Bay View Estates Corp. v. Southerland

154 So. 894, 114 Fla. 635
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 30, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 154 So. 894 (Bay View Estates Corp. v. Southerland) 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
Bay View Estates Corp. v. Southerland, 154 So. 894, 114 Fla. 635 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

— This suit was begun by J. Julien Southerland in the Circuit Court for the Eleventh Circuit in Dade County against Bay View Estates Corporation, L. T. Cooper Company, Tresulee Company, Municipal Investment Company, all corporations, Ethel M. Hauk and her husband, Paul Hauk, and J. O. Phillips.

The suit is in equity and is a creditor’s bill in which it is sought to declare null and void certain conveyances, mortgages and assignments of mortgages, and that the lands affected by such transactions be declared to be the property of Bay View Corporation and subject to a certain judgment lien held by the complainant against that corporation.

The judgment lien was in the form of a deficiency decree obtained by the First Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation, as Trustee against Bay View Estates Corporation in June, 1931, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The suit in that case was brought to enforce a mortgage lien given by the Bay View Estates Corporation to J. K. Dorn Real Estate & Investment Company and by that Company assigned and transferred to the First Trust & Savings Bank, as Trustee, together with the promissory notes, four in number aggregating seventy thousand dollars face value, for the payment of which the mortgage was executed to secure. The suit resulted in a decree in favor of the complainant, a sale of the mortgaged land and deficiency judgment in favor of the complainant in the sum of thirty-three thousand nine hundred and forty-eight dollars. In August, 1931, the judgment was assigned to *638 the complainant in this cause, J. Julien Southerland. The notes secured by the mortgage were dated in July, 1925.

The Bay View Estates Corporation in October, 1927, conveyed certain lots to Tresulee Company, which deed of conveyance was duly recorded in November, 1927. The Tresulee Company gave a note to the vendor for ten thousand dollars and a mortgage on the lands to secure the payment of it. In November, 1930, the Bay View Estates Corporation assigned the mortgage to L. T. Cooper Company. Those transactions were alleged to be without consideration.

In October, 1927, the Bay View Estates Corporation conveyed certain other lots to Tresulee Company, and in November following that Company executed its note for three thousand dollars and a mortgage on the lots to secure its payment to the vendor. In August, 1931, 'the Bay View Estates assigned that mortgage to Ethel M. Hauk, who was president of the corporation. Those transactions were alleged to be without consideration.

In October, 1927, the Bay View Estates Corporation conveyed certain other lots to Tresulee Company which Company in December, 1928, executed to the vendor its note for three thousand dollars and a mortgage on the property to secure its payment. That note and mortgage also were assigned by the Bay View Estates Corporation to Ethel M. Hauk in August, 1931. Those transactions were alleged to be without consideration. During the same month in 1927 other conveyances were made to the Tresulee Company, all of which alleged to be without consideration.

In April, 1928, Municipal Investment Company executed a mortgage to the Bay View Estates Corporation to secure an indebtedness of fifteen thousand dollars. That mortgage was assigned to Ethel M. Hauk without consideration, so it is alleged.

*639 It is alleged that L. T. Cooper during his lifetime owned and controlled the Bay View Estates Corporation and Tresulee Company and was the husband of Ethel M. Cooper, who after his death became Ethel M. Hauk and President of the Bay View Estates Corporation; that L. N. Conrad at the time of the execution of mortgage to Dorn Real Estate and Investment Company was vice-president of the Bay View Estates Corporation and president of Tresulee Company.

The bill does not allege that the deficiency judgment obtained by the First Trust & Savings Bank as Trustee against the Bay View Estates Corporation has ever been recorded in Dade County, Florida, but a copy of the decree granting a deficiency judgment in the case by the Judge of the United States District Court was attached to the bill and made a part of it. It appears from that exhibit that a copy of the judgment was recorded in Book 9 of Satisfaction and Assignment of Judgment of the public records of Dade County on September 10, 1931.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed in July, 1932. On October 3, 1932, Mrs. Hauk moved to dismiss it and Paul M. Hauk, her husband, answered disclaiming any knowledge of the matter alleged. The Tresulee Company also answered the bill. It averred that the complainant had full knowledge of all the assignments and mortgages alleged in the bill when he obtained by assignment the deficiency decree and more than four years has passed since the recording of the various instruments described in the bill; averred a “good and valid” consideration paid for the transfer to it of all the properties described and denies any intention to defraud the complainant or his predecessors in ownership of the decree. The answer was full as to every allegation and concluded with a motion to dismiss the bill.

On the same date Mrs. Hauk answered the bill. Her *640 answer was likewise full as to the material allegations of the bill, averred consideration paid for the transfer to her and denied all charge of fraud and set up a correspondence between her attorneys and the complainant as attorney for the First Trust & Savings Bank in the case against Bay View Estates Corporation in which he advised her attorney concerning the foreclosure proceeding and in which he stated that neither Mrs. Cooper, who áfterward became Mrs. Hauk, nor any of the Cooper heirs, had any present interest in the matters involved and suggested that her attorneys file an answer disclaiming any interest in the property involved. The answer also closed with a motion to dismiss the bill.

On the same date, October 3, 1932, the Bay View Estates Corporation answered. The answer is full to every allegation made in the bill and denies that there was in any of the transactions alleged any element of fraud, lack of consideration or intention to hinder or delay any creditor. Answering as to the foreclosure proceeding it averred that the notes were understood by the parties to the transaction not to represent an indebtedness of the Bay View Estates Corporation, but were executed solely to indicate the amount which the purchaser of the property to whom the Bay View Estates Corporation had conveyed it and who had assumed the debt had agreed to pay, that such was fully-understood by the J. K. Dorn Real Estate and Investment Company to be the nature of the transaction and was so understood by the First Trust & Savings Bank when it acquired the notes and mortgage as Trustee; that the transfer was without consideration and the Bank in the matter was merely acting in the capacity of Trustee' for Dorn Real Estate and Investment Company.

It also avers that the defendant had no knowledge of the existence of such deficiency decree until the complainant *641 had filed the bill in this case. The answer also averred that the complainant had full knowledge of all transfers of property by the defendant as alleged in the bill of complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 894, 114 Fla. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-view-estates-corp-v-southerland-fla-1934.