Hyer v. Griffin

55 Fla. 560
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 Fla. 560 (Hyer v. Griffin) 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
Hyer v. Griffin, 55 Fla. 560 (Fla. 1908).

Opinions

Shackleford, C. J.

—The plaintiff in error brought an action of ejectment against the defendants in error in the circuit court for Escambia county, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants, which the plaintiff seeks to have reviewed here upon writ of error.

No error is assigned in connection with the pleadings; the declaration being in the usual form, to which the defendants interposed a plea of not guilty. The [562]*562sole assignment presented to us for consideration is the denial of the motion for a new trial. The defendants contend that this assignment is too general to merit consideration and, in support thereof, rely upon Stearns & Culver Lumber Co. v. Adams, 55 Fla. 401, 45 South. Rep. 847. The cited case does not bear out this contention. What we held there was that “an assignment of error that 'the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff in said cause’ is too general to be considered by this court.” In fact, the contention of the defendants has been decided adversely to them by this court in a line of decisions. We have frequently considered ian assignment of error to the effect that the court erred in denying the motion for a new trial, but we have refused to consider any grounds thereof except such as are urged before us, which grounds must be specifically stated in the motion, treating the other grounds as abandoned. See Ross Johnson v. State, decided here at the present term, and authorities there cited; Goode v. State, 50 Fla. 45, text 54, 39 South. Rep. 461, text 464; Williams v. State, 53 Fla. 89, 43 South. Rep. 428; Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Beazley, 54 Fla. 311, 45 South. Rep. 761, text 796; Cross v. Aby, 55 Fla. 311, 45 South. Rep. 820, text 825; McCall v. State, decided here at the present term.

Such motion in the instant case contains five grounds, all of which, however, question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, and we now take up thajt point for consideration.

We find that the plaintiff introduced in evidence a complete cháin of title from the government down to himself, while the defendants introduced a tax deed and subsequent conveyances based-thereon, showing a prima facie title in one of' them, Mary A. Griffin. By the introduction, however, by the plaintiff, of a certified copy of the assessment roll for the year for which the land [563]*563in dispute was sold for taxes, such assessment was shown to be invalid, and in the general charge to the jury the court so instructed, stating that the tax deed conveyed no title. This left the defense resting upon adverse possession, based upon the deed* to Mary A. Griffin as color of title. The land in dispute consisted of a forty-ácre and a ten-acre tract. The date of the deed to the defendant is the 27th day of October, 1899.

Ethan A. Griffin testified on behalf of the defend-" ants as follows: “I am a defendant, the husband of Mary A. Griffin. At the time I received the deed made to my wife by Carlson and Lind dated October 27th, .1899, we were living in Pensacola. Soon after receiving the deed, I began to cut fire wood from the land in dispute and continued to cut it pretty régularly. I paid taxes on the land from the time I bought it, up to the present time;” witness here produced and the defendant read in evidence tax receipts from the tax collector of Escaihbia county showing payment of state and county taxes, upon the land in dispute and other lands, as follows: By Mary A. Griffin for 1899, by E. A. Griffin for 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904. The- witness continued: “I used part of the firewood at my home in Pensacola while I lived there, and part at my home about half a mile from this land, after I moved from Pensacola. The rest I sold in Pensacola. I would get’ about two loads a week. I began to get wood the next month after I bought the land and continued this up until now. I let Flem Brooks burn some charcoal on the land after the storm 1906. I had Flem Brooks’ boys cut wood for me on this land. I got s'ome posts to put up a wire fence around that part of the land which had formerly been under fence of Travis Waters; also'some posts to repair the fence on some other lands, that I was living on when I moved out in that neighborhood. I do not know how many posts I cut off the land last mentioned, not [564]*564very many, but a few at different times. When I first bought the land part of Mr. Travis Waters’ fence ran over on it enclosing about two acres. I had an arrangement with him that he could use these two' acres. He cultivated it'under this arrangement. When I first’got my deed I asked Dime Lock, who lived on the quarter section west of this land, to look out for it and keep trespassers off for me. I moved from Pensacola to within about half a mile of this land,. I think about the year after I got my deed. Before I moved there, the wood I got was burned at my home in Pensacola, or sold by the load in that city. The same thing occurred after I moved. The wood which I got was either used at my home or sold in Pensacola. The wire fence around the little piece of land that'used to be enclosed by Mr. Waters’ fence, was a two-wire fence, built about a yea" ago, in the late fall or winter of 1006. I never cut down a tree on any of the land, I simply used the dead wood for fuel and posts. The storm of 1906 was about Septémber 26th, 1906. I did not rent the enclosed land to Travis Waters, I simply let him cultivate it, as his fence was upon it. We had no particular understanding or agreement about it at all, I simply did not forbid his using it. I got an average of about two_ loads of wood a week from this land ever since I bought it, every year. By load I mean a one horse wagon load. ' I got wood most all over the lower forty, but the ten-acre piece I cannot say I cut so regularly from that. I may have gotten as many as a dozen loads all told, from the ten-acre piece. I cannot say I ever got more than that off the ten-acre piece. I got wood wherever convenient on the fifty acres. I never made any improvement on any of the land. Never cut or sold logs from it. Never enclosed, rented, improved or cultivated any part of it, except I built the small wire fence already mentioned. I never got any wood or posts except from timber that was down. Never [565]*565cut a standing tree. I generally got the wood near the road where it was convenient. Dime Lock never made any reports to me after I asked him to look out for the lands. I can not say how many posts I cut off the land to use on the place I was living at. I know I cut some occasionally to repair fences where I lived. We owned 200 acres in /that neighborhood, all conveyed by the deed of Carlton & Lind.”

Dime Lock testified on behalf of the defendants as follows: “Mr. Griffin asked me to look out for the land in dispute, for me to keep trespassers off it. I do not know how long ago this was, but it has been a good while. I never did anything about it, as there was nothing- to do. 1 saw nobody trespassing upon the land, nor did I make any reports to Mr. Griffin.” And the defendants further to maintain the issues on their behalf produced as a witness. Flem Brooks, who, being sworn, testified as follows: “I burnt charcoal on the land in dispute. I got permission from Mr. Griffin to do so. My boy also cut wood on the land for Mr. Griffin. Charcoal was burnt after the storm of 1906 from timber that was blown down by the storm. I do not know what part of the land the charcoal was burned on, nor where the wood was cut. Do not remember when the wood was cut. It was a good while ago.”

In rebuttal, Travis Waters, A. J.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Fla. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyer-v-griffin-fla-1908.