Price v. Stratton

45 Fla. 535
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 45 Fla. 535 (Price v. Stratton) 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. Stratton, 45 Fla. 535 (Fla. 1903).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

On March 10th, 1866, F. F. L’Engle, appellee’s lessor, filed and recorded in the office of the clerk of the Circuit-Court of -Duval county a plat of a tract of land then he-[538]*538longing to him, in the western suburbs of Jacksonville, called LaVilla. This plat showed the property subdivided into blocks and lots, with streets sixty feet in width separating the various blocks. On March 31st, 1866, L’Engle executed a lease to one Frank Clark of “lot number one in square number eight” by reference to the plat above mentioned for ninety-nine years, at a yearly rental of $10, containing a provision for a conveyance of the property in fee upon payment of $250. Clark went into possession about the time of the execution of the lease to him. L’Engle, introduced as a witness in behalf of appellee, testified that he pointed out to Clark what he supposed to be the east line of the lot,- and the latter, as L’Engle had since lately discovered, built his fence almost four and a half feet to the westward of the line pointed out, and the fence had continued to remain there. The fence was built about the latter part of 1866. On April 21st, 1876, L’Engle executed to Adeline Clark, widow of Frank Clark, then deceased, a warranty deed conveying to her in fee the lot leased to her deceased husband, by reference to the same plat above mentioned, and the appellants claim title to the property so conveyed through the^ said Adeline Clark.

On April 10th, 1875, L’Engle conveyed by warranty deed to Cain Williams the northeast quarter of lot six in block eight, according to the plat above mentioned, lying immediately south of, and contiguous to, the premises leased to Frank Clark, and shown by reference to the plat to extend eastwardly to the same street therein laid off. By a subsequent conveyance, dated July 27th, 1877, this parcel of land was conveyed by Williams to Henry Smith, and on February 18th, 1878, Smith conveyed it to Anthony Dekle; Adeline Clark, then Smith’s wife, uniting [539]*539in the conveyance and acknowledging the Same “for the purpose of relinquishing her right of dower.” On January 21st, 1887, Dekle conveyed the same premises to William S. Ware and Nellie Ware, who, in turn conveyed the same on March 31st, 1887, to the appellee, Harrison D. Stratton.

About April 1st, 1884, L’Engle leased to one Claiborne “an irregular tract bounded north by Bay street, east by Canal, south by railroadj west by six foot lane,” and the latter went into possession of and occupied the premises so leased. These premises lay to the east of those formerly conveyed by L’Engie to Adeline Clark and Cain Williams, and the “six foot lane” described as the west boundary thereof was a lane extending six feet east of, and parallel to, the fence erected by Frank Clark, when he went into possession in 1866 of the premises leased him, and subsequently conveyed to Adeline Clark, his widow. On March 24th, 1885, the appellee, Stratton, purchased Clairborne’s rights under this lease and also the improvements made by him on the leased premises. Previously, on March 14th, 1885, L’Engle leased to Stratton “that certain tract or parcel of land in the town of LaVilla, Duval county, Florida, on the south side of Bay street as the same is extended through the town, lying between the said Bay street on the north, the railroad on the south, a lane six feet wide on the west and the canal opened some years since by the party of the first part on the east, having a front of eighty-four feet exclusive of said lane on Bay street and a front on the railroad exclusive of said lane, one hundred and ten feet or thereabouts, the measurements being made by the party of the second part and reported to the party of the first part as correct.” This [540]*540lease extended to April 1st, 1889. On July 1st, 1886, another lease was made by L’Engle to Stratton for a term of seventy-nine years, describing the leased premises as follows: “that certain tract or parcel of land in the town of LaYilla, Duval county, Florida, on the south side of Bay street, now occupied by the party of the second part with an ice factory and buildings connected therewith, bounded on the north by Bay street, a distance of eighty-four (84) feet, beginning at a point on the south side of Bay street, three hundred and twenty-one feet east of the east side of Second street in said town of LaVilla,, or six feet from the northeast corner of a certain lot of land conveyed in the year 1876 by the party of the first part hereto, to Adeline Smith, known as a plat of said town, made and recorded- in the 'year 1866 on page 724 of Book M of the county records as lot one of block eight, said deed of conveyance being recorded on page 324 and following, of Book N of said records, on the west by a lane or street six feet wide, extending from Bay street towards the railroad in a southerly direction, a distance of one hundred and seventy-four feet, or to the northern boundary of the right of way granted for railroad purposes by the party of the first part, to William E. Jackson and his associates by deed bearing date in the year 1868, and recorded on page 538 of Book P of the county records. On the south of said right of way, extending from the eastern side of said lane or street one hundred and ten feet eastward, on the east by a straight line extending from the limit on the east of said south boundary to the limit on the east of said north boundary respectively.”

The appellee filed his bill in the court below to enjoin appellants from moving their fence to the true boundary of their premises, four and a half feet east of its location. [541]*541since 1S66, claiming that such removal would obstruct the lane mentioned; which was alleged to have been used as a public highway, for a long period of time.

The appellants answered the bill, denying that they had obstructed or attempted to obstruct a public lane, and asserting that they had the right to set their fence on the true boundary line of their premises, being the western boundary of the street as delineated on the plat filed and recorded by F. F. L’Engle in 1866. The answer further averred the dedication of said street to the public by L’Engle in 1866; that he wrongfully and in violation of appellants’ rights made a lease to appellee covering part of said street, and that appellee with full knowledge thereof erected his ice factory in the street, and obstructed the street and had continued so to do.

At the same time appellants filed a cross-bill against appellee, seeking to enjoin him from continuing to obstruct the alleged street.

The cross-bill was demurred to, on «the ground that it wrns wanting in equity, that the subject-matter thereof was not germane to the subject-matter of the original bill, and that F. F. L’Engle was a necessary party thereto. The demurrer was sustained, and the cross-bill dismissed “without prejudice to the right of complainants in cross-bill to file an original bill.”

Testimony was taken and a decree rendered in favor of appellee making perpetual a temporary injunction theretofore issued, in accordance with the prayer of the bill. Error is alleged in sustaining the demurrer to-, and dismissing the cross-bill, an din the rendering of a decree in favor of appellee. The other facts are stated in the opinion.

Jambs F. Glen, Commissioner,

(after statmg the facts)

The first error assigned is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-bill, and dismissing it.

The cross-bill showed that F. F.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Fla. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-stratton-fla-1903.