Fletcher v. Fletcher

38 So. 2d 300, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 1215
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 14, 1949
StatusPublished

This text of 38 So. 2d 300 (Fletcher v. Fletcher) 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
Fletcher v. Fletcher, 38 So. 2d 300, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 1215 (Fla. 1949).

Opinion

Action by Guillermina V. Fletcher against Andrew R. Fletcher and others for a decree that the plaintiff was absolute owner of certain realty as against the claims and alleged interest of the defendants, wherein the defendants filed a counterclaim seeking an order requiring the plaintiff to execute such a deed of conveyance as might be necessary to perfect title in defendants as tenants in common to the realty. From a decree in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants appeal.

Decree affirmed. Madison K. Fletcher and Guillermina Vega were married at San Juan on the Island of Puerto Rico on September 8, 1941. These parties on June 22, 1944, acquired by warranty deed described lots in Blocks 8 and 14 in the Town of Haines City, Florida, and situated thereon was an apartment house. On April 27, 1944, they acquired by warranty deed a tract of approximately 17 acres of land lying in close proximity to the city limits of the City of Bartow. Some few acres of the tract were in citrus with a dwelling house thereon. It was valued at approximately $9,500, while the apartment was placed at about $25,000, both properties being encumbered by mortgages. Madison K. Fletcher and wife, Guillermina V. Fletcher, owned and held the above real estate as tenants by the entirety.

Madison K. Fletcher died on March 25, 1945, and left surviving his widow, Guillermina V. Fletcher, and some twelve children by a former marriage. A controversy or dispute arose between the widow of Madison K. Fletcher and her twelve step children as to a proper division among the heirs of the estate of Madison K. Fletcher, deceased. The widow, on August 26, 1946, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Polk County, Florida, against her step children and alleged that she was the exclusive owner by survivorship of the lands situated in Polk County, Florida, then appearing of record in the joint names of Madison K. Fletcher and Guillermina V. Fletcher. She prayed for a decree to be entered to the effect that she was the absolute owner of the Polk County lands as against the claims and alleged interest of her step children.

It is not disputed that Madison K. Fletcher died testate on the island of Puerto Rico and made complete testamentary distribution of all of his property situated on the island at the time of his death. The widow and the testator's son, Madison J. Fletcher, were made co-executors. Counsel for the children of the deceased contend that the last will and testament of Madison K. Fletcher, coupled with a contract referred *Page 301 to as a family settlement and signed by some of the children and the widow of the deceased and further identified as deed No. 17, dated subsequent to testator's death, had the legal effect of enlarging the property interest of the widow in the Puerto Rican property and simultaneously made the children of the testator tenants in common with the widow in the property located in Polk County, Florida. Counsel for the widow contends that her signature to deed No. 17 was obtained on the Island of Puerto Rico by chicanery, fraud, over-reaching, imposition and other conditions and circumstances which rendered deed No. 17 not only inequitable and unjust but void and unenforceable.

The answer of the defendant step children (appellants) in effect sets out a signed written agreement with the widow, appellee, referred to in the record as deed No. 17, by the terms of which the lands situated in Polk County, Florida, owned by the widow and the deceased as an estate by the entirety would be owned and distributed by the widow and step children as an estate in common. The consideration for deed No. 17 was the amicable partition and distribution of all properties of the decedent's estate situated in Puerto Rico and Polk County, Florida. The widow, it was alleged, signed deed No. 17 for a valuable consideration, after being advised of all her legal rights as to the Florida law, and it was her intention thereby to change her status of ownership from that as an owner by survivorship of the Polk County lands to that of tenant in common with her twelve step children.

The answer sets out that deed No. 17 was signed, executed and delivered and all acts by her performed necessary to the validity and enforceability of the deed; that in the partition and distribution of all the property of the estate the widow has received under deed No. 17 an adequate and lawful consideration for her relinquishment of her interest in the Polk County lands, as a survivor of an estate by the entirety, to that of an estate by tenants in common with her step children. It is alleged that the widow now refuses to carry out the binding terms, conditions and stipulations set forth in deed No. 17 and repudiates the applicable provisions with reference to the Polk County lands, and her action in the premises is not only a fraud on her step children but a breach and violation of the terms and provisions of deed No. 17. The step children in their counterclaim pray for an order requiring the widow to execute such a deed of conveyance as may be required or necessary to perfect title in them as tenants in common to the Polk County properties as provided for in deed No. 17.

The case was submitted to the Chancellor below on final hearing upon the bill of complaint and amended answer after the time for taking testimony had expired. Appearing in the record are answers of the plaintiff-appellee to many interrogatories propounded to her by counsel for the defendants-appellants. Counsel for appellants point out that under Section 63.48(7), F.S.A., answers to interrogatories and admissions of documents shall be evidence against, but not for, the party interrogated. It is suggested that the Chancellor below in entering a decree for the plaintiff-appellee and against the defendants-appellants failed or omitted to observe the clear mandates and provisions of Section 63.48(7), supra.

Deed No. 17 by record appears to have been prepared by Puerto Rican counsel and a copy thereof is attached to the amended answer and counterclaim of the defendants-appellants and was construed by the Chancellor and his interpretation thereof set out in the final decree challenged on this appeal. The writer is impressed with the thought, painstaking care and careful consideration given by the Chancellor below as expressed in his final decree. We adopt the following language of the decree:

"The answer of the defendants alleges that said defendants are in equity the owners of and entitled to have an undivided one-third interest in all said property so claimed by the said Guillermina V. Fletcher and the claim of said defendants to said undivided one-third interest in said lands is based on a certain instrument in writing mentioned and described in said answer as Deed No. 17, a copy of which is made a part of the answer of said defendants. The court has made a careful study of the contents of said Deed No. 17 and finds that said deed is principally and essentially intended *Page 302 as a settlement between the plaintiff in this cause and the defendants in said cause of the rights of all parties to said Deed No. 17 so far as the property owned by Madison K. Fletcher at the time of his death in Puerto Rico was concerned and said Deed No. 17 purposes to determine the exact property and amount of property of the estate of said Madison K. Fletcher in Puerto Rico that the said wife of said Madison K. Fletcher and each of his said children should have and receive from the estate of said Madison K. Fletcher, deceased.

"The said real estate in Florida of the said Madison K. Fletcher, deceased, is referred to in paragraphs marked `Fifth,' paragraph marked `Thirteen,' and paragraph marked `Fourteen,' in said Deed No. 17.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 300, 1949 Fla. LEXIS 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-fletcher-fla-1949.