Beach v. Williamson

83 So. 860, 78 Fla. 611
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 83 So. 860 (Beach v. Williamson) 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
Beach v. Williamson, 83 So. 860, 78 Fla. 611 (Fla. 1919).

Opinions

Ellis, J.

— In November, 1917, E. P. Williamson exhibited his bill in the Circuit Court for Lake County against Groveland Realty Company, The Florida Development Corporation, both Florida corporations, Henry L. Bressler as administrator o.f the estate of George N. Bressler, deceased; M. A. Bressler, A. M. Bressler, Neva Mae O’Neill and her husband, M. C. O’Neill, H. L. Bressler, J. W. Beach, Geo. T. Cann as Trustee for creditors of F. D. Finsley and D. B. Hull.

The allegations of the bill in substance were that in 1913 the complainant and George N. Bressler and J. W. Beach and others were stockholders of the Florida Development Corporation, which was organized for the purpose of dealing in lands and which held a large acreage of lands in Lake County; that the corporation was without funds to pay the proper demands upon it or to properly conduct its business, and owed large sums of money, about $38,256.00, which, according to Exhibit “E” attached to the bill, it owed to about forty persons, the complainant holding $24,667.47 of the debt; that the stockholders [613]*613unanimously agreed that the Florida Development Corporation should convey all its property, real and personal, to George N. Bressler, who agreed to assume and pay all of the debts and obligations of the corporation; that pursuant to that agreement a written contract was entered into between the corporation and George N. Bressler on the 1st day of May, 1913, whereby the corporation agreed to convey to George N. Bressler all its property, real and personal, and .Bressler agreed to release all his claims and obligations against the corporation and to assume and pay all the liabilities outstanding against it. A clause in the agreement provided that it was mutually understood and agreed between the parties that the consideration for the conveyance to Bressler of all the corporation’s property was the payment to Bressler of one dollar, the release of his claims against the corporation and that he would assume and pay all its liabilities and that he would carry out and fulfill all the “selling contracts” made by it. Bressler’s claim amounted to $5,575.00; Williamson’s claim amounted to $24,000.00 and $667.47.

The bill alleges that pursuant to the agreement a list of the liabilities and contracts of the corporation was delivered to Bressler, deeds were executed and delivered to him conveying all the property of the corporation. Copies of these deeds were attached to the bill and made parts of it as Exhibits B, C and D; that complainant was the president of the corporation at that time, but that he did not reside in Florida; that Bressler and J. W. Beach were directors of the corporation and the active men in charge of its business.

It is alleged that complainant is not informed whether Bressler had paid any of the other debts of the corporation and that the bill was filed in behalf of complainant [614]*614and all other creditors whose claims Bressler had assumed and agreed to pay.

It is alleged that this arrangement above recited was urged upon the complainant and the other stockholders by Bressler and Beach, who represented that it was for the best interests of all parties, and upon such representations complainant assented to the agreement. It is alleged that prior to the consummation of this arrangement Bressler and Beach privately entered into a contract dated the same day, May 1st, 1913, of which, however, the complainant was ignorant, in which it was recited that Bressler had acquired certain lands in Lake County from Tinsley and Hull; H. S. Budd and R. F. E. Cooke; E. E. Edge and T. E. O’Keefe, and all the lands of the Florida Development Corporation and all its assets, negotiable instruments and personal property, and' by which it was agreed that Bressler should receive “net to him in cash, less all expenses, commissions, office force and necessary incidental expenses pertaining to the sale of said land contracts, real and personal property acquired (same not to include the liability of the Florida Development Corporation assumed by George N. Bressler, in the sum of thirty-three thousand two hundred- seven and 81/100 ($33,207.81) from the date of this agreement, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000.00) from the sale of the lands held by him, by contracts, deed or otherwise, acquired from the Florida Development Corporation, Tinsley & Hull, Budd & Cooke and E. E. Edge as aforesaid, he will pay unto the said ’party, of the second part (Beach) 25% of the gross receipts received thereafter as aforesaid from the sale of said land at retail, less all expenses, commissions, office force and necessary incidental expenses pertaining to the sale of said land (same not to include the liability of the Florida Development Corpora[615]*615tion assumed by George N. Bressler, iu the sum of thirty-three thousand two hundred seven and 81/100 ($33,207.81) dollars.”

Another clause of this agreement provides that Bressler was in no event to be liable to Beach for any part of the “25% hereinbefore referred to until” Bressler had'first received his one hundred thousand dollars “as aforesaid from the sale of said lands.” After which Beach “shall be entitled to twenty-five per cent of all property, both personal and real, acquired as herein set forth after reasonable time expires from date.” It was also agreed that if Tinsley & Hull, Budd & Cooke or T. E. O’Keefe should foreclose any of their mortgages on any of the lands and such lands should be.lost to the parties on account of such foreclosure, then Bressler’s one hundred thousand dollars to be received by him before Beach should come into his interest, should be reduced by five dollars per acre for all lands so lost to the parties by foreclosure. Provision was also made in the contract for any loss that Bressler might sustain on account of the contracts made by the Florida Development Corporation which he had assumed, affecting lands conveyed by the corporation, the title to which might fail. It was provided that if Bressler should sell his interests in the property before he received the $100,000.00 he should pay to Beach the sum of three thousand dollars as full payment of all his interest or claim under the contract. Beach agreed to use his influence and good will in the sale and colonization of the lands and was to receive a commission on all sales effected by him. The bill alleges that at the time this contract was made Beach was the manager and secretary of the Florida Development Corporation; that Beach at the time of filing the bill was suing for large amounts under the contract made with [616]*616Bressler involving the property conveyed by the corporation to the latter and such claims were adverse to the interests of the corporation’s 'creditors mentioned in the list which was delivered to Bressler. It is asserted that under these circumstances Beach’s claims are subordinate to those of the complainant and other creditors of the corporation, because he had. full knowledge and information of all the circumstances under which the corporation’s properties were conveyed to Bressler and himself urged the arrangement upon them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 So. 860, 78 Fla. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-williamson-fla-1919.