Price v. McLeod

64 So. 769, 67 Fla. 171
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 64 So. 769 (Price v. McLeod) 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
Price v. McLeod, 64 So. 769, 67 Fla. 171 (Fla. 1914).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The appellees as complainants below filed their bill in the Circuit Court for Columbia County against the appellant as defendant below for partition of certain described lands situated in said county. Upon the pleadings and proofs taken the court below rendered a decree in favor of the complainants for partition of said lands, and the defendant below brings such a decree here for review by appeal.

The bill alleges, and the proofs sustain its allegations, that said lands belonged to Mrs. Lucy H. McLeod who died intestate leaving as her heirs-at-law her husband, F. McLeod, since deceased, two sons, the complainants, E. D. and James McLeod, and one daughter, Mary Crowley, since deceased, and a grand-daughter, the complainant, Ernestine Abbott. That the interest and estate of the said Mary Crowley in said land has since passed by conveyance to the complainant, James McLeod; that about the year A. D. 1892, the interest and estate of the said F. McLeod in said land, the same being an undivided one-fifth interest therein, was sold by the sheriff of said county under a judgment and execution against the said F. McLeod and was purchased at said sheriff’s sale by the defendant George W. Price, who obtained a sheriff’s deed thereto; that the complainant James McLeod is now the legal owner of an undivided two-fifths interest and estate in said land, the complainants, E. D. McLeod and Ernestine Abbott and the defendant, George W. Price, are the owners each of an undivided 'one-fifth interest and estate therein. The defendant Price in his an[173]*173swer alleges that since the date of his purchase at the sheriff’s sale on February 7th, 1893, he has been continuously in the sole and exclusive adverse possession of the whole of said land under color of title conveyed to him by such sheriff’s deed and has acquired prescriptive title to the whole thereof as against the complainants and all others. The proof shows that ever since the sheriff’s sale of the one-fifth interest and estate of F. McLeod in said land the whole of said land has been unenclosed, unoccupied, unimproved and wild; that after his purchase the said defendant occassionally got fire-wood, and fence posts for his domestic uses, and some clay and sand therefrom, and paid the annual taxes thereon, and got various persons living in the vicinity to prevent trespassers from cutting and taking wood and timber therefrom, and occasionally went over said land in person. No act of his in reference to said land even tended to put his co-tenants on notice that he was claiming, the entire interest and estate in said land adversely to them, and his deed from the sheriff only conveyed to him such interest and estate therein as was owned by the judgment debtor, F. McLeod, the same being an undivided one-fifth interest and estate therein. Under the pleadings and proofs the decree of the court below in said cause was proper, and it is hereby affirmed at the cost of the appellant.

Shackleford, C. J., and Cockrell, Hocker and Whitfield, J. J., concur.

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 769, 67 Fla. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-mcleod-fla-1914.