45 Fla. 191 | Fla. | 1903
STATEMENT.
Margaret A. Lenox and her husband Andrew Lenox, Elizabeth O. Swain and her husband Wilbur Swain, filed their bill in equity for partition in the Circuit Court of Duval county on the 18th day of February, 1897, against James R. Booth, Mary J. Van Loon and her husband Arthur E. Van Loon, Mabel F. Booth and Esther L. Booth, alleging that James R. Booth was, in his lifetime afid qt the time of his death, seized in fee simple of an in the following described real estate, to-wit: Lots five (5) and six (6) in block thirteen (13) of McIntosh and Reed’s addition to La Villa, according to plat duly recorded in Duval county, said land being situated in the city of Jacksonville in said Duval county; that the said James R. Booth died intestate in Duval county, Florida, on July 10th, 1886, leaving him surviving the following children: the complainants Margaret A. Lenox and Elizabeth C. Swain, and the defendants James R. Booth, Mary J. Van Loon and Mabel F. Booth, and Thomas Charles Booth, who died in infancy without issue on December 31st, 1888; that the children named are all the children born to said James R. Booth, deceased; that Mabel F. Booth is a minor; that the said lots adjoin each other and form one tract of land which does not exceed in quanity half an acre; that at the time of his death the said James R. Booth resided upon said land apd was the head of a family caring for and supporting certain members of his family mentioned herein; that said living children hold and are. seizeed in and
The defendant Esther L. Booth filed her separate answer to the bill in which she admitted the death of James V Booth at the date as alleged and that at the time of his death he resided on said land, and that the same was one contiguous body of less than one-half of an acre in area, and that at his death James S. Booth left surviving him his widow, the. answering defendant, and the children named in the bill; that Thomas charles Booth, wince deceased d\iring minority; unmarried and without issue,
The cross-bill prays that she may be adjudged to be the sole owner in fee.simple of said land, and that the cloud on her title may be removed, that said actions at law may be enjoined, and for general relief.
The defendants,other than Mabel F. Booth who answered separately by guardian//J litem, after the overruling of a demurrer to said cross-bill, answered the same denying all of the material allegations thereof that were inconsistent with the allegations of their original bill, and alleging that James R. Booth, from the time .of his purchase of said property, claimed and treated it as his own, and that the said Esther was well aware of said claim as to the ownership of said property by her husband, and was well
(after stating the facts.)
Upon the evidence in this case the Circuit Judge erred in rendering the decree appealed Jrom. Without cumbering the record with the volume of testimony in detail, we think that the great preponderance of it establishes clearly and satisfactorily the following facts: That the appellant Esther L. Booth’s separate property and money alone purchased the property in dispute, and that the procurement of the title de.ed thereto in the name of her husband, James R. Booth, or James Booth, was contrary to her desire and consent; that her husband during his life time
It is contended by the appellees that, under the provisions of section 1095 Revised Statutes, prohibiting an interested witness from testifying to transactions aryl communications with one at the time of such testimony deceased or insane, the evidence of the appellant Esther L. Booth as to earning of money and delivery thereof to her husband to purchase the property for her cannot be considered. The appellees, or some of them, as heirs at law of the deceased James R. Booth, testified as to these moneys, undertaking to show that they were the moneys of James R. Booth derived partly from insurance on property of his destroyed by fire, and partly from his earnings in carpentry work, which testimony on the part of the heirs involved communications had between them and the deceased, James R. Booth, this testimony of the heirs removed the prohibition against the living wife’s, testifying as to such transactions, and qualified her, under the stat:
It is also contended by the appellees that in her sworn answers to the bills filed against her as adminixtratrix of J. R. Booth by one O. O. Livingston to foreclose mortgages executed to him upon a portion of the property by James R. Booth, she admitted the seisin and possession of Janies R. Booth of the property and alleged therein that said property was the homestead of said James Booth, and that she as his wife had not joined 'in such mortgages and consequently that they were void, and that she is estopped by such answers now in this litigation between herself and the heirs of said J. R. Booth to allege contrary to the said statements of such answers. There is no merit in this contention. The estoppel asserted is one in pais as contradistinguished from an estoppel by deed or by contract. Two, .among other, essentials of an estoppel iv pais, are (1) that the representation, claimed as the estoppel, must have been made with the intention, actual or virtual, that the other party should act upon it, and (2) the other party must have been induced to act upon it. Bigelow on Estoppel, p. 570. The representations made in the answers of the appellant to the bills of C. O. Livingston were not made for the purpose of influencing or affecting, and could not influence or affect, the appellees in this case, and could not have been made by .Esther L. Booth with the intention that the appellees herein should act thereon or should be influenced thereby, since such representations could not in anyway affect any action upon their part or cause them to change their situation or right towards the property, and they have not been induced by such representations to act in any way or to uake any change in their situation towards the matter inblved therein. The representations made by Esther L.
The decree of the Gircuit Court appealed from herein is reversed with directions to enter a decree in its stead dir