22 Fla. 255 | Fla. | 1886
The Chief-Justice delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an action of ejectment by the appellees in the Circuit Court of Putnam county to recover from the appellants a lot of ground in the city of Palatka. The court gave a. judgment on a verdict of a jury in favor of plaintiffs below from which the defendants here prosecute their appeal. Appellants assign as errors the instructions of the court to the jury and the refusal to admit evidence, all of which are noticed in the opinion of the court.
The first error assigned is that the deed of Greeley to-C. Parlchurst does not describe or identify the land mentioned in the declaration and there was no evidence tending to identify it. The land sued for is described as follows : “ Water lot number two,, situate in the town ol Palatka in Putnam county, Florida, and described in the original map of said town as that lot or parcel of land bounded as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of lot No. 3, formerly owned by Converse Parkhnrst and now claimed by Martin Griffin, on the east side of Water street and running southerly along Water street, 87 feet thence easterly to the edge of the St. John’s river, thence northerly along said edge 113 feet to the southeast corner of said lot No. 3, thence westerly to the point of beginning, embracing also all laud lying between said easterly and westerly lines produced to the>
This deed taken alone does not show the identity of the land described in the declaration with the land described in the deed. We think from the description of the land in the deed, although it designates a point of commencement as the “ south corner,” that from the subsequent language the “ southwest ” corner was plainly intended. But we do not see how the jury could infer that the “southwest corner of the premises, now owned (1857) by Converse Parkhurst, on east side of Water street,” which is the language of the deed, is the same point of beginning as the “southwest corner of lot No. 3, formerly owned by Converse Parkhurst on east side of Water street,” the language of the declaration. If the identity existed, and did not appear from the language of the deed, proof should have been adduced that the lot on east side of Water street, owned by Converse Parkhurst in 1857, was now known as lot 3 on the east side of said street.
There was no objection to the introduction of the deed, and it is only objected to here after excepting to a refusal of the court below to grant a new trial, one of the grounds for which it was asked being that “ the verdict is not supported by the evidence,” that it was insufficient to support the verdict of the jury. But without the deed there was sufficient evidence to authorize the jury to find a verdict,
The defendant objects, however, to the evidence of the witness which tends to prove that Wilson and wife, or Converse P. Devereux, were in possession of the lot as executors. We think it fair to presume, excluding the testimony of witness as to collecting the rent and holding the land as executors, that from the fact that the deceased was in possession of the lot in his lifetime, and the plaintiffs were admitted by operation of rule 59 to be the executors of Parkhurst, and the absence of any evidence that possession of the executors of Parkhurst was as individuals in their own right, that any possession by them after the death of Parkhurst was in their representative capacity. We think the jury, from this evidence, could have found a verdict against the defendants if no deed from Greeley to Parkhurst had been introduced.
There was no error in refusing to permit the certified copy of a judgment of Woods against Devereux, executor, and Emily R. Wilson, executrix, to be read in evidence to the jury. It was not competent evidence. “ It was part only of a record.” “The whole record, or an authenticated or sworn copy of the whole, should be produced.” Walls
The court erred in charging the jury “ that the deed introduced by the plaintiff's showed a fee simple title in the ‘ estate of Parkhurst,’ and they should find in their verdict that the plaintiffs have a fee simple title to the land sued for.” An estate is property and incapable of holding titles, nor could the plaintiffs as executors hold a fee simple title'. A mere statement of these rulings is sufficient, without argument, to carry the conviction that they were erroneous. The latter instruction provided a recovery was had might have been without injury to the defendants, but the language in which the charge is delivered trenches two strongly on the province of the jury as to finding facts.
Though this instruction is erroneous for the reason pointed out, yet it seems proper to say that the verdict should state what estate in the land it was that Parkhurst had, and the plaintiffs, in their representative capacity, are entitled to recover.
The charge was erroneous also in saying that the “ deed ” showed a fee simple title to the property in suit. The deed alone, without supplementary proof, did not show identity of land sued for and land described therein.
The last error assigned is that there was no proof to support the judgment against the Ashmead brothers for mesne profits for 53 months, or for any period of time anterior to the suit.
The evidence shows that Griffin took possession of the property June 14, 1880. There is nothing to show a joint possession of Griffin and the Ashmeads until December 13, 1883. The judgment is joint against all the defendants for the detention of the property from June 14, 1880, until November, 1884—the time of the trial. The statute (McClellan’s Digest, page 480,) authorizes the joinder of an action
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.