DocketNumber: No. F-280
Judges: Carroll, Donald, Sturgis, Wigginton
Filed Date: 10/29/1964
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This appeal is from a final decree can-celling and holding for naught a deed to land given by appellees to the husband of appellant. It is contended that appellees failed to either allege or prove that the deed was procured by misrepresentation and fraud, and that the court erred in entering the decree appealed.
Appellees are the mother and father of Wiley Grantham, Jr., estranged husband of appellant Mary Pearl Grantham. Appel-lees, by warranty deed dated August 18, 1959, conveyed to their son, Wiley Grant-
At the outset we deem it appropriate to dispose of the main contention urged by appellees on this appeal. They take the position that the only interest appellant has in the land conveyed by the deed in question is an inchoate right of dower, and that since a decree pro confesso was entered against her husband, the co-defendant, all material allegations of the complaint with respect to fraud and misrepresentation must be accepted as true, and appellant had no standing before the circuit court to question the bona fides of this cause of action, or the correctness of the decree appealed. With this position we are unable to agree. It is our view that appellant’s joinder as a defendant to the action, and the inchoate dower interest she possesses in the land give her a sufficient standing to defend the action and assert every defense to the complaint which may be available under the jurisprudence of this state.
Without burdening this opinion with a detailed recitation of the allegations contained in the complaint filed by appel-lees, or of the evidence adduced at the trial of the case before the court, we are of the view that the complaint fails to allege and the evidence fails to establish facts sufficient to warrant the relief of cancellation on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation. We are of the view, however, that the complaint sufficiently alleges facts warranting a decree granting the alternative relief prayed for therein for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on account of default in the installments of the purchase price. We are of the further view that there is sufficient evidence in the record which, if believed by the chancellor to be true, would warrant a decree of foreclosure in favor of appellees. We have considered the remaining contentions of appellant but- find them to be without merit.
The decree appealed which cancels the deed of conveyance involved in this action on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation is reversed and the cause remanded with directions that the chancellor reconsider his decision in light of the views ex
Reversed.
. Blount et al. v. Bost, 97 Fla. 449, 121 So. 472.