Blackburn v. Venice Inlet Co.

38 So. 2d 43, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 1027
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 3, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 43 (Blackburn v. Venice Inlet Co.) 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
Blackburn v. Venice Inlet Co., 38 So. 2d 43, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 1027 (Fla. 1948).

Opinion

Creditor's bill by Mary M. Blackburn, joined by her husband and next friend, A.E. Blackburn, against Venice Inlet Company and others, to subject certain lands *Page 44 to two judgments owned by plaintiff wife. From decree dismissing amended bill of complaint, the plaintiffs appeal.

Affirmed. On July 18, 1929, two judgments were entered in the Circuit Court of Sarasota County, Florida, against B.L.E. Realty Corporation. One of the judgments was in favor of Joe Gill in the sum of $27,348.64 and the other was in favor of the Bank of Sarasota in the sum of $35,310.76. One of the judgments was assigned to the plaintiff, Mary M. Blackburn, on July 26, 1934, which assignment was recorded December 11, 1936. The other judgment was assigned to Mary M. Blackburn on May 1, 1936. Executions issued on the aforesaid judgments but nulla bona returns were made thereon by the Sheriff of Sarasota County.

On April 15, 1929, a mortgage from B.L.E. Realty Corporation to the Board of Financial Trustees of the Grand International Division of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers in the sum of $50,000.00, encumbering certain described lands, was executed and filed for record and fully recorded in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Sarasota County, Florida, on April 17, 1929. On July 24, 1931, the Board of Financial Trustees of the Grand International Division of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers assigned the aforesaid note and mortgage to the Miakka Estates, Inc., a Florida corporation. On January 19, 1935, the Miakka Estates, Inc., assigned and transferred the note and mortgage to Herman Myers.

In February, 1935, Herman Myers filed in the Circuit Court of Sarasota County a suit to foreclose the mortgage supra. M.A. Smith, as Liquidator of the Bank of Sarasota, and Joe Gill, judgment creditors, were each made parties defendant to the mortgage foreclosure instituted by Herman Myers. (Mrs. Mary M. Blackburn obtained an assignment of one of the judgments on July 26, 1934, but the assignment was not recorded until December 11, 1936.) Decrees pro confesso were entered against M.A. Smith, as Liquidator of the Bank of Sarasota, and Joe Gill, judgment creditors, supra, H.M. Wimmers, as Receiver for B.L.E. Realty Corporation, the B.L.E. Realty Corporation, and Venice-Nokomis Bank on the rule day in March, 1935, for failure to appear and defend the foreclosure. Service by publication was obtained on other defendants to the foreclosure.

After decrees pro confesso had been entered in the cause against the defendants, who had been personally served with process or by publication, the Chancellor then heard all the evidence offered by the plaintiff, Herman Myers, and on April 13, 1935, made and entered a final decree of foreclosure and sale of the real property described in the mortgage. The final decree appointed Frank Evans as Special Master to execute the decree and the property was sold and an order confirming the sale and the execution and delivery of a Special Master's deed to Herman Myers was entered by the Chancellor on May 8, 1935. Pending the foreclosure proceedings, Herman Myers formed the Venice Inlet Company, a Florida corporation, and took title to the property and in 1935 went into the possession thereof and made heavy expenditures in improvements of the property.

The appellants, plaintiffs below, on December 17, 1946, filed a creditor's bill in the Circuit Court of Sarasota County, Florida, against Venice Inlet Company, Herman Myers and H.M. Wimmers, as Receiver of the B.L.E. Realty Corporation, and prayed for a decree subjecting the lands described in that certain mortgage assigned and transferred on July 24, 1931 by the Board of Financial Trustees of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers to the Miakka Estates, Inc., and on January 19, 1935, *Page 45 sold and transferred by the Miakka Estates, Inc., for and in consideration of the sum of $5000.00 to Herman Myers, to the two judgments then owned by Mary M. Blackburn. It is not denied that M.A. Smith, as Liquidator of the Bank of Sarasota, and Joe Gill, former owners of the two judgments, were each made parties defendant to the foreclosure of said mortgage by Herman Myers, and the Venice Inlet Company, a Florida corporation, was organized during the time of foreclosure.

Pertinent allegations of the creditor's bill are viz.: (1) the B.L.E. Realty Corporation now owns the equitable title to said land and Venice Inlet Company is simply holding the property for the B.L.E. Realty Corporation for the purpose of shielding this asset from the plaintiffs' judgment; (2) the mortgage Herman Myers bought and foreclosed was a fake mortgage and without consideration, as the Miakka Estates, Inc., was the alter ego of B.L.E. Realty Corporation; that it attempted to assign the fake mortgage to Herman Myers, agent of the B.L.E. Realty Corporation and of the Grand International Division of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, and was a conspirator to defeat the rights of creditors; (3) that Myers, to cover up and perpetuate a fraud and a shield against the plaintiffs' judgment, caused to be created the Venice Inlet Company, and, after organization, conveyed said property to it; that the Venice Inlet Company has no interest in the property other than to perpetuate a fraud and is simply holding the property for the B.L.E. Realty Corporation; (4) Herman Myers, as agent for B.L.E. Realty Corporation, having organized the Venice Inlet Company for the purpose of creating a holding company to hold and receive the title involved in this suit and to perpetuate a fraud upon the plaintiffs as judgment creditors and to prevent the collection of the two judgments; (5) the Venice Inlet Company is operated and controlled by the agent and co-conspirator of the B.L.E. Realty Corporation and its associated companies, Herman Myers, and the title to the property is in B.L.E. Realty Corporation; (6) the discovery of the property described in this suit has been made since the last creditor's bill in Chancery Suit No. 4121 filed in the Circuit Court of Sarasota County during 1936 and the suit at bar was brought immediately after discovery of said information.

Answers were filed by the defendants and testimony in support of the issues made by the pleadings was offered by the parties and heard by the Chancellor below. The Chancellor heard oral arguments on final hearing and thereafter entered an order dismissing the amended bill of complaint. The plaintiffs appealed. Counsel for appellants have posed several questions here for adjudication, but all of them converge or center around the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the pertinent or material allegations of the amended bill. An answer to the following question should place at rest many of the posed questions: Did the chancellor on final hearing err or abuse his discretion in holding that the plaintiffs-appellants failed to establish by competent testimony the material allegations of the amended bill of complaint and decreeing the equities of the cause to be with the defendants? Or, in another form, did the Chancellor, in consideration of the entire record, commit reversible error in dismissing the amended bill of complaint on final hearing?

Counsel for appellants contend that the mortgage from B.L.E. Realty Corporation dated April 15, 1929, to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and by the latter, on July 24, 1931, assigned to Miakka Estates, Inc., and by Miakka Estates, Inc., sold to Herman Myers for the sum of $5000.00 on January 19, 1935, was and is fraudulent and void. This contention is bottomed squarely on our ruling in Wimmers v. Blackburn, 151 Fla. 236, 9 So.2d 505.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 43, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackburn-v-venice-inlet-co-fla-1948.