Johnson v. Turner
Johnson v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
Motion is made to- set aside and vacate ah order of supersedeas claimed to have been made in this cause on the sixteenth day of October, 1901, by the Circuit Judge, upon the following frounds: 1st. Because the said supersedeas order granted by the said judge of the Circuit Court is illegal and void. 2nd. Because the decree herein superseded by the said order is a decree lor injunction as well as for other purposes, and the said judge of the Circuit Court had no authority nor jurisdiction to make the said order for supersedeas. 3rd. Because the appeal herein is frivolous’and no supersedeas should be granted. 4th. Because the appeal in this case is from a decree which does not affect the appellant’s interest.
The bill'in this case alleged that the complainants as the widow and heirs at law of George Johnson, deceased, were entitled to certain described real and personal property as the homestead and exemption to which the said George Johnson, as the head of a family residing in this State was the owner, and entitled to under the Constitution at the time, of his decease; that the appellant,
After the overruling of a demurrer and plea to the bill, decree pro confesso was entered, and a final decree was rendered therein on the twenty-seventh day of September 1901, adjudging that all of the personal property of which the said George Johnson died seized and possessed be set aside to the complainants as their homestead in said estate, and that the. temporary injunction theretofore granted he made perpetual, and that the defendant be required forthwith to deliver to the complainants all of ■said property of which he and hi® agents and attorney are possessed, and that if he -shall fail to deliver up the same within ten days from the date of said decree, that a writ of possession shall issue in favor of the complain ante against the defendant and his agents and attorney, and directing the clerk of the court to issue the same on praecipe therefor.
Petition for rehearing was- made and denied on the fourteenth day of October, 1901, and in the order denying such rehearing the judge -ordered the clerk forthwith to issue a writ of possession as- directed in the final decree.
On the sixteenth day of October, 1901, the defendant entered his appeal from said final decree rendered on the twenty-seventh of September, 1901, and from the order denying the rehearing and ordering the ele-rk to issue writ of possession made on the -fourteenth day of October, 1901.
On the sixteenth day of October, 1901, the Circuit Judge made the following order in response to a motion made by the defendant for a.n order fixing the amount, term® and conditions of bond to be given by him-, in order
On the 'seventeenth of October, 1901, the bond as required by this order was filed and approved.
On the twenty-seventh day of May, 1901, the following act, Chapter 4917, was approved, and was in force at the time of the appeal in this case.: “An Act to Amend Section 1458, of the Revised Statutes of the State of Florida, Relating to Appeal as a .supersedeas.
Be it Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
Section 1. That Section 1458, of the Revised Stattes of the State of Florida, relating to appeal as a 'supersedeas, be, and the same is, hereby amended so as to read as follows:
Sec. 1458. Appeal as a supersedeas. 1. Supersedeas on Appeal from final decrees. No appeal from, a final decree isha.ll operate as a supersedeas unless said appeal be taken within the time fixed] by law for taking a writ of error, operating as of course as a supersedeas or if not taken within that time, unless one. of the justices of the
2. Supersedeas' on Appeal from Interlocutory Ordeis. Etc. No appeal from any interlocutory decision, judgment or decree of a Circuit Court, sitting as a court of equity, shall operate as a -supersedeas- unless the judge of the Circuit Court or a justice of the Supreme Court shall on an inspection of the record, order and direct a stay of proceedings. No appeal so allowed shall operate as a supersedeas except on the conditions prescribed by law in cases of appeal from final decrees. No supersedeas on an app-eal from any such decision, judgment or decree granting or dissolving án injunction shall have the effect to suspend or modify the decision, judgment or decree appealed from unless the Supreme Court or a justice thereof shall make an order for the suspension or modification of the order appealed from during the pendency of the appeal on like terms as to bond and security.”
It is contended on behalf of the mover on the motion now under consideration that because the final decree appealed from provides- for a perpetual injunction., there can be under the above quoted act no superisiedeas of such decree, or of any phase or provision thereof, unless the Supreme Court or a justice thereof shall make an order for the suspension or modification of such decree, and in no event has the judge of the- Circuit Court any authority
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas Johnson as Administrator of the Estate of George Johnson v. Reuben Turner and Hettie Turner, Adults, and Ellen Johnson, Vinnetta Johnson, Edward Johnson, Willie Johnson and George Johnson, by their next friend Reuben Turner
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- APPELLATE PRACTICE—SUPERSEDEAS IN CHANCERY APPEALS—CHAPTER 4917, LAWS OP 1901, CONSTRUED—SU-PERSEDEAS OP IN JUNCTIONAL DECREES REQUIRES SPECIAL ORDER—VACATING SUPERSEDEAS. 1. The first part of sub-division 1 of section 1 of Chapter 4917 laws, approved May 27th, 1901, taken in connection with- - section 1272, Revised Statutes, makes provision for a statutory supersedeas of final decrees, without any order from any judge or court in cases where the appeal is entered and the requisite bond given within thirty days from the rendition of such decree, but if such appeal is taken . after the expiration of thirty, days from the rendition of such final decree, it can become a supersedeas thereof only uppn the order of the Supreme Court, or one of the justices thereof. The latuer part of.the first sub-division of section 1 of said act operates as a proviso to the first part of such sub-division, and its meaning and purpose is to restrict and limit the operative effectiveness of supersedeases, whether obtained by force of the statute itself in cases where the appeal is taken and bond given within thirty days from the rendition of tho decree, or by a general order of the Supreme Court or a justice thereof, so that such supersedeases should not have the effect of suspending or modifying, not the entire decree appealed from and every phase and provision thereof, hut those features and provisions thereof only that may grant or dissolve an, injunction, unless the Supreme Court or a justice thereof shall by a special order cause it (the supersedeas) to have the effect of suspending or modifying such injunctions! feature of the decree appealed from. The proper construction of said first sub-division of section 1 of said act is .that where a final decree appealed from contains provisions other than those granting or dissolving an injunction besides the latter provisions, and a supersedeas of such decree is obtained, either by force of the statute by'the perfection of an appeal therefrom within thirty days from its rendition, or after that time by a general order of the Supreme Court or a justice thereof, that such supersedeas is of full force and effectiveness as to all the provisions of such decree, except those provisions thereof that grant or dissolve an injunction. The latter provisvisions thereof, when existent, can he suspended or modified only by a special order of the Supreme Court or a justice thereof expressly suspending or modifying them. 2. The Circuit Judges, under the provisions of Chapter 4917 laws, approved May 27th, 1901, have no authority, on an appeal from a final decree, to grant a supersedeas thereof. 3. In eases where there is a statutory supersedeas obtained by virtue of the perfection of an appeal within thirty days from the rendition of the decree appealed from, the appellate court has no authority to vacate it upen the ground that the appeal is frivolous.