34 Fla. 149 | Fla. | 1894
In February, 1882, George Patten, the appellee filed his bill in equity in the Circuit Court for Manatee county against Edmund Lee, the appellant, for the purpose of compelling the defendant to convey to him all that tract of land in Manatee county. Florida, described as being the south half of the south half of section 27, Tp. 34 south, Range 17 east, excepting the west half of the S. W. ¼ of the S. E. ¼ of said section that had theretofore been sold to one Stephen A. Brown. The suit resulted in a final decree in the complainant’s favor declaring the title to said land to be in the defendant, Lee, as trustee for the complainant, and ordering him to convey the same by deed to the complainant. From this decree the defendant, Lee, appeals.
The bill alleges, in substance: That about-January, 1854, one Robert Gamble, being the owner of a bounty land warrant for one hundred and sixty acres of land, delivered the same over to the defendant, Lee, authorizing and requesting him to locate said warrant for him (Gamble) on the south half of the south half of section 27, Tp. 34 south, Range 17 east. That Lee, in pursuance of said authority and request, located the said warrant on said land for the sole use, benefit and behoof of said Gamble; but, intending and contriving to perpetrate a fraud upon Gamble, entered said tract of land with said warrant in his own name, instead of in the name of the said Gamble as he should have done; and falsely and fraudulently represented to the
The defendant filed an original and amended answer In which he denies that Gamble authorized or requested him to locate said warrant upon said land for him and for his sole use and benefit; and he denies that he ever represented to Gamble that he had entered said land for him with said warrant, lie denies also that Gamble ever took possession of said land, or paid the taxes thereon, or used the same as his own lands. I-Ie radmits that Gamble cut and used the timber on said land, but avers that it was done under an express •agreement between him and Gamble. He admits obtaining from Robert Gamble the bounty land warrant with which he made the entry of this land, but" says that he got it from him for his own use and benefit for the purpose of procuring therewith for himself Another tract of land in the' same locality upon which another party .had made a settlement and improvements, which improvements he had traded- for, and upon which there was ■' a quantity of’ live oak timber, «and that when lie obtained the warrant from Gamble
After replication to the answer, and after the testimony was all taken, and at the final hearing of the cause, the complainant was permitted to amend the special prayer of his bill so as to include therein a prayer‘‘that the defendant, Edmund Lee, might be decreed and declared to be the trustee for the compplainant over said land.” This ruling is assigned and urged here as error. There is no merit in this assignment. The amendment asked for was wholly immaterial. It did not change in the least the case as made by the bill and by the proofs, and did not affect the defense made by the answer and sought to be established by the defendant’s proofs. In fact the amendment asked for and made was altogether useless and immaterial. The facts set up in the bill and fully sustained, as we think, by the proofs made out a clear case of a resulting trust in reference to the lands in
The complainant to sustain the allegation of his bill, that Robert Gamble in 1858 sold and conveyed said tract of land to Cofield & Davis, introduced in evidence a deed executed by the executors of John G. Gamble, deceased, to Cofield & Davis, conveying the land in ■controversy, which deed was executed by Robert Gamble, as one of the executors of John G. Gamble, but in his own individual right as well, the other executors joining him in the execution of such deed. The admission of this deed is also assigned and urged as error upon the ground that it does not sustain the allegation
The next assignment of error is the admission in evidence of a deed made by one Curry, as referee or special master, to the complainant, Patten, conveying the land in dispute, which deed recites that it is executed in pursuance of a decree of foreclosure of mortgage in a cause wherein the executors of Allen M. McParlan are complainants, against Cofield & Davis. The admission of this deed is urged as error upon two grounds: (1) Because of its variance from the allegations of the bill, which were, that Curry, the referee, conveyed to Patten under a decree of foreclosure in favor of Allen M. McParlan, instead of, as this deed recites, in favor of McParlan’s executors; (2) and because the deed shows upon its face that the foreclosure proceedings under which it was executed were illegal .and void because it. shows that said proceedings were originally instituted at law under the code practice
As to the first of these grounds of objection, we do not think there was error in admitting the deed. The material substance of the allegation in the bill was, that Patten acquired his title to the land by means of the foreclosure of the ‘mortgage that had been given by Cofield & Davis to Gamble to secure the purchase money of the land in dispute; that Cofield & Davis’ title had passed to him by means of the foreclosure of such mortgage. The allegation that Allen M. McFarlan was complainant in this foreclosure proceeding, was only a part of the identification or description of the medium by which Patten became possessed of Cofield & Davis’ title, and because the deed offered in evidence to sustain such devolution of title shows that the foreclosure proceedings were had in the name of Allen M. McFarlan’s executors instead of in his own individual name, as alleged, is not such a material variance from the allegata as should have excluded the deed. The deed admitted, even with the variance pointed out, contained enough to sustain the material substance of the allegation of the bill. 1 Green-leaf on Evidence (15th ed.), Sections 56, 57, and citations.
Neither was there any error in admitting this deed because of the second objection urged against the same. The foreclosure proceedings, it seems, were begun under the act of February 19th, 1870, entitled: “An act to simplify and abridge the practice, pleadings and
The court admitted in evidence a written agreement signed by the counsel representing all the parties, in which it was stipulated as an admission of fact on the part of the complainant’s counsel, that the land warrant with which the defendant, Lee, entered this land was formally transferred to him by Robert Gamble in the presence of two witnesses, and was acknowledged before a judicial officer. The admission of this agreement is the fourth error assigned, and the objection urged against it is, that in contradiction of the documentary evidence in the cause, “it is a unilateral admission, by the complainant’s counsel ¡alone, that the warrant with which Lee entered the land had been transferred by Lee to G-amble ¡in ¡the presence of witnesses and a judicial officer,” etc. The agreement in -the record before us does just the reverse of this contention, and represents that the transfer was by Gam
The fifth and sixth assignments of error are objections to certain parts of the evidence of the witnesses, E. M. Graham, George Patten and Eobert Gamble. Without setting out in detail the particular features of the evidence of these witnesses that is objected to, we will say that we have examined them carefully and find no merit in the objections made except to that of E. M. Graham. The chief objection to Graham’s evidence was, that it was a disclosure of confidential communications made to jhim by the defendant, Lee, while he occupied the relationship of attorney towards Lee as his client. We think that the evidence of Graham objected to was subject to the objection made. He testifies, it is true, that the whole scope of his employment by Lee was for the sole purpose of writing to the land office at Gainesville, Florida, to obtain the patent that had been long before issued to Lee for the land in dispute. That when the patent was thus obtained by him and delivered to Lee, the sole purpose of his employment by Lee was accomplished and the relationship of attorney and client ended. But he testifies further that he had been employed by Lee to institute proceedings in trespass against the complainant concerning this very land, and he does not disclose in his evidence whether the conversation with Lee that he relates, did not transpire at the time of or subsequent to that employment. So jealous is the law against the disclosures by attorneys of communications .made to them in confidence by their clients, that we think under the circumstances of this case Mr. Gra
The seventh, eighth and ninth objections urged against the correctness of the decree appealed from are, that it is contrary to law and equitable rules; that-it is not supported by, and is inconsistent with, the evidence; and because it is founded upon facts and conclusions that are immaterial to the issues made. Without rehearsing the evidence here in detail, we can not agree with the counsel for the appellant that the decree appealed from is not sustained by the evidence, or that it is contrary to the law and equity of the case. The great preponderance of. the evidence, «fe: the evidence of Robert Gamble and George Patten, coupled with the admissions of the defendant’s answer, establishes the fact that Gamble being the owner of a military-bounty land warrant, issued under the act of Congress, approved February 11th, 1847, entitled “An
It is also contended that the complainant is barred by laches in waiting so long before enforcing his remedy. The case establishes clearly a fraud in law upon Gamble, out of which springs the resulting trust in his favor, and in favor of those claiming under him. -Any apparent laches in applying for the remedy, we think, is sufficiently avoided here by the principle that laches, in assailing a fraud will not be imputed until the discovery of the fraud. The defendant admits that he-kept silent about the whole matter from 1854 to 1877,
Our conclusion is, that the decree appealed from was. entirely proper, and it is hereby affirmed.