Brautigam v. White

64 So. 2d 781, 1953 Fla. LEXIS 1245
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 24, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 So. 2d 781 (Brautigam v. White) 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
Brautigam v. White, 64 So. 2d 781, 1953 Fla. LEXIS 1245 (Fla. 1953).

Opinion

TERRELL, Justice.

Miami Country' Club, hereinafter referred to as the Club, owns a tract of land in the City of Miami of approximately 120 acres. In lieu ■ of ordinary capital stock, the Club issued its members .450 certificates, designated as “Participating Ownership Certificates.” Said certificates provide that they are issued “subject to the articles of incorporation and By-laws of the Club and subsequent amendments thereto” and that they may be held and transferred only in accordance with the By-laws. Each ' certificate provides that' the owner “as a senior member of Miami Country Club of Miami, Florida, is the owner of an undivided one four hundred fiftieth (1/450) interest of and in the property of said Club of every kind and description which it now owns or may hereafter acquire and is entitled to all the privileges of the Club so long as he shall remain a senior member thereof in good standing.”

Dade County has determined that the lands owned by .the Club, including the buildings and improvements thereon, are needed for county purposes. Having so determined the Board of County Commissioners acting as “Dade County Port Authority” in the manner provided by Chapter 22,963, Acts of 1945, as amended by Chapter 23,296, Acts of 1947, negotiated with the officers and Board of Governors of the Club for the purchase of said properties. A price was agreed on but two-thirds of the owners of “Participating Ownership Certificates” declined to approve the sale as authorized by the By-laws of the Club. The sale having failed for this reason, the County then entered into an agreement with the holders of the “Participating Ownership Certificates” to sell their respective certificates at a price aggregating the approximate sum the County had offered the corporation. By this means the County determined that it could acquire the property of the Club, dissolve the corporation or the Club and thereby vest the title to the lands in the County.

Account of the terms of the “Participating Ownership Certificates” and provisions of section 10, article IX of the F. S.A. Constitution, serious legal impediments were raised as to the right of the County to acquire said certificates, including their effect if so acquired. To resolve these difficulties the instant suit by declaratory decree was instituted to construe the certificates and to determine whether section 10, article IX of the Constitution prohibited the County from purchasing them and thereby acquire title to the real property owned by the Club. The bill of complaint was brought as class suit on behalf of (1) all holders and owners of “Participating Ownership Certificates” and (2) on behalf of all citizens and taxpayers of Dade County. Notice to all parties was duly given as required in bond validation proceedings and the State Attorney was directed to intervene in behalf of citizens, and taxpayers.. At final hearing on the issues made by the bill of complaint, the answer of the defendants and the intervention and answer of the State Attorney and notice to show cause, evidence was taken, arguments and briefs were submitted and the court entered declaratory decree in which he determined:

(1) That the “Participating Ownership Certificates” are mere stock certificates evidencing shares of the capital stock of the Club, a corporation not for profit.

(2) That said “Participating Ownership Certificates” do not constitute evidence of ány present vested interest in the real property of the Club.

[783]*783(3) That the rights of the owners and holders of such “Participating Ownership Certificates” are as defined in the by-laws of the corporation and may he transferred by simple assignment; and

(4) Section 10, article IX of the F.S.A. Constitution is inapplicable to the situation and that Dade County is not prohibited by said provision of the Constitution from buying and owning all the “Participating Ownership Certificates” of the Club as the means of acquiring title to the real estate of said corporation, and that the amount offered by the County for them represents their fair cash value. The State Attorney has appealed from this decree.

. The first point for determination is whether the “Participating Ownership Certificates” of the Club constitute evidence of ownership of a present title to the real property of the Club, or whether they are mere stock certificates.

There is no dispute about the facts in the case, neither is it questioned by either party that the allegations of the bill of complaint bring it squarely within the provisions of Ready v. Safeway Rock Co., 157 Fla. 27, 24 So.2d 808 and Coral Gates Properties, Inc., v. Hodes, Fla., 59 So. 2d 630. Suit for declaratory decree is brought because of the doubt cast on the construction of the documents brought in question, the applicability of section 10, article IX of the F.S.A. Constitution and the large amount of public funds involved in the transaction.

Chapter 22,963, Acts of 1945 as amended by Chapter 24,296, Acts of 1947 authorizes the Board of County Commissioners, acting as Dade County Port Authority, to acquire the property of the Club by “grant, purchase, gift, devise, condemnation, exchange or in any other manner * * * or any estate or interest therein, upon such terms and conditions as the said County shall by resolution fix and determine”.

It is apparent that the “Participating Ownership Certificates” do not vest title to the interest of the members of the Club in real estate because there are no words of conveyance or description as required by the Statute of Frauds. The law requires that the words of description must be such that a surveyor can go out and locate the land. Bank of South Jacksonville v. Cammar, 89 Fla. 296, 103 So. 827. Another very pertinent reason why the certificates do not constitute muniment or evidence of title, is that they are held subject to the by-laws of the corporation and amendments thereto, paragraph 12 of which provides that the Board of Directors of the Club may sell and convey all its property upon approval of the holders of two-thirds of the certificates. From this and other provisions of the by-laws it is clear that all rights of certificate owners are governed by the by-laws, portions of which are incorporated in the certificates and negative any claim of ownership of a vested interest or title to the property of the Club. The by-laws further provide that in case of dissolution of the corporation the holder of each certificate will receive 1/450 interest in the assets of the corporation. They have been sold from time to time and regarded by the holders as mere stock certificates devoid of any muniment of title. If it were to be held that these certificates constitute evidence of present title to an interest in the real property of the Club, the difficulty in conveying the property would be almost insurmountable. Such a holding would require every owner of the 450 certificates to execute a deed joined by their wives. The interest of each holder would be subject to tax liens, judgments and other liens against it and it might be necessary to secure a deed from each former owner of any interest therein. A condemnation suit would not remove' the difficulty because every person who ever owned one of the certificates would have to be made a party to- the cause.

The next and only other point necessary to adjudicate is whether or not section 10, article IX of the State Constitution inhibits the purchase of the capital stock of the Club as a means of acquiring title to the property of the company, said section 10 being as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 2d 781, 1953 Fla. LEXIS 1245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brautigam-v-white-fla-1953.