Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Coupland

143 So. 133, 106 Fla. 111
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 143 So. 133 (Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Coupland) 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
Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Coupland, 143 So. 133, 106 Fla. 111 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 113 This is a companion case to that of Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Loblaw, et al, filed this term wherein the appeal was taken from a final decree of the Circuit Court of Lake County in a mortgage foreclosure between the same parties, and as the issues are kindred and similar, attention is here directed to the pleadings and facts involved in that case given in the opinion as bearing upon the instant case.

The appeal in the instant case involves a tax deedforeclosure on the same property instituted by the same Complainant against the same Defendants while the appeal is from an order of the same Circuit Court denying a motion of complainant (Appellant herein) to strike the answer of Defendant, Consolidated Paving Company (Appellee herein).

A restatement of some of the facts involved in the mortgage foreclosure case, in connection with some of the facts in the instant case, appears necessary here in order to understand all the issues involved. They are in substance as follows:

Mrs. Ella M. Johnston, a married woman, purchased certain land in Lake County (subject-matter of this suit) as her separate property and as grantee in her deed she assumed and agreed to pay as part of the "purchase price" a certain outstanding first mortgage held by C. H. Wilson and wife covering the same property; subsequently, while owner and in possession, Mrs. Johnston, joined by her *Page 114 husband, gave to the Appellee, Consolidated Paving Company (then the Cox-Bryson Paving Company) a written contract for constructing paving through the said property, in which there is contained a covenant which constitutes said contract a lien against said property of the "same force and effect as a second mortgage deed;" that after the paving was completed and approved, Mrs. Johnston joined by her husband, conveyed the property to Percy T. Coupland and wife from whom she collected the initial cash payment and later received full payment of her total equity by foreclosure of a "second mortgage" given to her by said Coupland and wife as part of the purchase price, and in said deed said Coupland and wife also covenanted to pay the first mortgage and the paving lien of the Consolidated Paving Company, one of the Defendants herein; that T. P. Loblaw, of Canada, was the purchaser at the sale under the second mortgage foreclosure, but he appears to have taken no part in either of the instant cases. It further appears that after Mrs. Johnston had conveyed the premises, and after she had been made a free dealer, she purchased tax certificates covering most of said property which were converted into tax deeds to Complainant and are here being foreclosed; that Mrs. Johnston personally furnished the funds with which the certificates were purchased, but the title to said tax-deeds were taken in the name of the corporation, Appellant here, as she had before done when she took an assignment of the first mortgage; that pending the consideration of the bill to foreclose the said first mortgage, the same complainant filed the bill in the instant case to foreclose said tax deeds in which there is likewise a prayer for a decree of superiority of said tax deeds over the paving mortgage liens of the said Consolidated Paving Company executed by Mr. and Mrs. Johnston and her husband while she was owner and in possession, also a prayer that Defendants be given a reasonable time within which to pay said tax lien or be *Page 115 "forever foreclosed." To this tax foreclosure bill the said Paving Company filed its answer and set up by way of counter-claim the amount still due on the said paving contract secured by said paving lien which defendant avers had become a superior lien as the mortgage and tax deeds being foreclosed by Complainant had merged in Mrs. Johnston, also avers that said corporation was organized as a subterfuge to defeat said Defendant's lien; and it is argued that Complainant could not in equity be considered in the status of a third party. The answer also contains a prayer that the lien of defendant paving company be adjudged superior in dignity to the tax deeds of complainant corporation, and that the Court decree that the amounts of money so paid by Complainant for said tax certificates, tax deeds and costs be decreed to be funds paid for the protection of the interests of both complainant and defendant, and that defendant be dismissed with its reasonable costs.

The only assignment of error presented in the instant case for review, is whether or not the trial court committed error in denying the motion to strike that portion of the Defendant's answer setting up the cross claim.

Under the above assignment Appellant contends: (1st) that the affirmative matters set up by the defendant paving company are not such as are allowed to be interposed as a counter-claim in a foreclosure of the said tax deeds; (2nd) that the said tax deeds being foreclosed are superior liens to that of defendant, and (3rd) that if the paving lien is a proper subject-matter of a counter-claim, that Mr. and Mrs. Johnston are necessary parties defendant thereto and must be served with process. The question also arises as to what are the rights of the complainant who holds at the same time the tax deeds and the said first mortgage covering the same premises, both of which Mrs. Johnston as grantee in her deed agreed to pay, and is now through her own corporation separately foreclosing as against the said *Page 116 paving company whose lien has the "same force and effect as a second mortgage."

As to the first question there could scarcely be any doubt that the counter-claim contained in defendant's answer may be properly interposed under Section 4906 (3120) C. G. L. 1927, which provides that any such counter-claim may be so interposed when it arises out of the same transaction which is the subject matter of the suit or where it constitutes the subject matter of an independent suit in equity against Complainant touching the same property.

The bill of complaint in terms seeks to have defendant's mortgage lien for paving declared inferior to complainant's tax lien by forever foreclosing same upon failure or refusal of defendant to pay in full the amount set up as a prior lien upon said premises. The answer is in response to that allegation, and undertakes to show why Defendant's lien should not be adjudged inferior by showing that Mrs. Johnston, who is in fact, if not in name, the Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc., had only paid the taxes which she had by covenant obligated herself to pay when she bought the property and when she executed defendant's mortgage lien to secure the cost of the paving, and by so doing also protected her own mortgage lien. The matter set up in the answer not only arose out of the subject-matter of the original bill, but was connected with and made an issue by complainant's bill, and therefore constituted a proper subject matter for equitable counter-claim. See Turner, et al., vs. Utley, et al., 93 Fla. 910, 112 So.2d 837; Lovett v. Lovett, 93 Fla. 611, 112 So.2d 768; Gentry-Futch Co. v. Gentry, 90 Fla. 595, 106 So.2d 473; Levitt v. Axelson 102 Fla. 233, 135 So.2d 553; Tilton v. Horton, 103 Fla. 497, 137 So.2d 801.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

JAB ENTERPRISES v. Gibbons
596 So. 2d 1247 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1992)
Ago
Florida Attorney General Reports, 1974
Gates v. Roberts
85 So. 2d 862 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1956)
Baldwin Co. v. Blaisdell
82 So. 2d 587 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1955)
Bie, Et Ux. v. Hulet
5 So. 2d 457 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1942)
Hillsborough Investment Company v. City of Tampa
5 So. 2d 256 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1941)
Smith, Et Vir v. City of Arcadia
2 So. 2d 725 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1941)
Horn v. City of Miami Beach
194 So. 620 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1940)
Holloway, Et Ux. v. Sewell
191 So. 825 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)
Bauman v. Healy
193 So. 773 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)
Rives v. Anderson
175 So. 897 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
Hughes, Et Vir v. Shaner
174 So. 400 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1937)
Pacific Coast Investment Co. v. Jones
63 P.2d 888 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1936)
First Nat. Bank of Bradenton v. Albee
169 So. 613 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)
Malone v. Nelson
167 So. 714 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)
Miller v. Ellenwood
164 So. 140 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1935)
Hirsch v. Lincoln Securities Co.
160 So. 12 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Florida Land Holding Corp. v. Lee
159 So. 7 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Quinby v. Meyer
148 So. 869 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 So. 133, 106 Fla. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clermont-minneola-country-club-inc-v-coupland-fla-1932.