Henry Vogt Machine Co. v. Milton Land & Investment Co.

76 So. 695, 74 Fla. 116
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 19, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 So. 695 (Henry Vogt Machine Co. v. Milton Land & Investment Co.) 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
Henry Vogt Machine Co. v. Milton Land & Investment Co., 76 So. 695, 74 Fla. 116 (Fla. 1917).

Opinion

Whitfield, 3.-

In a foreclosure proceeding brought by the appellee wherein the defendants claimed priorities among themselves, a decree was rendered settling the equities. An entry of appeal in the cause was made as follows:

“In Jackson County Circuit Court

State of Florida in Chancery:

Milton Land & Investment Company, a corporation, Trustee, Complainant, vs. Marianna Manufacturing Company, a corporation, The Marianna Refrigerating Co., a corporation, M. R. Burton, M. L. Dekle, C. C. Liddon, W. H. Milton, Cecil Rhyne and B. H. Simmons, First National Bank of Marianna, a corporation, C. C. Liddon and M. L. Dekle as trustee, F. M. McHale as trustee in bankruptcy, Satira Martin and J. B. Martin her husband and Cora Lee Wilson, and Henry Vogt Machine Company, a corporation, Defendants.

An appeal is hereby taken, and notice thereof given, by the Henry Vogt Machine Company, a corporation, a defendant, to the Supreme Court of Florida, returnable to July 9, 1917, from the decree of foreclosure rendered herein on April 4th, 1917.

This April 23, 1917.

THOS. E. WALKER,

PRICE & CARTER,

Attorneys for said defendants.”

Written directions to the clerk of the lower court for making up the transcript of the record on appeal and an [119]*119assignment of errors were filed for “the said defandant Henry Yogt Machine Company, a corporation.” The following copy of a receipt appears in the transcript:

“Received of counsel for Henry Yogt Machine Company, a corporation, a true copy of the assignment of errors and written directions for making up the transcript of record on appeal, in the above stated case of Milton Land & Investment Company, a corporation, trustee, et al vs. Marianna Manufacturing Company, a corporation, et als., at Marianna, in said Circuit, this the 11th day of June, A. D. 1917.

PAUL CAETEE,

Sol. for First National Bank, Satira Martin and Cora Lee Wilson, M. L. Dekle, and C. C. Liddon, Trustees, C. C. Liddon, M. E. Burton, M. L. Dekle, W. H. Milton, Cecil Bhyne and B. H. Simmons.

JOHN H. CAETEE,

Sol. for Marianna Mfg. Co., Marianna Refrigerating Co., F. M. McHale Trustee in Bankruptcy.

WM. B. FARLEY,

Sol. for Milton Land & Investment Company, Trustee, and J. C. Folsom.”

Cross assignments of error and written directions to

include the cross assignment in the transcript were filed for “the defendants M. R. Burton, M. L Dekle, C. C. Liddon, W. H. Milton, Cecil Rhyne and B. H. Simmons,” and for “the defendants C. C. Liddon and M. L. Dekle as trustee,” and for “the defendant Thos. W. Conely successor in trust to said F. M. McHale, trustee, deceased,” and for “the complainant Milton Land & Investment Company.” In the decree it is “ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant, Henry Yogt [120]*120Machine Company, a corporation, have no lien upon the property of the said defendant, Marianna Manufacturing Company, or any part thereof, as against the liens of the complainant, and of the defendant, First National Bank of Marianna, Satyra Martin, Cora Lee Wilson hereinbefore adjudged, but that its claim is superior to the lien of the defendants, M. R. Burton, M. L. Dekle, C. C. Liddon, W. H. Milton, Cecil Rhyne, and B. H. Simmons, and that the relief prayed for by the defendant, Henry Vogt Machine Company, be and the same is hereby denied.”

The appellant Henry Vogt Machine Company, a defendant below, assigns as error the portion of the decree adjudging that the liens of the defendants The First National Bank of Marianna, Satyra Martin, Cora Lee Wilson and the Milton Land & Investment Company are superior to the claim of the appellant Henry Vogt Machine Company.

The Milton Land & Investment Company, appellee, moves to dismiss the appeal taken only by the Henry Vogt Machine Company on the grounds that other defendants in the court below are necessary parties but are not made parties, and that the appeal is not properly taken.

In equity appeals the appellants ask for a reversal of the decree appealed from, and they should have all interested.parties before the court. Where the appellate court is asked to determine the correctness of a decree all who are interested in and benefitted by such decree are entitled to be heard, and should be before the court by proper proceedings if they were parties to the cause in the court below. Nichols & Johnson v. Frank, 59 Fla. 588, 52 South. Rep. 146.

The acknowledgment by counsel of service of a copy [121]*121of the. written directions to the clerk to make up the transcript, with consent that he should at once commence the preparation of the same, is no waiver of the right to move to dismiss an appeal on the ground of a void or irregular entry thereof. Spencer v. Travelers’ Ins. Co. 39 Fla. 677, 23 South. Rep. 442.

Where indispensably necessary parties are omitted from an appeal, such appeal will be dismissed, sua, sponte, by the court. Ferris v. Ferris, 43 Fla. 358, 31 South. Rep. 345.

Where a decree in equity is entered in favor of a complainant against one of several defendants, and the decree does not directly affect any of the other defendants, the injured defendant alone may take a separate appeal, which if duly recorded will bring the complainant before the appellate court as appellee. But where a chancery decree or a severable portion thereof is in favor of the complainant and of one or more of the defendants and against one or more of the other defendants who appeal and assign such decree as error, as in this case, the defendants in whose favor the decree is rendered should be brought here by making them parties appellant and if necessary with the service of a summons as for severance, or equivalent proceeding. This gives to the appellate court jurisdiction of the parties against whom relief is sought, and it being an equity cause the court may make proper decrees binding on all the parties before it. In such case the complainant below is made appellee and is brought here by a proper .record of an appropriate entry of appeal; and the defendants in whose favor the decree is rendered against the appealing defendants, are brought in by making them appellants in the entry of appeal; and if they refuse to join in the [122]*122appeal, the complaining defendant may have service of summons to appear made upon such defendants, which gives the appellate court jurisdiction to make proper orders and decrees in the progress and disposition of the appeal. See Jones v. Stewart, 37 Fla. 369, 19 South. Rep. 657.

The appeal herein is taken by only one of the many defendants in the court below. This appeal transfers the cause to the jurisdiction of this court and when duly recorded brings the appellee into this court by operation of the statute making the record of the entry of appeal a substitute for a citation duly served. While this brings the appellee, the complainant below, into this court, the defendants other than the one taking the appeal are not brought here since the appeal is expressly taken by only the one defendant though others are mentioned in the caption of the entry of appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 So. 695, 74 Fla. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-vogt-machine-co-v-milton-land-investment-co-fla-1917.