36 Fla. 36 | Fla. | 1895
The appellee, the Pensacola City Company, a corporation, and divers other persons, its alienees, on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1887, filed their bill in equity in the Circuit Court of Escambia county against the appellants, and against Georgia I. Caro, John B. Caro > Theresa E. Caro, Josephine Caro, Mary L. Caro (children of A. Y. Caro), Irene C. Williams, Matilda C. Duval and numerous other persons claiming to be •alienees or lessees of the Caros, or claiming portions •of „ the property involved in the suit. The bill alleges in substance: That the complainants are the owners in fee of the tract of land in the city of Pensacola, Plorida, known as the Chabeaux or Rivas tract. That •said tract originally belonged to one Gabriel de Rivas, but the title thereto was divested out of his heirs about the year 1817 by a legal and valid sale made under the authority of the Spanish court in Pensacola, and by mesne conveyances from the purchaser at said •sale became vested, on January 13th, 1837, in the Pen.sacola City Company, a joint stock association, by which it was conveyed, in the year 1870, to the Pen.sacola City Company, a corporation then organized under the laws of Plorida, and one of the complain•ants, and that the interests of the other complainants have been acquired from the said corporation. That in 1837, upon the purchase of the said property by the Pensacola City Company, it went into possession of the same, and it and its grantees, mediate and immediate, the complainants, have been in possession ever •since, except as hereinafter stated. That it then had it laid off into lots, blocks and streets and a plat thereof made, known as the Georgia E. Chase plan, and of «other of his property, and had the same printed, a
The prayers of the bill are: That the title to said property may be declared to be in the complainants as claimed by them. That the defendants and each and every of them, their agents, servants and attorneys, be perpetually enjoined from interfering in any way with the possession of complainants or of their tenants, and from asserting title to the same, or any part thereof; from leasing or selling any part of the same; from re
Many of the defendants filed disclaimers. The defendant J. C. Peterson filed an answer disclaiming any interest or part in the matters involved except a certain portion of the tract that he alleges in his answer was conveyed to him in the year 1872, and of which portion he asserts that he has been in continuous adverse possession ever since. Ramon Campderos interposed a seperat-e disclaimer and answer, similar to that of J. C. Peterson, asserting adverse possession of another portion of said tract under a deed of same for more than seven years prior to the filing of the bill. The defendants James Wilkins, W. B. Runyan, J. C. Keyser, Octavia Thompson and TIenry J. Thompson, her husband, filed a joint and several answer, in substance, as follows: They deny that the complainants and' those for whom they sue are the owners in
Temporary injunction was granted and a receiver appointed as prayed. Yoluminous testimony, both oral and documentary, was taken for both the complainants and defendants, and the court at the final hearing upon the pleadings and proofs rendered a final decree in conformity to the prayers of the bill, except as to two parcels of the tract that were shown to have been held adversely to the complainants by the defendants J. C. Peterson and Ramon Campderos, under claim of title to same for more than seven years prior to the filing of the bill. From this decree the appellants named have taken this appeal.
It will be observed from the foregoing statement of the pleadings that this suit is practically a continuation of or supplementary to the suit of the Pensacola City Company vs. A. V. Caro, decided by this court at its January term, 1883 (19 Fla. 766), the allegations of the bill in that case being practically the same as those of the present bill. In that case the jurisdiction in
That there was a sale of this land by authority of the Spanish court for West Florida, at Pensacola, upon the application of the executrix and widow of Gabriel de Rivas and of the guardian for the minor heirs, for the purpose of a division among and between the heirs at law, and that such division was had and made of the proceeds of its sale, there can be no question. The documents introduced by the complainants from the Spanish Archives, showing the entire proceedings had, have forcibly impressed us for their regularity and particularity, and for the zealous care taken by the court to have all parties interested duly notified of every step taken in the procedure, and the ample opportunity afforded to all persons concerned to be fully heard. Against the authenticity of these documents nothing is interposed. The documents introduced show also, beyond cavil we think, that Gregario Caro became the purchaser of the entire tract at that sale, at a price far in advance of the amount at which it had been officially appraised by order of the Spanish court prior to the order for its sale, and that he paid the purchase price, and that the sale was duly confirmed to him by the Spanish court, and that the money paid by him for its purchase was duly divided by the Span
The appellants next contend that notwithstanding-they may be held to have acquired no title through the Gabriel de Rivas heirs, that still the decree should be reversed because they have shown that some of the defendants have acquired title to some portions of the tract by prescription by having adversely held possession thereof for more than seven years prior to ■ the institution of this suit. The proof shows that while some of the defendants have had possession of' portions of the tract, that the Pensacola City Company through its agents, lessees and assignees have all along - had the possession and control of the larger portion thereof. The law is well-settled that in such cases of mixed possession, the possession of all parts of the-tract not actually and adversely occupied will be presumed to be with the owner of the true title in possession of a part. The real title draws to the actual occupant holding it a constructive possession of all the land covered by the title that is not actually adversely occupied; and the adverse occupant, not having any title, is to be confined to the actual limits of his occupancy. Barr vs. Gratz’s Heirs, 4 Wheat. 213; Hunt vs. Wickliffe, 2 Pet. 201; Codman vs. Winslow, 10 Mass. 146; Brimmer vs. Proprietors of Long Wharf, 5 Pick. 131; Armstrong vs. Risteau’s Lessee, 5 Md. 256, S. C. 59 Am. Dec. 115; Semple vs. Cook, 50 Cal. 26. In considering the claim .of the appellants to an acquisition-of title by adverse possession to certain portions of the-tract, the following elementary principles become pertinent and must be borne in mind: That the burden of proof of all the essential facts requisite to give title by
The appellants next contend that portions of the tract have been held adversely by the defendants George Bell, Eugene Cardenas, Louis Cobb, E. Claiburn, Burk Hamilton, John Harris, Jeff. Lennox,. James Milne, Betsy Lundy and Caesar Wiggins, and that they are entitled by adverse possession to all of such portions. In all of these cases there has been an entire failure on the part of the appellants to establish by proof the essential facts necessary, as already pointed out, to clothe them with a prescriptive title to any definite portion of the tract. There is no proof of substantial enclosure, cultivation, improvement or occupancy of any definite portion of the tract by any of' them continuously for seven years before the filing of the bill, and it is nowhere shown what particular portion thereof any of them claim to be possessed of.
From a careful review of the whole case our opinion is that the complainants in the bill have fully established by the proofs the allegations of their bill, and that the decree appealed from is entirely proper, and it is therefore affirmed.