Wade v. Lewis

106 So. 2d 411
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 14, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 So. 2d 411 (Wade v. Lewis) 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
Wade v. Lewis, 106 So. 2d 411 (Fla. 1958).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The court granted a petition for certiorari under Sec. 4, Art. V, of the Constitution, F.S.A., to determine whether or not a decision of the District Court of Appeal, Third District, is in direct conflict with former decisions of this court on the same point of law, a situation that is made prima facie to appear in the petition.

The facts as they appear in the stipulation of counsel filed in the county judge’s court for the parties litigant are simple. One Helen L. Weiss died 24 April 1956 leaving a last will and testament by which she devised, after certain bequests not pertinent to this controversy, the residue of her estate, real and personal, to her son, Howard A. Lewis, stepson of Alexander Weiss, her then husband. Lewis was named executor. Included in the real property was a home purchased by decedent with her own money, conveyed to her alone, and at the time of her death occupied by her and her husband. It was stipulated not only that the property was occupied as a homestead but also that she was the head of the family.

The surviving husband petitioned the county judge’s court for an order adjudging the property to be of such character, and the county judge entered an order [413]*413holding (1) that the property constituted a homestead, (2) that it descended as intestate property, and (3) that the decedent’s husband and son should inherit it equally free from all debts and costs of administration.

The executor of the estate of Helen L. Weiss appealed to the circuit court from the order of the county judge, and the circuit court affirmed the order throughout.

An appeal was then taken to the Supreme Court from the circuit court’s order of affirmance. This occurred before 1 July 1957 and the Supreme Court pursuant to Sec. 26(6), Art. V, transferred the cause to the District Court of Appeal, Third District. To avoid confusion about the names of the parties it should now be stated that by the time the district court of appeal disposed of the litigation Alexander Weiss had died and Burton J. Wade, executor of the last will and testament of Alexander Weiss, had become appellee in his stead. He is petitioner in the instant proceeding and Howard A. Lewis, executor of the last will and testament of Helen L. Weiss, is respondent.

In the opinion of the district court of appeal it was observed at the outset that it was upon the oral argument that the appellant, respondent here, raised for the first time the question whether or not the county judge had jurisdiction to enter the order we have digested. The district court decided that the question of jurisdiction was a substantial one and should be decided though belatedly raised.

The district court thereupon dealt with the contention of the appellant that the litigation entertained by the county judge involved the title to real estate and that exclusive jurisdiction to determine it was vested in the circuit court by the provisions of Sec. 11, Art. V, of the Constitution, which, since the amendment adopted in 1956, are found in Sec. 6(c), Art. V. The court observed that the order of the county judge disposed of three aspects of the controversy, i. e., the status of the property involved, the heirship, and the manner in which the heirs should inherit. The district court correctly decided that the first of these was properly determinable by the county judge under the ruling of the Supreme Court in Wake-man v. Noble, Fla., 73 So.2d 873.

The district court stated that the second aspect was not in dispute so jurisdiction of the county judge to specify the heirs was not treated.

Dealing with the third factor, the district court held, point-blank, that the county judge had no power to fix the interest of the heirs, referring to Spitzer v. Branning, 135 Fla. 49, 184 So. 770, and Wakeman v. Noble, supra, and quoting from the latter our statement that once the county judge had fixed the homestead status, the manner in which title should descend, or life estate should arise, was “ ‘consequential.’ ”

The district court expressed the conviction that once the county judge decided the homestead status of the property, he became powerless to go further and establish the respective rights of the parties inasmuch as title of real estate would then become involved and a problem therefore arise which could be solved only in the circuit court.

The court then concluded that since the county judge had exceeded his jurisdiction in respect of the determination of title, the court would not “initially” decide that question but would leave the parties to seek an adjudication of the matter by the circuit court. The cause was remanded to the “county judges’ court” for the entry of an order consistent with the opinion.

Without pausing to comment on the procedure directed we proceed to decide the immediate question of conflict.

The petitioner insists here that the decision of the district court of appeal is in direct conflict with decisions of this court in Luther v. Florida Nat. Bank of Jack[414]*414sonville (In Re: Monk’s Estate), 155 Fla. 240, 19 So.2d 796, and Blanton v. State ex rel. McManus, 158 Fla. 667, 29 So.2d 865. This occurred, so the petitioner states, because the decision in Spitzer v. Branning, supra, cited by the court to support its conclusion, was subsequently overruled by these decisions.

We find some obstacles in our path as we attempt to follow the reasoning of the petitioner. In the first place we cannot accept the bare statement that the district court’s decision “in effect nullifies the Noble v. Wakeman case” as the petitioner charges in his brief. It is obvious from a reading of the decision under challenge that the court ruled the county judge had jurisdiction to declare that the property was homestead. The court said so and cited the case as authority for the ruling. We find in the immediate decision no deviation whatever from the holding in the cited case unless undue significance be placed on our statement that once homestead character of property is established the interests of the parties become “consequential.” In that litigation we were not dealing with any dispute among claimants to the life estate or the remainder. Here the argument arose over the construction given by the county judge to the statutes regulating descent, which would apply upon setting the homestead status. It should be commented that in Wakeman v. Noble, supra [73 So.2d 874], we were concerned only with the jurisdiction of the county judge to determine the homestead status of property from its use and the position of the owner as head of a family and we expressly stated that “[t]he title [was] affected by neither.” When we became convinced that the county judge could do that we said that the manner in which the title would vest was only incidental to the question he had entertained and answered. In brief the exercise of the jurisdiction by the county judge up to a certain point was approved. It was beyond that point that jurisdiction was exercised by a county judge in the present controversy so the assertion that the decision in Wakeman v. Noble, supra, has been, in effect, overruled has no merit.

Actually the only matter for consideration in the instant case is whether or not the ruling by the district court that when a county judge fixes the homestead status he must place a period after his deliberations and cannot go further and declare the respective interests in the homestead is out of harmony with our decisions on the subject.

A condensation of the opinion in Spitzer v. Branning, supra, seems fitting.

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Related

Lyons v. Lyons
185 So. 2d 121 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1966)
In Re Weiss'estate
106 So. 2d 411 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 2d 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-lewis-fla-1958.