Greene v. Uniacke

46 F.2d 916, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
Docket5877
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 916 (Greene v. Uniacke) 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
Greene v. Uniacke, 46 F.2d 916, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523 (5th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree denying a motion for a temporary injunction restraining the further prosecution of a suit brought by the appellee against Southwest Tampa storm sewer drainage district to collect an amount alleged to be due under the terms of written instruments purporting to be bonds of that district. That decree followed a hearing upon the amended bill and a motion for a temporary injunction. Appellants’ amended bill shows that the asserted right to the relief sought was based upon the grounds that appellee was bound by a decree in a suit previously brought by appellants against J. M. Burnett, as tax collector of the county of Hillsboro, state of Florida, and others, which adjudged that all bonds purporting to have been issued by Southwest Tampa storm sewer drainage district are contrary to law, invalid, null, and void, and that all proceedings had or taken for the validation of said bonds, or any oE them, are contrary to law, invalid, null, and void, and that, whether the last-mentioned decree was or was not binding on the appellee, the organization of the Inter bay drainage district, the name of which was changed to Southwest Tampa storm sewer drainage district (herein referred to as the drainage district), and all proceedings had or taken for the levy of taxes for the purposes of said district, and for the assessment of benefits in pursuance of the purposes of said district, and all bonds and obligations purporting to have been issued by that district, and all proceedings had or taken for the validation of said bonds, were, by reason of alleged defects and irregularities, contrary to law, invalid, null, and void.

Allegations of appellants’ amended bill show that the above-mentioned decree in a former suit was rendered in a suit brought in a Florida state court by the appellants, claiming to be the owners of lands which were included in the lands which, under the proceedings taken for the organization of the drainage district mentioned, purported to comprise that district, against named defendants, not including appellee or any bondholder by name, and “all unknown persons claiming any right, title, interest in or claim upon any lands in the bill of complaint described as owners or holders or otherwise interested in bonds issued by Interbay Drainage District or Southwest Tampa Storm Sewer Drainage District”; that, pursuant to an order made in that suit, by publication in a newspaper notice was given “to all unknown persons, claiming any right, title, interest in or claim upon” described lands comprising said drainage district “as owners or holders of, or otherwise interested in, any bonds issued by” that District, requiring them to appear to the bill filed in that cause at a tíme *918 and place named, "otherwise decrees pro eonfesso will be entered against you as provided by law”; and that, so far as the final decree rendered in that case was against persons not named as defendants in the bill therein, it was based on a decree pro eonfesso entered “against all unknown persons claiming any right, title, interests in or claim upon” described lands, comprising that district, “as owners or holders of, or otherwise interested in, any bonds issued by .Interbay Drainage District or Southwest Tampa Storm Sewer Drainage District.” That suit was brought under a Florida statute which deals with the subject of suits to quiet' title to real estate by removing clouds thereon. Compiled General Statutes of Florida 1927, § 5010 et seq. That statute, in addition to authorizing that remedy where there are states of fact plainly not disclosed in the instant ease, provides for that remedy “wherever .a person or corporation, not the rightful owner of any real estate shall have any ' conveyance or other evidence of title thereto, * * . * which may east a cloud, doubt or suspicion on the, title of the real owner,” and provides for the giving of a! prescribed notice “where the bill shall show parties interested who are unknown to the complainant and that he has made diligent search and inquiry for their names and could not obtain them.” Sections 5011, 5012. That statute does not authorize a suit or proceeding against unknown defendants to quiet complainant’s title by removing a cloud, the nature and. existence of which are wholly unknown.

For the bill to be maintainable against unknown defendants, its allegations must show the assertion or existence, actual, apparent or potential, of a hostile title or claim of unknown defendants, and its apparent invalidity or inferiority to the title of the complainant. A bill seeking only to remove a cloud, the nature and existence of which are wholly unknown, as against defendants who also are wholly unknown, does not present a justiciable matter under the statute. McDaniel v. McElvy, 91 Fla. 770, 108 So. 820, 830, 51 A. L. R. 731. The allegations of appellants’ bili do not show that any unknown person or corporation, not the owner of real estate included in the drainage district, has any conveyance or other evidence of title thereto which may cast a cloud, doubt or suspicion on the title of the real owner.' It does not show that' at or prior to the date of the bringing of this suit appellee, or Ms predecessor in the ownership of the instruments i sued on, had any relation to the drainage district other than that resulting from the fact that he, or one under whom he claims, was the owner or holder of instruments purporting to be bonds of that district upon which appellee had brought suit against that district. The claim that unknown holders of- bonds of that district could be bound by the above-mentioned previously rendered decree seems to be based on the circumstances that the Florida statute under which that district purported to have been organized makes drain'age taxes levied as provided for liens on the lands against which such taxes are levied, and authorizes the holders of bonds or notes of such district to bring suit for the collection of such taxes when delinquent, in case said district shall fail to commence suit within a prescribed time after such taxes become delinquent. Compiled General Statutes of Florida 1927 Annotated, §§ 1472,1473. That statute (Id. § 1451 et seq.) makes a drainage district organized pursuant to its provisions a public corporation of the state of Florida, provides for the governing body of such corporation levying taxes upon lands witMn such district, makes such taxes liens upon the lands against which they are levied, provides for the governing body of the district instituting suits in its corporate name for the collection of such taxes or assessments, and provides for lands offered for sale under a decree in such’a suit becoming the property of the district if the amount of the tax due, interest, costs, and penalty, is not bid for the same.

It is plain from the terms of the statute that the liens provided for are vested in the district, not in the holders of its bonds or notes, and that holders of bonds in bringing suits authorized to be brought by them in case of a district’s default in failing to bring suit for the collection of delinquent taxes are not enforcing liens or interests in lands conferred on or possessed by themselves. The existence of appellee’s claim to a right of action based on instruments purporting to be bonds of the drainage district did not constitute possession by him of evidence of title to land comprised in that district, or the assertion of a elaim by Mm that he had any title, estate, or interest in such land.

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46 F.2d 916, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greene-v-uniacke-ca5-1931.