Conant v. Blount

192 So. 481, 141 Fla. 27, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1312
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 8, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 481 (Conant v. Blount) 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
Conant v. Blount, 192 So. 481, 141 Fla. 27, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1312 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Thomas, J.

Marcus Conant died in the year 1926 leaving a last will in which his wife and J. Henry Blount, a member of the Jacksonville bar, were named executrix and executor. Testator’s wife preceded him in death and two children, a daughter and a son, survived. The son, to whom we will refer as the appellant, filed a bill of complaint against the executor, hereinafter called appellee, charging him with mismanagement of the estate, failure'to perform the duties of his trust, refusal to account, sale of property without sanction of the court and continuance of testators business without authority.

Relief prayed was accounting and reimbursement of the estate for losses occasioned by appellees misconduct.

A comprehensive answer brought to issue the allegations of the original pleading and after a hearing before the chancellor he rendered a final decree approving in certain terms and unequivocal language the conduct by appellee of the affairs of the estate.

*29 At the outset of the final hearing the appellee, on the theory that the burden rested upon him to make an accounting, offered in evidence ten annual returns and a final report together with orders of approval signed by the county judge. Then followed in the record the simple statement under oath by appellant that he was the sole legatee of the estate. At this point appellant’s counsel announced to the chancellor that there was but one question involved: the propriety of appellee’s action in forming a corporation to take over part of the assets of the estate without judicial sanction, in other words, to quote counsel: “If, as a matter of law, he was justified in doing that, there is no case against him, and if he was not justified, there is.”

Then it was that the appellee proceeded to give a history of the affairs of the deceased and narrate his management of the estate. Testator had for many years immediately prior to his death engaged in the undertaking business in Jacksonville under the trade name “Marcus Conant Company” during which time he accumulated assets approximating eighty thousand dollars. Of this amount about seventeen thousand dollars represented caskets, shrouds, automobiles, furniture and fixtures peculiar to his occupation. The real estate on which the establishment was located was heavily mortgaged and appellee sought to devise some plan to defray the expense of carrying the loan. He desired, too, to preserve the business until appellant reached the age to continue as successor to his father. One A. W. Ruus, who had been in the employ of testator for many years and who enjoyed his employer’s confidence, offered to purchase a half interest and to that end a corporation was organized, named Marcus Conant Company, with three hundred shares of capital stock and thirty thousand dollars par value. Ruus became the holder of one hundred forty-nine shares and *30 appellee one hundred fifty-one. Ruus delivered to appellee a note for fifteen thousand dollars, payable two hundred dollars monthly, in payment for the stock which became collateral for the note. The assets of seventeen thousand dollars value were conveyed to the corporation. Ruus operated the business from the time of incorporation until it went into bankruptcy in 1932. For about a month immediately prior to the organization of the company he had managed it for appellee. Bankruptcy was evidently not chargeable to poor judgment, lack of attention or inexperience, but to inability to realize upon accounts receivable during the universal economic depression complicated by increasingly keen competition. Appellant reached his majority in 1931. Fie was advised freely at all times about the condition of the business and when creditors began to press the company he and his sister, then having an interest, were fully acquainted with the emergency caused by insufficient cash and the difficulty of collecting accounts due. At that time the company had paid $11,550 in rents and owed $4,600 more. Appellee bought the property at forced sale for $4,500, receiving as a credit on his bid the amount of unpaid rent and thus he obtained much of the property originally conveyed to the corporation, had already been paid more than $11,000, and still held Ruus’ note for $15,000. As a successor in the operation of the business, which was not meanwhile interrupted, “Conant Funeral Home” was created. Seventy-two shares of its stock were issued to the estate as a consideration for the property theretofore purchased at the bankruptcy sale; one share was issued to appellee and twenty-seven shares to one E. C. Long who paid therefor $2,000, one-half to the estate ond one-half to the corporation. This organization lasted until December, 1933, and after April 1, 1933, appellant was a director. *31 The same year appellee sold the stock held by the estate to Long for $500 with appellant’s written consent. There was due rent at that time $1,800 for which Long gave his note. Early in the year 1933 appellant secured an audit and employed an attorney, all of which appellee welcomed. Subsequently appellant apologized for this activity and urged appellee not to resign as executor, which he had offered to do. In 1935 appellant purchased his sister’s interest in the estate. Again appellee obtained the property used in the undertaking business, or such of it as remained, under distress proceedings for unpaid rents of $1,375, and again he sold it, this time to Florida Funeral Home. Appellee had no interest in “Long & Ruus,” successors to Conant Funeral Home, who paid him rental of $1,300.

At the conclusion of appellee’s evidence, which was supplemented by that of an auditor from the county judge’s office, attorneys who gave opinions as to a reasonable fee and a real estate appraiser who estimated rental value of the real estate, appellant testified about his recollection of the dealings with appellee and the information given him from time to time. What he said was most unconvincing about any misdeeds on the part of appellee or any concealment of information or advise by him.

Adverting to the allegations raised in the bill and the statement of counsel, which we have quoted and referring now to the questions presented in the appellant’s brief, it seems we should decide whether appellee has (1) properly accounted for the assets coming to him, (2) mismanaged the affairs with which he was entrusted, and if appellant has ratified appellee’s actions.

The chancellor expressly held that proper accounting had been made of “all his acts and doings * * * and of his management of the affairs of said estate.” It is said by *32 appellant’s counsel that the testimony relative to this matter “consists mainly” of the copies of the annual returns which are “supposed to accurately and completely reflect the activities and accounts of appellee,” but their sufficiency is challenged because of lack of detail in setting forth the items reflecting the activities of the companies in which the appellee was concerned.

We find small support for the position in this record. The various statements seem comprehensive and to have received the sanction of the county judge. The auditor or examiner of that official found no fault with them and the learned chancellor was satisfied with their completeness. Aside from this positive approval, we are offered no specific information as to their incorrectness.

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

Related

John Daly Enterprises, LLC v. Hippo Golf Co., Inc.
646 F. Supp. 2d 1347 (S.D. Florida, 2009)
Beck v. Beck
383 So. 2d 268 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 So. 481, 141 Fla. 27, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conant-v-blount-fla-1939.