Commodores Point Terminal Co. v. Hudnall

3 F.2d 841, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 905
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJanuary 30, 1925
Docket215
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 841 (Commodores Point Terminal Co. v. Hudnall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commodores Point Terminal Co. v. Hudnall, 3 F.2d 841, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 905 (S.D. Fla. 1925).

Opinion

CALL, District Judge.

This cause comes on for final hearing upon the bill of complaint, the answers of the defendants, the replications to that part of the answers of certain defendants praying partition, the testimony taken before the examiner by the parties, and certain depositions filed in the cause. The bill of complaint, with its exhibits, contains ihore than 240 pages, and I shall not attempt to give a resume .of it,, but will refer to Judge Clayton’s opinion, filed on the hearing of one aspect of this ease, and reported in 283 F. 155 to 162, for a statement of the allegations of the bill.

The defendants, all except Mrs. .Wilson, as the executrix of T. M. Wilson, who disclaims, answered the bill, and, as I understand their contentions, claim undivided interests in the lands contained in the “Hud-nail grant,” as heirs of two of the children of E. Hudnall, to the uplands of said grant, and to the filled-in lands below high-water mark, along the St. Johns river, under the Riparian Act passed by the Florida Legislature in 1921 (chapter 8537), as owners of the uplands in December, 1856, when the first Riparian Act was passed. The answers pray for partition of the lands held in possession by the complainants as tenants in common.

At the first hearing the defendants filed a motion to sustain various and sundry objections to testimony reserved by them before the examiner. I have examined these objections and motions to strike, but none of them seem to me well taken or of sufficient importance in this ease to require any discussion. Said objections insisted upon will be overruled.

The first contention of defendants which I will take up is in respect to the title to the grant. The complainants contended that Hudnall acquired title from the Spanish government through the concession made by Gov. Coppinger to Hogan, who conveyed to E. Hudnall. The contention of the defendants is that this concession did not convey the lands, either in fee or equitably, but that when the commissioners, appointed to ascertain the private land claims under the Spanish government, confirmed the “Hogan grant” to the heirs of E. Hudnall, in 1826, and the report was approved by Congress, the heirs were then vested with title.

In considering this contention, it must be • borne in mind that Gov. Coppinger, the Spanish Governor in 1817, made the concession to Hogan for 255 acres of land at the point asked in Hogan’s petition, and ordered the lands surveyed, and that in a short time, about two 'months, the survey was made by the official surveyor, and plat made delineating the concession. It must be that these papers, the petition of Hogan, the concession by the Governor, and the report of the survey and plat purporting to show the lands surveyed in compliance with the concession, were duly returned to the proper officer, as either the originals or copies of same appear in the Spanish archives, delivered under (he treaty of cession to the United States, and now in the custody of the commissioner of agriculture of the state of Florida, the custodian of same under the statutes.

I therefore find as a fact from the evidence that in 1817, before the cession by Spain of the Floridas to the United States, a valid concession of the lands in controversy was made to Hogan, and the concession was duly surveyed by the Spanish official whose duty it was to make surveys. As a *843 matter of law, I find that those proceedings segregated these lands from the public lands of Spain which passed to the United States by the treaty of cession.

I further find as a fact from the testimony that Hogan by his deed vested in E. Hudnall all his right and title to the land in 1818, while the Floridas were Spanish possessions. I further find as a fact that in 1825 the heirs of E. Hndnall, through an attorney, filed their claim before the land commissioners of East Florida, deraigning title through Hogan to the lands, which claim was allowed in said year by the commissioners to the heirs of Hndnall as a valid Spanish grant, duly reported to Congress, and by Congress confirmed in 1827 as such Spanish grant.

Under these facts I find as a matter of law that the title to the lands in controversy comes from the Spanish government. There ma.y be a question whether the title is equitable or legal, there having been no royal grant; but in my view it ean make no difference in the decision of the issues in this case. I find as a ma-tter of law that the heirs of E. Hudnall take whatever rights they may have to the lands in controversy through the concession to Hogan, and the confirmation by the United States did not vest in them an independent title derived from the United States. The acts of confirmation are simply recognitions of the Spanish title and a segregation from the public domain ceded to the United States by Spain. What is said above applies to the lands above high-water mark, covered by the concession to Hogan.

The complainants contend that the land was ganancial property. The facts appearing from the testimony are: That E. Hndnall, for a valuable consideration, acquired the title of Hogan in 1818, while the marriage relation existed between him and Elizabeth Hudnall, and while the Floridas wore Spanish possessions. Under the Spanish law, property acquired by either spouse for "a valuable consideration, an onerous title as distinguished from a gift, devise, or bequest, becomes ganancial. Under this law, the rights acquired by Hudnall from Hogan, whether legal or equitable, become a pax’t of the gananciales. This being so, at the death of Hndnall, the possession and administration of the propex’ty remained with the widow, Elizabeth, until the debts were paid, and the value of the gananciales, after payment of the debts, ascertained, theft to be divided equally between the widow and the heirs, of the dead husband. This power of payment of the common debts out of the gananciales caxried with it the power of sale of such as was necessary to pay them. It appears from the proofs that Hndnall at his death left debts. The date of his death is not definitely fixed, but was probably after the change of flags. From the advertisements by the administrators, filed in evidence, it appears that the estate was insolvent, and certain real estate advertised to pay debts. The records of the probate office in St. Augustine, Fla., were destroyed, and so at this late day better proof of the condition of the estate cannot be made. The lands contained in the Hogan concession wore conveyed by Elizabeth Hendricks, in 1838, after the death of Hendricks (a.nd who, after the death of Hudnall, intermarried with Hendricks), to David Brown, by warranty deed. The complainants all claim by mesne conveyances from David Brown. Under these facts, I find, as a matter of law, that the deed from Elizabeth Hendricks to David Brown conveyed all the right and title of E. Hudnall in and to the Hogan concession to David Brown.

Contention is made by defendants that Elizabeth Hendricks had released all claim to her ganancial rights by becoming eoad-ministratrix of her husband, Hudnall, by joining in a deed as administratrix, and joining with the heirs in,a certain conveyance. These acts do not, I think, evince such an intention, nor do I think they work an estoppel upon David Brown or his successors in title to claim that the property was a part of the gananciales. There is no particle of testimony even hinting at any change of position of the defendants' ancestors by reason of such facts.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 841, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commodores-point-terminal-co-v-hudnall-flsd-1925.