70 Fla. 300 | Fla. | 1915
H. S. Rogers and D. S. Bowen filed their bill in chancery against D. R. Cameron and W. J. Case for the cancellation of certain tax deeds, and other deeds, as clouds upon the title of the complainants to certain lands therein described, and also1 for an injunction against the defendants ‘from trespassing upon such lands and from cutting and removing the timber therefrom. A decree pro confesso was entered against W. J. Case and a demurrer interposed to the bill by D. R. Cameron was overruled, whereupon Cameron filed an answer to the bill, wherein he denied jfractically all the allegations thereof which wére essential to entitle the complainants to relief, a general replication was filed to the answer and the cause referred to a special master to take and report the testimony offered by the respective parties. The cause came on for a final hearing upon the pleadings and the testimony reported by the special master, which resulted in a decree being rendered against the defendants in favor of the complainants in accordance with the prayers of their bill. From this decree the defendants have entered their appeal.
The first assignment is based upon the overruling of Cameron’s demurrer to the bill. We do not set forth the grounds of the demurrer, as the sole contention made here by the appellants is that the appellees could not maintain their bill against the appellants both for the cancellation of the tax deeds and the other deeds and the enjoining of the cutting of the timber on the lands. We are of the opinion that this contention is not well founded. The complainants clearly set forth their title to the lands, allege that the same are wild and unimproved, that “neither of the said defendants have possession of the
The third assignment is expressly abandoned and the remaining grounds are argued together by the appellants, who state in their brief that they resolve them into “one general assignment” to the effect that “The court erred in holding the tax deeds under which the defendants held title void, and rendering a decree for the complainants.” A careful examination of all the evidence adduced shows
Such publication meets the statutory requirements, as we held in Townsent v. Brown, 69 Fla. 155, 67 South. Rep. 869.
We have not overlooked the fact that the complainants sought to prove by A. L. Durrance, the Clerk of the Circuit Court for DeSoto County, that “the newspaper advertisement of delinquent taxes, lands for sale, for nonpayment of taxes of 1907,” had not been recorded as required by Section 58 of Chapter 5596 of the Laws of Florida, Acts of 1907, page 31, but such witness did not go that far in his testimony. He simply testified that by virtue of his office he was the custodian “of the records and reports of tax sales and of papers in which tax sales advertisements appear;” that there was an official record book in which such reports were recorded; that he had examined such book and did not find therein the report of the tax sale for the taxes of 1907, but that he would not swear that there was no such record in his office, only that “it was not in the record book where it should be
“State of Florida,
County of DeSoto.
I, H. E. Carlton, Clei'k of the Circuit Court, in and for the County of DeSoto, State of Florida, do hereby certify that the foregoing list, or report of lands sold for taxes at Arcadia, Florida, on the 7th day of September, A. D. 1908, by W. C. Langford, Tax Collector, was duly recorded in Record Book 1899, on the 10th day of November, 1908, as required by Section 55, of Chapter 4322, Laws of Florida.
And I further certify that a copy of said issue of the newspaper containing the notice of tax sale aforesaid, together with the affidavit of the publisher as required by Section 50, of Chap: 4322, of the laws of Florida, have been duly filed in my office.
PI. E. Carlton,
(SEAL)”
Clerk Circuit Court, DeSoto County.
This evidence introduced bjr the complainants themselves would seem to establish that such report was recorded in compliance with Section 50 of Chapter 4322 of the Laws of Florida, Acts of 1895, page 31. Why the Clerk should have referred in his certificate to this section and Chapter, instead of to Section 58 of Chapter
We are of the opinion that the evidence adduced fails to establish the invalidity of the tax deeds, therefore the decree was not warranted and must be reversed.
Taylor, C. J., and Cockrell, Whitfield and Ellis, JJ., concur.