37 Fla. 307 | Fla. | 1896
The plaintiffs in error, as plaintiffs below, on March 8th, 1886, sued the defendant in error in the Circuit Court of Duval county in an action on the case for damages for an alleged breach on the defendant’s part of a contract entered into in writing with the plaintiffs, whereby the defendant agreed to purchase from them at an agreed price and on a certain date a piece of real estate described as lot 2, in block 5, in the city of Jacksonville. By reagon of the disqualification of the Circuit Judge presiding over Duval county, in the Fourth Circuit, to try the cause, it was transferred to-
The sum total of all the errors assigned is, that the referee erred in his findings of the law and facts in the case, and in the rendition of the judgment entered.
The suit was based upon the following contract in writing, executed under seal, between the said parties: “This agreement made'and entered into this 6th day of March, 1.885, by and between Jennie E. Frazier and George W. Frazier, her husband, of Duval county, Florida, parties of the first part, and Sarah A. Boggs and William Boggs, her husband, of the county and State of New York, parties of the second part. Witnesseth: That in consideration of the sum of money hereinafter mentioned, the said parties of the first part hereby agree to sell and convey by good and sufficient •deed, free from encumbrances, except the taxes assessed at the date of this agreement, unto the said parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, in fee simple, all that piece or parcel of land situate; lying and being-in the county of Duval and State of Florida, and known and described as follows: Lot two (2), in block five (5), in the city of Jacksonville, according to the I. D. Hart map of said city, and being one hundred and five (105) feet square. The said parties of the second part hereby covenant' and agree to pay for. said land the sum of fourteen thousand dollars in the manner following: Five hundred dollars ■on the execution of this agreement, and thirteen thousand five hundred ($13,500) dollars on or before April 15th, 1885, without interest. The said parties
The declaration alleges that the plaintiffs did, on the-15th day of April, 1885, execute to and tender to the defendant a good and sufficient deed of said premises, and were at that date, and on each day from the 6th day of March, 1885, to said 15th day of April, 1885, willing and ready to convey, and did offer to convey to defendant by good and sufficient deed, free of encumbrances, the said premises for and in consideration of defendant paying to plaintiffs the sum of fourteen thousand dollars as he had agreed to do, but that defendant failed and refused to pay the same, or to comply with-his said promise and agreement, to the plaintiffs’ damage of ten thousand dollars.
To this declaración the defendant plead as follows: 1st. That the plaintiffs were not able at the date of the-
2d. And for a second plea the defendant says that he denied that the plaintiffs were at the time of the making of said contract, and up to the date of the commencement of this suit, ever ready, willing and able to convey to defendant a good and sufficient title to said property, for the reason that said plaintiffs derived their title only from and through one Luther I>. .Alexander. That said Alexander acquired title to said property on May 22d, 1875 ; that he held the said title from the date last aforesaid to the time of his death-on March 3d, 1879; that between the 22d of May, 1875, and March 3d, 1879, the time of his death, he made no will or evidence affecting said prop
The contract between these parties stipulated that the plaintiffs would convey to the defendant all of the said lot “by good and sufficient deed.” It is well settled that in such a case the vendor of land does not •discharge his covenant by the execution of a deed good merely in point of form, but that, fully to comply with his covenant, he is bound to make a good and perfect title to the land, and to remove any existing incumbrance, or protect the vendee against it. Holland vs. Holmes, 14 Fla. 390; Greenwood vs. Ligon, 10 Smedes & M. 615, S. C. 48 Am. Dec. 775; Witter vs. Biscoe, 13 Ark. 422; Shreck vs. Pierce, 3 Iowa, 350; Burwell vs. Jackson, 9 N. Y. (5 Selden), 535. In Souter vs. Drake, 5 Barn. & Ad. (27 Eng. Com. Law), 992, it is held that in every contract for the sale of an existing lease, there is an implied undertaking by the seller (if the contrary be not expressed) to make out the lessor’s title to demise; and without showing such title, the seller can not maintain ah action at law against the buyer for refusing to complete the purchase. Goddin vs. Vaughn’s Executrix, 14 Gratt. 102; Cullum vs. Branch Bank, 4 Ala. 21, S. C. 37 Am. Dec. 725; Clute vs. Robinson, 2 Johnson, 595; Baldridge vs. Cook, 27 Texas, 565; Cooper vs. Singleton, 19 Texas, 260, S. C. 70 Am. Dec. 333. In Hunter, Admr. vs. Bradford, Admr., 3 Fla. 269, text 287, it is
These facts present the question, whether, at the' time of these transactions, a testator could by will devise real estate located in Florida that had been acquired by him subsequently to the execution of such will? This question must be answered by the laws of Florida, since a will of real estate is to be governed by the lex loci rei sitce. 1 Jarman on Wills (5th Am. ed.), 1, and cases cited. By the settled rule of the common law, as well as by the uniform construction put upon the English statute ón wills of the 34 and 35 Henry VIII, no one could by will devise lands that he-did not own and had no interest in at the time of its execution; and lands acquired subsequently to the execution of a will did not pass thereby. Bunter vs. Coke, 1 Salk. 237; Broncker vs. Coke, Holt’s Rep. 246; Brydges vs. Duchess of Chandos, 2 Ves. Jr. 417; Perry vs. Phelips, 1 Ves. Jr. 251; Thompson vs. Scott & Bostick, 1 McCord’s Ch. 32; George vs. Green, 13 N. H. 521; Meador vs. Sorsby, 2 Ala. 712, S. C. 36 Am. Dec. 432; Livingston vs. Newkirk, 3 Johns. Ch. 312; McKinnon vs. Thompson, Ibid, 307; Brewster vs. McCall, 13 Conn. 274; Youngs vs. Youngs, 45 N. Y. 254; Ballard vs. Carter, 5 Pick. 112, S. C. 16 Am. Dec. 377; Raines vs. Barker, 13 Gratt. 128, S. C. 67 Am. Dec. 762. The enabling clause of the statute of wills of 34 and 35 Hen. VIII that authorized devises of lands was as follows: “That all and singular person and persons having a sole estate or interest in fee simple, or seized in fee simple in coparcenary, or in common in fee simple, of and in and manors, lands, tenements, rents or other hereditaments, in possession, reversion, or remainder, shall have full and free liberty, power and.
Our statute of November 20th, 1828, upon the same subject, that continued in force until the Revised Statutes took effect on June 13th, 1892, was as follows: “Every person of the age of twenty-one years, being of sound mind, shall have power by last will and testament in writing, to devise and dispose of his or her lands, tenements and hereditaments, and of his or her estate, right, title and interest in the same, ^possession, remainder or reversion, at the time of the execution of the said last will and testament.” McClellan’s Digest, sec. 1, p. 985. Because of the lar reaching importance of the question under discussion, and from the further fact that it has never before been presented to this court, we have given it the most careful and extended consideration, with a view to discover, if possible, whether our statute of November, 20th, 1828, effected any modification of or change in the English statute of the 34 and 35 Hen. VIII. Our conclusion is, that except in phraseology the two statutes are in legal effect identical. Our statute, as we think, pointedly confines the power to dispose of lands by will to such lands, or to such estate, right, title and interest therein as the testator had in possession, remainder or reversion, at the time of the execution of such 'will. Thus concluding, it follows that, as the testator
It is contended for the plaintiffs that the effect of the above quoted section, in cases of wills executed and probated in Connecticut, is to adopt the laws of that State, that empower devises of after acquired lands; and that because the will under discussion had the effect, under the laws of Connecticut, of passing after acquired lands in that State, where it was made and first probated, it would have the same effect in Florida, under this statute, to pass after acquired lands located here. This contention is wholly untenable, and, for its complete refutation nothing more is necessary than to point, to the terms of the statute itself that is claimed to have this effect. Its express
It is further contended for the plaintiffs that the whole question of the right of Clayton L. Alexander to an, undivided half interest in said lot of land had been adjudicated adversely to the claim of the said Clayton L. in a suit in equity instituted by him in the Circuit Court of Duval county against the plaintiffs for partition of said lot, which suit resulted in favor of the plaintiffs herein in a dismissal of the bill at the cost of the complainant therein, and that such decree of dismissal is an adjudication of the question of the right of the said Clayton L. to an interest in said lot, adverse to the existence of such right, and that it is an adjudication to the effect that plaintiffs have perfect title to the whole of the lot. There is no merit in this contention. In the first place the defendant herein was not a party to such partition suit, and could not be affected thereby unless he had become interested in its subject-matter subsequent to its pendency; but the said suit for partition was not instituted
It follows from what has been said that the findings and. judgment óf the referee were proper, and they are, therefore hereby affirmed.