33 Fla. 470 | Fla. | 1894
W. L. Payne, appellee’s intestate, filed a bill in January, 1887, against appellants, James M. Winteiy Robert TL Winter, Teresa 0. Sedgwick and husband, William Sedgwick, praying for a mandatory injunction? requiring them to remove a certain obstruction in am alleged street mentioned in the bill.
Complainant’s case is that some twenty-five years before the filing of the bill, Miles Price, then deceased;, was the owner of a certain tract of land known as the-Winter tract, situated, at the time of filing- the- bill, in-, Brooklyn, a suburb of Jacksonville, Duval county, Florida; that the said Miles Price during the time he • owned said tract of land laid it off into lots and blocks,. and at convenient distances, as he saw proper, laid out. streets through and across • said tract of land and named them, and dedicated the said streets to the use of the public; that among the streets so laid out and dedicated by the said Price while he- was the sole* owner of the land through which they run, was Duval; street, which runs from Commercial street to the St.. Johns river, between blocks fifteen and twenty-one as. designated on LeBaron’s map of the city of Jacksonville and its suburbs. Further, that the said Price after he had laid out the “Winter tract” and had dedicated Duval street to the use of the public as a public-street, or highway, from Commercial street, to the St. Johns river, as alleged, sold lots on each side of said, street, and in designating the boundary lines of said lots in deeds conveying them bounded the lots- on the ■ southeast side of said street by Duval street on the ■ east or northeast, and also designated said street as the western boundary of lots lying on the east: side of the same; tliat said Price showed to- the--;
It is further alleged that at the time complainant ■purchased said lot Duval street ran in the same direc'ition, and was located where it had been laid off by Miles Price, and the west side of said street was the 'eastern boundary of his said lot, and he had no knowledge that it ever was or would be claimed that said fstreet was not in its proper place; that the land on ‘the east side of said Duval street is owned by the defendants jointly, the same having been deeded to them "by Miles Price; that sometime in the Fall of 1886 said '•defendants wrongfully and unlawfully moved their 'fence which ran along the east side of said street, out ‘.into and diagonally across said street in such manner i-as to entirely cut off complainant from the use of the
A demurrer to the bill, on the ground that it did not make such a case as entitled complainant to any relief in equity, was overruled and defendants answered. 'The answer admits that Miles Price owned the “Winter tract” of land, and that during his ownership he laid the same off into lots and blocks and had a plat made. It is alleged that the plat so made was recorded in the public records of Duval county, in Book P, page 379, and that it was the map used by Miles Price in his lifetime and by which he sold all the lots sold "by him in Brooklyn, and is the one referred to in the ■deeds of Pence, Mitchell and complainant, W. L.
After replication filed and testimony taken, the court decreed in favor of complainant, and that defendants be perpetually restrained from keeping and maintaining any fence or other obstruction upon or across the said Duval street, as the same had been used and defined during the past fifteen or twenty years, and that they be restrained from building or placing any fence enclosing their land described in the bill, upon the southwest side, fronting on Duval street outside of, or beyond where the fence had been located before its removal by defendants in the Pall of 1886.
After the decree was rendered, W. L. Payne •died, and the suit was- revived in the name of his administratrix, and an appeal taken from the decree entered.
Counsel for appellants insists that the testimony ■does not sustain the decree, and this is the only question presented for our consideration. In disposing of the case we will confine ourselves to the question presented.
As shown by the pleadings before us, Miles Price owned the ‘Winter tract” of land, subsequently called Drooklyn, a suburb of the city of Jacksonville, and
Price made two deeds to the Winters: the first was. made on the 28th day of February, 1876, to Teresa O. Winter (now Sedgwick), and the second one was made to James M. and Robert H. Winter on the 10th day of J uly, 1886, a short time before the fence in question was erected. At the time of the conveyance to Mrs. Winter, as appears from what has been stated, Price had sold all the abutting lots on the west side of Duval street- and this side of that street as then used, and as it had been used for a long time prior thereto, was bounded by a fence. The property conveyed to the Winters is-situated on the east side of Duval street, and it is-shown, we think, that at the time of the first conveyance to Mrs. Winter, Duval street, from Commercial street to the river, was opened and built upon as a public street of the dimensions and shape as claimed by complainant. The house on the Pence lot, as shown by the testimony of the county surveyor, would be in the street as laid out by him at the request of appellants, and yet this house was built, as it appears, before the map was filed. Certainly Pence bought his-lot before the map was filed. The street as actually laid off on the ground and opened up will control, and the descriptions in deeds referring to streets will relátelo the streets as thus located. We do not mean of course that after an owner has platted a tract of land and conveyed lots according to such plat, he can there
There is considerable testimony in the record as to what Price said about the location of the street after-the fence had been erected across it in 1886. Objections were noted to this testimony before the master,, but it does not appear that such objections were urged, or insisted on before the chancellor at or before the-trial. Counsel for appellants insist that this testimony is incompetent, as Price had no right to bind them by his declarations after their rights were acquired. In reaching the conclusion we have, no importance has been given to the recent statements of Price in reference to the location of the street, but what he did and said in reference to the location of the-street while he was the owner and before conveying to the Winters has been considered. In disposing of the;
.The decree must be affirmed, audit is so ordered.