74 Fla. 262 | Fla. | 1917
The complainant Mary Ella Craft and others filed their amended bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Hillsborough County on October 29th, 1915, against Isaac S. Craft, the defendant.
The bill in substance alleges that Emma M. Craft died
The prayer of the bill is for an accounting, that the defendant may be decreed to hold the sums received for Said property in trust for the complainants, and that they may have a decree against the defendant for the payment of the same, and for general relief.
To this bill, the following demurrer was filed:
“This defendant, by protestation, not confessing or acknowledging all or any of the matters and things in the said amended bill of complaint contained, to be true and in such manner and form as the same are therein and thereby set forth and alleged, demurs to said amended bill and for cause of demurrer shows:
“1. That there is no equity in said amended bill.
“2. That the complainants have failed to make or
“3. Because said amended bill of complaint contains simply conclusions of law, without any statement of facts from which the court could say that, as a matter of law, or equity the complainants have any cause of action whatsoever against the defendant.
“4. Because there are no positive averments or allegations of fraud of any kind or character in the amended bill of complaint, the attempted allegations of that character being alleged wholly by conclusions of law, and not being any positive, clear, convincing averments of facts;
“5. Because there are no positive averments or allegations of any kind or character in said amended bill of complaint so as to show beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of a trust in the defendant for the benefit of the complainants.
■“6. Because said amended bill shows upon its face gross negligence' upon the part of the deceased and the complainants, or either of them, in the assertion of their supposed and alleged rights.
“7. Because said amended bill shows upon its face that outside of any equity and as a matter of law, the statute of limitations had intervened to bar the assertion of the supposed and alleged rights upon the part of the said complainants, or either of them.
“8. Because the bill shows upon its face that the complainants have a complete and adequate remedy at law, and that there is no necessity for the interposition by a court of equity in this case.
“9. Because the delay and laches in bringing this suit is such as to bar all of the complainants from asserting their claims in a court of equity and there is no reason or excuse of any kind or character given for such laches or
“10. Because said amended bill, in its entirety, is wholly barren of any facts such as are sufficient in a court of equity and under the decisions of the Supreme Court of this State to establish any trust.
“11. Because said amended bill of complaint fails in every particular to contain the necessary averments to enable the complainants to maintain a- suit of this character.
“12. Because the allegations of said amended bill are vague, indefinite and -contradictory.
“13. Because said amended bill of complaint does not in any way, shape or manner change the case of°the complainants as stated in the original bill of complaint, and all questions involving the equities of the rights of the complainants to institute this suit have been by this court adjudicated upon the previous demurrer to the original bill of complaint, and adjudicated against the complainants.
“14. Because said amended bill of complaint does not make or state any cause of action any different from the cause of action as stated in the original bill of complaint; that the amended bill of complaint is almost a verbatim copy of the original bill of complaint, except with a slight change of verbiage in some of the paragraphs of the amended bill; but the cause of action and the theory of complainants’ case is not changed in the slightest, and all of the questions raised in the amended bill of complaint have been by the court, upon demurrer to the original bill of complaint, adjudicated against the complainants.
“15. And for other reasons apparent upon the face of said amended bill.”
Upon a hearing on this demurrer before the Circuit
The error assigned'is this order of the court sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill.
This is a general demurrer addressed to the entire bill and should be overruled if there is any equity in the averments of the bill, Mitchell v. Mason, 65 Fla. 208, 61 South. Rep. 579; Warren v. Warren, 66 Fla. 138, 63 South. Rep. 726.
It is clear we think from the material facts alleged in the bill of complaint, which are admitted by the demurrer to be true, that this transaction created between the parties to it a trust relationship; that the complainants and their ancestor Charles D. Craft were, notwithstanding the conveyance to the defendant, still the beneficial owners of the lots so conveyed, that he held only the bare legal title and was charged with the obligation of faithfully accounting for and paying over the proceeds derived from the sales of such lots to his grantor, Charles D. Craft, or his successors, the complainants.
The property conveyed to the defendant by Charles D. Craft and wife is lots 7, 8, 10 and 18. In disposing of it he also disposed of other lots derived from other sources making joint conveyances of such properties. In the first deed the defendant conveyed lot 18, together with lot 19, and in the second he conveyed lots 7, 8 and 10, together with lot 9. By sales of this kind the defendant has so intermingled the property held in trust by him for the complainants, with other property, as to make it difficult if not impossible for complainants to prove in a court of law the amounts received by the defendant which should be paid over to them as the consideration for such prop
In this situation the complainants are entitled to an accounting in a court of equity, and the Circuit Judge committed reversible error in sustaining defendant’s demurrer to the bill of complaint.
The order will be reversed.