Baker v. Cox

120 So. 2d 214, 1960 Fla. App. LEXIS 2526
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 30, 1960
DocketNo. 1427
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 So. 2d 214 (Baker v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Cox, 120 So. 2d 214, 1960 Fla. App. LEXIS 2526 (Fla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinions

ALLEN, Chief Judge.

The appellants, owners of certain property, filed their bill of complaint against the appellees in which they sought a decree cancelling an option, two assignments of the option, and an agreement which ap-pellees described as a renewal of the option. The appellees answered and, by counterclaim, sought to force the appellants to carry out the agreement to sell to them.

The lower court then entered a final decree cancelling all the instruments. The purchasers appealed to the Supreme Court.

The facts as set forth in the Supreme Court opinion and supplemented by the record as of that point in the history of this case are as follows:

Bellamy agreed to sell certain lands to W. T. Cox, trustee for a corporation later to be formed, and an option for the purchase was executed on September IS, 1953, and recorded on October 15, 1953, and exchanged for a payment of $1,000 in cash. In the instrument it was provided that if title to more than 15% of the lands was not insurable, the sellers were to bring suit to [216]*216quiet the title within a reasonable length of time, not to exceed one year. The trustee was to bear the expense of the suit but he was granted the privilege of accepting the title in its then condition, by warranty deed, if it developed that the title could not be cleared within the prescribed period.

It was agreed that the option should be effective for a period of six months unless it should be necessary to quiet title in which event the life of the option would be extended for that purpose for a reasonable time but not to exceed one year from its date.

Bellamy was advised about March 19, 1954, that an examination had disclosed that suit to quiet title was necessary and he replied in April, 1954, that he expected to close the deal and receive the funds within one year of the date of the original option thereby indicating that he took no exception to the tardiness of the notice to him. The option was dated September 15, 1953.

Thus the option was to expire March 15, 1954, unless the suit was necessary, a question obviously to be decided by the vendee and if the suit was found by him to be necessary, the sellers, in effect, granted themselves an enlargement of the time so they could institute and conclude the suit, but restricted themselves to the period that would expire September 15, 1954.

On August 9, 1954, only 37 days before the expiration of one year computed from the date of the option, the optionee, W. T. Cox, trustee, assigned the instrument to Joe Priest, Inc., and on November 6, 1954, the sellers entered into an agreement with that corporation and with Joe Priest and his wife, Maxine Priest. Apparently the sellers did not have the title quieted and as of this time was still uninsurable thus the sum of $1,000 was still in their possession.

The agreement between Bellamy and Priest provided that title to the tracts in Townships 18 and 19 of Range 16 was of such condition that a proceeding to' quiet title was imperative and that the suit would require considerable time. Under this contract title was to be quieted by the buyers and a “reasonable” time was stipulated for that purpose. There were numerous provisions concerning sales and distribution of proceeds. The contract stated that the consideration was $10, “to each in hand paid by the other.” The agreement stipulated that the tracts in Range 17 could be quickly sold, and the price per acre, manner of distributing the proceeds and terms of payment were specified. However, title to lands in Townships 18 and 19 of Range 16 apparently would take a great deal of time to clear.

On December 15, 1954, Joe Priest, Maxine Priest and Joe Priest, Inc., assigned both the option and the Bellamy-Priest contract to Joe Priest, C. M. Dunham, M. D. Andrews, P. C. Crapps, Jr., L. M. White and Harlow Land. There was also an agreement with these assignees which transferred the obligation to bring the suit from the sellers to the buyers.

It appears that in April, 1955, Bellamy listed the property for sale with a broker after having been unsuccessful in selling the land through the complicated dealings thus far. An attorney wrote to Bellamy stating that Andrews (holder of one-eighth of the option to buy) wished to purchase the land regardless of Joe Priest (the original holder of the second option and still the holder of the largest interest).

Thus, on November 17, 1955, Bellamy brought suit to declare the option abandoned and thereby commenced this litigation. Andrews filed an answer and counterclaimed seeking specific performance of the contracts. The chancellor (not the judge from whom the present appeal is taken) then decreed that all of these instruments were unenforceable.

Justice Thomas, speaking for the Court in Cox v. Bellamy, Fla.1957, 93 So.2d 64, 67, held that the vendors were not in a position to bring the suit and that the case must be reversed. The Court reviewed [217]*217its reasons for its holding which are summed up in the following language:

“Inartificially as the contract appears to have been drawn, we do not find support in the record for the charge that the apparent inexpertness of the author [buyer’s counsel] was studied, or purposeful. Nor do the actions of the parties afterward convince us that any advantage was taken of the sellers by the buyers. It seems to us that the indifference of the latter was matched by the lethargy of the former * * *
“ * * * They [the vendors] possibly once possessed the right to bring the matter to an end because of the lapse of a 'reasonable time’ but to do so they should have first given the appellants [buyers] notice of such intention. [Citations omitted].
“We must disagree with the chancellor and reverse his decree with directions to proceed in accordance with the views we have expressed. Reversed.”

During the time that this option was open to Cox, prior to and during this aforementioned appeal, certain transactions involving parcels of this realty apparently were made by Bellamy. After this cause was remanded to the circuit court, the purchasers or optionees, filed an amended counterclaim seeking specific performance of the option and articles of agreement. The defendants to this amended counterclaim were Bellamy, the optionor vendor, the grantees to whom Bellamy had sold some of the realty, and Mitchell who had acquired contracts to purchase some of the realty.

The grantees, hereafter referred to as the Bellamy to Baker grantees, filed an answer alleging several defenses to the counterclaim. These defenses, stated briefly, are as follows:

1.No notice of the prior option extended to Cox or of the counterclaim that was originally filed.

2. That the cenveyances to Baker grantees by Bellamy were authorized and contemplated by the original articles of agreement.

3. That the option and articles of agreement were so ambiguous that specific enforcement would be inequitable and unjust.

After this answer was filed, and before testimony was taken, the option-holders, Cox et al., moved for summary judgment on their counterclaim. The lower court held the defenses insufficient and entered a summary decree cancelling the deeds that Bellamy executed to Baker, and requiring Bellamy to specifically perform the agreement to sell to Cox, et al.

No notice of lis pendens was ever filed in this suit by Bellamy.

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Related

Bache v. Lefcoe
162 So. 2d 525 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1964)
National Exhibition Company v. Ball
139 So. 2d 489 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1962)
Baker v. Cox
122 So. 2d 778 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 So. 2d 214, 1960 Fla. App. LEXIS 2526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-cox-fladistctapp-1960.