Water Control District of South Brevard v. Davidson

638 So. 2d 521, 1994 Fla. App. LEXIS 3906, 1994 WL 151312
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 29, 1994
DocketNo. 92-3069
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 638 So. 2d 521 (Water Control District of South Brevard v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Water Control District of South Brevard v. Davidson, 638 So. 2d 521, 1994 Fla. App. LEXIS 3906, 1994 WL 151312 (Fla. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

W. SHARP, Judge.

The Water Control District of South Bre-vard County appeals from an adverse judgment in a quiet title suit in favor of various landowners who were the plaintiffs below. The trial court ruled that the District had not obtained legal title to the disputed lands by any effective means, and that the current landowners were entitled to have the District’s claims to a 117 foot-wide right-of-way for drainage and maintenance along the west side of Canal C-37 declared null and void and nonexistent. The trial court, however, recognized the District’s rights-of-way to the canal and an area to the immediate east of the canal, which had been utilized by the District for maintenance of the canal since the canal was built, in 1927. We reverse that part of the decree which deals with the rights-of-way on the west side of the canal, which in contrast with the east side, was never used by the District.

The record in this ease shows that all of the appellees, John Roschman, Marie Taylor, Clyde Taylor, George Wells, Ramone Taylor, Richard Love, Jr. as Trustee, Donald Huber, Alan Thomas, and Billy Davidson bought the properties from prior owners, in 1990. In 1991, they filed this quiet title suit. There are six parcels of land involved in this case. Five are located north of Malabar Road and [523]*523one is located south of that road in Brevard County. The disputed property is a 117 foot right-of-way along canal C-37’s west side. It is dense and overgrown and has never been cultivated or improved.

We first direct our attention to appellant’s argument that the evidence was sufficient to establish that the District originally received clear title to the land that is the subject of the easement. This involves a historical analysis which goes back to the original creation of the District, formed under the provisions of Chapter 6458, Laws of Florida (1913). That statute remains today, essentially unchanged, in section 298.001-78, Florida Statutes. It authorizes the creation of water districts by chancery court proceedings, in which title is conveyed to the District by the landowners in a District.

The proper procedure in creating the District (then called the Melbourne-Tillman Drainage District)1 was presumptively followed in this ease. On January 7, 1922, the chancery court entered a decree establishing the Melbourne-Tillman Drainage District. On October 3, 1922, a decree of confirmation involving the District was recorded. This decree included the disputed property. All of the appellees’ predecessors in title to the property (W.C. Carter, E.W. Thompson and Edwin Hult) signed the petition to create the District. Carter and Hult hired an attorney and engineer and participated in the election of the District’s first board of directors.

The 1922 Decree expressly states that it confirms a report of the commissioners who had been appointed to appraise the property which was required for the rights-of-way for the District roads and canals. The property disputed is listed in this report. Section (29) of the 1913 law provided:

The board ... shall not have the right to enter or appropriate any land for rights-of-way, holding basins or other works of the districts, until the prices awarded to the owners of such land shall have been paid.... Whenever any land is acquired by any district under the provisions of this Act and the price of such property has been paid the owner by the district the title, use, possession and enjoyment of such property shall pass from the owner and he vested in the district-(emphasis supplied)

Title to the property and the rights-of-way did not vest in the District until the owners were paid. But when they were, title vested by operation of law.

Sections 11 and 13 of chapter 6458 require the board of supervisors to file a petition to appoint three commissioners to appraise or value property to be acquired for rights-of-way, holding basins, and other drainage works, and to assess benefits and damages under the Plan of Reclamation (which is a water management plan). The record shows three commissioners were appointed on August 5, 1922 to survey the property and prepare a report. The report includes a description of the property necessary for acquisition by the District for the canals and rights-of-way, as well as the price to be paid to the property owners. The commissioners’ report was filed on September 2, 1922. The report refers to a final report in the Plan of Reclamation (“the engineer’s report”) dated August 1, 1922 which was prepared by the engineer. The engineer’s report contained a map which showed the locations and configuration of all the canals that were eventually built by the District, including Canal C-37, as well as their adjoining 117 foot rights-of-way along both the east and the west side of the canals.

Section 15 provides that any property owner may object to the commissioners’ report. The court must approve and confirm this report and may also order the report changed to conform with any objections or with its own findings. The statute provides that any property owner “may accept the assessment of damages in his favor ... or acquiesce in [the commissioners’] failure to assess damages in his favor, and shall be construed to have done so” unless he notifies the supervisors before a certain time that he [524]*524objects to the assessment. Only in the latter event shall the supervisors initiate a separate condemnation action.

The 1922 Decree approved the commissioners’ report and appropriated title in the District to all the property and rights-of-way described in the report. This decree was recorded in chancery order book 6, page 288 and re-recorded in the official record book 3074, page 2349 of the Public Records of Brevard County, Florida. No property owner objected to the assessments in this case. Therefore, no separate condemnation action was required.

After the chancery court decree (January, 1922) which created the District and the 1922 Decree of Confirmation (October, 1922), the Governor of the State of Florida signed Chapter 9999, Laws of Florida (1923), which expressly ratified, validated and confirmed all of the proceedings creating and organizing the Melbourne-Tillmán Drainage District.

The property owners whose property was to be conveyed to the District by the 1922 Decree were paid for their property on March 26, 1924. The April 4, 1924 minutes of the District show that such payments were made and payment records customarily used at that time are available. The trial court excluded the index cards which allegedly also evidenced payment to the owners.

In 1922 and 1923, many of the canals were built, but Canal C-37 was not completed until September of 1927. It has been maintained continuously by the District, openly visible to all parties. Appellees concede they were fully aware of it at the time they purchased their property.

In 1928, the chancery court held a bond validation proceeding which reviewed all issues relating to the District. No irregularities were found. In 1940, another bond validation proceeding was held, and legal notice was given to all property owners in the District. The court judicially acknowledged the engineer’s map referenced in the 1922 chancery court proceedings and reaffirmed the validity of these prior proceedings in all respects.

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Bluebook (online)
638 So. 2d 521, 1994 Fla. App. LEXIS 3906, 1994 WL 151312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-control-district-of-south-brevard-v-davidson-fladistctapp-1994.