Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund v. Gleason

39 Fla. 771
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 39 Fla. 771 (Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund v. Gleason) 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
Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund v. Gleason, 39 Fla. 771 (Fla. 1897).

Opinion

Taylor, C. J.:

In August, 1892, the appellee filed his bill in equity fin the Circuit Court of Dade county against the appellants under the provisions of section 1500 of the [772]*772Revised Statutes, the same being section 1 of chapter-3884, laws, approved June 4th, 1889, alleging therein that he was the owner of all the lands lying above the waters of Biscayne Bay in section 19, township 53 S., R. 42 E., in Dade county, Florida, and that he acquired same by a deed of conveyance in fee from his-father, W. IT. Gleason, who acquired said land by patent from the United States. The bill alleges that-portions of said section 19 have been patented to the State of Florida by the United States since the patent thereof to W. H. Gleason, 'out was so patented by mistake. That the State of Florida has sold and conveyed to several of the defendants various portions of the part patented to her, and that these grantees im turn have conveyed portions of their purchases from-the State to still others of the defendants. The bill alleges the defendants or some of them to be in possession, and prays that the patent to the State of Florida for any portion of said section may be can-celled, and that all subsequent conveyances by the-State of Florida and her grantees to any part thereof may be cancelled, and the complainant adjudged tobethe rightful owner of the whole of said section, and that he be put into possession thereof.

The Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement-Fund, and several others of the defendants, answered the bill, reserving therein, as a ground of demurrer to the whole bill the question of its want of equity. The-complainant filed divers exceptions on the ground of impertinence to various parts of the several answers of' the defendants, and brought said exceptions on for-hearing, and the court below made orders sustaining-the several exceptions to all of said answers, and frorm these orders the defendants have taken this appeal.

[773]*773The bill is filed, expressedly, under the provisions-, of section one of chapter 3884, laws of 1889, brought forward into the Revised Statutes as section ífSGO» thereof. It alleges that the defendants are in possession of the disputed lands, sets up an alleged paramount title thereto in the complainant, and prays aia adjudication of such title, and that the defendants be-evicted thereof and the complainant put into possession. In other words, the bill is simply an ejectmentbill, presenting no other feature or claim for the interposition of a court of equity than the bare permit of this statute to carry such cases into equity. In the-case of Hughes et al. vs. Hannah et al., (decided ah our last term) 39 Fla. 365, 22 South. Rep. 613, it was held, iu effect, that while this statute should be enforced so far as it can be done consistent! y with the limitations of our Constitution, that yet it was unconstitutional and without force or effect in so far as it undertook or had the effect of converting the remedy at law by ejectment into an action cognizable in equity. That where the remedy at law by ejectment was clear and adequate, that then this statute could not, constitutionally,- put such a cause into equity, and thereby deprive the defendant of his common law right guaranteed by the Constitution of a trial by jury. The bill in this case falls squarely within this decision, and! no case is made thereby over which a court of equity has jurisdiction. Having arrived at this conclusion, it becomes unnecessary to enquire into the questions presented by the exceptions filed to the answers of the defendants; but, according to the practice of this and the courts of England and the United States, it is proper for us to order a dismissal of the bill for want, of equity, even though its equity had not been que»[774]*774tioned by the pleadings or presented here. Freeman vs. Timanus, 12 Fla. 393; Foley vs. Hill, 1 Phil. (19 Eng. Chy.) 399, affirmed in 2 H. L. Cases, 28; Fowle vs. Lawrason, 5 Pet. 495; Hipp vs. Babin, 19 How. 271; Strother vs. Lovejoy, 8 B. Mon. 135.

Without passing upon the propriety or the impropriety of the rulings upon the exceptions to- the answers, the cause is remanded with directions that the complainants bill be dismissed, and that the appellee pay the costs of the cause, and of this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Fla. 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-internal-improvement-fund-v-gleason-fla-1897.