Carman v. Gunn

198 So. 2d 76, 1967 Fla. App. LEXIS 4740
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 5, 1967
DocketNo. 7229
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 So. 2d 76 (Carman v. Gunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carman v. Gunn, 198 So. 2d 76, 1967 Fla. App. LEXIS 4740 (Fla. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

PIERCE, Judge.

This is an appeal by H. Marcus Carman, plaintiff below, from a final decree entered by the Pinellas County Circuit Court in favor of John Harry Gunn, defendant below, denying relief in a specific performance suit. The parties will be referred to as they were in the Court below.

By amended complaint, plaintiff sought the aid of the chancery Court in requiring defendant to specifically perform a written agreement entered into by the parties on June'3, 1964, whereby defendant agreed to sell to plaintiff all his stock in a solely-owned corporation known as True Realty Co., Inc., for the sum of $137.50 cash and a like sum each month thereafter for and during the lifetime of defendant, or for a period of five years from date of the agreement, whichever was longer. It was provided that in the event of defendant’s death within said period, such monthly payments would be then made to Mrs. Reglita V. Reyes, his housekeeper, until the five year period expired on June 3, 1969.

The corporation, hereinafter referred to as True Realty, held title to defendant’s realty holdings, consisting largely of property bordering upon or near the Little Withlacoochee River in Sumter County. The property was the remaining accumulations of defendant from many years of buying and selling property in that area, dating back to acquisition of tax delinquent properties under the old Murphy Act of the latter 1930’s. The corporate entity had been created as a convenience to defendant in dealing in real estate because he was then laboring under disability of an insane wife.

After the agreement of June 3, 1964, plaintiff sent to defendant promptly each month his check for the requisite monthly payment of $137.50. However, defendant refused to either cash or return any of them, including the original check given at the time the agreement was made. Defendant also refused to convey or transfer his stock in the corporation as provided in the agreement.

By answer, the defendant admitted executing the contract, admitted receiving the monthly checks and not cashing any of them, and admitted owning all stock of True Realty and that its main asset was real estate; alleged that on the day the agreement was signed his “physical and mental condition was such that he was incapable of transacting business,” that he had been “suffering from an asthmatic condition,” that “lack of sleep had dulled his mental facilities (sic)” so that he was “not able to comprehend the meaning” or understand the terms of the agreement; that he had just passed his 69th birthday and “has a shortened life expectancy because of his [78]*78asthmatic condition and other physical infirmities”; and that the agreement contemplated transfer of the stock only “after full payment therefor” and that it would be inequitable to require such transfer prior to full payment “because the defendant would be left without any security for future payments by the plaintiff.”

Thus the issues drawn by the pleadings were extremely narrow, consisting of only two substantial questions, (1) the legality of the agreement from the standpoint of defendant’s competency to execute the same, and (2) the enforceability of the agreement as against the claim that it lacked mutuality of remedy. After trial and taking of sworn testimony, the Chancellor entered final decree on November 22, 1966, finding that the agreement was for the purpose of transferring to plaintiff the entire outstanding stock of True Realty, whose sole asset was title to approximately 275 acres of real property in Sumter County which was free and clear of any encumbrance of record; that the monthly payment checks had been received by defendant but not “negotiated”; that defendant’s physical condition when he executed the agreement was such that he was not unaware of his actions and therefore “knew, or should have known, the contents of said contract”; that the acts and conduct of plaintiff did not “in any way amount to fraud, overreaching, or sharp practices”; that while the agreement was ostensibly for the purchase of corporate stock it was actually an agreement “for the purchase of real property” and viewed thusly “its terms were not sufficiently certain nor could there be a mutuality of remedy thereunder”; and that the agreement was not equitable because of “a complete lack of adequate security for the defendant” and therefore should not be specifically enforced although “the amount of the consideration is not in and of itself inadequate.” The decree thereupon denied specific performance without prejudice to plaintiff pursuing any “action at law” he might have.

We agree with the able Chancellor upon his findings and hold there was credible, substantial evidence to sustain the same, except such findings as bear upon the decretal order denying specific performance, as to which we are impelled to disagree and must reverse.

The testimony reveals a most interesting human interest story. At the time of the agreement, defendant was a retired dentist living in St. Petersburg and had organized the True Realty corporation some thirty years before for the sole purpose of being able to handle real estate transactions over his own signature notwithstanding a then incompetent spouse. He lived alone in a home owned and occupied by his housekeeper Mrs. Reyes, and had been retired only about four years. Although Dr. Gunn stated he was feeling “so bad” physically when the agreement was signed that he in effect didn’t know what he was doing, he displayed in his testimony a remarkable mental alertness and agility which is readily apparent even from the cold record. His memory was acutely sharp and incisive, being able at will to recall dates, persons, locations, geographical descriptions, transactions, occurrences, etc., in trenchant detail, such as would challenge a much younger person of the keenest intellect. He displayed a rare insight into comparable values, relative locations of property, trends of realty developments, and generally all facets of the real estate field. It is apparent that in asserting his inability to comprehend the nature of the agreement when it was signed, he, to use a trite, hackneyed expression, “protesteth too much.”

The negotiations and actual execution of the agreement in question came about in meetings between plaintiff, Dr. Gunn, and one George R. Boortsalas. Boortsalas had known Dr. Gunn for some ’ten or twelve years, first as a dentist, and later through accounting work with a realty company. He had known plaintiff Carman about five or six years as an acquaintance at stockholder’s meetings of a development organization. Prior to June 3, 1964, Dr. Gunn had [79]*79asked Boortsalas “about selling the property” and Boortsalas “had indicated that Mr. Carman might be interested.” Thereafter, around June 1st, Boortsalas chanced upon Carman and mentioned to him “that Dr. Gunn was interested in selling the property” and' “would he be interested in meeting Dr. Gunn.” Carman indicated that he would, so Boortsalas phoned Dr. Gunn and asked him “would he be interested in meeting with Mr. Carman, and he said yes.” Dr. Gunn “set the time” for the meeting for the following afternoon around 1 or 2 o’clock, at which time Carman and Boortsalas went to Dr. Gunn’s home, where the deal was discussed at length, Boortsalas listening but taking no part otherwise in the conversation. Boortsalas testified that in the early stages of the discussion Dr. Gunn did most of the talking. They then discussed the deal at length.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 2d 76, 1967 Fla. App. LEXIS 4740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carman-v-gunn-fladistctapp-1967.