Watrous v. Morrison

33 Fla. 261
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 33 Fla. 261 (Watrous v. Morrison) 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
Watrous v. Morrison, 33 Fla. 261 (Fla. 1894).

Opinion

Raney, C. J. :

This is an action of ejectment instituted June 22nd, 1885, (Rev. Stats., sec. 1282) by Morrison against Watrous, and in which the controversy is as to the boundary line between Lots 1 and 2, T. 29, R. 18, S. and E., •such lots being in Hillsborough county and riparian to Hillsborough bay, now frequently, if not usually, called Tampa bay.

Morrison deraigns title to Lot one from the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of Florida, who conveyed it in April, 1875, to Mrs. Sarah C. Taylor, she being the wife of John M. Taylor. Afterwards, on March 14th, 1876, Mrs. Taylor and her husband conveyed an undivided interest therein to James E. Lipscomb, who, according to the testimony of Mr. Taylor, was interested originally to this extent in the purchase from such trustees; and subsequently Mrs. Taylor and Mr. Lipscomb made partition of the lot between themselves, she taking the southern portion, containing thirty-three acres, more or less, and he the remainder or northern portion of the lot; such northern portion having a western boundary of thirteen chains, and containing forty acres, more or less; the deed to her bearing date June 18th, 1877, and that to him the 22nd day of the same month. On April 16th, 1878, Lipscomb [266]*266and wife conveyed the' former’s portion to Morrison, and on the 10th day of October following, Taylor and wife conveyed Mrs. Taylor’s portion to him.

Watrous deraigns title to Lot 2 from the United States in this wise: Harriet C. Chase conveyed by deed dated December 5th, 1875, with covenants of general warranty, to Spranger and Lang, and they on March 1st, 1876, conveyed to Watrous by deed containing similar covenants; and on July 13th, 1885, a patent to Harriet C. Chase, widow of Samuel C. Chase, for the land was issued by the United States, it reciting that she had paid for the land under the act of Congress of April 24th, 1820.

The locus in quo which Morrison sues to recover is a. piece of land seeming’ to be nearly rectangular in shape, and containing 4.97 acres. According to Morrison’s contention, it is a part of Lot 1, lying in'the extreme western part thereof and extending the whole' length of the lot, north and south, he relying on asurvey made by C. E. Worth in July, 1884. According to the position taken by Watrous, the land contended for is in the extreme eastern part of Lot .2, extending the whole length thereof, north and south, he relying more particularly on a survey made by W. F. White in the year 1876. Watrous claims to have been in adverse possession up to the White line since 1878; Morrison, on the contrary, contending that whatever possession Watrous had -was not adverse to Morrison or to the title under which he claims. -The verdict was for the plaintiff, but without mesne profits. Watrous has appealed from the judgment.

In the sale of lands in sections, or subdivisions thereof, including lots, according to the government survey, the survey as actually made controls. Miller [267]*267vs. White, 23 Fla., 301, 2 South. Rep., 614; Liddon vs. Hodnett, 22 Fla., 442. It is the survey as it was actually run on the ground that governs, if the monuments, corners or lines actually established can be located or proved. Courses and distances yield to such corners and lines, so long as the latter can be located, and for the reason that the latter are the fact or truth of the survey as it was actually made while the former are but descriptions of the act done, and when inacurate they can not change the fact. McClintock vs. Rogers, 11 Ill., 279; Yates vs. Shaw, 24 Ill., 367; Bauer vs. Gottmanhausen, 65 Ill., 499; Kincaid vs. Dormey, 47 Mo., 337; Majors’ Heirs vs. Rice, 57 Mo., 384; Willis vs. Swartz, 28 Penn. St., 413; Riley vs. Griffin, 16 Ga., 141.

While it is true that the title to real estate can not be transferred by verbal agreement, yet where the boundary between contiguous lands is uncertain and disputed, the owners of such lands may agree upon a certain line as the permanent boundary line, and where the agreement is followed by actual occupation according to such line as the boundary, the line will be binding upon them, and their successors in title, as the boundary. The line becomes binding not upon the principle that the title to real estate can be passed by parol, but for the reason that the proprietors have by such consent and conduct agreed permanently upon the limits or the extent of their respective lands or property. Crowell vs. Maughs, 2 Gilman, 419; Yates vs. Shaw, 24 Ill., 367; Cutler vs. Callison, 72 Ill., 113; Kerr vs. Hitt, 75 Ill., 51; Kincaid vs. Dormey, 47 Mo., 337: Majors’ Heirs vs. Rice, 57 Mo., 384; Turner vs. Baker, 64 Mo., 218; Jackson vs. McConnell, 19 Wend., 175; Acton vs. Dooley, 74 Mo., 63; Jackson vs. Van Corlaer, 11 Johnson, 123; Rockwell vs. Adams, 7 [268]*268Cowen, 761; Kip vs. Morton, 12 Wend., 127; Vosburgh vs. Teator, 32 N. Y., 561; Brown vs. Caldwell, 10 Serg. & R., 114; Kellum vs. Smith, 65 Penn. St., 86; Burrell vs. Burrell, 11 Mass., 294; Hoxey vs. Clay, 20 Texas, 582; Clark vs. Hulsey, 54 Ga., 608; Riley vs. Griffin, 16 Ga., 141; Sawyer vs. Fellows, 6 N. H., 107; Orr vs. Hadley, 36 N. H., 575; Houston vs. Mathews, 1 Yerger, 115; Jamison vs. Petit, 6 Bush, 669; Jordan vs. Deaton, 23 Ark., 704; Boyd’s Lessee vs. Graves, 4 Wheaton, 513.

In Yates vs. Shaw, supra, it is said: In all matters of uncertainty and dispute the parties may without doubt compromise and end the dispute, and they may as certainly fix by agreement the boundary lines separating their lands as other disputes. And when they have thus agreed upon the position of such boundary and have acted upon it as the true line they should be estopped from asserting another and different line. Slight acts which may be construed into such an agreement should .not, however, be held to conclude the parties. To have that effect they shoiild be clear and satisfactory, and not doubtful and equivocal in their character. When the agreement of the parties to adopt a particular boundary is shown and possession is taken and held according to such agreement, the parties are estopped to dispute that as the true boundary, and when the fact is satisfactorily established it is sufficient. And while it may be true that it does not alter or change the original location of such line, still it must be regarded as the true line and the parties concluded from disputing it. If it was proved that the McFadden line was by agreement adopted and acted upon as the boundary, and that the parties, in pursuance of that agreement, erected fences or hedges ©n that line, and took possession in conformity to it, [269]*269they are now concluded from denying that it was properly and truly located. In Cutler vs. Callison, decided in-1874, where the parties agreed in 1868 upoa the line where an old fence stood, as the true line, and agreed to set out a hedge upon it, and one of the parties furnished the plants and the other set them out, and there was also evidence of the admission made three years before the trial in the lower court by the recusant party of the agreement, but he claimed there was a further understanding that if the hedge did not turn out to be on the true line they were to sell and buy, as the case might be, to come to the hedge, it was said that the courts always look with favor upon the adjustment of controverted matters of this character by agreement of the parties in interest, and' when an agreement to establish a boundary line is fairly and clearly made, and possession held according to the line so agreed on, no reason is preceived why such an agreement should not be conclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Fla. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watrous-v-morrison-fla-1894.