Evans, Et Ux. v. Hillsborough County

186 So. 193, 135 Fla. 471
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 10, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 186 So. 193 (Evans, Et Ux. v. Hillsborough County) 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
Evans, Et Ux. v. Hillsborough County, 186 So. 193, 135 Fla. 471 (Fla. 1938).

Opinions

Buford, J.

From an order denying motion to dismiss bill of complaint the defendant in the court below entered appeal. The order appealed from was as follows:

“The motion to dismiss the bill of complaint in the above entitled cause was this' daj' argued before the Court by counsel for the respective parties.

“The court is of the opinion that the facts alleged in the bill of complaint iri this case render the same distinguishable from the decisions in Hillsborough County v. Memorial Heights Development Company, 154 So. 188, and Hillsborough County v. DeSear, 162 So. 703, and is controlled by the rule announced and given effect in Sheppard v. Barron, 194 U. S. 553, Sellers, et al., v. Cox, et al., 56 S. E. 284, and other like authorities including Abell v. Town of Boynton, 117 So. 507, Lyle, et al., v. Hunter, 136 So. 633, Connelly v. Special Road & Bridge Dist., et al., 126 So. 794, and McAdoo v. Moses, 132 So. 638. It is now, therefore,

“Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that the motion to dismiss the bill of complaint be and the same is hereby denied.

“Done and Ordered at Tampa, Florida, this July 22, 1938.”

The appellant states one question for our determination, as follows:

“May a lien be properly decreed to exist and enforced in equity by foreclosure for the amount payable as' principal and interest upon a paving certificate, issued against a tract *473 of real estate for its proportionate share of the cost of grading, paving and curbing a public road in Hillsborough County, upon which such real estate abuts, where the improvement was installed, the cost was ass'essed against the abutting property, and certificates of indebtedness were issued, pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 9316, Acts of 1923, as a supposed constitutional legislative enactment but which statute has been adjudged not so to be?”

Appellee submits that there should be sub-joined thereto, the following statement:

“Where the additional facts- are that the installation of such improvement, together with all that was done was by reason of, in response to, and in conformity with the written request, agreement and acquiescence of the owner of the entire property abutting on both sides of the road improved who invoked the employment of the statute, and who, together with the successors in title of such owner, with full knowledge thereof, acquiesced in all that was done, and the defendant owner is charged with knowledge of and bound by what had transpired.”

The facts involved may be succintly stated, as gleaned from the allegations of the bill of complaint and stated in the briefs, as follows:

Ferncroft Avenue, between designated termini, the same-being a continuous portion of a public road in Hillsborough County outside the limits of any municipality, was graded, paved and curbed, the cost thereof assessed against the property abutting thereon in proportion to its frontage thereon, and certificates of indebtedness consequent upon such assessments were delivered to the contractor in payment for his work in installing the improvement, in strict conformity with the provisions of Chapter 9316, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1923, in response to and only by reason of the written request, agreement and acquiescence of Beach *474 Park Company, the owner of the entire property abutting on both sides of the road thus improved, evidened by the written petition signed by the Beach Park Company and filed with the Board of County Commissioners of Hills-borough County on June 27, 1924. The work was done by Cone Brothers, the contractor, in response to bids requested by the Board of County Commissioners. In accordance with the contract, certificates of indebtedness against the abutting property were delivered to and accepted by the contractor in payment for the work done, amounting to .$4184.62, the total cost of the work. .One of the certificates so issued, No. 8147, dated September 2, 1927, for the principal sum of $756.16, embracing lot 25 of Block 20 of Beach Park unit No. 2, was acquired by purchase by Hills-borough County from Cone Brothers in November, 1931. more than four years after the issuance and delivery of the certificates to the contractor in payment for his work. Foreclosure of such certificate was sought by the appellee, Hillsborough County, by the bill of complaint filed in this cause, to which bill the appellants were made defendants'. Ihe defendant, appellant George M. Evans, was the owner of the lot at the time the bill of complaint was filed, and the appellant, Mary Evans, is his wife. The Beach Park Company, which had acquired the entire abutting property before the improvement of the road, sold and conveyed the lot involved on April 28, 1925, to Lillian O. Young. Thereafter, Lillian O. Young, joined by her husband, sold and conveyed the lot on March 18, 1927, to Tampa Coal Company. The defendant, George M. Evans, acquired title from the Tampa Coal Company by quit claim deed executed May 5, 1938.

The certificate sought to be foreclosed remains unpaid both as to principal and interest, and’ no part of the cost of grading, paving and curbing of the road adjacent to s'aid *475 lot has been paid to the contractor or to Hillsborough County.

Following the completion of the grading, paving and curbing of the road, in strict conformity with the provisions of Chapter 9316, the Board of County Commissioners assessed the entire cost of the improvement against the property abutting on the road in proportion to frontage. Notice of such assessment was given both by newspaper publication and by mail to the owners, with advice of the date upon which certificates were proposed to be issued in accordance with the assessments and that any interested person might make any valid objection to the issuance of any of the certificates at any time prior to the is'suance thereof No objection was interposed by anyone to the issuance of any of the certificates. Such certificates issued, and record thereof was made in the public road improvement lien book and thereafter the certificates were delivered to and accepted by the contractor.

The petition in response to which the road was improved and except for which the road would not have been improved, by reference to Chapter 9316 by the quotation of the title, in reality incorporated the provisions of such chapter into the petition, and the petition furthermore embodied the declared understanding of the petitioner “that the total cost of such improvement, including the paving of the road, grading and curbing and the paving of road and alley intersections and all other costs that are incident to this work will be paid for by the owners of the abutting property,” which was tantamount (as borne out by the authorities to be hereafter cited) to an agreement on the part of the petitioner that the entire cost of the improvement be assessed against its property in accordance with the front foot rule.

The improvement was made, the cost assessed and the *476

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 193, 135 Fla. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-et-ux-v-hillsborough-county-fla-1938.