Coffee v. Groover

20 Fla. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 20 Fla. 64 (Coffee v. Groover) 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
Coffee v. Groover, 20 Fla. 64 (Fla. 1883).

Opinion

The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the court.

Tliis was an action of ejectment brought by defendants in error to recover lands in Madison county, and tided in Jefferson on change of venue. A former trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in error, which was sot aside on appeal by this court in June term, 1882. 19 Fla., 61.

The second trial, in March, 1883, resulted in a verdict and judgment for .the plaintiffs below, defendants in error, and now the defendant below brings error.

The present record brings np questions of pleading which were not before this court at the former hearing, the plaintiff below having been the appellant.

The errors assigned will be considered in their order:

I. The first is that the court refused to dismiss the cause on motion ot defendant below, on the ground that the matter had been adjudicated in the Circuit Court of the United States in his favor.

A former recovery relating to the same cause of action, [78]*78as between parties and privies, may be matter of defence as an estoppel, to be proved at the trial, but it is not good ground of a motion to dismiss, and the motion was properly denied.

IT. The second assignment of error has no foundation in the record. We do not find that the court decided that a judgment as between the plaintiffs in error and the executrix does not bind the heirs of decedent. Uo such judgment was offered at the trial.

III. The third assignment is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the pleas of res adjudicata.

In ejectment all legal defences may be made under the plea of not guilty, and the special denials mentioned in the statute. McC. Dig., 481. Special pleas of matter affecting the legal title, or in estoppel, only encumber the record and tend to embarrassment. Wade vs. Doyle, 17 Fla., 522; Real vs. Spooner, supra 88. They should bo struck out by the court sua sponte, . or on motion or on demurrer, because they are not proper pleas ; but a judgment sustaining a demurrer will not preclude proof on the trial of the facts so improperly pleaded. There was no error in the ruling.

IV. The fourth ground of error is that two of the defendants are married women, and they cannot maintain a suit at law in their own right, nor their husbands in the right of their wives, independent of them.

This assignment we do not think applicable to the case. The husbands and their wives are joined as plaintiffs here in the right of their wives. This is the correct practice. Tyler on Eject., 169; 1 Chitty’s Pl., 82.

V. The fifth ground is “ because the court erred in' de- “ ciding that a grant issued by the State of Georgia, to “ lands outside of the State of Georgia, and within the “ limits of the State of Florida, is superior to a grant is- [79]*79“ sued by the United States Government to the same lands, “ and that parties holding the said lands in Florida by said “ Georgia grant, have superior title to one claiming under “the U. S. Government”: and the sixth ground is “ because “ the court erred in deciding that a party holding land in “ Florida under a Georgia grant for a long time'acquired a “ title superior to that of the United States Government, “ thereby deciding that the statutes of limitation could run “ against the government.”

We do not understand this to be the ruling of the court at the trial, in substance or in effect.

The testimony is substantially the same as that which was before the court upon the former trial. See 19 Fla., 68, et eeq. It shows that the boundary line between Georgia and the Territory, and the State of Florida, was uncertain and in dispute ; that in 1842 Georgia granted this land to James Groover, describing it as laud in what was then Irwin county, in Georgia ; that the survey and plat by which the grant was made were made in 1820 by the Surveyor-General of Georgia; that the State of Georgia, through all the departments of its government, and the local authorities of Irwin and other counties, which were created out of Irwin county, claimed and exercised control g,nd jurisdiction of the territory as far south as the line known as the Watson line, and the courts exercised jurisdiction, civil and criminal; conveyances of land located there were recorded in Georgia; people living there were summoned as witnesses and jurors; the estates of people dying there were administered in the courts of Georgia; lands were surveyed, platted and granted by the authority of the government of that State down to the time of the establishment and recognition of the “ Whitner and Orr ” line by the States of Florida and Georgia, and by the Act of Congress of April 9,1872.

[80]*80James Groover, the grantee of Georgia, was in possession of the land under the grant of 1842 at that time, and he and his grantees and the plaintiffs as heirs of such grantees remained in possession, improving and cultivating it, until they were dispossessed in 1876 by Coffee, against whom this suit is prosecuted.

No definitely marked boundary line between Georgia and the Spanish province of Florida, or between Georgia and the Territory or State of Florida, had ever been recognized by the respective governments until the Whitner and Orr line ivas recognized by Congress in 1872. The boundary was in doubt and in dispute up to that time when the Whitner and Orr survey, made under the authority of the respective States, was for the first time recognized, and grants made by Georgia down to the Watson line were also recognized. (We refer to the opinion of this court in Groover vs. Coffee, 19 Fla. R., 61, 76, for a more detailed statement of the action of the respective State governments on .the subject.)

On the part of the defendant below, it was shown that the land in dispute was patented by the United States to the State of Florida, July 6, 1857, under an act of Congress of September 28, 1850, as “ swamp and overflowed land,” it being a part of fractional section twenty-nine, in township three, north, and range nine, east. On September 2, 1857, the Register of the Florida Land Office issued a certificate of purchase to McCall and Stripling, who assigned and conveyed to A. J. Coffee November 12, 1858, and on the 12th September, 1874, the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of Florida executed a deed of the said section 29 to Coffee. Coffee testifies that in 1839 his brother had a “ claim oh this land and cleared a part of it before it came into market, and he bought his brother’s claim; that Charles A. Groover had a -eleariug also on it, north of the [81]*81Watson line, Coffee’s clearing being south of that line, and Coffee never took actual,possession oí the portion north of said line (which portion of section 29 is the territory in dispute) until after the act. of Congress of 1872. The Groovers were dispossessed in 1876 by Coffee as appears by the testimony, and Coffee has been in possession since that time.

There is nothing in this record nor in the history of the government of the Territory or the State of Florida showing that the authorities oí' the latter exercised any of the powers of government over this portion of section 29 lying north of the Watson lino up to the time of the survey of the Whitner and Orr line, which was recognized and adopted as the boundary February 8, 1861, by the Legislatures of Georgia and Florida, and recognized by Congress in 1872.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Florida First National Bank v. Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund
36 Fla. Supp. 42 (Monroe County Circuit Court, 1971)
Calder v. Hillsboro Land Company
122 So. 2d 445 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)
Schroeder v. Homestead Corp.
77 N.W.2d 678 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1956)
Overly v. Overly
66 So. 2d 706 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1953)
Carson, Et Vir. v. Palmer
190 So. 720 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)
Edgar v. Bacon
122 So. 107 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1929)
Kelsey v. Lake Childs Co.
112 So. 887 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1927)
Jarrett v. United Fuel Gas Co.
130 S.E. 670 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1925)
Osceola Fertilizer Co. v. Beville
98 So. 354 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1923)
Vickers v. Vickers
199 P. 79 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1921)
Covington v. Clemmons
61 Fla. 151 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1911)
McKinnon v. Johnson
57 Fla. 120 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1909)
Hagan v. Ellis
39 Fla. 463 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1897)
Morris v. Burke
38 P. 1065 (Montana Supreme Court, 1895)
Grant v. State
33 Fla. 291 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1894)
Coffee v. Groover
123 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1887)
Florida Savings Bank & Real Estate Exchange v. Smith
21 Fla. 258 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Fla. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffee-v-groover-fla-1883.