Gracy v. Fielding

70 So. 625, 71 Fla. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 70 So. 625 (Gracy v. Fielding) 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
Gracy v. Fielding, 70 So. 625, 71 Fla. 1 (Fla. 1916).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

Thomas W. Fielding exhibited his bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Alachua County against L. C. 'Gracy, Margaret S. Gracy and, H. F. Townsend and prayed for a partition of certain lands in the bill described'; an accounting from the defendant L. C. Gracy for timber, cross-ties and wood cut and removed from the lands by him; an injunction restraining him from cutting timber, cross-ties and wood from the lands; and that certain deeds to L. C. Gracy be cancelled and declared void as clouds upon the complainant’s title.

The bill alleges in substance that Asbury T. Wideman in 1860 acquired by patent from the United States Government the west half of the northwest quarter and west half of the southwest quarter of section thirteen, and the east half of the northeast quarter and east half of the southeast quarter of section fourteen in township eight, range seventeen east, in Alachua County, Florida, and that he died seized and possessed of that land; that he left surviving him three children, John F., W. P., and Sallie Wideman; that the latter married W. P. Addison, who is now dead; that W. P. Wideman died leaving surviving him his widow Rebecca and three children, Clara, Jennie and Boyce Wideman; that in 1896 J. H. Jones recovered a judgment against J. F. Wideman and certain other parties, and that such other parties had no interest or title in the land described; that the sheriff of Alachua county in June, 1900, sold the said lands under that judgment and L. C. Gracy became the purchaser, who thereby acquired the undivided one-third interest of J. F. Wideman in the said lands; that Mrs. W. P. Addison, widow, Mrs. W. P. Wideman, widow, and her three children, Clara, Jennie and Boyce Wideman, conveyed by warranty deed to Thomas W. Fielding their [4]*4interest, title and claim to the lands, and in November, 1911, L. C. Gracy and wife conveyed by warranty deed to H. F. Townsend the west half of the southwest quarter, and the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section thirteen, township eight, range seventeen, but that by such deed Townsend only took the undivided one-third interest of Gracy in said land; that there appears upon the public records of Alachua county the record of a deed purporting to' 'be signed by J. F. Wideman, W. P. Wideman, R. A. Wideman and, S. W. Addison and others, but that the deed was never made, executed or delivered by any of the parties named in the bill, and the same is “false and forged;” that said deed was not acknowledged by any of the parties named in the bill, nor was it entitled to record, and the same is a cloud on the complainant’s title; that there is also upon the records of Alachua county the record of a quit-claim deed from J. Hill Jones ho L. C. Gracy purporting- to convey the lands first described, but that such deed is void because Jones never owned the lands, nor was he authorized by the owners thereof to sell the same, and at the time the deed was executed the lands were the property of Mrs. W. P. Addison, Mrs. W. P. Wideman, Clara, Jennie and Boyce Wideman, and L. C. Gracy, who were tenants in common, and that the deed is a cloud upon the complainant’s title; that there are also upon the public records of Alachua county the record of two quit-claim deeds to L. C. Gracy embracing the lands first described, one deed from' Mrs. Fannie Bates and her husband B. H. Bates, John R. Lites and wife Annie Lites, Mrs. Annie Hoag Williams and her husband Hugh Williams, and the other from Mrs. J. D. Means and her husband J. Di Means, James R. Lites and wife Annie Lites, and Lou [5]*5H. Means; that said deeds are void and passed no title because the grantors therein named were not owners of the lands described, and that the complainant and defendants were tenants in common, but that the (feeds constituted a cloud upon the complainant’s title; that the lands are timbered lands, and that L. C. Gracy is cutting and removing the trees therefrom, and otherwise committing waste thereon and depreciating their value.

The defendants L. C. Gracy and wife, and H. F. Townsend answered the bill of complaint and, among other things, admitted that J. Hill Jones recovered a judgment in 1896 against J. F. Wideman and certain other parties who had no interest in the lands, but averred that such other parties to said judgment had interests in divers other lands which were sold by the sheriff as alleged.

The complainant filed an exception to that part of the answer containing the above averment as impertinent, and the exception was sustained,.

The answer denies that the lands described in the bill are “wild, uncultivated, unoccupied and uninclosed,” although there is no allegation in the bill that they are of that character, and then beginning at the seventh page and continuing through seventeen pages of typewritten matter avers in substance that the sheriff’s deed to L. C. Gracy in 1900 referred to in the bill of complaint described other lands, as well as those described in the bill, namely, lands in sections 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27 and 36, T. 8, S., R. 17 E., which together with the lands described in the bill were known as the “Bradley-Wideman Farm', or tract of land;” that upon the execution of the sheriff’s deed Gracy immediately went into possession of the land, and that such possession was [6]*6“actual, peaceable, uninterrupted, undisputed, exclusive, open, visible, adverse and notorious,” and that since December, 1900, he has personally given the greater part of his time to “developing, improving, farming and looking after said tract of land;” that he cut and removed from some of the land described in the bill, “old field pine saplings” preparatory to putting the lands into cultivation, built fences, used the wood obtained from the land for posts, likewise improved and utilized other lands embraced in the “Bradley-Wideman Farm,” and generally exercised ownership and control of the entire tract. The answer also sets out in detail and with particularity many acts to show, as the answer averred, “exclusive, open, adverse” possession, by the defendant Gracy of the lands embraced in the “Bradley-Wideman Farm” other than those described in the bill, all of which acts were averred to be “under his own right as his sole property by virtue of 'his said sheriff’s deed.” These acts consisted, so the answer avers, in cutting cord wood, cross-ties, fence posts, logs for houses from, and sale of portions of the land, building- houses and cultivating other portions of the tract, and payment of the taxes upon the lands. This part of the answer also denies that the com’plainant has any equitable interest in the lands described in the bill, and avers that the deed to the complainant was without consideration, and made merely for the purpose of enabling him as the attorney of the grantors named therein to bring the suit, all of which was in substance elsewhere averred in the answer. It was also averred that the proper parties had not been joined ac complainants; that there should have been an action of ejectment at law in place of the bill for partition, and that complainant and his grantor were guilty of laches. [7]*7These averments, however, rested upon and were conclusions of the pleader from the facts averred in other portions of the answer.

The answer also contained averments of facts as to how the debt from J. F. Wideman to J. Hill Jones arose which was finally merged in the judgment against J. F. Wideman and others, that Wideman was in fact the agent of the complainant’s grantors when the debt to Jones was contracted.

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 625, 71 Fla. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gracy-v-fielding-fla-1916.