Spencer v. Wiegert
This text of 117 So. 2d 221 (Spencer v. Wiegert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Jesse F. SPENCER and Elizabeth K. Spencer, His Wife, Appellants,
v.
A.M. WIEGERT and Rena Wiegert, His Wife, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*222 Askew, Earle & Holley, and Robinson & Robinson, St. Petersburg, for appellants.
John G. Enwright, St. Petersburg, for appellees.
KANNER, Judge.
Relief sought by the appellants, the Spencers, in their suit to enjoin the appellees, the Wiegerts, from interfering with their use as easement of a fifteen foot strip of land abutting appellants' property was denied by the chancellor by his final decree. The appeal now before the court is from this adjudication.
*223 The appellants are predicating their claim of easement upon the fifteen foot strip as shown on a plat entitled "Mitchell's Beach", recorded in 1914, showing lots, blocks, streets and alleys throughout its entire area, but not dedicating the streets and alleys to public use. Block 42 on the plat was bisected by a fifteen foot alley connecting with Fifth Street to the north, with lots 7, 8, 9, and 10, now owned by appellants, abutting on its westerly boundary and with lots 11, 12, 13, and 14, now owned by appellees under a different description, abutting on its easterly boundary.
The dispute here involved arose when appellees, early in May, 1958, notified appellants, who had acquired their property in March of 1957, that appellees held legal title to the area shown on the Mitchell's Beach plat as an alley, free and clear of any easement, demanding that appellants cease using it as a way and further stating that there was an encroachment of several inches onto this land by one of the steps to one of appellants' cottages.
Although as stated above, the plat of Mitchell's Beach recorded in 1914 did show the alley in question, a replat of a portion of the lands included in Mitchell's Beach Subdivision was made and recorded by P.A. Page, Jr., in December, 1935. At the time of that replat, all the lands in Mitchell's Beach Subdivision were owned by Gulf Beach Company, Inc.; but an agreement for deed had been entered into in February of that year and recorded in August between that company and P.A. Page, Jr., appellants' remote predecessor in title, providing for the eventual conveyance to Page of certain lands described therein. This replat did not include lots 7, 8, 9, and 10, now owned by appellants, but showed the alley here in dispute as a portion of lot 11, block M of the replat. It also showed lots 11, 12, 13, and 14 of block 42 of Mitchell's Beach as a portion of the replat, although the caption of the replat failed to show that a portion of block 42 of Mitchell's Beach was included.
In February, 1938, while still holding title to all the lands involved, Gulf Beach Company, Inc., conveyed to P.A. Page, Jr., "Lots Numbers Seven (7), Eight (8), Nine (9), and Ten (10) of Block Forty-Two (42) of Mitchell's Beach Subdivision, according to the Map or Plat thereof recorded in the Office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Pinellas County, Florida," together with other lots. Later in that same month, Page through deed recorded April 1, 1938, conveyed these lands under the same description to Mary Sierkese, a predecessor in title of appellants; and in 1939 certain cottages were constructed on the property which virtually abut on the property line, with a slight encroachment as to the steps of one cottage. In conveying the lands, Page made no reference to his replat of a portion of Mitchell's Beach.
In 1941 the Gulf Beach Company, Inc., conveyed to Page all the lots in Mitchell's Beach Subdivision not already conveyed to him. Although this deed carried all the right, title, and interest of the grantor in the streets of Mitchell's Beach Subdivision, no reference was made to the 1935 replat. This latter conveyance included the lands now owned by appellees. Subsequently, when Page in 1942 conveyed the lands now owned by appellees, he described them with reference to Page's Replat which had absorbed into lot 11, block M, the greater portion of the alleyway originally shown in block 42 of Mitchell's Beach.
It is thus seen that the common predecessor in title of both the appellants and the appellees, Gulf Beach Company, Inc., conveyed the property now owned by these respective parties by reference to the plat of Mitchell's Beach Subdivision which did show the fifteen foot strip as an alley abutting the lots now owned by the appellants. The question here posed is whether there does now exist the fifteen foot alleyway to which appellants are here contending they have the right of easement and to which appellees are asserting legal title free of such easement.
*224 An intervening period of about nineteen years elapsed after construction of the cottages in 1939, then came the objection of the appellees who had acquired their property in the year of 1957. This area in dispute had been and was being used in connection with these cottages in the operation of a motel business, for travel, garbage collection and other uses, and was regularly traversed by others. A person stepping directly off the back steps of the cottages would have to step into the alley.
Appellants, in being denied use of the strip of land originally designated as an alleyway, say that in 1939 their predecessor in title then owning the property erected the cottages in the described manner in reliance upon the plat of Mitchell's Beach Subdivision with reference to which the conveyance had been made, so that use could be made of the easement for ingress and egress to and from Fifth Street. Their position is that the only action by appellees and their predecessors in title to sustain the absorption of the fifteen foot strip as an easement was constituted within the conveyance by Page after 1941 of title to the lands now held by appellees with reference for the first time to his replat of a portion of the subdivision instead of to the plat of Mitchell's Beach Subdivision. They say that such effect could not be achieved by Page after appellants' predecessor in title had acquired and improved this property in reliance upon the Mitchell's Beach Subdivision plat, and since they derived the property through mesne conveyances from their predecessors in title under the Mitchell's Beach plat. On the other hand, the appellees say that since no reference is made in the 1938 conveyance by Page to a plat book by number and page and both plats contain the inscription, "Mitchell's Beach," and since the replat was already of record, this constituted notice to the world that the alleyway no longer existed prior to any conveyance shown in the record in appellants' chain of title.
The chancellor's refusal to grant injunctive relief was premised principally on the fact that both plats were recorded prior to acquirement of appellants' property through mesne conveyances by their predecessors in title. Primarily, this is the position pursued by appellees in their brief and argument.
Actually, little disagreement appears to exist between the parties as to the facts of the case. It is to the legal principles as they may apply to these facts that the court must turn for the solution to the problem in dispute.
Concerning the divergent positions of the parties to this controversy, the court first observes that generally where property has been conveyed by a deed with reference to a plat which embraces the property, the plat and the deed should be read together; and whatever properly appears on the plat should be considered a part of the deed. Wahrendorff v.
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