Carey v. Peoples Mortgage Corp.

4 Fla. Supp. 37

This text of 4 Fla. Supp. 37 (Carey v. Peoples Mortgage Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 11th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Miami-Dade County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey v. Peoples Mortgage Corp., 4 Fla. Supp. 37 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1953).

Opinion

WAYNE ALLEN, Circuit Judge.

Set forth in full below is the report of G. Kenneth Kemper, Esq., special master in chancery—

This is a suit in equity for a declaratory decree and other relief, brought by the plaintiffs Charles Carey and Elizabeth Carey, his wife, against the defendants Peoples Mortgage Corporation (hereinafter sometimes referred to as “the corporation”), Etha Beck, and John Freedman and Belle Freedman, his wife.

The complaint alleges that on or about March 4, 1952 the plaintiffs applied to the corporation in Miami for a loan on their real property in Dade County in -order to pay off an existing mortgage on the property in the sum of $1,850 and a balance they owed to a finance company in the amount of $197.12. At that time, the plaintiffs allege they signed various papers, some of which were in blank. They later discovered that the mortgage which they received was in the amount of $2,750 providing for payments in the amount of $50 monthly, bearing interest at the rate of 10% per annum. This mortgage deed bore the name of the defendant Etha Beck, as mortgagee — not the name of the corporate defendant.

Plaintiffs allege that the mortgage at that rate of interest— being in a sum greatly in excess of the amount they actually borrowed — was usurious under the provisions of section 687.03, Florida Statutes 1951. They allege that on March 21, 1952 the note and mortgage were assigned by Etha Beck to the defendants John and Belle Freedman, that the Freedmans were aware of the usurious character of the mortgage, and that the circumstances constituted [39]*39a conspiracy on the part of all the defendants to circumvent the Florida usury laws. They ask that the court judicially determine and ascertain whether the said interest contract is valid under the laws of this state and if found to be invalid, that it be declared null and void and the illegally charged interest forfeited.

Each of the defendants filed answers to the bill, denying that there was any usury or that there was any conspiracy to circumvent the usury statutes.

Two hearings were held before the master, at which all the parties were represented by their attorneys, and testimony was taken of the various parties and witnesses. The transcribed record of the proceedings before the master, consisting of 130 pages, together with 11 exhibits offered in evidence, are filed herewith.

All of the individual parties are residents of Dade County and are sui juris. The corporate defendant is a Florida corporation, and holds itself out as engaging in the business of making mortgage loans in Dade County.

This court has jurisdiction of all the parties and of the subject matter of this action. The evidence, as it developed during the hearings, showed the following—

Prior to March 4, 1952 plaintiffs owned a small duplex house on property in Dade County which was encumbered by a mortgage in favor of Ed Burts which had originally been in the amount of $3,500 but which on March 4, 1952 had a balance due and owing in the amount of $1,850. Payments on this mortgage were several months in arrears.

In addition, plaintiffs owed a small loan in the amount of $197.12 to the Family Finance Co., a Florida corporation. This loan did not constitute a mortgage against the real property.

The plaintiffs are negro people, and their real property is located in a section which may be described as a “colored section.” The plaintiff Elizabeth Carey can read and write, but the plaintiff Charles Carey can neither read nor write.

At some time shortly prior to March 4, 1952 plaintiffs heard a radio announcement concerning Peoples Mortgage Corporation. They testified that this announcement did not state that the defendant corporation was merely a mortgage brokerage company, but that they understood it actually made the mortgages which were announced. Murray Beck, president of the corporation, testified also that he did not believe the announcement stated that the corporation was merely a brokerage company.

[40]*40On March 4, 1952 both plaintiffs went to the office of the corporation in Miami and there discussed their problem with two men in the office. At that time they signed various papers. The papers they signed on that day were an application for a mortgage, admitted in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibit #2, and a note and mortgage which were admitted in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibit #4.

Plaintiffs’ exhibit #2, the application for mortgage, is a form containing several blanks. These forms are filled in in pen and ink handwriting. Among the blanks filled in in handwriting is the sum of “$2,750.00,” the amount of the mortgage applied for, and the sum of “$750.00,” the commission to be paid to the corporation. Plaintiff Elizabeth Carey testified that these handwritten fill-ins were not written on the application at the time she signed it, but she admitted that she did not read the application at the time she signed it. Plaintiff, Charles Carey did not, and could not, read the application. Murray A. Beck, who accepted the application on behalf of the corporation, testified that these blanks were filled in at the time the application was signed.

The application, which is in the form of a letter from Charles and Elizabeth Carey to the corporation, contains the following paragraph—

In consideration of your accepting employment on our behalf in this matter, we agree to pay you the sum of $750.00 as a commission; such payment to be conditioned upon the consummation of the transaction referred to herein. This payment will cover not only your commission, but also all costs incidental to the consummation of the transaction.

The sum of $750.00 in the foregoing paragraph is written in ink —the rest of the quoted paragraph is typewritten. The application also states that the mortgage to be obtained shall be in the sum of $2,750 for a period of three years, payable at $50 per month including interest at 10% per year. The mortgage signed on the same day is from the plaintiffs as mortgagors to Etha Beck, as mortgagee.

The note attached to the mortgage, which was signed on the same day, is also from the plaintiffs to Etha Beck and is in the amount of $2,750, payable $50 per month with interest at the rate of 10 % per annum, providing for 85 monthly payments. The note also provides that the entire principal and interest due thereunder shall become due and payable on March 15, 1955.

Plaintiffs testified that at the time they signed the mortgage and note they did not contain the amounts or the name of the mortgagee-payee. The witnesses to the mortgage are Murray A. Beck, [41]*41president of the corporation, and Lawrence A. Beck, his brother, an employee of the corporation. It was notarized by Lawrence A. Beck. Murray Beck testified that all the blanks on the note and mortgage were filled in at the time the Careys signed them.

As stated above, the note and mortgage signed by the plaintiffs in this case are to Etha Beck, who is the mother of the president of the corporation, Murray Beck, and of Lawrence Beck, a corporation employee. Lawrence Beck is the husband of Lillian Beck, who is an officer and stockholder of the corporation.

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9 Fla. Supp. 80 (Broward County Circuit Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Fla. Supp. 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-peoples-mortgage-corp-flacirct11mia-1953.