Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Loblaw

143 So. 129, 106 Fla. 122, 1932 Fla. LEXIS 967
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 143 So. 129 (Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc. v. Loblaw) 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. Loblaw, 143 So. 129, 106 Fla. 122, 1932 Fla. LEXIS 967 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

This cause is here upon appeal from the Circuit Court of Lake County from that portion of the final decree rendered in favor of the counter-claim of the Consolidated Paving Company interposed in the mortgage foreclosure proceeding instituted herein by Clermont-Minneola County Club, Inc.

In substance the essential facts are that Mrs. Ella M. Johnston, a married woman (not then being a free dealer), on August 28, 1923, purchased from A. B. Connor and wife certain lands in Lake County as her separate property, and in the deed of conveyance assumed and agreed to pay a first mortgage of $19,740.00, held by C. H. Wilson and wife given by A. B. Connor and wife, as part of the purchase price, payable in eight equal annual installments with interest, evidenced by notes, the first of which had been paid at the time of said conveyances; that during her ownership, Mrs. Johnston joined by her husband, executed and delivered to the Cox Bryson Paving Company (afterwards reorganized as the Consolidated Paving Company) a second lien upon the same property agreeing to pay said paving company $4,317.70 for construction of sand-clay hard surfaced roads through said property which was subdivided into building lots and a golf course; that on January 4, 1927, Mrs. Johnston joined by her husband, deeded said premises (not already sold off in lots) to Dr. Percy T. Coupland and wife, who in said deed likewise assumed and agreed to pay the balance of said first mortgage, and also agreed in said deed to pay the lien of the Cox Bryson Paving Company; that after Mrs. Johnston had so divested herself of the legal title, she received payment in full of "something over $38,000.00" for her equity in the lands from the proceeds of a foreclosure of her second mortgage executed by the said Percy T. Coupland and wife who, it appears, never paid off the remainder of the first mortgage nor the said lien for paving held by the Cox Bryson Paving *Page 125 Company; that on April 28, 1930, she purchased with her own funds the said first mortgage (then reduced to $12,642.48) which was however assigned by the holder to the Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc., then being organized by Mrs. Johnston who issued stock in the Company to herself, her husband, daughter and son-in-law; that after the mortgage had been assigned, at the direction of Mrs. Johnston, to the Complainant Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc., the latter filed foreclosure proceedings against the property involved, except thirteen lots which she had become owner of in her own name, and made the Cox Bryson Paving Company, among others, one of the defendants, also named as defendants Mr. and Mrs. Johnston.

The Consolidated Paving Company filed their answer, in due course, in which it is alleged that of the sum of $4,317.70, agreed to be paid it by Mrs. Johnston for constructing the sand-clay roads through the property, that only $2,000.00 had been paid. The answer further states that the work performed by said paving company was duly accepted by Mrs. Johnston; that it constituted a permanent improvement and a lien upon said lands, and that the said lien had been duly filed and recorded in the public records of Lake County; that although Mrs. Johnston had been paid the full price for her equity in the property she had failed and refused to pay the Defendant the balance due on said lien for paving.

The answer further states that prior to April 28, 1930, Mrs. Johnston and her husband for the purpose of defrauding the Defendant Paving Company, and for the purpose of destroying said lien, had fraudulently formed an alleged corporation known as the Clermont-Minneola Country Club, Inc., (Appellant) in which they held all shares of stock except one share each given their son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Linbaugh; that the said assignment of said mortgage to the said corporation by the direction *Page 126 of Mrs. Johnston was a mere subterfuge for the purpose of defrauding the defendant paving company and an attempt to evade payment of the amount remaining due under said lien. The Court allowed said defendant to file an amendment to the answer which in substance asked that an accounting be had for the purpose of determining the amount due the said paving company and that said amount so found be declared to be a lien upon the described property superior to the mortgage, and that it be paid before any other payments shall be made to complainant under said foreclosure proceeding, and that the Defendant be granted such other and further relief as the Court may deem proper.

Thereafter a motion was made by the Complainant to strike several paragraphs of the answer, including that portion setting up the counter-claim, on the grounds that it did not set up any defense to the bill of complaint, nor any facts that would show that the defendant has been prejudiced or damaged by any of the transactions therein set up or complained of, and does not show any facts that would alter the priority of the lien of said mortgage sought to be foreclosed.

When the above motion came on for hearing it was denied by the Court, and thereupon a replication to the said answer was filed by the Complainant; end upon the issues thus made testimony was duly taken which resulted in a final decree being rendered sustaining the contention of the defendant paving company by making its claim a lien superior in dignity to that of said mortgage and requiring its claim to be first paid from the proceeds of the foreclosure sale. From this final decree an appeal was taken by Complainant, and the cause is here for review.

Only the First and Third Assignments of Error are insisted upon here. The First is directed to the denial of the motion of complainant to strike designated portions of *Page 127 the answer, which included the affirmative answer setting up the counter-claim of the defendant paving company; the Third Assignment is directed to that portion of the decree adjudicating that the said lien of the Consolidated Paving Company became a prior encumbrance to the mortgage lien being foreclosed by complainant.

It is observed that three of the paragraphs which complainant moved to strike from the answer of the defendant as not setting up any defense to the allegations of the bill of complaint, merely allege that defendant neither admits nor denies" certain designated paragraphs of the bill and "demands strict proof thereof."

Section 4904 (3118) C. G. L. 1927, (Sec. 34 Chap. 14658 Acts of 1931), requires the answering defendant to either specifically (1) admit, or (2) deny, or (3) explain the facts upon which the defendant relies, "unless the defendant iswithout knowledge, in which case he shall so state, such statement operating as a denial." This court, in the case of Bostwick v. Van Sant, 98 Fla. 565, 124 So.2d 14, held that:

"It is not sufficient merely to state that he 'neither admits nor denies.' He must, as to all material allegations either admit them, or, if he has no knowledge of the facts alleged, he may disclaim such knowledge and require strict proof if he so desires."

If a defendant undertakes to answer any material allegation of the bill, he is required to make it full, true and direct, and failing to do so, the effect may be the same as to omit it.

Where a defendant in his answer avers that he "neither admits nor denies" a stated material allegation of a bill of complaint but "demands strict proof," it is equivalent to no answer, and is therefore subject to a motion to strike. If he is "without knowledge," he must so state and in such event it operates as a denial and may thus require proof on the part of complainant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 So. 129, 106 Fla. 122, 1932 Fla. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clermont-minneola-country-club-inc-v-loblaw-fla-1932.