Wilkins v. Pensacola City Co.

36 Fla. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 Fla. 36 (Wilkins v. Pensacola City Co.) 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
Wilkins v. Pensacola City Co., 36 Fla. 36 (Fla. 1895).

Opinion

Taylor, J.:

The appellee, the Pensacola City Company, a corporation, and divers other persons, its alienees, on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1887, filed their bill in equity in the Circuit Court of Escambia county against the appellants, and against Georgia I. Caro, John B. Caro > Theresa E. Caro, Josephine Caro, Mary L. Caro (children of A. Y. Caro), Irene C. Williams, Matilda C. Duval and numerous other persons claiming to be •alienees or lessees of the Caros, or claiming portions •of „ the property involved in the suit. The bill alleges in substance: That the complainants are the owners in fee of the tract of land in the city of Pensacola, Plorida, known as the Chabeaux or Rivas tract. That •said tract originally belonged to one Gabriel de Rivas, but the title thereto was divested out of his heirs about the year 1817 by a legal and valid sale made under the authority of the Spanish court in Pensacola, and by mesne conveyances from the purchaser at said •sale became vested, on January 13th, 1837, in the Pen.sacola City Company, a joint stock association, by which it was conveyed, in the year 1870, to the Pen.sacola City Company, a corporation then organized under the laws of Plorida, and one of the complain•ants, and that the interests of the other complainants have been acquired from the said corporation. That in 1837, upon the purchase of the said property by the Pensacola City Company, it went into possession of the same, and it and its grantees, mediate and immediate, the complainants, have been in possession ever •since, except as hereinafter stated. That it then had it laid off into lots, blocks and streets and a plat thereof made, known as the Georgia E. Chase plan, and of «other of his property, and had the same printed, a [42]*42copy of which is attached as an exhibit to the bill; and that portions of said tract were then and subsequently sold by the said plan. That the Pensacola City Company, and its grantees mediate and immediate, have ever since paid taxes upon the said property, except during the war between the States of the American Union from 1861 to 1865. That in the year 1870, upon the purchase aforesaid by the complainant, the Pensacola City Company, it caused the said tract, together with other of its property, to be again laid off into lots, blocks and streets, and a plat thereof to be made, known as the “Harding & Lee plan,” a copy of which is attached as an exhibit to the bill, and that by said plat it has made sale to the other complainants herein of nearly all of the said tract, except what it has reserved for itself. That from the time of the purchase by the Pensacola City Company, the joint stock association, in 1887, its claim to the said property and its possession thereof remained unchallenged by any one, and the said acts of laying off, plotting, selling and paying taxes were done without protest, objection or molestation until A. D. 1872, when E. J. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and Irene C. Williams, claiming to be the-heirs of the aforesaid Gabriel Rivas, brought suit in ejectment against one of the tenants of the Pensacola City Company, the complainant herein, one C. M. Hooper for the possession of a portion of said tract of' land. That in said suit the said plaintiffs relied upon the title of the said Gabriel Rivas and their descent from him, claiming that the title had never been divested out of him or his heirs, and the said C. M. Hooper defended upon the title of his landlord, the-said Pensacola City Company, derived as aforesaid. That before the said suit came to trial, the attorney for the said plaintiff, Richard L. Campbell, Esq., became-[43]*43convinced, by the discovery in the Spanish Archives' of West Florida, of the evidence of the divestiture aforesaid of the title out of the heirs of the said Gabriel de Rivas, that the title was not in the said plaintiffs, but in the Pensacola City Company, complainant herein, and declined to further prosecute the suit, but the said plaintiffs obtained other attorneys, and the suit, after the avoidance of a trial as long as-possible by the plaintiffs therein, by continuances, dismissals and voluntary non-suits, came on for trial in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida, at Pensacola, in 1879, and was then and there decided by verdict and judgment upon the merits of the conflicting claims of title as aforesaid in favor of the defendant C. M. Hooper, tenant of the said complainant, the Pensacola City Company, and thereby in favor of the title of the said complainant, and against the pretended title of the said plaintiffs claimed from the said Gabriel de Rivas, and that said judgment remains unreversed. That up to the time of the bringing of said suit no claim of title to the said property had ever been asserted by any of the heirs of the said Gabriel de Rivas, or by the father of the said A. Y. Caro, E. J. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and Irene C. Williams, one Joseph E. Caro, who was the son-in-law of the said Gabriel de Rivas, and the keeper of the Spanish Archives of West Florida, and was as well acquainted with the title of property in Pensacola as any other man in it, the fact being that the said Joseph E. Caro was a party to the sale of the said tract of land by authority of the said Spanish court in 1817, and that no assertion or pretence of claim was made until years after his death, which occurred in A. D. 1858, or 1859. That at or about the time of the bringing of the said suit the saidE. J. Caro, A. Y. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and-[44]*44Irene C. Williams began and have continued to take ■ other steps to assert a title to the said property by making numerous sales of portions of 'the same, by putting tenants under them into possession of . parts •of the same, by causing tenants of the complainants to attorn to them, by breaking open houses and breaking down enclosures that had been erected by complainants, and putting their agents and tools therein to hold for them, and by substituting a new occupant thereof holding under them when the complainants would seek to dispossess, thus continually changing the ■persons in possession in order to frustrate the complain..ants in their endeavor to obtain or retain possession. That in order to settle the title to the said property to be without question in the complainants, and to dispossess the said pretended claimants of a portion of ‘the said tract of which they had possession, the Pensacola City Company, in 1877, brought suit against the ;said A. Y. Caro, E. J. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and Irene ■C. Williams in ejectment in the Circuit Court of Es•cambia county, Florida, which said suit resulted in a verdict and judgment for the said Pensacola City Company, and in another adjudication of the validitjr of their title to the said tract, the said suit having been ■tried and determined on the merits of the said pretended title of the said defendants as against the title •of the said company derived as aforesaid. That in spite of the said adjudication upon the said title the said A. Y. Caro, E. J. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and Irene C. Williams not only continued to disturb the possession of the complainants in the said tract by interference with their tenants by putting tenants into possession under them, and by sales and attempts to -sell the said property or portions of it, but also by •themselves and by their tenants and agents committed [45]*45numerous trespasses upon the same, and cut down and destroyed timber, wood, shade and ornamental trees-thereon. And thereupon the said Pensacola City Company filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Escambia county, Florida, in A. D. 1879, to enjoin the said A. Y. Caro, E. J. Caro, Matilda C. Duval and Irene C..

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Bluebook (online)
36 Fla. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-pensacola-city-co-fla-1895.