Couture v. County of Dade

112 So. 75, 93 Fla. 342
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 112 So. 75 (Couture v. County of Dade) 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
Couture v. County of Dade, 112 So. 75, 93 Fla. 342 (Fla. 1927).

Opinion

Ellis, C. J.

The County Commissioners of Dade County, in the name of the County, exhibited their bill in Chancery in the Circuit Court for that County against Eugene Couture, C. J. A. Dittmar and E. L. Watson and eighteen other persons, alleged to be residents of the County; Herman Harvey and one hundred and nine other persons, whose places of residence were alleged to be unknown, and against Tatum’s Ocean Park Corporation and twelve other corporations, making one hundred and forty-one defendants.

The purpose of the suit was to obtain injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing a road alleged to be a public highway known as the Ocean Beach Road, under the control and management of the County, to declare the title of the road to be in the County, and that the County’s right to the maintenance and continuance of the road as a “ common highway” be quieted, and that the title and right of the defendants in the land over which the road was constructed be decreed to be inferior to that of the County.

According to the record, as certified to us by the Clerk of the Court under the court’s seal, the bill was neither signed by counsel nor by any one of the County Commissioners, nor were its allegations verified by any person in behalf of the complainants. It appears to be without any authenticity whatsoever. The defendants, however, and the learned *345 judge before whom the cause was heard, as well as counsel for all parties, treated it as if it possessed those evidences of verity which the rules require a bill in Chancery for such extraordinary relief to possess.

A temporary injunction was granted restraining the defendants from obstructing the road described in the bill and "from continuing all activities the natural result of which will amount to an obstructing” of the road. After demurrers to the bill were overruled, answers filed and much testimony taken upon a motion to dissolve the injunction, the Chancellor, by order dated April 25, 1925, overruled the motion to dissolve and continued the temporary injunction in full force and effect pending the further order of the Court.

The defendants appealed from that order three months afterwards.

The pleadings in the case, consisting of amended bill, demurrers both special and general, and answers are lengthy; the bill and answers abounding in matters of detail. To undertake to give the substance of each allegation and averment in the pleadings and follow that with a discussion of the evidence pertaining thereto we deem to be unnecessary. The interlocutory order from which this appeal was taken sets forth succinctly the facts which the Chancellor found to be established and which he conceived were sufficient to support the order. Our review of the evidence in the case does not lead us to the conclusion that it clearly does not support such facts though the deductions therefrom do not seem to be so clearly justified.

The County’s ease, as set out in the amended bill of complaint, rests upon the allegations that a public highway extending from a point on the northern boundry line of the city of Miami Beach northward for about seven miles to a point about five hundred feet south of the northern line *346 of Section 14, Township 52 South, Range 42 East has existed for many years and been maintained by the County. The nothern boundry line of the city of Miami Beach is the half section line of Sections 22 and 23 of Township 53 South Range 42 East. See Acts 1917, Chapter 7672. That the road traversed lands owned by the defendants, or in which they were interested, some in one part of the area and others in other parts; that barriers and other obstructions had been placed at different points along the highway ; The Miami Beach Bay Shore Company, one of the defendants, had obstructed the road as it passed through one or more of its subdivisions just out of Miami Beach and that it has laid'out and platted other subdivisions in Section 14 of Township 53 South, Range 42 East, and that it proposes to “barricade and cause the discontinuance” of the road at that point; that Tatum’s Ocean Park Company, one of the defendants, has platted portions of Section 2 of the same Township and Range as well as portions of Sections 35 and 26 of Township 52 South, Range 42 East, or will do so in the near future as to lands in the latter section through which the road runs, and that lands in Section 23 of the same township and range have also been platted by the same corporation as well as land in Section 14 of that township and range.

It is alleged that the purpose of these plats of subdivisions is to offer the lots shown thereon for sale and that the lots as shown by such plats extend across the highway to the Atlantic Ocean; that many persons have become interested by purchase in many of such lots and the names of such persons are set out in the bill as parties defendant; that the effect of such platting of the land and sale to individuals is to obstruct the road and deny to the public access to the Atlantic shore as well as to destroy the scenic beauty of the driveway.

*347 It is alleged that Tatum’s Ocean Park Company has been constructing and has practically completed a road running north and south through the ‘ ‘ said properties herein above described”, but that the road is a great distance from the Atlantic Ocean. That the corporation intends to obstruct and discontinue the use of the Ocean Beach Road.

Like allegations are made as to the activities of the Normandy Beach Development Company on lands in Section 35, Township 52 South, Range 42 East, through which the road passes. That all of the defendants are acting in collusion with one another in the effort to obstruct and discontinue the Ocean Beach Road. That all of such activities are being carried on without the consent of the County obtained through its Board of Commissioners.

There are many other allegations in the bill as to the nearness of the Ocean Beach Road to the Atlantic Ocean; its beauty on account thereof, and the easy access which it affords to the ocean by travelers on the road. There are also allegations as to the use of the road by the public; the construction of it with county funds and maintenance by the County and knowledge of these facts on the part of defendants.

If a roadway is a public highway any wilful obstruction thereof by a person with the intention of preventing its use by the public is without authority of law whether he has knowledge of the means by which it became a public high*^ way or not. The allegation therefore that Ocean Beach Road is a public highway is a complete allegation of the ultimate fact and need not be reinforced by allegations as to* how it became such.

The defense set up by the answers consists of a denial that the Ocean Beach Road, between the points named in the bill, is or ever has been a public highway.

This position is supported by averments of many facts, *348 and it appears from the evidence that such averments were amply supported by the evidence in which there was little if any material contradiction.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 75, 93 Fla. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couture-v-county-of-dade-fla-1927.