Watkins v. Watkins

166 So. 577, 123 Fla. 267, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 968
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 13, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 166 So. 577 (Watkins v. Watkins) 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
Watkins v. Watkins, 166 So. 577, 123 Fla. 267, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 968 (Fla. 1936).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The appellee (complainant in the lower *269 court) filed a bill of complaint, seeking to re-establish a lost deed, and for an accounting.

The allegation of the bill is that on July 10th, 1922, the complainant’s father and mother, John Barr Watkins and Carrie B. Watkins, transferred by deed certain lands, in Alachua County, which had been owned by the family for a century, to the complainant’s grandmother, Sue D. Barr, as go-between or trustee, and that she in turn conveyed to the complainant; that no consideration passed between the parties; that both deeds were identical, except as to the names of grantors and grantees, being drawn at the same time and executed on the same day; that the deed to the infant complainant had been lost or destroyed and was never recorded; that Lillian J. Watkins, one of the defendants, daughter and sole devisee of Sue D. Barr, later wrongfully deeded the said lands to the Ocala Manufacturing Ice and Packing Company, the appellant corporation, and therefore stands as trustee for the complainant and should account in full.

The testimony taken in behalf of the complainant tended to substantiate the theory of the bill. And the testimony of appellee’s mother also tended to show that John Barr Watkins was in debt; that the transfers were made to preserve the property from the creditors of John Barr Watkins, and to place the title thereto in his son, John Barr Watkins, Jr., then five years of age; that no consideration passed; that the deed from Sue D. Barr to John Barr Watkins, Jr., was delivered to Carrie B. Watkins and placed in her safety deposit box and that several years later' she discovered that the deed had disappeared; that it cannot be found.

The answer of the defendants (appellants) admits the transfer from John Barr Watkins and Carrie B. Watkins to Sue D. Barr, and admits the transfer from Lillian J. *270 Watkins to the Ocala Manufacturing Ice and Packing Company, but denies any transfer of the lands in question to the complainant, or any argument to transfer, and denies all allegations of the bill of complaint tending to show Sue D. Barr as a trustee or go-between in favor of the complainant.

The defendants produced testimony tending to substantiate the answer, and produced further testimony tending to show that Mrs. Sue D. Barr, on July 10, 1922, loaned John Barr Watkins and his wife, Carrie B. Watkins, $15,000.00 and received a note signed by them in such amount and took as security the deed to the land involved in this suit; that Mrs. Sue D. Barr, before her death, went to Mr. Hampton, her attorney, and gave him the said note and instructed him to foreclose the deed to Mrs. Barr as a mortgage; that he, as instructed, drew the bill of complaint, but before suit was filed John Barr Watkins convinced both Mrs. Sue D. Barr and Mr. Hampton that it was useless to go to the expense of a foreclosure suit, as' he, John Barr Watkins, felt that he could never repay the $15,000 and that his grandmother, Sue D. Barr, could keep the deed; that the note was left in the Hampton firm safe until after the institution of this Suit; that Mrs. Lillian J. Watkins and Mrs. 'Sue D. Barr, in her lifetime, paid the taxes on the property in question, although John Barr Watkins was in possession and using the place as his home; and finally that no deed was executed to John Barr Watkins, Jr., the complainant, as alleged in the bill of complaint.

Mrs. Carrie B. Watkins testified that she never gave Mrs. ■Sue D. Barr any note, and that although her name appeared as one of the makers, it was not her signature.

At the final hearing on bill, answer and testimony the Chancellor excluded and refused to consider the testimony *271 offered by the defendants below with regard to the $15,000 note and all testimony tending to show that a $15,000 consideration passed between Sue D. Barr and John Barr Watkins and that the deed was given to Sue D. Barr as security therefor, and entered a final decree in favor of the complainant. Defendant Lillian J. Watkins, fourteen days after the decree was rendered, filed a motion to amend the answer, so as to add an allegation that the purported warranty deed was in fact a mortgage. This motion was denied.

In the order denying the motion to amend, the court states that said motion was interposed after petition for rehearing had been heard and denied.

This is a suit to establish a title already vested in the complainant as distinguished from one in which a reconveyance is sought. In Kahn v. Wilkins, 36 Fla. 428, 18 So. 584, this Court held that a conveyance between a fraudulent grantor and grantee is good as between the parties and vests title in the grantee, except as to those persons actually defrauded. In the case before us no creditor is involved and none complain. As between the parties here involved none can be heard to complain that the transfer from John Barr Watkins and Carrie Watkins to Sue D. Barr and the alleged conveyance by Sue D. Barr to John Barr Watkins, Jr., was in fraud of creditors.

In Miller, et al., v. Berry, 78 Fla. 98, 82 So. 764, this Court held that: “The maxim ‘He who comes into equity must come with clean hands’ does not apply to wrongs committed at large by those who resort to equity for relief, but is confined to misconduct in the matter of litigation and must concern the opposite party.” And in the able opinion in that case, which was written by Circuit Judge Reaves, it was said:

*272 “A court of equity is not an avenger of wrongs committed at large by those who resort to it for relief, however careful it may be to withhold its approval from those who are involved in the subject-matter of the suit, and which prejudicially affect the rights of one against whom relief is sought.”

The appellee was only five years of age at the time of the transaction. As a general rule, estoppel cannot arise against an infant. In 31 C. J. 1005, it is aptly said:

“If an estoppel can arise against an infant, all the elements of an estoppel must concur. The conduct of the infant must have been fraudulent, and believed on, and acted upon by the other party.”

These elements could certainly not have been attributed to this infant, nor is laches imputable to an infant. 10 Ency. Pl. Pr. 590.

This suit was not instituted to determine whether the instrument given to Sue D. Barr was a mortgage or a deed, but is a suit to establish a subsequent or contemporaneous deed by Sue D. Barr to the infant appellee.

The appellants contend that the introduction of the note and the evidence thereof was to rebut the complainant’s allegation that no consideration passed, and was therefore admissible. If this evidence thus sought to be introduced would show that consideration actually passed for the deed from John Barr Watkins and wife to Sue D. Barr it would be admissible to disprove the complainant’s allegation that no consideration passed.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 577, 123 Fla. 267, 1936 Fla. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-watkins-fla-1936.