Miller v. Ellenwood

164 So. 140, 121 Fla. 551
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 So. 140 (Miller v. Ellenwood) 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
Miller v. Ellenwood, 164 So. 140, 121 Fla. 551 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Ellis, P. J.

This is an appeal from a decree of foreclosure in a suit brought, by Josephine I. Ellenwood, joined by her husband, L. E. Ellenwood, and Dorothy Eiseman Roberts, joined by her husband, W. M. Roberts, against C. Roy Miller and Albie Marie Miller, joined by her husband, C. Roy Miller, in the Circuit Court for Volusia County.

The mortgage was executed in August, 1926, by C. Roy Miller and his wife, Albie Marie Miller, to Annie Klee to secure the payment of a promissory note executed by the Millers to Annie Klee for the sum of three thousand dollars payable three years after date with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from maturity. The note and mortgage were of the same date.

The property mortgaged consisted ’of part of lot nineteen and all of lot twenty of McBride’s survey of the Hernandez Grant in Holly Hill, Volusia County, Florida.

The condition of the mortgage was that the mortgagors should pay the debt and interest, costs and expenses, including a reasonable attorney’s fee in case of foreclosure, and pay “all taxes and assessments levied or assessed on said mortgaged premises,” and keep the buildings located on the place insured against loss or damage from fire.

Mrs. Klee died October 25, 1930, one year and two months after the debt became due. She left surviving her a daughter, Josephine L. Ellenwood, and a granddaughter, Dorothy A. Eiseman, who later married W. M. Roberts.

Mrs. Klee left a will in which she directed the payment of her debts and funeral expenses. The residue of her estate she devised and bequeathed-to her daughter, “Joseph I. Ellenwood” and her granddaughter, Dorothy A. Eiseman, in equal shares. She appointed “Josephine I. Ellen *553 wood and Dorothy A. Eiseman,” to be executrices of her will without bond. The two beneficiaries under the will qualified as executrices in January, 1931, and later assigned the note and mortgage to themselves.

They brought the bill to enforce the lien of the mortgage in December, 1933, alleging that they were the owners and holders of the note and mortgage; that Mrs. Miller was the owner of the fee simple title to the mortgaged premises; that she had failed to pay the principal of the note and had failed to pay the interest since August, 1933.

The bill alleged that Annie Klee, in January, 1930, had paid a tax certificate issued to the State for taxes of 1926, and paid the taxes for 1927, 1928 and 1929. That item amounted to $160.35 on which interest accumulated amounting to $39.53 from January, 1930, to December, 1933. It is also alleged that Josephine Ellenwood, in November, 1930, at the request of the defendants paid the taxes then due amounting to $117.50, and obtained a tax certificate therefor, and interest amounting to $28.77 had accumulated thereon.

In 1932 Josephine Ellenwood paid the taxes at request of the defendants which amounted to $101.80, with interest; that the property was sold to the town of Holly Hill for the taxes of 1927, and a certificate of sale was issued therefor to the town, and L. E. Ellenwood, husband of Josephine and as her agent, redeemed that certificate amounting to $134.25, and interest in the sum of $40.32 had accumulated thereon.

Three other certificates for unpaid taxes due to the town of Holly Hill as follows: No. 1788 for $22.04; -1789 for $20.37, and No. 1790 for $126.30, were issued to the town and assigned to L. E. Ellenwood as agent for Josephine and her co-complainant. The amount paid on that account *554 was' $168.71 on which interest amounting to $60.55 'had accumulated.

A portion of the mortgaged premises was sold to the town in 1929 and tax certificate No. 76 issued. That certificate was assigned to L. E. Ellenwood as agent for the complainants, amounting to $36.30; likewise certificate No. 77 was issued to the town and assigned to L. E. Ellenwood as agent for the complainants. The amount involved in that transaction was $255.11; the two certificates showing the sum of $291.41 due for taxes, on which interest in the sum of $87.56 had accumulated.

The bill alleges that in April, 1930, Annie Klee paid at the request of the defendants the taxes due to the town, of Holly Hill for the year 1930 amounting to $231.64, the interest on which amounted to $66.96 to December, 1933; that Josephine Ellenwood, in April, 1931, at the request of the defendants, paid the taxes on the property due to the town of Holly Hill for the year 1931, which amounted to $266.99, the interest on which to December, 1933, amounted to $56.61.

Those several sums, it is alleged, were paid at the request of the defendants by the complainants and constitute a lien on the property of equal dignity and priority to the other indebtedness secured by the mortgage.

It is also alleged that certain assessments for improvements made by the town of Holly Hill for watermain assessments amounting in one case to $50.66, and in another to $101.31, have not been paid by the defendants, nor have they paid the taxes due to the town for the year 1932, amounting to $258.08, and a tax certificate was issued to the town, No. 109, for that amount. Complainants allege that the failüre to pay such assessments and taxes constituted a violation of the covenants of the mortgage.

*555 In the decree the various items of taxes and assessments were considered and allowed as being secured by the mortgage and that the complainants should recover the sums paid from the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises insofar as the same had not been discharged.

In the progress of the cause the defendants moved to dismiss the bill because the owners of the note and mortgage had not brought the suit by their next friend but had merely joined their husbands as parties complainant. The complainants sought to amend the form of the bill to meet that criticism, but the court denied the motion.

The objection that the married women should have sued by their next friends instead of merely joining their husbands as parties complainant is not supported by the reason which exists for such a rule when the action is one on contract and two or more persons are joined as plaintiffs and a joint obligation or indebtedness to all the plaintiffs is alleged. In such case all the plaintiffs must be shown to be entitled to recover or none can recover.

No reason for such rule exists in this case. This is' a suit in equity upon an obligation which does not run to all the parties named as complainants, but merely to the executrices of the will of Mrs. Klee which the bill clearly discloses. It is a proceeding to enforce a lien upon real estate created by a mortgage executed to secure the payment of a debt due to two married women and to preserve the security pledged from impairment by the accumulation of tax liens against it. In other words, the defendants mortgaged the land as security for the payment of the debt and covenanted to pay all taxes assessed against itthat the value of the security pledged should not be impaired by tax liens for unpaid taxes.

*556 In the case of Edgar V. Bacon, 97 Fla. 679, 122 Sou. Rep. 107, Mr. Justice Brown, speaking for the Court, said:

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 140, 121 Fla. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-ellenwood-fla-1935.