Fuller, as Admrx. Etc. v. Burruss

137 So. 241, 102 Fla. 1145
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 8, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 137 So. 241 (Fuller, as Admrx. Etc. v. Burruss) 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
Fuller, as Admrx. Etc. v. Burruss, 137 So. 241, 102 Fla. 1145 (Fla. 1931).

Opinion

Davis, J.

— In this case the Circuit Judge made an order dismissing an appeal taken from an order of the County Judge of Alachua County in a matter pertaining to his Probate Jurisdiction, as authorized by Section 4642, Com. Gen. Laws, 1927, 2923, Rev. Gen. Stats. The ground of dismissal was that the appellant had not complied with Section 4644, Comp. Gen. Laws, 2925 Rev. Gen. Stats., by having issued and served, as provided by that section, a proper citation to the appellees, the appeal not having been taken in open court at the time the decree appealed from was entered.

*1147 The record shows that a Citation was issued by the County Judge dated December 13, 1929, and that a copy of this Citation was delivered to counsel for the appellees on the same date. The contention sustained by the Circuit Judge in dismissing the appeal was that the issuance of a citation and the delivery of a copy of same to the Counsel for the appellees was not sufficient to give the Circuit Court jurisdiction over the persons of the appellees, in consequence of which the appeal entered, though sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of the subject matter of the appeal, should be dismissed because the court had not obtained jurisdiction over the parties.

In Garner vs. Garner, 83 Fla. 143, 90 So. 819, it was held by this Court that the applicable procedure for prosecuting an appeal from a decree of the County Judge in Probate matters was that provided by sections 4642-4644, inch, Com. Gen. Laws, 1927, 2923-2925 Rev. Gen. Stats. 1920, which were originally sections 1710-1712 Gen. Stats. 1906. It was also held in Christopher vs. Newman, 34 Fla. 370, 16 Sou. 274, that' the issuance and service of proper appellate process, such as the citation provided for by section 4644 (2925) supra, in the absence of any waiver on the part of the appellee, are essential to give the appellate court jurisdiction of the appellee’s person, and that process of this character could not properly be served upon an attorney of record for the parties, but was required to be served upon the parties themselves when they were residents of the state. Likewise in Dillard vs. Agnew, 37 Fla. 56, 19 Sou. 338, it was held that an acceptance of service of a notice of appeal, where a citation was required by law to be issued and served, was not the equivalent of the judicial writ of citation which the statute made necessary in order to give the appellate court jurisdiction over the persons of the appellees, and that when appellees never voluntarily appeared in' Court, that the appellate court *1148 was without authority to enter any judgment affecting their rights.

The appellees here were also appellees in the Circuit Court'. Because of the appellant’s failure to have issued and served a proper citation, they appeared specially in the Court below and there made their motion to dismiss the appeal because of the absence of a proper citation binding their persons, and this motion, the Court granted. It' is argued that by mating a motion to dismiss the appeal, the appellees in the Court below recognized the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court over the appeal, and that by making such motion, they thereby appeared in the Circuit Court and gave that Court' jurisdiction of their persons, notwithstanding the absence of service of citation. Garner vs. Garner, supra. Lonergan vs. Peeples, 74 Fla. 123, 76 Sou. 694; Oppenheiver vs. Guckenheimer, 34 Fla. 13, 15 Sou. 670; Ray vs. Trice, 48 Fla. 297, 37 Sou. 582.

This contention the Circuit Judge rejected, and after reciting that it appeared to the Court “that the motion to dismiss is confined to the question of jurisdiction of the appellees and does not extend to the cause of action and, therefore, cannot be considered as, a general appearance” an order granting the motion to dismiss the appeal was entered by the Court. The appeal in this case is taken from the order of the Circuit Judge just referred to, as well as a subsequent order dated July 9, 1930, which refused to grant a rehearing on the order of dismissal.

The holding of the Circuit Judge to the effect that a motion to dismiss- an appeal must contain a ground that is not confined to the question of jurisdiction of the appellee, or must extend to the cause of action, before it can be held to operate as a general appearance, was correct. Garner vs. Garner, supra, Rorick et al. vs. Stilwell, 101 Fla. 4, 133 Sou. 609. And accordingly it must be held that there was no reversible error committed by the Circuit Judge in dismissing the appeal which had been properly *1149 entered but which the appellants were attempting to prosecute without having obtained proper jurisdiction over the persons of the respondent appellees.

But under section 4642, Comp. Gen. Laws 2923, E. G. S. and applicable constitutional provisions, this Court has direct appellate jurisdiction over appeals from the Circuit Court to the Supreme Court in matters arising before the County Judge involving the exercise of his probate jurisdiction, and if the appeal entered to take the case from the County Judge’s Court to the Circuit Court was legally sufficient to give the Circuit Court jurisdiction over the subject matter, the appeal taken in this cause to bring the case here from the Circuit Court is likewise sufficient to give this Court jurisdiction over the subject matter altho neither the Circuit Court nor this Court has acquired jurisdiction over the persons of the appellees by the proper issuance and service of a citation in the Circuit Court.

However, such appellees have entered no special appearance in this Court as they did in the Circuit Court, neither have they moved for dismissal of the appeal here because of absence of jurisdiction over their persons. On the contrary they have appeared and filed briefs in this court and thereby to all intents and purposes have made and entered their general appearance in this Court by so doing. McGehee Interests vs. Alexander National Bank, 102 Fla. 140, 135 Sou. Rep. 545. This is true because the briefs filed do not undertake to assert that the appeal here should be dismissed for the same reasons that it was dismissed in the Court below, namely, absence of jurisdiction over the persons of appellees, but rather to suggest to the court that the decree of dismissal should be affirmed because it was made without error having been committed by the Circuit Judge.

It' is generally recognized in this state that an appearance of the parties to a cause originating in the Circuit *1150 Court may be made here under such circumstances that upon remand of the cause to the Circuit Court, that Court will have jurisdiction to proceed even in cases where it originally obtained none over the person of indispensable parties. Wylly vs. Sanford Loan & Trust Co., 44 Fla. 818, 33 Sou. 453; Rumeli vs. Tampa, 48 Fla. 112; 37 Sou. 563.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 241, 102 Fla. 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-as-admrx-etc-v-burruss-fla-1931.