53 Fla. 793 | Fla. | 1907
(after tftatmg the faots) : The court below erred in granting the temporary injunction, and in overruling the demurrer of the defendants to the bill of complaint and in the rendition of the final decree in this cause. The bill is so vague and meagre in its allegations as not to entitle the complainant, the J. C. Turner Lumber Company, to the relief prayed or to any relief in a court of equity. It alleges that the lands mentioned in the bill were conveyed by deed by the defendants in the year 1900 to J. C. Turner Cypress Lumber Company, a corporation, and that said J. C. Turner Cypress Lumber Company, in 1906, assigned to the J. O. Turner Lumber Company, a corporation, who is now the owner in fee of the said timbered, lands, all interest and estate under the said deed. The word “assigned” is not applicable to a, conveyance of real estate, and though it is parenthetically and recitatively alleged that the said J. C. Turner Lumber Company is now the owner in fee of said timbered lands, yet when it is alleged that the J. C. Turner Cypress Lumber Co., to whom these lands had been conveyed by deed from the defendants, “assigned all interest and estate under the said deed to the J. C. Turner Lumber Co.,” it is not equivalent to an allegation that the J. C. Turner Cypress Lumber Co. conveyed the fee in said lands to the J. C. Turner. Lumber Co. The chief defect in the bill, however, is that