Van Meter v. Kelsey
This text of 91 So. 2d 327 (Van Meter v. Kelsey) 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.
Opinion
P.W. VAN METER, Individually and as Guardian of the person and property of Sophie K. Van Meter, Incompetent, Appellant,
v.
Edward L. KELSEY and his wife, Lois D. Kelsey, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Florida. Division B.
*329 M.R. McDonald, Sebring, for appellant.
Haskins & Bryant, Sebring, for appellees.
O'CONNELL, Justice.
This is a suit to quiet the title to a strip of land approximately 413 feet wide lying between the center line running east and west of Section 17, Township 37 S, Range 30 E, as said line was established by the United States survey of 1870 and the center line of said section as located by the United States survey of 1917.
The suit was instituted by the plaintiff, P.W. Van Meter, appellant here, individually and as Guardian for his wife, Sophie K. Van Meter, an incompetent.
The evidence shows that in 1913 the plaintiff entered onto the fractional NE 1/4 of Section 17 for the purpose of homesteading said land. In the same year, Eugene W. Kelsey, father of the defendant, Kelsey, entered onto the fractional SE 1/4 of Section 17 for the same purpose. Both entries were made under the survey of 1870. At the time of the entries said lands were part of the public domain.
About 1915 plaintiff constructed a fence running east and west along his south boundary, the north boundary of the Kelsey property.
At about the same time Kelsey constructed a fence along the west boundary of his land and by consent of plaintiff connected said fence to the southwest corner of plaintiff's fence.
Thereafter, the United States made another survey in 1917, which survey when approved had the effect of moving the boundaries of Section 17 east and south. This survey moved the south boundary line of NE 1/4, the land claimed by plaintiff, south approximately 400 feet. When the survey of 1917 was made plaintiff did not move his fence. It is the land lying between this fence and the center line of Section 17, established by the 1917 survey that provoked this litigation.
Section 17 is bounded on the east by Lake Grassy and therefore when the section boundaries were moved east the effect was to reduce the acreage in both the NE and SE quarters, since the west edge of the lake remained the east boundaries of both quarter sections.
Plaintiff received patents, in 1923 and 1926, to the fractional NE 1/4 and to the E 1/2 of E 1/2 of the NW 1/4 of Section 17. Kelsey received a patent in 1923 to the fractional SE 1/4 and additional lands in the SW 1/4, Section 17. All patents were issued according to the 1917 survey.
It is obvious that both plaintiff and Kelsey received patents to lands not included in the quarter sections originally entered by them and it appears that this was done to compensate them for the reduction in acreage occasioned by moving the boundary lines of Section 17 eastward. The west edge of Lake Grassy was the east boundary of both quarter sections and remained such under the 1917 survey.
Plaintiff proved the legal title to the lands through introducing the patents from the United States and quitclaim deeds from Sippie M. Moore, who obtained a tax deed thereto from the State of Florida in 1941, the deeds from Moore to plaintiff having been recorded in 1952.
The defendant, Edward W. Kelsey, and wife claimed title to the land by virtue of a *330 quitclaim deed dated and recorded in 1954 from all the other heirs of his father, Eugene W. Kelsey, who died in 1951 and who is referred to throughout this opinion as Kelsey. Defendants assert that their predecessor, Kelsey, had acquired title to the land by adverse possession. They further assert that plaintiff is barred by laches from obtaining the relief he seeks.
The chancellor found in effect that the defendants did not prove their claim of title by adverse possession of their predecessor, but held (1) that the fence constructed by plaintiff in 1915 had been recognized and had been accepted as the true boundary between the lands by acquiescence of the parties and (2) that plaintiff was barred by laches. He then, based on prayer for affirmative relief in their answer, decreed the defendants to be the owners of said lands.
The evidence showed that the land in question was wild and unimproved, except for patches of ground near the edge of Lake Grassy, which patches of ground were not located with any certainty. Defendants claim that their predecessor, or persons under him, farmed these patches of land on several occasions and that until his death in 1951 Kelsey had some cattle running on the land. There was evidence that Kelsey had repaired plaintiff's fence on several occasions. There was no evidence of improvements made to the land, nor does the evidence show that Kelsey or the defendants ever returned the land for taxes, or ever paid taxes thereon. The evidence does show that application for a tax deed was made by Sippie M. Moore, that notice thereof was advertised according to law and a tax deed issued to her on these lands and others in 1941.
We agree with the chancellor that the defendants did not prove their claim of title by adverse possession. The possession of realty is presumed to be in subordination to the legal title and not to be adverse thereto. One who claims title by adverse possession for the required period must establish that fact by clear and positive proof. Atlantic Land & Improvement Co. v. Davis, Fla. 1954, 70 So.2d 910, Palmer v. Greene, 1947, 159 Fla. 174, 31 So.2d 706.
In support of his finding that the parties had established the fence as a boundary by recognition and acquiescence, the chancellor cited the case of Acosta v. Gingles, 1915, 70 Fla. 13, 69 So. 717. That case is not in point for there it appeared clearly that the line had been established by the father of the parties in order to divide a parcel of land between them, and the parties had made a settlement based on the division and had recognized it as the boundary for 25 years.
The case of Barrs v. Brace, 1896, 38 Fla. 265, 20 So. 991 is more nearly in point with the case before us. There as here, there was a question of correctness of the survey. In the case before us Kelsey signed a petition to the United States offering to cooperate in the resurveying of Section 17 and indicating that there was question about the boundary lines under the 1870 survey. Plaintiff testified that it was agreed between him and Kelsey that if the new survey moved his line south Kelsey would move south also. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the fence in question was agreed upon as the boundary between the two properties. Any recognition that it was such a boundary appears to have been conditioned on the results of the survey of 1917, made not before, but after the fence was erected. The only evidence to show that the fence was regarded as the boundary between the properties was the existence of the fence itself. This is not sufficient.
Next we consider laches as a bar to the relief claimed by plaintiff. The elements of laches as stated in 19 Am.Jur., Equity, Sec. 498 were cited by the chancellor. We agree that these elements are necessary to establish laches as a bar to relief.
The first of these elements is that there must be conduct on the part of *331 the defendant, or on the part of one under whom he claims, giving rise to the situation of which complaint is made. In this case such conduct must be either the acts of adverse possession claimed to have been made by defendants' predecessor and father or the filing of the deed from the other Kelsey heirs to defendants.
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