State Ex Rel. Rich v. Ward

185 So. 846, 135 Fla. 885
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 20, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 185 So. 846 (State Ex Rel. Rich v. Ward) 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. Rich v. Ward, 185 So. 846, 135 Fla. 885 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Buford, J.

Writ of error brings for review judgment sustaining demurrer to petition for writ of prohibition, and denying the writ.

C. L. DeFoor on June 3rd, 1938, filed in the County Court of Lee County Florida, his petition for unlawful detainer under Section 3459 R. G. S., 5312 C. G.' L., in the statutory form, against R. E. Rich, plaintiff in error, Relator in the Circuit Court and' the original defendant in the .prohibition action. R. E. Rich has possession of certain property under a lease dated September 1, 1935, and 'expiring on September 1, 1940; and signed by Elva E. Denison, et al., and Rich has had continual possession since the date of the lease. On December 28', 1937, the same lessor, Élva E. Denison, executed and delivered to C. L. DeFoor á warranty deed to a portion of the same premises. On Jdné 3rd, 1938, C. L.' DeFoor filed his petition for unlawftil detention, without ever having been in possession of the premises; R. E. Rich having been in constant and continuous possession. The foundation for the petition for unlawful detainer was the contention that certain breaches of Jhe lease -has been committed by R. E. Rich, none of the alleged breaches, however, being for non-payment of rent. riXs E. Rich then filed in the Circuit Court of Lee County, Florida, his petition for Writ of Prohibition, setting up facts to the effect that C L. DeFoor had never had possession of the property, but that on the contrary he, Rich, had had continual possession, and therefore,, for this reason as well as ojherá. set forth in the petition for prohibi *888 tion the County Court should be prohibited from trying the case of Unlawful Detainer. Order to show cause was issued on above petition, to which respondents filed their return and demurrer; in neither of which did they ever claim that C. L. DeFoor had ever had possession of the premises. After argument, the Circuit Court sustained Respondent’s demurrer and denied Relator’s writ of prohibition, from which order this appeal is prosecuted.

. Plaintiff in. error poses three questions for our consideration, as follows:

“1. Can a grantee under a warranty deed maintain an action for Unlawful Detention against Lessee holding prior and unexpired lease from same parties to same premises, where grantee has never been in actual possession of the premises ?”

“2. Where grantee received a warranty deed from same party as previously had signed and sealed a written lease to a lessee who is still in possession under, the unexpired lease—is an action between the grantee and the lessee, with titles as- aforesaid, such a contest of title as to prevent grantee from maintaining an action for Unlawful Detainer against lessee in County Court?”

“3. Can the question of whether or not forfeitures have occurred in a written lease not yet expired, be tried in County Court in Unlawful Detention action.”

The- lease executed by owners under whom the parties to this suit claim and by the lessee under which plaintiff in error claims, contains the following covenant, viz.:

“And the said Lessee hereby covenants and agrees that if default shall be made in the payment of the rent as aforesaid, or if the said Lessee shall violate any of the covenants of this Lease, then the said Lessee shall become a tenant at sufferance, hereby waiving all right of notice, and *889 tbe¡ Lessors shall he entitled immediately to re-enter and retake possession of the demised premises.”

. The suit in the County Court as indicated hy the recoid was not an action for forcible entry, but was one for unlawful detainer. The statute, supra, inter alia provides a remedy for one deprived of possession whether theretofore in possession or not.

Section 3438 R. G. S., 5311 C. G. L., provides a remedy for one who is unlawfully turned out of possession by forcible or unlawful entry. The cases of Goffin v. McCall, 91 Fla. 514, 118 Sou. 556; and Perry Naval Stores Co. v. Griffin, 57 Fla. 133, 49 Sou. 554, involve proceedings under the latter statute.

The case here under consideration is ruled by our opinion and judgment in the case of State, ex rel. West Drug Stores, Inc., v. Cornelius, as County Judge, et al., 110 Fla. 299, 149 Sou. 332. In that case the writ of error was to the judgment of the Circuit Court sustaining a motion to quash a petition seeking to prohibit the County Judge of Hillsborough County, Florida, and Allen Investment Company, a corporation, from maintaining a certain suit filed in that court which was instituted upon petition for removal of a tenant and dismissing the cause, and we said:

“Sec. 5312 C. G. L. ‘Remedy declared for unlawful detention. If any person shall enter, or shall have entered in a peaceable manner into any lands or tenements, in case such entry is lawful, and after the expiration of his right shall continue to hold the same against the consent of the party entitled to the possession, for years or otherwise, shall be entitled to the like summary remedy at any time within three years after the possession shall have been withheld from him against his consent.’

“The above ■ quoted section vests jurisdiction in the County Judge to determine the cause presented to him by *890 the petition. There was a motion to quash the petition, which motion was overruled.

“The contention appears to have been that the action was brought under Sections 3534 R. G. S., 5398 C. G. L., 3535 R. G. S., 5399 C. G. L., and 3536 R. G. S., 5400 C. G. L. This Contention, however, is not tenable. The actions there dealt with are those arising out of the relationship of landlord and tenant. Hére the controversy is between a tenant claiming to hold under the terms of a lease and a subsequent lessee claiming the right of possession as against that tenant, and the procedure which is followed in this case is provided by the statutes. See Section 3460 R. G. S., 5313 C. G. L., et seq.

“In this case both parties claim the right of possession from the same source and the right of possession is the only question involved.

“It, therefore, follows that the motion to quash the petition for prohibition was properly sustained and the judgment in favor of the respondent was without error and should be affirmed.”

The only factual difference between that case and the case at bar is that in the Wests Drug Stores, Inc., case the suit in the County Judges Court was by a lessee of the- owner against a tenant claiming his rights to hold under a prior lease and in this case the suit is by the grantee from the former owner against a prior lessee of the former owner.

The case of Ex parte Bienville Investment Company, Inc., 102 Fla. 524, 136 Southern 328, is in line with the West Drug Stores, Inc., case, supra, and deals with questions involved here. In that case it was said:

“It is contended that because the petition of the landlord alleges that the premises are occupied by the defendant under a written lease that title is necessarily thereby involved. ■ ■

*891

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brownlee v. Sussman
238 So. 2d 317 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1970)
Floro v. Parker
205 So. 2d 363 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1967)
Gray v. Callahan, Et Vir
197 So. 396 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 So. 846, 135 Fla. 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rich-v-ward-fla-1939.