Court Opinion

ID: 3396995
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:05:02.994513+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:02:57.866576
License: Public Domain

On March 27, 1931, the civil court of record for Hillsborough County rendered a judgment for the plaintiffs in an action on a fire insurance policy. On May 15, 1931, a writ of error was taken to the circuit court. By Chapter 14663, Acts of 1931, the civil court of record for Hillsborough County was abolished, the statute becoming effective December 31, 1931. On February 1, 1932, the circuit court reversed the judgment of the civil court of record and remanded the cause "for a new trial." A writ of certiorari was issued from this court upon a petition alleging that the circuit court had no power to reverse the judgment of the civil court of record after such court had been abolished, and that the correct rule of law had not been applied by the circuit court in reversing the judgment that had been rendered by the civil court of record. The respondent moves to quash the writ of certiorari. If the circuit court had no authority to exercise its appellate jurisdiction to determine a cause on writ of error to a judgment of the civil court of record after the latter court had been abolished, though the writ of error was taken before such court was abolished, a writ of certiorari may be a proper remedy. When the judgment of the civil court of record was reversed, the court had been abolished and the causes pending therein were by law transferred to the circuit court for trial and disposition. Chapter 14663, Acts 1931. While a possible legal effect of the reversal by the circuit court of the judgment of the abolished civil court of record might be a right to a new trial to be had in the circuit court to which the causes pending in the civil court of record were transferred upon the abolition of the civil court of record, yet such reversal involving a question of jurisdiction may, under the circumstances here shown, be reviewed by certiorari if allowed by this court.
By section 1, Article V, constitution of 1885, "the judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Supreme *Page 15 
Court, Circuit Courts, County Judges, and Justices of the Peace." An amendment adopted in 1914 added "Court of Record of Escambia County" "and such other courts or commissions as the Legislature may from time to time ordain and establish."
Under amended section 1, Article V of the constitution, Chapter 6904, Acts of 1915, provided for a "Civil Court of Record in each county which has, or shall have, a population of more than seventy thousand (70,000) according to the last preceding Federal census, or as such census hereafter taken: Provided, that the provisions of this Act shall not apply to any county which has been divided subsequent to the last preceding Federal census * *." By the Federal census of 1910, only two counties in Florida had "a population of more than seventy thousand." Duval county had 75,163 population and Hillsborough county had 78,374 population. As Hillsborough county had "been divided subsequent to the last preceding Federal census," in the formation of Pinellas county by Chapter 6247, Acts of 1911, Duval county was the only one in which a civil court of record was established under Chapter 6904, Acts of 1915.
Chapter 8521, Acts of 1921, provided for a "Civil Court of Record in each county which has, or shall have, a population of more than an hundred thousand (100,000) according to the last preceding Federal census, or as such Federal census is hereafter taken; and that "The Civil Court of Record in existence under" Chapter 6904, Acts of 1915, sections 3310 to 3324, Revised General Statutes, "is hereby abolished, its termination being in all respects effectual and final when but not until the Judge hereunder provided for shall be lawfully commissioned."
By the Federal census of 1920, Duval county was the only county in the State having a population of more than 100,000 and consequently a civil court of record existed *Page 16 
only in Duval County under Chapter 8521, Acts of 1921, though such a court could have been established in other counties subsequently attaining more than 100,000 population according to the later Federal censusses, if Chapter 8521 had not been superseded by Chapter 11357, Acts of 1925, except as to the provisions of Chapter 8521 which are still applicable to the civil court of record for Duval county. Chapter 11357, Acts of Extra Session 1925, effective January 1, 1926, provided for a "civil court of record in each county in the State of Florida, which has or shall have a population of more than One Hundred Thousand (100,000) according to the last State census, or as such census hereafter taken, provided that the provisions of this Act shall not apply to any county in which there has heretofore been established a civil court of record." See sections 5156 et seq. Compiled General Laws, 1927, forgeneral provisions relating to civil courts of record.
By the State census of 1925, the population of Duval county was 123,396; Dade county, 111,413; Hillsborough county, 133,384. No other county had a population of more than 100,000. Under Chapter 11357, a civil court of record was established in each of the counties of Hillsborough and Dade. As a civil court of record had theretofore been established in Duval County, such court was excepted from the provisions of Chapter 11357, Acts of 1925, leaving Chapter 8521, Acts of 1921, applicable only to Duval county; and the provisions of such Chapter 8521 were not included in the general laws contained in the Compiled General Laws of 1927.
Under section 11, Article V, constitution, "The Circuit Courts * * shall have final appellate jurisdiction in all civil and criminal cases arising in the county court" * * "and appellate jurisdiction * of such other matters as the legislature may provide."
Section 11, Chapter 11357, provides that: *Page 17 
    "The circuit courts shall have appellate jurisdiction in all cases decided by such civil courts of record in the same manner and with the same limitations as in writs of error from the Circuit to the Supreme Court." See Sec. 1, Ch. 15666, Acts 1931, giving Circuit Courts "final appellate jurisdiction" in such cases.
Section 1, Chapter 14663, Acts of 1931, enacts that:
    "The Civil Court of Record in and for Hillsborough County, Florida, be and the same is hereby abolished and all cases pending in said Court on the dates of its abolishment shall be transferred by the Clerk of said Court to the Circuit Court of said County and there docketed by the Clerk of the said Circuit Court and said cases shall be tried and disposed of in said Circuit Court."
The effect of Chapter 14663 is merely to abolish the civil court of record for Hillsborough county created under Chapter 11357, leaving the provisions of Chapter 11357 in force.
In this case the writ of error from the Circuit Court to the judgment of the civil court of record for Hillsborough county was issued and made effective before the civil court of record was abolished; and the abolition of such court does not affect the appellate jurisdiction already acquired by the circuit court under Chapter 11357 which is still in force, notwithstanding the abolition of the civil court of record for Hillsborough county.
The amended declaration filed in the cause in the civil court of record by Frances McBride joined by her husband, Elias McBride, and W. T. Whitlock against the insurance company alleges in substance that the defendant issued to Mrs. Edith Callahan, its policy of insurance upon stated property with New York standard mortgage clause in favor of W. T. Whitlock, the mortgagee attached; that W. T. Whitlock assigned the mortgage and the note secured by the mortgage to Carl Baughman who endorsed the same to Frances McBride, but said Carl Baughman endorsed same *Page 18 
without recourse as to him, "and said insurance policy with said New York Standard Mortgage Clause attached thereto was deposited, with said mortgage and note, in the hands of said Frances McBride as collateral security, said endorsements and assignments being made after said New York Standard Mortgage Clause was attached to said policy, and before the burning of said building, as hereinbefore set forth, and plaintiff W. T. Whitlock, is still bound and obligated on his assignment and endorsement of said mortgage and note to the plaintiff, Frances McBride; and said building was burned and destroyed under such circumstances as to come within the promise and undertaking of said policy."
The circuit court, on writ of error to a judgment for the plaintiffs, held that there was error in refusing to allow the defendant to show there was no privity of contract between the plaintiff, Frances McBride, the assignee of the mortgagee and the insurer, who did not know of the assignment; and that no insurable interest in W. T. Whitlock was shown, in view of his assignment of his interest in the note and mortgage.
The circuit court may have overlooked the possible liability of Whitlock on his assignment of the note and mortmage and a consequent insurable interest of Whitlock in the mortgaged property insured, under the principle stated in 1 Cooley's Briefs on Insurance (2nd Ed.) p. 254, 290, that "though the mortgagee has assigned the notes and mortgage, his liability on his assignment gives him an insurable interest." See Joyce on Insurance, Section 1042; 9 L.R.A. (N.S.) 490. But it is not shown that the plaintiff, Frances McBride, was in privity with or had a right of action against the insurer; and for this reason alone the judgment of the civil court of record against the defendant in her favor, was properly reversed by the circuit court.
The writ of certiorari is quashed. *Page 19 
TERRELL AND DAVIS, J.J., concur.
BUFORD, C.J. AND BROWN, J., concur in the opinion and judgment.
                          ON REHEARING.