Thompson v. Maxwell

16 Fla. 773
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 16 Fla. 773 (Thompson v. Maxwell) 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
Thompson v. Maxwell, 16 Fla. 773 (Fla. 1878).

Opinion

The Chief-Justice

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the orders of the Circuit Court for Alachua county overruling a demurrer to complainant’s bill and granting injunction without requiring the security prescribed by law. By the bill it appears that Maxwell, appellee, was the mortgagee and holder of a mortgage executed by Charles P. Crawford to secure some ten thousand dollars and interest, dated October 25, 1870, on 1,860 acres of land in Alachua county, witnessed by J. J. Thompson, appellant, and “ A. J. DaCosta, D. C.,” and recorded December 26', 1870, by W. IL Cessna, Clerk, by “ A. J. DaCosta, D. C.” There was no formal certificate of the proof or acknowledgment put upon record, other than what may be deduced from the above memorandum. On June 23,1873, formal proof of the execution of the mortgage was made before the Clerk by DaCosta as a subscribing witness and duly recorded.

In March, 1873, Thompson, obtained a judgment in the County Court of Alachua county for $119.11 against Crawford, the mortgagor, and levied the same on the lands described in the mortgage, which lands were sold by the sheriff June 2, 1873, to Thompson, the plaintiff in the execution, for ten dollars, the sheriff’s deed being duly recorded July 12, 1873.

[775]*775Thompson brought suit in ejectment against one Dupuis, the tenant in possession under Crawford the mortgagor, and «on March 31, 1875, recovered a -judgment in said action for the possession of the premises .and for about $600 mesne profits. The time of the commencement of the ejectment •suit is not stated in the bill.

Complainant filed his bill to foreclose his said mortgage August 30, 1873; obtained his decree November 4th, and ■the lands were sold to complainant January 5, 1874, and •conveyed to him by sheriff’s deed, recorded February 25, 1874.

The bill shows that the mortgage was deposited with the •clerk for record and actually spread upon the records December 26, 1870 ; but alleges that the clerk by mistake endorsed upon the mortgage that it was recorded in December, 1871, instead of 1870.

It is also shown that one parcel of the land mortgaged, ito wit: the “jW-J of section 1, T. 8 S., R. 18 E.,” was erroneously and by mistake described in the bill of foreclosure, .and all subsequent proceedings, including the sheriff’s deed, as the “ N-J- of section 1,” &c. It is further alleged that.,complainant has not parted with the title of any of said lands .so acquired under the foreclosure sale. The bill prays that the clerical error of the clerk in his endorsement of the date •of recording the mortgage be reformed and corrected; that the error in the description of the lands as set out in his .bill of foreclosure be corrected by amending the bill and other ¡proceedings in accordance with the truth of the description, and that such proceedings maybe had therein as maybe proper to rectify the' said decree and proceedings; and it being alleged in the bill in this cause that the defendant Thompson caused the levy to be made upon the mortgaged lands, and a sale and deed to be executed under his., judg taent for the purpose of overreaching and defrauding'complainant ; that the sheriff’s deed to Thompson casts a cloud [776]*776upon the complainant’s title ; that Thompson is not a ~bona fide creditor or purchaser without notice of complainant’s mortgage, but that said Thompson had notice and was a subscribing witness of said mortgage; that Thompson’s “ purchase was inequitable, unfair, for an inadequate price, and was manifestly secured by fraudulent collusion with other parties, or by the gross ignorance of the sheriff;” that no public notice of said execution sale was given as required by law ; that the said sheriff’s deed conveys no interest to Thompson as against the mortgage title; that the judgment in the ejectment suit against Dupuis for rents and profits, and for possession, was obtained more than thirteen months after complainant’s purchase at the foreclosure sale, was contrary to equity and fraudulent, and yet he persists in claiming title and in taking possession of the lands; complainant thereupon further prays that the levy and sale under Thompson’s execution be set aside and the deed annulled so far as the same covers the land embraced in the mortgage; that Thompson be enjoined from further proceeding with the judgment in ejectment or writ of possession under it, and from taking possession, or collecting- the rents and profits of the premises, or the judgment recovered therefor, and that the sheriff deliver the quiet possession to complainant. Afterward the complainant amended his bill by alleging that said defendant is now seeking by suit against J. -D. Matheson, one of the sureties with Maxwell on a bond of J. Samuel Dupuis, to pay said debt in ejectment, which the complainant avers to be void as before stated in said bill, and complainant says that a judgment on said bond against said co-surety will be a judgment against complainant under the' statute for contribution, whereas the complainant avers that the obligors on said bond are not bound thereby by reason of the facts set forth in said bill without secwmg (sic) the principal before there [777]*777has been a breach of said bond so far as complainant knows.”

The defendant Thompson demurred on the general ground that “ there is no equity in the bill.”

Upon hearing the demurrer was overruled and defendant Thompson enjoined, as prayed, from proceeding with a suit of Thompson vs. Matheson upon the appeal bond of J. S. Dupuis, principal, and W. A. Maxwell'and J. D. Matheson, until the further order of the court, provided the complainant file his bond as usual in such cases with his own signature alone, without surety, within twenty days, for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.” Thompson was further enjoined from further proceeding to enforce or execute any writ of possession issued, or to be issued.upon the judgment in ejectment until further ordered. No security .was required upon the latter injunction. Erom these orders Thompson appealed, and seeks to reverse the same—1st, because the court erred in overruling the demurrer, and 2d, because the court granted the injunctions without requiring the complainant to give the bonds and securities prescribed by law.

I. It is a well settled rule that upon a general demurrer to a bill, if there is in the bill any good ground for equitable relief, the demurrer must be overruled, even if there are any number of grounds of special demurrer in the bill. Story’s Eq. Eh, §443; Cooper’s Eq. El., 112; Barb. Oh. Br., 107, and citations.

This bill, as a bill of review, filed for the purpose of correcting the apparent errors' in the decree and in the record in the foreclosure proceedings in the suit of this complainant against Crawford (which errors affect the vitality of the decree to a certain extent, and proceeding from an evident mistake and misadvertance in the description of the mortgaged property,) presents a case which entitles the complainant to equitable relief.

[778]*778A bill of review lies after a final decree, (Story’s Eq. PL, 408, a; 2 Barb. Ch. Pr., 93; Whiting, et al., vs. Bank U. S., 13 Pet., 6; Putnam vs. Lewis, 1 Fla., 455;) and may be filed without leave of the court. 2 Dan. Ch. PL & Pr., 3 Am. Ed. 1633 ; 17 Ves., 178.

The bill may pray simply that the decree may be reviewed and reversed in the part complained of, if it has not been carried into execution.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Fla. 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-maxwell-fla-1878.