time the land was unimproved and in its natural state. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff subdivided the land into the subdivisions of Lighthouse Point, 1st Section, and Lighthouse Point, 2nd Section, and plats thereof were duly filed for record. The plaintiff sold and conveyed numerous lots in said subdivisions. In 1954, the defendant and counter-claimant, A.H. Burket, conveyed to the defendant and counter-claimant, Stephen A. Calder, by a metes and bounds description, a certain parcel of land purportedly being a portion of Government Lot 4, but which, when laid out upon the land, encompassed the easterly portion of the lands in the two subdivisions of Lighthouse Point, including lands claimed by the plaintiff, as well as various lots in said subdivisions claimed by grantees, direct or remote, of the plaintiff. The disputed land consists of approximately 78 lots or parcels of land in the easterly portion of the two subdivisions of Lighthouse Point, as well as portions of certain roads, drives, streets and other public ways, dedicated to the public by said plats. The plaintiff claims that all said lands are located in Government Lot 3 — the defendants claim that all of such lands are located in Government Lot 4.

The plaintiff filed its suit against the defendants Calder and Burket to quiet its title against the claims of the defendants. The defendants by counterclaim sought the same relief against the plaintiff and approximately 70 other persons and corporations who were claiming title to or interest in various lots in the two subdivisions as successors in interest of the plaintiff. The counterdefendants filed answers and other pleadings. At pre-trial conference, it was stipulated that since the counterdefendants, other than the plaintiff, all claimed under the plaintiff, a decree in favor of the plaintiff on the issues between the plaintiff and the defendants would also be conclusive in favor of the other counterdefendants and upon such stipulation, it was ordered that the cause proceed to final hearing, first upon the issues between the plaintiff and the defendant, but reserving to the other counterdefendants the right to be heard upon their special defenses in the event the defendants should prevail.

The dispute centers upon the boundaries between the two government lots (Lot 3 and Lot 4). According to the official government plat, Lot 3 was bounded on the east by a body of water which was a part of the Hillsboro River and an arm extending northwesterly and northerly off from the River, and this same body of water was also the westerly and southerly boundary of Lot 4. The plat clearly shows this body of water and also shows that it is the only body of water of such size, shape and contour in said Southwest Fractional Section 20 in existence at the time of the government survey. In 1952, when the plaintiff acquired the land in Government Lot 3 and while the land in Lots 3 and 4 was still unimproved and in its natural state, except for a small portion of Lot 4 not involved in this suit, there existed in the Southwest Quarter of Section 20 one and only one body of water, known as Lake Placid. This body of water was located upon the ground approximately 800 feet easterly and northerly of the body of water shown on the official government plat which constituted the east boundary of Lot 3 and the westerly and southerly boundaries of Lot 4.

It is the plaintiff's contention that since, according to the official government survey and plat, the easterly boundary of Lot 3 was a body of water, and since Lake Placid is the *449 only body of water existing in said Fractional Section 20, and since Lake Placid conforms substantially in size, shape and contour to the body of water shown upon the government plat, Lake Placid constitutes the easterly boundary of Lot 3 and the westerly and southerly boundary of Lot 4. Accordingly, the plaintiff claims that all of the land in said Fractional Southwest Quarter of Section 20 lying between the west line of said Fractional Section 20 and the westerly shore line of Lake Placid, is a part of Lot 3, and that such lands comprise the subdivisions of Lighthouse Point, 1st Section, and Lighthouse Point, 2nd Section.

The defendants, while admitting that Lake Placid was the only body of water existing in said Fractional Southwest Quarter of Section 20 in 1952, contend that since Lake Placid is not located upon the ground in the exact location shown for the body of water shown on the official government plat, that Lake Placid is not the boundary between Government Lot 3 and Government Lot 4. The defendants contend that the boundaries of the two lots must be fixed by reference to the traverse or meander lines of the field notes of the official government survey, even though when such lines are plotted upon the ground, they fall entirely upon dry land, and thus produce a situation where the boundary between Government Lot 3 and Government Lot 4 would be a parcel of land between 300 to 400 feet in width, of undeterminate ownership, rather than a water boundary as shown by the government plat. Accordingly, the defendants contend that the westerly boundary of Lot 4 extends completely over Lake Placid and into a portion of the subdivisions of Lighthouse Point, and thus the defendants claim title to said parcels of land in said subdivisions specifically described in their counterclaim. If the plaintiff's contention is correct, Government Lot 3 now contains approximately 54.85 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
122 So. 2d 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calder-v-hillsboro-land-company-fladistctapp-1960.