Beasley v. Burnett

1 So. 2d 260, 146 Fla. 421, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1162
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 260 (Beasley v. Burnett) 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
Beasley v. Burnett, 1 So. 2d 260, 146 Fla. 421, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1162 (Fla. 1941).

Opinion

Buford, J.

Appeal is from final decree in favor of defendants in a suit wherein plaintiff sought a decree granting “a restraining order by the terms of which the defendant Burnett, as clerk of the circuit court, ór in any other capacity, and the defendant W. P. Ellis, be restrained and enjoined from further advertising the lands involved in this cause for a tax deed, as shown by plaintiff’s Exhibit ‘A’ and from exposing for sale, or selling said lands on the 3rd day of October, 1938, or at any other time, and from as *422 signing, or transferring said certificates to any person other than plaintiff, and from doing any act, or thing, which will prevent, or interfere with plaintiff’s right to purchase said certificates under the provisions of the Murphy Act, and for such other interlocutory orders and decrees as may be necessary, or which seem meet to the Court to prevent the mischief, which the plaintiff verily apprehends will be done by the defendants unless so restrained, and that the defendant Burnett, by decree of this Court, be required to accept the application of the plaintiff to purchase said certificates under the provisions of the Murphy Act aforesaid, and the plaintiff prays process of this Honorable Court directed to the. defendants D. F. Burnett, Jr., as clerk, W. P. Ellis and R. L. Ellinor.” ■■

The record' shows in effect that on or about December 10^ 1937, R. L. Millinor owned considerable real estate in Madison County, Florida, consisting of improved, and perhaps some unimproved, property in the Town of Madison, lots in unincorporated villages, and rural farm and timber lands, upon all of which he was delinquent in the payment of taxes and many tax sale certificates were outstanding. Millinor was in bad financial condition and a kinsman, plaintiff in the court below, had advanced to him large loans of money and taken real estate mortgages to secure the payment of the loans.

This is the second appearance of this case here. See Beasley v. Burnett, 140 Fla. 231, 191 Sou. 459.

The chancellor in disposing of the issues carefully analyzed the evidence and made his findings thereon in the final decree as follows:

“This cause has heretofore been before the Supreme Court on the pleadings by way of interlocutory appeal, Beasley v. Burnett, 191 So. 459, and therein the Court said, in substance, that if Ellis bought the certificates and paid *423 face value for them, he was entitled to have them assigned to him, but if because of agreement between he and Clark Burnett, the sale was a sham effectuated so that Ellis could demand a consideration for their relinquishment to Beasley, that such would be a fraudulent arrangement and violative of law. Further, that if Ellis so purchased the certificates under other existing law, it was lawful for him to do so, provided there was no prior and pending application for their sale under the Murphy Act. Further, that the main question was, whether or not the sale to Ellis was bona fide, before there was an application for sale under the Murphy Act by Beasley.
“Our Supreme Court having held that ‘if Ellis purchased the certificates under other existing law, it was lawful for him to do so, provided there was no prior pending application for their sale under the Murphy Act.’ The first question to be determined then, is, did Mr. Beasley have or make a prior sufficient application under the Murphy Act at the time of the sale of the certificates to Ellis. It seems to the Court that the testimony of Mr. Beasley shows within itself that he did not. The record shows that when he first talked to Mr. Burnett on December 10, 1937, that he simply expressed a desire to take up some of the Millinor lands, but he did not know which of the lands he wanted to take up. Therefore, he asked Clerk Burnett to make up a list of the lands and sent to him at his home in Columbia, Tenn., and he would then check them over and advise him what he wanted. On December 30, 1937, Clerk Burnett sent to him the list of the lands together with a Murphy Act request sheet and a letter in which he requested Mr. Beasley to check the lands, sign the request sheet, and return the list and sheet to him, and he would advise him as to the cost of taking them up under the Murphy Act. Did Mr. Beasley do that? The record shows that he did not. Instead, the *424 clerk never heard a word from Mr. Beasley, until July 18, 1938, more than six months thereafter, when he appeared in Clerk Burnett’s office in Madison two days after Ellis had purchased the certificates, on July 16, 1938. Why did Mr. Beasley sit silent for more than six months without replying to the clerk and telling him what he wanted?”

The chancellor then quotes in the decree much of the testimony of Mr. Beasley, which is unnecessary to be quoted here, and then continued:

“So it is clear from'Mr. Beasley’s own testimony that he did not reply to Mr. Burnett, but waited six months to attend to it, and the reasons were (1) that he thought he had until July, 1939, in which to make application, and he was in no hurry, (2) that he did not know which lands he wanted to take up or leave out, (3) that he decided to wait until ‘the normal course of events’ carried him back to Florida so he could tell Mr. Burnett what he wanted, (4) that the ‘normal course of events’ did not bring him back to Florida 'until July 18, 1938, more than six months after he had received Mr. Burnett’s letter and during which time, so far ■as Mr. Burnett was concerned, he did not open his mouth. The Court presumes- that Mr. Beasley must have thought that Mr. Burnett should divine his intents and purposes by some sort of mental telepathy. It is also clear to this Court that Mr. Beasley made no application either verbal or written to Mr. Burnett to sell these lands under the Murphy Act, and that at the time Mr. Ellis bought the certificates Mr. Beasley had no Murphy Act rights out of which he could be defrauded.
“When Mr. Ellis directed advertisement for deed to begin on the certificates he purchased, Mr. Burnett promptly notified Mr. Beasley so he could redeem them if he wanted to before deed issued thereon. Then Mr. Beasley came to Madison on September 14, 1938, and going into Mr. Bur *425 nett’s office, demanded to be allowed to take up the lands under the Murphy Act although he knew the advertisement for deed was then being published, and to impress his demand, apparently, he got out a roll of hundred dollar bills and peeling off four of them (See R. P. 45) demanded to know if that was enough for him to take up the lands under the Murphy Act. Mr. Burnett told him the lands were being advertised and he could do nothing about it. Mr. Burnett thought Mr. Beasley was trying to bribe him, but the Court does not think so, for after hearing and observing Mr.

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Related

Peninsula Land Company v. Howard
6 So. 2d 384 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 260, 146 Fla. 421, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beasley-v-burnett-fla-1941.