Semple v. Semple

105 So. 134, 90 Fla. 7
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 105 So. 134 (Semple v. Semple) 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
Semple v. Semple, 105 So. 134, 90 Fla. 7 (Fla. 1925).

Opinion

Ellis, J.-

In October, 1922, John S. Semple exhibited his bill in chancery against his wife, Marguerite, and prayed that the bonds of matrimony existing between them “be declared null and void;” that the custody of their three children, a girl seventeen years of age and two boys of eleven and ten years of age respectively, be given to him, and that a certain tract of land described as the “North *9 west Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24, in Township 37 South, of Range 24 East, in DeSoto County, Florida,” be decreed to be his property and that the defendant, in whom rested the title to the same, be declared “a trustee only.”

The date upon which it is stated in the transcript of the record that the bill was filed is an error. It should have been the 13th of October, 1922. The subpoena was issued upon the latter date, was served upon the defendant the following day, she entered her appearance on the 6th day of November, 1922, and interposed a plea to a part of the bill on the 29th of that month and the transcript was filed in this court in July, 1923.

The plea was interposed to that portion of the bill alleging the conveyance of the land described to the defendant by the complainant in December, 1906, and the prayer that it be declared to be held in trust for the complainant by the defendant. To the remaining portion of the bill the defendant answered.

The plea was overruled. From that order the defendant appealed.

The plea averred that prior to the 13th day of October, 1922, the complainant exhibited his bill of complaint against the defendant in which he “sought to have the same deed of conveyance described in the present bill of complaint, dated December 9th, 1906, conveying to this defendant the same land described in his bill of complaint * * * declared to be null and void and of no effect, and set aside and cancelled and vacated by the court”; that in the bill first filed the complaintant described the land as his homestead ; that on final hearing of the cause the chancellor decreed the cancellation of the record of the deed. That on appeal by the defendant from that order the Supreme Court reversed the “decision and final decree of the Circuit *10 Court ’ ’ and thereby adjudicated that the 11 deed here sought to be declared invalid was and is a valid deed of conveyance to this defendant, and should be so decreed, and the said matters and things were thereby finally adjudicated. ’ ’

It is contended by appellant that the plea was one of res adjudicata, because it averred that the same subject matter was involved between the same parties and the cause was tried on its merits and decided by a court of competent jurisdiction in favor of complainant, one of the parties to the litigation in the instant case, on the issue that the land conveyed was the “home place and homestead” of the complainant and on appeal the decree of the court was reversed by the Supreme Court, which held the conveyance to be valid and should be so decreed.

The appellee contends that the issues involved in the first case were different from those presented in the instant case, in that in the former the conveyance was attacked as invalid as being an attempted conveyance of the homestead by the complainant to the defendant, there being children of their marriage; while in the instant case the conveyance is not attacked as invalid but it is sought to impress a trust upon the land in complainant’s favor because the defendant had violated the conditions on which the conveyance was made and thus destroyed its purpose.

ít is alleged in the bill of complaint that the land was conveyed by the complainant to the defendant “for the purpose of making it a home place' and homestead for him and his wife and their family,” but that the “said defendant has deserted him and carried away his children.” That complainant is living upon the land as “was his custom and as it was understood he should. ’ ’

It is not alleged in the bill that the defendant in accepting the deed of conveyance did so with any such purpose and agreed, as consideration for the conveyance, to hold and *11 use the land as a home place and homestead for the complainant, herself and children.

The theory of that portion of the hill relating to the conveyance of the land and the prayer which rests upon it is that a trust was created when the deed was executed, a trust in favor of the grantor. It is not contended that it was an express trust because no mention of it is made in the conveyance, nor did any agreement, express or implied, exist between the parties evincing an intention that the property was to be held by the grantee for the purpose alleged. It is not contended that it was an implied trust because none of the elements of such a trust are alleged to have existed. The bill’s allegations show no resultant trust because it is not deducible from the mere nature of the transaction — the conveyance of a lot of land by a husband to his wife — nor are any facts alleged from which the irust could be presumed from the supposed intention of the parties ; nor are there any allegations showing a trust ex maleficio or ex delicto.

The grantor’s intention, with which he executes a deed of conveyance to another, which intention he does not reveal at the time of the conveyance and of which the grantee knows nothing, and the circumstances of the transaction are not of such character that an intention of the parties to create a trust may be presumed, does not create a trust upon the land conveyed. In both an express and resulting trust the element of intention to create a trust must exist between the parties. In one ease the intention is expressed, in the other it is implied. A constructive trust arises entirely by operation of law without reference to any actual or supposed intention of creating a trust and often directly contrary to such intention. They are entirely in invitum and are forced upon the conscience of the trustee *12 for the purpose of working out right and justice or frustrating fraud. See 39 Cyc. 26-104; 26 R. C. L. 1214-1232.

Reduced to their last analysis the allegations of the bill are that the complainant, who owned the fee simple title to the land, made a conveyance of it to his wife in order that he and she and their children might have a home. In such case the intention was that the grantee and her children should enjoy the beneficial interest in the property, which is wholly inconsistent with the idea of a resulting trust. See 39 Cyc. 136; Long v. King, 117 Ala. 423, 23 South. Rep. 534 ; Rowe v. Johnson, 33 Colo. 469, 81 Pac. Rep. 268; Veeder v. McKinley-Lanning Loan & Trust Co., 61 Neb. 892; 86 N. W. Rep. 982.

The doctrine has frequently been announced by this court that the evidence to establish a resulting trust must be so clear, strong and unequivocal as to remove from the mind of the chancellor every reasonable doubt as to the existence of the trust. See McGill v. Chappelle, 71 Fla. 479, 71 South. Rep. 836.

The ultimate facts alleged must, when established, have such probative force or the bill cannot be said to sufficiently allege the existence of such a trust.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 134, 90 Fla. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semple-v-semple-fla-1925.