Armstrong Cork Co. v. Crook, K-322
| Decision Date | 07 October 1969 |
| Docket Number | No. K-322,K-322 |
| Citation | Armstrong Cork Co. v. Crook, 227 So.2d 64 (Fla. App. 1969) |
| Parties | ARMSTRONG CORK COMPANY, a corporation, Appellant, v. Hiltz CROOK, Appellee. |
| Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Campbell & Andrews, De Funiak Springs, for appellant.
W. Fred Turner, Lynn Haven for appellee.
Plaintiff in an ejectment action has appealed from a judgment rendered upon a directed verdict in favor of the defendant at the end of the plaintiff's case.
Appellant's complaint alleges that appellee is in possession of some 3.037 acres to which the former claims title through a deed from J. R. Sealy and his wife dated November 30, 1951, and recorded December 5, 1951, in the records of Walton County, Florida. Appellant's deed encompasses substantial acreage in addition to the small parcel here under litigation. The deraignment of title submitted by appellant as an exhibit to the complaint concedes that both parties claim title out of a common source.
By his answer, the appellee admitted his possession of the subject parcel and his refusal to deliver it up to the appellant. The answer admitted that appellee's claim is founded upon a deed from the Sealys and alleged his deed to have been dated March 6, 1951, and recorded on April 12, 1951. It is to be noted that the appellee's deed was recorded some seven months prior to that of appellant. In addition to claiming under the 1951 deed, appellee's answer also alleged title under a quit claim deed from Mrs. Sealy, by then a widow, dated June 10, 1963, and recorded June 15, 1963. After setting forth the two deeds aforesaid, appellee interposed his adverse possession under color of title as a defense to the ejectment action.
In support of said defense, appellee alleged that shortly after he bought the land from the Sealys in 1951, he went upon the land and enclosed it with a substantial fence. The fence was erected in either late 1951 or early 1952 and the said fence was still standing at the time the instant action was filed. Also alleged by appellee was that he had paid taxes upon the land enclosed and had claimed the land to be his from the day of the purchase to the present. It was also alleged by appellee that he had held the subject land openly and notoriously and against the claims of all other persons.
Upon trial of the cause, the plaintiff produced the testimony of two witnesses and introduced three exhibits. Also admitted in evidence were three exhibits for the defendant. The defense exhibits consisted of two deeds noted above and a copy of a survey of the property dated February 27, 1963. Said defense exhibits were admitted without objection by the appellant. The record of the trial proceedings also indicates a stipulation that the defendant had returned the property for taxation from 1951 until 1963 using the description in the first deed from the Sealys; and, beginning in 1964, he returned it using the description in the second deed signed by Mrs. Sealy only in 1963.
The plaintiff's exhibits consisted of a copy of its deed, a copy of a survey made by its witness, Cook, and a copy of a letter written by one of appellant's agents. The letter was dated in 1962 and addressed to the appellee. The tenor of said letter is that appellant notes that appellee has erected a fence so as to enclose property which belongs to appellant and requests appellee to correct that situation. The letter also states that appellant has known of the alleged encroachment since 1953 and that on several occasions appellant had asked appellee to remove the fence. One of the witnesses produced by appellant corroborated the existence of the fence on appellant's property as well as appellee's refusal to remove the fence.
Section 95.16, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., provides that when an occupant of premises enters into possession thereof under claim of title based upon an instrument of conveyance or judgment and such possession in continued for seven years, the premises so occupied shall be deemed to have been held adversely. Appellant argues that the instrument of conveyance herein by which appellee asserts his claim is insufficient within...
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DeRoche v. Winski
...the land in question by a legally sufficient description. Mitchell v. Moore, 152 Fla. 843, 13 So.2d 314 (1943); Armstrong Cork Co. v. Crook, 227 So.2d 64 (Fla. 1st DCA 1969). Appellees could not qualify under either of the two methods for establishing adverse possession. They did not have p......
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Shultz v. Johnson
...must be established by clear and positive proof. Bailey v. Hagler, 575 So.2d 679 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991); Armstrong Cork Company v. Crook, 227 So.2d 64 (Fla. 1st DCA 1969). Herein, our review of the record below reveals no clear and positive proof of the essential element of substantial enclosu......
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