State Ex Rel. Hillman v. Hutchins

158 So. 716, 118 Fla. 220
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 21, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 158 So. 716 (State Ex Rel. Hillman v. Hutchins) 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
State Ex Rel. Hillman v. Hutchins, 158 So. 716, 118 Fla. 220 (Fla. 1935).

Opinions

Davis, J.

A defendant, sued as a tenant at sufferance *222 in a landlord and tenant removal proceeding instituted against him under Sections 5407-5417 C. G. L., 3543-3553 R. G. S., filed an affidavit of defense, denying that he, said defendant, was a tenant at sufferance, and setting forth that the plaintiff had made a certain written contract of lease with him, simultaneously therewith executing a separate contract, consisting of an option to purchase the property for $38,752.00, in pursuance of which aforesaid documents he, said defendant, had entered into possession of the property and while in possession thereof, had exercised the option to purchase for the price, and upon the terms and conditions therein set forth and had done and performed all matters and things in and by his purchase agreement agreed to be done and performed by him, in consequence of which, so he alleged, he was not subject to being dealt with by the County Court because of its lack of jurisdiction in view of Section 11 of Article V of the State Constitution, to proceed with the adjudication of the relationship between plaintiff and defendant which was' not that of landlord and tenant.

Plaintiff in the cause filed motion for a default upon the ground that the defendant’s answer set forth no legal defense to the petition, whereupon the County- Judge entered an order on plaintiff’s motion to the effect following:

“This cause came on to be heard at ten o’clock A. M.,Friday, November 16th, 1934, on motion of plaintiff and to strike the answer and affidavit of defense of the defendant and for entry of default, and the Court having heard argument of counsel for the respective parties, and now being advised of his ruling,

“It Is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that plaintiff’s motion to strike answer and affidavit of defense, and for entry of default, be and the same is hereby denied.

*223 “And the Court being of the opinion that the matters and things set up by the answer and affidavit of defense filed by the defendant raised a question over which this Court has no jurisdiction and that this Court has no jurisdiction of this cause in view of the matters and things set up in said answer and affidavit of defense.

“It Is Further Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that this Court has no jurisdiction of said cause and that same is hereby dismissed at cost of plaintiff.

“Done and ordered, adjudged and decreed at Orlando this 19th day of November, A. D. 1934.

“Victor Hutchins,

“Judge of above Court.

The controversy between the parties is now before the Supreme Court on a mandamus issued directed to the respondent, Victor Hutchins, as County Judge and ex officio Judge of the County Court of Orange County commanding him to forthwith vacate the foregoing quoted order of dismissal and thereupon proceed with the dispatch of the delinquent tenant suit, or show legal cause before this Court for his failure so to do,

A motion for peremptory writ of mandamus having been interposed by relator in this proceeding to the respondent’s return which undertakes to set up his lack of jurisdiction as County Judge to determine what respondent says' is in substance an equitable plea giving rise to an equitable controversy, and not an issue appropriate to be adjudicated in the trial of a landlord and tenant proceeding in the County Court, it is suggested by relator in his brief that the true question for decision thus' raised by the pleadings now before us shall be stated in substance as follows:

“Where in a landlord and tenant action in Florida, brought by a landlord against a tenant at sufferance, the *224 defendant pleads, by way of equitable plea, that the defendant ought not to be removed because, although the defendant admits he has no right of possession under his former lease, the defendant claims that he has an equitable right of possession, based on a separate agreement in the nature of an option to purchase, does the filing of such an equitable defense ipso facto deprive the County Court of jurisdiction of the controversy as' raising a question of title?” ,

Mandamus lies to compel a County Court to exercise its lawful jurisdiction where it refuses to do so, but will not be used to correct errors of procedure or judgment. State, ex rel. Dykeman v. Petteway, 96 Fla. 74, 117 Sou. Rep. 696.

In every landlord and tenant proceeding the County Court or County Judge, as the case may be, has full jurisdiction •to determine from the pleadings and evidence as a matter of law whether or not there ever came into actual existence the relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties litigant in the landlord and tenant proceeding pending before him, and furthermore when, if ever, that relationship came to an end or some other status was established between the parties who, having once been landlord and tenant toward each other, may have brought that relationship to a close by the substitution of some other to take the place of the former. The general rule that a tenant is estopped to deny his' landlord’s title is applicable to summary landlord and tenant proceedings only where the landlord and tenant relationship is admitted or established (Pugh v. Davis, 103 Ala. 316, 18 Sou. Rep. 8, 49 A. S. R. 30; Note to 120 A. S. R. 57). It does not preclude an alleged tenant from showing as a matter of defense that the landlord and tenant relation never existed, or if it did once exist that the alleged tenant surrendered possession to the landlord and *225 assumed another relationship by going back into possession under some other status or claim. Note 49 L. R. A. 438; Reich v. Cochran, 151 N. Y. 122, 45 N. E. Rep. 367, 56 A. S. R. 607, 37 L. R. A. 805.

The determination of whether or not a relationship of landlord and tenant ever existed, the date that it was' created, and the date that it was brought to an end, either by delinquency, agreement, operation of law, or other terminating case, are all factors to be decided in the adjudication of a landlord and tenant proceeding brought under our statutes if and when properly put in issue. Therefore the jurisdiction of a County Court to try such landlord and tenant proceedings in the first instance, includes within its purviews ample jurisdiction to make a legal finding on the existence vel non of an alleged tenancy relationship as the predicate for the maintenance of such a proceeding.

Hence an affidavit of defense, plea, answer or other response merely setting up facts' that if true, simply operate as a negation of the alleged tenancy asserted by the plaintiff in such a proceedings, would not per se oust the jurisdiction of a County Court to try the issue raised thereby to the extent of deciding the existence of the relationship of landlord and tenant vel non, nor preclude the entry of a judgment awarding recovery of possession of the alleged leased premises involved in the proceeding, should the fact of tenancy be found in the affirmative.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 So. 716, 118 Fla. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hillman-v-hutchins-fla-1935.