This is a companion case to Stark v. Marshall, Fla.,
Being unsuccessful in their efforts to maintain their counterclaim, the Starks then filed the instant chancery suit, against the plaintiffs in the declaratory judgment proceedings and against the same parties whom they had attempted to bring into the first suit, for the purpose of quieting title to- the lot of land involved.
In the complaint filed by the Starks in the instant case it is alleged that all the boundary lines of the lots in a certain subdivision in Escambia County, known as Pinellas Point Subdivision, fan out in a radial fashion from a common center point; that they, the Starks, are the owners of lot 5 in the subdivision; that lot 6, an adjoining lot to the west of the lot owned by the Starks is owned by the Frayers; and that lot 4, an adjoining lot to the east of the Stark lot, is owned' 'by the Marshalls. It is also alleged that the Starks are in possession of lot 5 and that neither of the defendants is in possession of any part thereof; that the defendants claim indefinitely determinable strips of their respective lot boundaries, and that by such claims the title of the plaintiffs to lot 5 is clouded. The complaint finally alleges that the defendants have refrained from bringing ejectment suits to determine the true boun/lary lines of the lots owned by them, respectively, and that in the companion suit instituted by the defendant Frayer against the Starks, the trial court refused to al
The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that it was without equity; that no sufficient cloud oh title had been alleged; and that the plaintiffs had an adequate remedy at law. Tire trial court granted the motion and this appeal followed.
The question on the appeal is whether the complaint wholly failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted as against the respective defendants in the suit.
As a general rule boundary line disputes should not be settled by equitable proceedings to quiet title. The mere fact that a boundary line is in dispute is not of itself sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon a ■court of equity to settle such an issue. See Annotation
As appears from the complaint, and this court’s record of the proceedings in the companion case, Stark v. Marshall, of which we may take judicial notice, Collingsworth v. Mayo, Fla.,
In respect to such a situation, the general rule is that an assertion in a judicial proceeding of an adverse claim, even though such a proceeding may have been terminated without a decree on the merits, will constitute a cloud on title which may be removed or confirmed in an equitable proceeding brought for that purpose. Shults v. Shults,
The right of the Starks to make the Mar-shalls parties defendant in the suit is quite a different matter. While a valid predicate for relief against the Frayers seems reasonably clear, the same cannot be said as to the right to relief against the Mar-shalls.
It is elementary that in a suit to quiet title against an alleged cloud the complaint must contain sufficient allegations to show a cause of action. Such a complaint must not only show title in the plaintiff to the lands in controversy, but also that a cloud exists, before relief can be given against it. Not only must the matter which constitutes the alleged cloud be shown, but facts must be alleged which give the claim apparent validity as well as those which show its invalidity. Tibbetts v. Olson,
We do not think this is sufficient to show a “cloud” of which a court of equity
We conclude that as to the Marshalls, the complaint fails to state a claim for relief, but that as to the Frayers the complaint is not wholly insufficient.
The decree appealed from should therefore be affirmed in part and reversed in part with directions that the cause proceed in court below in compliance with the principles herein stated.
It is so ordered.
