Hillsborough County v. Dana

20 Fla. Supp. 177
CourtCircuit Court of the 13th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Hillsborough County
DecidedSeptember 10, 1962
DocketNo. 36402-L
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Fla. Supp. 177 (Hillsborough County v. Dana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 13th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Hillsborough County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillsborough County v. Dana, 20 Fla. Supp. 177 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

JOHN G. HODGES, Circuit Judge.

Opinion, including findings of fact, conclusions of law and final judgment: This cause comes before the court as an action to condemn certain property, which property is to be used for the construction and maintenance of a state highway. While there are several defendants, those pertinent to the issues at hand are defendants E. B. Evans and Bonnie K. Evans, his wife, and the Hillsborough County Port Authority, a body politic and corporate created under the laws of this state, which was added as a party defendant by the petitioner subsequent to the filing of the petition in eminent domain.

The specific matter before the court concerns the motion of the Evans defendants to dismiss the defendant port authority from these proceedings on grounds that the port authority has no right, title or interest in the land in question. The Evans defendants were the record title holders of two parcels of realty, i.e., parcel no. 14 and parcel no. 56, both of which were sought by the county in this proceeding for use in construction of a state road. The [179]*179defendant port authority, in its answer to the county’s amended petition to condemn these parcels, claimed title to that portion of the parcels which are submerged or sovereignty lands.

As to both parcels, there are two questions to be determined in this proceeding— (1) What part of the land was submerged or emerged land in 1888 and in 1960 at the time of the taking involved, and (2) as to the submerged land, which of the parties defendant was the legal title holder and actual fee simple owner at the time of the taking?

The question was raised during these proceedings as to whether the port authority was a proper party defendant to this action. The Hillsborough County Port Authority was created by the legislature of the state of Florida by chapter 23338 of the Laws of Florida, Acts of 1945, under which it was granted title to all of the submerged lands lying within the boundaries of the port district described in the act. The Fish Creek tract, including both parcels no. 14 and 56, lies within the port district and title to that part of the Fish Creek tract, which is submerged land, is claimed by the port authority under the described legislative enactment. This court sitting in banc by final decree dated July 23, 1956, in Hillsborough County Port Authority v. Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, chancery no. 103251-C, confirmed in the port authority title to the submerged lands within the port district. This court finds, therefore, that the port authority, as title holder to the submerged lands in the port district, pursuant to the legislative provision and the cited decision of this court sitting in bane, supra, is a proper party defendant in this action.

Counsel for petitioner Hillsborough County, the Evans defendants, and the defendant port authority, have been vigorous in the factual development of this cause and in the presentation of the principles of law applicable to the issues raised. The extensive evidence presented as to the character of the land involved has covered all the details of its topography and the court has actually viewed the said lands.

From the evidence presented, both documentary and by way of copious testimony by witnesses, the stipulations entered herein by the parties, and the court’s view of the premises, the court finds the controlling facts as hereinafter set forth.

Parcel no. 14, taken in the condemnation proceeding for the road right-of-way, is made up of 6.58 acres in the northeast portion of the Fish Creek tract, which embraces approximately 30.07 acres. Parcel no. 56, the so-called drainage easement, is com[180]*180posed of 2.32 acres toward the southern end of the Fish Creek tract.

The Fish Creek tract is an area which was embraced within government lot 2 in a survey made by the United States in the early 1850’s. This tract has running through its center area Fish Creek, which is navigable to small motorized craft, and enters Old Tampa Bay. Adjoining the creek on both sides throughout its length and involving both parcel no. 14 and parcel no. 56 are areas covered by mangroves, saw grass and other types of vegetation which grow only on land that is subject to the ebb and flow of the tide, being covered by salt water at some time during the daily tidal cycle.

Portions of parcel no. 14, which portions, together with the bed of Fish Creek, the parties have stipulated as comprising approximately 5.17 acres of the total 6.58 acres, and all of parcel no. 56, are land of this submerged character and subject to the ebb and flow of the tides.

There has been no substantial change in the location of the high water mark as to the lands in question between the date of the original United States Government survey and the time of this proceeding. The earliest United States Government survey was dated 1852.

It is the conclusion of the court that 5.17 acres of parcel no. 14 and all of the acreage contained in parcel no. 56, both at the time of the taking and at the time of the conveyance in 1888 to the Evans defendants’ predecessors in title, were submerged or tide land, that is to say, land covered by waters of Old Tampa Bay and subject to the ebb and flow of normal tides, and that the portions which composed the bed of Fish Creek were lands covered by navigable waters.

The Evans defendants purportedly deraigned title to all of the Fish Creek tract to which they claim ownership from the trustees of the internal improvement fund, hereinafter called the trustees, by deed dated June 28, 1888, which conveyed government lot 2, including the Fish Creek tract, to the South Florida Railroad Company, and thereafter from the railroad company through successive grantees to the Evans defendants.

While probative evidence was not offered as to the payment of taxes by the Evans defendants and their predecessors in title upon the Fish Creek tract or the basis on which the property was evaluated for tax assessment, the court assumes that the Evans defendants and their predecessors have paid whatever state and county taxes may have been assessed against the tract during the period of the claimed ownership.

[181]*181The Evans defendants suggested that the deed to their predecessors in interest by the trustees was executed under their authority to convey swamp and overflowed lands, the title to which had been derived by the state of Florida pursuant to an Act of Congress dated September 28, 1850, c. 84, 9 Stat. 519. While this question may not have been properly developed by the pleadings in these proceedings, the court believes it should nevertheless be dealt with here.

Under the aforementioned Act of Congress, the United States of America granted to Florida, as well as other states, certain lands known as “swamp and overflowed lands” in order to enable the state to provide for the construction of levees and drainage necessary to reclaim such swamp and overflowed lands for use in husbandry. Under provisions of this act, the Secretary of the Interior was charged with the responsibility of having the lands surveyed and lists prepared showing what sections were predominantly swamp and overflowed lands. Upon completion of the survey and preparation of lists describing such lands, the Governor of Florida could request a patent of these lands from the United States.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Fla. Supp. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillsborough-county-v-dana-flacirct13hil-1962.