Adler v. Superior Apartments Corp.

160 So. 868, 119 Fla. 127, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 945
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 25, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 So. 868 (Adler v. Superior Apartments Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adler v. Superior Apartments Corp., 160 So. 868, 119 Fla. 127, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 945 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Ellis, P. J.

This case appears here for the third time. In this appeal an attack is made upon an order of the Chancellor dated December 5, 1933, striking the reply of Louis Adler to a rule to show cause why the Superior Apartments Corporation should not have a writ of assistance to place it in possession of a certain lot of land on which a building known as Windsor Apartments had been erected, of which the Superior Apartments Corporation had become the purchaser at a foreclosure sale held November 6, 1933, pursuant to a final decree of foreclosure in a case entitled Henry H. Taylor, as Receiver of The City Trust Company, v. Jacob Becker and wife, Isaac Gross and wife, Louis Baum and *129 wife, Hyman Bialik and Louis Adler, pending in the Circuit Court for Dade County.

The first appeal was from a decree of foreclosure. The decree was reversed because it appeared that negotiations to pay up all past due installments and reinstate the trust deed had proceeded to the point at which the amount due had been ascertained and tendered to complainant but refused by it. The amount, however, was paid into court. Testimony was taken and a final decree entered allowing trustee's fees in the sum of $453.34, and $2,000.00 attorney’s fees. The Court held that the attorney’s fees allowed were excessive; that no basis existed to support the allowance of fees for the trustee and that the appellants should have been permitted to pay up the amounts due and that the status of the trust deed be restored. See Becker v. City Trust Co., 102 Fla. 682, 136 South. Rep. 642.

Two years later an appeal was taken from an amended or new decree. During the pendency of the first appeal the Chancellor allowed the defendants to withdraw the amount deposited in the registry of the court. When the mandate reached the Circuit Court the Chancellor vacated the former decree and entered another requiring the payment of the exact amount previously tendered and withdrawn which represented the amount due under the trust deed and the bonds -secured thereby including attorney’s fees and costs.

The second appeal was taken from that decree. The appellants contended that when the mandate from the Supreme Court came down in the first appeal the Chancellor should have dismissed the bill. The Court decided against that contention and affirmed the decree. See Becker v. Taylor, 111 Fla. 731, 149 South. Rep. 591.

Upon the mandate in the second appeal being received, *130 the Special Master gave notice of the sale of the property, the payments required by the decree not having been made. At the appointed time the sale was made and the property purchased by the Superior Apartments Corporation. The price bid for the property was twenty-two thousand dollars. The purchaser tendered in payment thereof bonds of the face value of forty-four thousand seven hundred dollars secured by the trust deed, and the purchaser paid in cash the “costs, charges, fees and disbursements.”

By order entered November 21, 1933, the Chancellor confirmed the Master’s report of the sale and directed him to execute a deed to the Superior Apartments Corporation for the property.

The purchaser applied for a writ of. assistance the fol- . lowing day. An order was made on the 23rd day of November granting the writ. The Chancellor treated the order as a rule to show cause why the premises should not be delivered to the purchaser.

Now, Louis Adler, who was' a defendant in the litigation and against whom a decree pro confesso had been entered according to the admission of counsel interposed a reply or an answer to the rule to show cause, or the petition for the writ.

The mortgage, which was foreclosed, was executed by Jacob Becker and wife on September 25, 1925, to secure the payment of eighty-seven bonds', some of which were of the par value of one hundred dollars, some of five hundred dollars and others of one thousand dollars; the last series falling due in September, 1935.

Becker and wife, in April, 1926, conveyed the property to Isaac Gross and Louis Baum, who assumed and agreed to pay the Becker mortgage.

*131 It is averred by Adler in his answer that in May, 1926, Gross and Baum, joined by their wives, executed a mortgage upon the premises to secure a debt of forty thousand dollars evidenced by fourteen promissory notes. The promissee named in the notes was Jacob Becker and the mortgage was executed to him.

In January, 1927, Becker transferred the notes to Hyman Bialik and assigned the mortgage to him also, who on the same day transferred the notes and mortgage to Louis Adler. In October, 1933, Isaac Gross and Louis Baum, who were the owners of the mortgaged premises, placed Louis Adler in possession of the property. That was two months after the affirmance by this Court of the second decree and three days after the Master’s notice of sale was filed.

Now the answer sets up a conspiracy on the part of Becker, Gross and Baum to perpetrate a fraud upon Adler by a process of freezing him out of any benefit from the mortgage from Gross and Baum to Becker, who assigned it to Bialik, who in turn sold and transíered it to Adler.

The scheme, as'averred, was as follows: Becker, who originally owned the property, mortgaged it for $50,000.00 to secure the eighty-seven bonds. Seven months after that transaction he conveyed the property to Gross and Baum.

, On the same day of that conveyance, April 29, 1926, they mortgaged the property to Becker to secure the payment of fourteen notes' aggregating forty thousand dollars and assumed the payment of the Becker mortgage of fifty thousand dollars. Becker in January, 1927, transferred the notes and mortgage to Bialik, who on the same day transferred them to Adler.

Gross and Baum paid the bonds secured by the Becker mortgage up to May, 1929. Then Becker, Gross and Baum conceived the plan that Gross and Baum should default in *132 the payment of the bonds falling due subsequently to that date and thus discourage the holders of the bonds in their hope of collecting the same or any substantial part of them, thus precipitating a foreclosure of the trust deed or mortgage and extinguishing the lien of the mortgage held by Adler; that the scheme was followed and Gross and Baum refused to pay any more of the bonds as they became due; that while that plan was carried out for a while the conspirators disagreed among themselves, but Becker continued the plan to defraud Adler by organizing a corporation called the Superior Apartments Corporation; that the Corporation is merely the alter ego of Becker; that the purpose of it was to acquire the outstanding bonds of Becker at a small fraction of their face value to the end that he might escape his obligation upon them; that Becker did acquire the bonds at a small price and used them in paying the price of the property at the mortgage sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vance v. Scanlon
121 So. 2d 709 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)
Adler v. Becker, Et Ux.
178 So. 117 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
State Ex Rel. Adler v. Barns
166 So. 589 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)
Gamble v. Gamble Holding Corp.
162 So. 886 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 So. 868, 119 Fla. 127, 1935 Fla. LEXIS 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adler-v-superior-apartments-corp-fla-1935.