Wilson v. Knight
Wilson v. Knight
Opinion of the Court
In March, 1900, the defendants in error, as heirs at law of Joseph Jackson Knight, deceased, instituted their action of ejectment against the plaintiffs in error in the Circuit Court of Columbia county for the re-recovery of a certain lot of land located in the southern division of the town of Lake City, in section 32, township 3, range 17 south and east in said Columbia county, contain
To this judgment the defendants below have sued out writ of error from this court.
The defendants moved for new trial, on the grounds, among others, (1) because the said findings and judgment are contrary to the evidence, and (2) because said findings and judgment are contrary to law. The denial of this motion is one of the errors assigned.
From the conclusions reached by us as to the law applicable to the facts in proof, an adjudication of this assignment of error will effectually dispose of the case upon its merits, without regard to other assignments of error made, we will consider and discuss this assignment alone.
The following facts are established by the evidence, and are practically admitted and unquestioned: 1. That the land in controversy is a part of a 20,000 acre grant of land made by the Spanish government on March 20, 1817, to one Don Jose de la Maza Arredondo.
2. That this 20,000 acre grant, as surveyed and platted by one Andres Burgevin in 1819, was conveyed by the administrator of said Arredondo to one Benjamin Chaires, on the 16th of February, 1829, with the exception of certain undivided parcels thereof that had prior to that date been conveyd by the estate of Arredondo to one Pedro Miranda, and to one Gad Humphreys.
3. That said 20,000 acre Spanish grant to Arredondo as surveyed, located and platted by the said Burgevin, on November 24, 1834, was adjudged to be a valid grant, vest
4. By a supplemental decree rendered in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida, dn the 10th day of April, 1882, in the suit of Benjamin Chaires et al., claimants to said Arredondo grant against the United States, on the application of counsel for said claimánts, it was decreed that scrip for 20,000 acres of land, receivable in payment for any of the public lands in Florida that had been offered at public sale, should be issued to the parties entitled to said Arredondo grant in lieu of and in full satisfaction of said grant, and- that said grant should thereafter be held and taken as a part of the public lands of the United States. That such land scrip was subsequently, on November 20, 1883, duly issued to said claimants, aftd other lands purchased therewith outside of said grant, and the grant thus satisfied.
5. The United States District Eand Office, then locátéd at Newnansville, Florida, on March 1st, 1847, in the mistaken belief that the same was public land of the United States subject to entry and sale as such, sold to Joseph Jackson Knight for cash the S. W. Y of N. E. Y, N. W. Ya oí E. Ya and E. of S. W. Ya °i section 32, township 3, south range 17, east, embracing the land in dispute her'éín, afid the same being part of said 20,000 acre Spanish grant to Arredondo; the then receiver of said District Eand Office issuing to the said Knight on March 1st, 1847, a re
Joseph Jackson Knight settled upon the land embraced in his entry shortly after its entry, and resided there with his family until 1853 or 1855, when he died. How the heirs of Joseph Jackson Knight after his death lost possession and control of the land covered by his entry, there is no formal proof in the record, but the proof does show that shortly after his death his heirs did lose possession and control thereof, and that it passed into the possession and control of other parties, and that they did not assert or make any claim thereto from that time until after the issuance on April 30th, 1896, of the patent thereto by the United States.
Under these circumstances we hold, 1st, that the grant of 20,000 acres from the Spanish government in 1817 to Joseph de la Maza Arredondo, when confirmed, vested the title in presentí in said Arredondo, and that the United States did not acquire any property right in or to the land covered by such grant under the treaty of cession of the Floridas in 1819. McGee v. Alba, 9 Fla. 382; Doe ex dem. Magruder v. Roe, 13 Fla. 602. And, consequently, that the attempted sale by the land officers of the United States to Joseph Jackson Knight in 1847 of a part of such grant was a nullity.
2nd. That the United States did not acquire any property right in or to such Spanish grant until November 20, 1883, when land scrip was issued in lieu thereof by the United States to the then claimants of said grant, under and by virtue of the decree of the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida of date April 10th, 1882. That the United States thus and then became the owner by purchase of such title, and such title only, as such claimants then had to convey.
3rd. That by such purchase the United States did not acquire title to any part or portion of such grant the title to which had been previously acquired, by prescription or otherwise, by third persons not parties or privies to such sale to the United States; and consequently-, could not effectually convey title to any such part or portion by patent or otherwise.
4th. That such Spanish grant being the property of private individuals in February, 1872, when our statute of limitatons, Chapter 1869, laws of Florida, was enacted, limiting the time to seven years for the acquirement of a prescriptive title, such statute of limitation was operative
5th. That the defendant and his grantors having been in the actual, continuous, open and adverse possession of the land in dispute herein for more than seven years prior to the acquirement by the United States in 1883 of any property rights in such land, became possessed of a perfected prescriptive title thereto under said statute of limitations of 1872, before the United States acquired any property rights therein; and, consequently, that the subsequent patent by the United States in 1896 to Joseph Jackson Knight was ineffectual to convey title as against such prior perfected prescriptive title. Joplin v. Chachere, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, October term, 1903, 192 U. S. 94.
Other errors are assigned upon the admission and rejection of evidence, which we deem it unnecessary to notice further than to say that all documentary and Other evidence that tended to establish the facts stated and enumerated herein above,.were properly admissible.
The judgment of the court below is hereby reversed and a new trial awarded at the cost of the defendants in erfor.
Hocker and Cockrell, JJ., concur.
Carter, P. J., and Shackleford and Whitfield, JJ., concur in the opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.