Hogan v. Martin
This text of 52 So. 2d 806 (Hogan v. Martin) 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.
Opinion
HOGAN et al.
v.
MARTIN et al.
Supreme Court of Florida, en Banc.
Robert L. Staufer of King & Staufer, Winter Haven, for petitioners.
B.G. Langston, Lakeland, and Marshall H. Edwards, Bartow, for respondents.
ADAMS, Justice.
We have here a petition for certiorari under Supreme Court Rule 34, 30 F.S.A., to review an interlocutory order striking a portion of petitioner's answer.
Dewitt F. Rollins and his wife were seized of certain real estate as tenants by the entirety. Rollins murdered his wife and then purported to convey the entire property to his attorneys in payment of legal services. The attorneys filed a bill for declaratory decree naming the heirs of his late wife as defendants. The latter answered alleging in substance the taking of the deed by plaintiff's with full knowledge of the murder; that in law and equity Rollins could not assert title to the property because of his foul and felonious deed.
The lower court struck this part of the answer and held that the entire property became vested in Rollins upon the death of his wife.
We will not labor the question at length because we are of the view that our opinion and decision in the case of Ashwood v. Patterson, Fla., 49 So.2d 848, calls for a different conclusion from that reached by the lower court.
The lower court was persuaded to its conclusion by the cases of Bailey v. Smith, 89 Fla. 303, 103 So. 833; Palm Beach Estates v. Croker, 106 Fla. 617, 143 So. 792. This case is differentiated because here Rollins, by his own wrongful act, severed the marital status thereby removing the only foundation upon which to base a tenancy by entirety. We have held that where a husband and wife are divorced and own property by the entireties they become tenants in common. Markland v. Markland, 155 Fla. 629, 21 So.2d 145. See also Sec. 689.15, F.S.A.
*807 The lower court erred in holding that Rollins acquired the whole of the estate held by the entirety, whereas he only acquired a one half interest. The writ is granted and the order in question is quashed with directions to proceed further not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
SEBRING, C.J., and THOMAS and ROBERTS, JJ., concur.
TERRELL and CHAPMAN, JJ., dissent.
CHAPMAN, Justice (dissenting).
A grand jury of Polk County, Florida, on the 22nd day of June, 1948, presented in open court an indictment against Dewitt F. Rollins charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree for the unlawful killing of his wife, Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, in the County of Polk on the 16th day of May, 1948. Rollins, upon arraignment, entered a plea of not guilty to the indictment. Subsequently he was placed upon trial and a jury of Polk County, after hearing all the testimony and the charges of Court upon the law of the case, returned a verdict of murder in the first degree but with recommendation to mercy. A motion for a new trial was made and denied and the trial Court then adjudged Rollins guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree and sentenced him to the State Prison for the period of his natural life. Rollins appealed and the judgment of conviction entered below was affirmed. See Rollins v. State, Fla., 41 So.2d 885.
It appears by the record that in 1931 T.H. Wilkinson and wife Mattie E. Wilkinson acquired title to and became the owners of the real estate described in the bill of complaint and resided upon it as a homestead for a number of years. The Wilkinsons died, leaving as their sole heirs at law seven children: (1) Gladys Hogan; (2) Jeanne Joines; (3) Roy Hill Wilkinson; (4) Olin A. Wilkinson; (5) Billie Ruth Pratt; (6) Charles Howard Wilkinson; and (7) Thelma Wilkinson Rollins. The heirs supra in 1943 conveyed a six-sevenths interest in and to the property to Dewitt F. Rollins and wife, Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, and by said conveyance Dewitt F. Rollins and wife, Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, became vested in an estate by the entireties as to the six-sevenths interest, but Thelma Wilkinson Rollins at the time of her death in May, 1948, additional thereto owned in her own right a one-seventh interest in the homestead of her deceased parents. The Rollins lived upon the property as a homestead from the time of purchase in 1943 until the death of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins in 1948.
On June 11, 1949, Dewitt F. Rollins, unmarried, by warranty deed conveyed to D.M. Martin, E.P. Martin, H.E. Oxford and L.D. Oxford the property described in the bill of complaint for and "in consideration of services rendered in the amount of $5,000.00." This deed was duly recorded among the public records of Polk County, Florida, on the 21st day of June, 1949. On October 18, 1949, D.M. Martin, E.P. Martin, H.E. Oxford and L.D. Oxford filed in the Circuit Court of Polk County, Florida, their bill of complaint under the provisions of Chapter 87, F.S.A., against the heirs at law of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins above named, and the legal representatives of the estate of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins. The bill of complaint recited that Dewitt F. Rollins and wife, Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, owned the described property as an estate by the entireties and that Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, on May 18, 1948, departed this life leaving as a sole owner of the described property Dewitt F. Rollins. It alleged that the heirs of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins asserted and claimed the ownership of the property but the exact nature of the claim was unknown. The bill of complaint prayed that the plaintiffs be decreed and declared the sole and only owners of the property.
An answer to the bill of complaint comprising some nine paragraphs was filed by the six brothers and sisters of the deceased Thelma Wilkinson Rollins. Paragraph nine of the answer prays that the Court take jurisdiction of the matter and adjudicate the rights of the parties according to the facts based upon equitable principles. It asked that a decree be entered to the *808 effect that the brothers and sisters of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins be decreed the owners of the property described in the bill of complaint that the murderer of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins be not permitted in a court of equity to profit by his own wrongful act.
Paragraph six of the answer sets out that D.M. Martin, E.P. Martin, H.E. Oxford and L.D. Oxford are attorneys at law and represented Dewitt F. Rollins in and about his defense wherein the State of Florida charged him with the murder of his wife, Thelma Wilkinson Rollins. The attorneys represented Rollins in the Circuit Court of Polk County, Florida, where he was convicted of murder in the first degree and thereafter on appeal to the Supreme Court of Florida. The attorneys well knew at the time of acceptance of the deed (a copy of which is attached to the bill of complaint) of the murder charge then pending against Rollins and had such information when the deed in question was delivered and recorded among the public records of Polk County, Florida, as well as immediately after the death of Thelma Wilkinson Rollins, which occurred on May 16, 1948.
Paragraph seven of the answer sets out that Dewitt F.
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52 So. 2d 806, 1951 Fla. LEXIS 1371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-martin-fla-1951.