Smith v. Owens

108 So. 891, 91 Fla. 995, 1926 Fla. LEXIS 1027
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 108 So. 891 (Smith v. Owens) 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
Smith v. Owens, 108 So. 891, 91 Fla. 995, 1926 Fla. LEXIS 1027 (Fla. 1926).

Opinions

Brown, C. J.-

— This cause is before this court on appeal from the final decree entered by the chancellor in the court below in a suit brought by T. L. Smith and others, heirs-at-law of a deceased daughter of G. Owens, deceased, to cancel a certain deed of conveyance made by G. Owens to defendant, W. T. Owens, and for partition of the property described in the bill of complaint, which embraced other lands in addition to those described in the deed sought to be cancelled.

In their bill, the complainants alleged that on March 6, 1912, G. Owens and his wife executed a deed of conveyance to said W. T. Owens, an adult sixty-eight years of age, to certain described property, comprising some thirty-four acres of land, which deed provided that the grantor’s wife should have the right to have a home undisputed, during *997 her natural life, on said described land; that on April 14, 1914, said G. Owens deposited the-deed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court for recording and that the same was duly recorded; that the grantor then took possession of the deed and kept it with his papers and effects; that'said deed was not delivered to W. T. Owens or to anyone for delivery to him, and that W. T. Owens had no knowledge of its execution, until after the -death of G. Owens, when he, the said W. T. Owens, found the deed in the said G. Owen’s papers and effects; that said deed was not, during the life of said G. Owens, or the life of his said wife, accepted by the said W. T. Owens or anyone acting for him or in his behalf, and 'that the same constitutes a cloud upon the title of complainants. That G. Owens died on January 26, 1919, leaving as his only heirs-at-law Mrs. J. P. Smith, a widow, and the said W. T. Owens, his daughter and son; and that at his death these two became the owners of said property as tenants in common, each having an undivided one-half interest by descent from their father. That said Mrs. J. P. Smith died on November 12, 1919, leaving the complainants as her heirs-at-law and hence vesting them with her undivided half interest. That Mrs. Bettie Owens, the wife of G. Owens, had died intestate prior to the death of said G. Owens. The bill prayed the cancellation of the said deed to W. T. Owens and concluded with the usual prayer for partition.

W. T. Owens filed an answer in which he admitted-the execution of the deed to him, and its recordation, as alleged in the bill, and its possession after such recordation by the grantor, but alleged that said instrument was, on or about January 26, 1919, delivered to Mrs. Henry Burnett, by the grantor, for delivery to the defendant, in the lifetime of said G. Owens, and was delivered afterwards, on the same day, or a short time thereafter, to the defendant, who ac *998 cepted the same. That defendant knew before the death of O. Owens that the instrument had been executed and has assented- thereto. That after the death of said G. Owens, the said deed was among certain papers which had been in the possession of G. Owens but that he had parted with ■the possession of the papers during his lifetime and that •they were not his papers at the time of his death. ■

‘ Considerable testimony was taken and the chancellor rendered the final decree dismissing the bill as to the real estate described in the deed from G. Owens to W. T. Owens, above mentioned, but providing for the partition of the remaining lands described in the bill.

There are seventy-five errors assigned by the appellants 'but only two of them are argued, the same being numbered 45 and 75, and it is only necessary here to consider assignment of error number 75, which attacks the action of the court in dismissing the bill as to the lands described in said deed, and which raises the controlling question in the cause. Evidence was adduced by the respective parties tending to support the allegations of both the bill and the answer, leaving as practically the only matter in dispute the question of whether or not, under the facts in evidence, there was such a delivery of the deed by G.' Owens before his 'death as would result in vesting the title to the lands described in the deed in the said W. T. Owens.

The evidence shows that after the execution and recording of the deed, said G. Owens repossessed the same, and ■appellants contend that he retained possession and control •of the deed until his death, while appellee contends that just a short while before his death the grantor delivered the deed to Mrs. Burnett for delivery by her to the appellee, which was done immediately after his death.

While the question presented is not without difficulty, we cannot escape the conviction that there was sufficient *999 evidence in this case to sustain the decree of the court below on the question of delivery of the deed. The rule is, that the chancellor’s conclusions on the facts will not be reversed unless it clearly appears that he has erred in such conclusions, and, in our opinion, no such error clearly appears.

One of the witnesses, Mrs. Burnett, who had formerly acted as housekeeper in the home of Mr. G. Owens, testified that some two or three years before his death, Mr. Owens asked her to get the tin box in which he kept his papers and bring it to him out on the porch, where he was at the time. She obtained the tin box from its usual place, on the mantelpiece and brought it to him and he opened the box and took the papers out in his hand among them the deed in question and told her that, “if you are here in my last hours, will you give this to Billie ? ” It is conceded that he referred to his son W. T. Owens, and that among the ' papers was the deed in question. After giving these direction, he closed the box and she took it and returned it to its usual place on the mantel. There was also evidence that Mr. G. Owens had told his son’s daughter, during his lifetime, and several friends, that he had made the deed to his home place to his son, giving just reasons why he Had done so in view of what he had given his daughter, Mrs. Smith, during his life time.

During his last hours, the aged and dying man sent for 'Mrs. Burnett, who had married and ceased her employment as housekeeper sometime before, to come, to, him, and told her to remember what he had. formerly told her and to deliver the tin box which contained the deed.to “Billie”,; the box being at the time in its usual place on the mantel in the same room. No conditions were attached to this unequivocal, final order or direction. This was, in our opinion, as effective a delivery of the deed into the custody *1000 of Mrs. Burnett for Billie Owens as was possible under the circumstances, and in legal effect the same as if Mr. G.. Owens had, were it possible to have done so, gotten up and taken the box off the mantel and handed it to Mrs. Burnett, or if he had had some one hand him the box and then handed it to Mrs. Burnett — which it is hardly probable he had strength to do — with the same directions, and she had then placed it back in the same place on the mantel to stay there until W. T. Owens arrived. At the time these directions were given, the box was where Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 891, 91 Fla. 995, 1926 Fla. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-owens-fla-1926.