McCrillis v. Copp

31 Fla. 100
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 31 Fla. 100 (McCrillis v. Copp) 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
McCrillis v. Copp, 31 Fla. 100 (Fla. 1893).

Opinion

Mabry, J:

In this case a bill was filed in the Seventh Judicial Circuit for Dade county to enforce the specific per[102]*102formance of a written contract for the conveyance of real estate. The bill alleges “that on the 17th day of June, A. D., 1879,' the respondent herein, James W. Copp, made his-homestead entry No. 7228 for Lot 4, Sec. 34, Tp. 43 S., R. 43 E., and Lots 1 and 2 of Sec. 3, Tp. 44 S., R. 43 E., containing 144.74 acres. That upon the 9th day of July, A. D. 1884, respondent received notice from the Register and Receiver of the U. S. Land Office at Gainesville, that his five years of residence and cultivation expired -June 17, 1884, said notice being hereto attached and marked ‘Ex. A.’ That failing or being unable to prove up on his home-. stead under the homestead law, respondent purchased the said land from the government, ■ as appears from the patent issued to the said James W. Copp, which is hereto attached and marked ‘Ex. B.5 That from an examination of said patent it will appear to your honor that the said respondent obtained title as a purchaser under the law oP April 24, 1820, and April 15, 1880, and not as a homesteader. Your orators further represent unto vonr honor that on the 27th day of October, A. D. 1884, respondent entered into a bond to your orator, Valentine E. Jones, in the penal sum of $367.20, conditioned upon his executing a deed of said land to your orator, the said Valentine E. Jones, upon respondent obtainingjfrom theU. S. Land Office his receipt for the purchase money of said land; and your orators further show that as the consideration for the deed agreed to be delivered by respondent, your orators paid respondent the sum of $183.60, which was the [103]*103full consideration agreed upon between respondent and your orators as the price of said land. The said bond - for title is hereto attached and marked ‘Ex. CJ

Your orators further represent that their contract with respondent for the conveyance of said land was and is valid and binding contract in as much as said land was obtained by purchase as shown by the patent hereinbefore referred to, and said respondent never proved up or availed himself of any rights as a homestead settler, but bought in the land by cash purchase. Wherefore your orator says that the said respondent ought in good conscience comply with his agreement to deed to them said land, and should have done so upon receiving his receipt referred to in said bond, said receipt being hereto attached and marked ‘Ex. D.’

A our orators further represent that they have been in possession of said land since the date of said bond, but although frequently requested so to do, respondent has utterly failed and neglected to execute to your orator, the said Yalentine E. Jones, a deed to the said land, but has delayed and refused so to do upon frivolous pretexts, and has departed these parts and his. whereabouts is at present to your orators unknown. A letter of the said respondent written to the agent of your orator in this transaction is hereto attached and marked ‘Ex. Ed

The bill prays that respondent be decreed to make and deliver to Yalentine E. Jones a good and perfect deed to said land in conformity to his bond, and that. [104]*104if he fail to do so, a master be appointed to execute the same.

After the filing of the bill, Yalentine E. Jones intermarried with J. Wilson McCrillis, and by order of court the bill was amended and suit directed to proceed in the name of Yalentine E. McCrillis, by her next friend S. H. Ray, and in the name of the husband McCrillis.

No service of subpoena was had on the respondent Copp, but publication, as provided by Chapter 3589, Acts of 1885, was made, citing him to appear and answer the bill at a specified time. Upon the showing that the publication had been made as jmovided by Chapter 3589, supra, a decree pro confesso was entered against the respondent. Subsequent to the entry of the decree pro confesso, the following decree dismissing the bill was made, viz: “This cause having come on to be further heard, and it appearing to the court that the bill of complaint and the exhibits thereto, that the relief therein prayed is not proper to be decreed in a court of equity, it is therefore ordered that complainant’s said bill of complaint be and the same is hereby dismissed with costs to said complainant to be taxed.” Complainants entered an appeal to this court from the decree dismissing the bill.

As gathered from the bill and exhibits, it appears that James W. Copp in June, A. D. 1879, made homestead entry No. 7228 upon the land in question, and on the 27th day of October, A. D. 1884, without furnishing to the U. S. land office any proof of residence [105]*105and improvement as required by the United State homestead laws to prove up a homestead, or without commuting for the same by a cash purchase, sold said land to Yalentine E. Jones, now Yalentine E. Mc-Crillis, for the sum of $183.60 cash, and executed a bond conditioned to convey to her the land by warranty deed when he obtained a receipt of the U. S. land office for • payment of the purchase money of homestead entry No. 7228. This bond which, it is claimed, contains the contract sought by the bill to be specifically performed, acknowledges that Copp is held and bound unto Yalentine E. Jones, now McCrillis, in the sum of $367.20 to be paid to her, her heirs, administrators or assigns, with a conditional clause as follows, viz: “The condition of the above obligation is such that if the above bounden Copp shall upon receipt of the U. S. land office for payment of the purchase money of homestead entry No. 7228, being” (the land described in the bill), “or in case of his death before that time, if the heirs of the said Copp shall within six months after his decease do, and shall upon the reasonable request of the said Yalentine E. Jones, her heirs or assigns, make, execute' and deliver, or cause so to be, to the said Yalentine E. Jones, her heirs and assigns, or to such person or persons as she or they shall nominate or appoint, and to such uses as she or they shall direct, all and every such deed or deeds, conveyance or conveyances whatsoever, which shall be necessary and needful for conveying and confirming unto the said Yalentine E. Jones, her heirs and assigns, a good, absolute and indefeasible estate [106]*106in inheritance in fee simple with the usual covenants, and free from all encumbrances of the premises described in the first clause of this bond, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue.”

After the sale of the land and the execution of the foregoing bond, it appears that Oopp commuted for the land and obtained a patent for it by paying the government price under a statute of the United States passed the 15th day of June, A. D. 1880. The bill alleges ‘ ‘that failing or being unable to prove up on his homestead under the homestead law, respondent purchased the land from the government, as appears from the patent issued to the said James W.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Fla. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrillis-v-copp-fla-1893.