73 Fla. 233 | Fla. | 1917
Theodore Lesley in January, 1915,' filed his bill in the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County against the appellants, alleging that he was the owner of a certain tract of ten acres of land in Hillsborough County, which whs described; that in April, 1901, his father, Captain John T. Lesley, as agent for the complainant purchased the land from E. O. Morgan paying him therefor the sum of foür hundred dollars;. that in making the sale E. O. Morgan acted as agent for the appellants., and promised to have them execute a deed of conveyance to the land and deliver the same to the complainant; that complainant took possession of the lands in April, 1901, enclosed the tract with a substantial fence and used the land for years as a pasture, and maintained the fence in good condition; that he has held himself out as the owner of the property continuously ever since, and claimed it adversely to all, alleging that his possession had ripened'into title by adverse possession. The complainant alleg'ecl in the bill that the defendants, who are the appellants here, had some claim upon the land “the extent of which” was alleged to be unknown, but that the same was a cloud upon his title. The. prayer was that complainant’s title to the land be quieted, that defendants be required tc execute a deed conveying the lands to complainant, or in default thereof, that complainant be declared to have the title to the lands, and for general relief.
A demurrer to the bill was interposed in behalf of Mrs. Carr, which was overruled, and she filed a sworn
- The Chancellor decreed the title to be in complainant, •that the defendants be barred and precluded from any right or title or interest in the property. This decree rested upon the.finding by the Chancellor that complainant had acquired title to the property described in the bill by adverse possession, under the provisions of Section 1722 General Statutes of Florida, 1906.
Within five days after this decree was- rendered, the defendants below filed their petition for a rehearing upon the ground that the testimony failed to show such possession of the premises by the complainant as was sufficient to ripen into title by adverse possession, because the com-. plainant and the defendants were shown by the testimony to own the property jointly between them. In substance, that the property was owned in common by the complainant and defendants, and the testimony failed to show an ouster by complainant of his co-tenants. The petition was overruled and an appeal taken from the final decree and the order overruling the petition for rehearing.
We have arrived at the conclusion that the decree was ■erroneous, and the petition for a rehearing should not have been denied. AVe are mindful of what this court has said in many cases to the effect that the findings of the Chancellor on questions of fact should not be reversed unless the evidence clearly shows that in such findings the Chancellor erred. See Mock v. Thompson, 58 Fla. 477, 50 South. Rep. 673; Lucas v. Wade, 43 Fla. 419, 31 South. Rep. 231; Sarasota Ice, Fish & Power Co. v. Lyle & Co., 58 Fla. 517, 50 South. Rep. 993 But these
We think that the facts .in this case show that Mr. Theodore Lesley’s possession of the land described was that of a cotenant with the complainants; that when the negotiations for the purchase of the land were being-carried on by Captain J. T. Lesley, the complainant’s father, acting- as complainant’s’ agent, and the father of the defendants, Mr. E. O. Morgan, Captain Lesley knew that the title to the land was in the four daughters of Mr. Morgan. Mr. Morgan and Captain Lesley had some business dealings together which involved the handling- of cattle and the use of the land in dispute, and some lands adjacent thereto, as a pasture for their cattle. > The pasture was surrounded by a substantial enclosure, which took in the particular ten acres in dispute. Mrs. Lizzie Jackson owned this ten acre tract and complained to Mr. Morgan and Captain Lesley about putting a fence on her lands. She instituted suit against them for damages. They both called upon her, settled their difficulties by agreeing- to purchase the land from Mrs. Jackson, Captain Lesley himself writing to her and instructing that the deed be made to the four daughters of Mr. Morgan. The deed was executed according- to those instructions on August 24, 1900. The grantees named were Jennie K. Lesley, Emma Morgan, F. H. Alderman and Ida V. Carr, the four daughters of E. O. Morgan—Mrs.; Jennie K. Lesley being the wife of E. L. Lesley, a son of Captain J.
This court has many times said in discussing the law of adverse possession as applied to one who claims title against a cotenant, that “the possession of one tenant in common is prima facie presumed to be the possession of all, and such possession does not become adverse to the other cotenants unless they are actually ousted, or unless the possession of the one is exclusive of and openly hostile to his cotenant, and the character of such possession is brought home to them by actual notice of such adverse holding, or that such possession is so open and notorious in its' hostility to, and exclusiveness of, them as to- put
We think, therefore, that the decree should be reversed and the bill dismissed, and it is so ordered.
Browne, C. J., and Taylor, Shackleford, Whitfield and Ellis, JJ., concur.