Dunscombe v. Loftin

154 F.2d 963, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2944
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1946
DocketNo. 11351
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 154 F.2d 963 (Dunscombe v. Loftin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunscombe v. Loftin, 154 F.2d 963, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2944 (5th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

WALLER, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, as plaintiff, filed a petition asking that she be allowed to sue the trustees in bankruptcy of the Florida East Coast Railway Company. She asserted that the Railway ran over .a portion of the Miles or Hanson Grant, to which it had no title and of which she claimed to be the owner; that her claim was not for the land but for the value of the land taken and used without right through eminent domain proceedings or otherwise by the Railway.

She tendered a complaint with her petition wherein she deraigned title from the Kingdom of Spain into Rufus K. Sewall, Annabelle Robertson, and others as tenants-in-common, and alleged that in 1890 Annabelle Robertson, joined by other tenants-in-common, filed, in the United States Circuit Court for Florida, a bill for partition of the land among the tenants-in-common. The Florida East Coast Railway Company was made a defendant for the purpose of seeking a cancellation of a deed to the Railway by R. K. Sewall of a tract of land 100 feet by 450 feet alleged to be ineffectual to convey title.' This tract was no part of the right of way of the railroad. In the final decree the Railway was held to have no title to this lot. In that suit commissioners, who were appointed to divide the land am’ong the various claimants, divided the land into lots and made a partition plat which was filed among the public records.

The complaint in the instant case further alleged: that in partitioning said lands the commissioners found a single track railway running across the grant from north to south, which railroad was used as a dividing line by the commissioners between lots 2 and 3, but that neither the commissioners nor the Court allotted any part of said grant to the Railway Company; that the plan of partition was submitted to, and approved by, the Court; that in the final decree of partition, however, the Court, without lawful authority, awarded to the Railway Company the right of way as laid out by the Commissioners and then used and occupied by the Railway Company, but that since the Court had already found that the Railway Company had no interest in said grant, and since the commissioners had awarded no part of the grant to the Railway Company, the Court was without jurisdiction to give to it any portion thereof; that the Railway Company was a Florida corporation empowered to exercise the power of eminent domain and could not acquire land in such a partition proceeding, nor by a claim of adverse possession, and that moreover the only part of the grant in possession of the Railway Company at the time of the partition was that upon which its single track railway was laid; that in due course lots 2, 3, and 4 of the grant were conveyed to Sewall’s Point Land Company, and in July, 1919, the grantee therein conveyed lots 3 and 4 to Carroll Dunscombe, who in turn conveyed to Florida Growers, Inc.; that in 1926 the Railway, without claim of right, threw up a grade and double-tracked its railroad over the land; that lots 3 and 4 were partially platted and on May 28, 1928, Florida Growers, Inc., conveyed the unplatted part to plaintiff and included in the unplatted part was the property embraced in the right of way in question; that Florida Growers, Inc., was dissolved for failure to pay its capital stock tax to the State of Florida, and that at the time of the dissolution plaintiff was the owner and holder of all of the outstanding stock of the corporation and. became vested with all its rights and claims, including the right to claim the value of the land appropriated by the Railway Company in 1926, or, that is, the portion of the right of way upon which the Railway had built the second of its [965]*965double line track of railroad without purchase or condemnation or paying full value as required by the Constitution of the State and of the United States; that the Railway Company had never fenced the lands nor asserted any claim other than to dig pits, grade, and lay ties on and across the land, but that it had authorized the Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company, a corporation also having the right of eminent domain, to erect poles and to string wires across a portion of said property in January, 1926; that at the time the land was appropriated by the Railway Company in 1926 it had a value of $9,000 for which amount, plus interest, the plaintiff claims a vendors lien.

The Trustees of the Railway Company filed what they called legal objections to granting the petition to allow the plaintiff to sue, and also a lengthy report to the Court on the J. K. Dunscombe claim, in which they state that they have examined and investigated the matters alleged in the petition, certain abstracts, the record of the Court, and other public records, and that claim was barred by laches and limitations and otherwise without merit.

The Court denied the petitioner leave to sue, and in a memorandum filed with said order stated that Carroll Dunscombe, petitioner’s husband and attorney, acquired from Sewall’s Point Land Company on July 28, 1922 [Plaintiff alleged that this conveyance was in 1919], those portions of lots 3 and 4 of the Miles or Ilanson Grant through which the Florida East Coast right of way runs, and on April 3, 1928, the title to all the unplatted part of said lots was conveyed to the petitioner, J. K. Dunscombe ; that the deed from Sewall’s Point I,and Company to petitioner’s husband is based upon plats of lots 3 and 4, one of which plats was prepared and acknowledged by the grantor in the deed to Carroll Dunscombe and shows the right of way 100 feet wide through said lots; that since petitioner claims through this deed, she is estopped to dispute the existence of the right of way shown on the plat which is a link in the chain of title through which she claims; that the Railway Company was in possession under a claim of right, namely, the decree of the Federal Court entered December 17, 1901, dividing said lands, wherein the Court decreed that the Railway Company was entitled ■ to a right of way to the extent and width as then occupied, laid out, and surveyed through the grant; that there was no appeal from this decree; that since said date the Railway Company had been in actual undisputed possession pursuant to said decree; that since 1915 or earlier the Railroad’s possession of 100 feet of right of way had been evidenced on the ground by the presence of telephone and telegraph poles and right of way monuments along the easterly jftid westerly sidps of the 100-foot right of way; that when Carroll Dunscombe acquired title in 1922 his grantor, Sewall’s Point Land Company, was not in possession of any portion of this right of way; and that the petitioner and her predecessor husband took a deed from a grantor out of possession with actual notice of the Railway Company’s possession and claim of title as evidenced on the ground by the above-mentioned markers, of which the plaintiff had notice as early as 1922, and that the Railway Company’s possession being open, continuous, and uninterrupted, the Railway Company had at least title by adverse possession; that any claim of the plaintiffs to land or compensation which the plaintiff might otherwise have had was long since barred by the statute of limitations and laches, as well as by orders of the Court in the bankruptcy proceedings of the Railroad limiting and fixing the time within which claims might be filed against the Railway; that twenty-three years had elapsed since the plaintiff’s husband took title and seventeen years had elapsed since the Petitioner took title.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F.2d 963, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunscombe-v-loftin-ca5-1946.