Day Et Ux. v. Weadock

134 So. 525, 101 Fla. 333
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 28, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 134 So. 525 (Day Et Ux. v. Weadock) 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
Day Et Ux. v. Weadock, 134 So. 525, 101 Fla. 333 (Fla. 1931).

Opinion

Davis, J.

This is a ease wherein rescission and cancellation was sought by appellants. Two contracts are involved, by the terms °of which appellants agreed to purchase and the appellees agreed to sell, two lots in Casa Loma, a subdivision of the Town of Boynton, in Palm Beach County. Appellees, as defendants in the court below, sought affirmative relief in the suit against the appellants for the balance of the purchase price due on the contracts. The Chancellor denied all relief sought by each party, and dismissed the bill. An appeal from the final decree brings the ease here.

Errors are assigned on the sustaining of special demurrers to certain paragraphs of the bill of complaint and *335 on certain rulings on the admissibility of evidence made against the appellants, who were complainants in the Court below. Likewise the merits of the case must be considered on an assignment which challenges the propriety of the final decree as not being warranted by the evidence.

In his final decree the Chancellor made the following findings of fact:

“The theory of the second amended bill, for rescis-sion is fraud — either the false statement of present existing material facts, or promises to be performed in the future, with no intention on the part of the promisor, at the time of making the promises, of ever fulfilling them. On the first theory of fraud the only representations of fact, I find in sub paragraphs (g) and (h) in paragraph 5 of the second amended bill. From the evidence the falsity of these representations is not made to •appear. On the second theory of fraud it does not appear from, the evidence that, at the time of making the promises to be performed in the future, the owner had no intention of performing them.
I am highly suspicious of the activities of the agent and the owner, but the evidence is not sufficiently convincing to find them guilty of fraud. The very careful wording of the advertisements, so as to avoid facts and promises — the glowing generalities 'of the advertisements — the apparent willingness of the owner to accept complainants money, and at the same time disclaim responsibility for the utterances and promises of the agent — the careful wording of the printed contract to avoid any covenant to undertake improvements — the unusual aloofness of the owner to the sales campaign and activities of the agent — the installation of some improvements apparently in fulfillment of some obligation —the obvious lack of any intention on the part of the complainants to buy an orange and grapefruit grove on the basis of about $43,000.00 an acre — -the fact that the *336 promises to make the stated improvements were no doubt made in order to induce the sale — the recognition of the obligation to make some improvements as evidenced in the letter written on behalf of the owner under date of March 11, 1926 — the obvious desire of the complainants to buy land -in an improved modern subdivision which would be surrounded by buildings, (which was no doubt known to the agent) and the obvious intention of the owner to sell something more than raw unimproved land in an area without buildings or the modern conveniences which are offered by public utilities or by the owner of a subdivision — all cause me to guess that complainants were the victims of a rather well planned “high pressure” sale campaign put on by two experts. The agent and owner have carefully guided their course of dealing so that there is no clear evidence of fraud, and it goes without saying that I have no right to enter a decree finding one guilty of fraud on even a strong suspicion, — where there is lack of clear and convincing proof.”

Findings of fact by the Chancellor in all equity cases are now expressly required by the Federal Equity Practice. Whete made in cases pending in our State Courts, this Court will not reverse the decree where the evidence is conflicting but sufficient to sustain the findings of fact so made. Tatum Brs. v. Osborne, 83 So. 703, 79 Fla. 130; Com. Bank v. First National Bank. 87 So. 315, 80 Fla. 685.

The practice of making findings of fact in equity causes is not only commendable, but tends to greatly facilitate the disposition of the cause in an appellate court, where the findings serve to give the Court of review a guide by which the correctness of such findings can be cheeked and verified from an examination of the evidence adduced, and the legal conclusions of the Chancellor as expressed in his *337 final decree tested by the application of the proper rules of law to the facts so found.

In this case the ground of rescission is alleged representations as an inducement to purchase made by a licensed real estate broker who was handling the property of appellees for sale. Whether such broker was an agent with general authority to act on behalf of the owner, as contended by appellants, or merely a special agent for a single object whose representations would not bind the principal (El Reno Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Stocking, 127 N. E. 642) becomes immaterial to the disposition of the ease, if it be held that the alleged representations have not been established by the evidence, or that if so established, they are insufficient in law to constitute a ground of rescission if made.

The allegations of the bill and the proof submitted fail to bring the case within the operation of the rule laid down in Sun City Holding Co. v. Schoenfield, 122 So. 252, 97 Fla. 777, and Southern Colonization Co. v. Derfler, 75 So. 790, 73 Fla. 924, for vendor’s breach of covenants contained in a contract for the sale of real estate because no such covenants with reference to the matter complained of are shown in this ease.

On the contrary, the grounds of rescission are similar to those that were passed on by this Court in the case of Nixon v. Temple Terrace Estates, Inc., 121 So. 475, 97 Fla. 392, where it was held:

“Any false representation of a material fact, made with knowledge of its falsity and with intent that it shall be acted on, entitles party deceived thereby to avoid contract or maintain action for damages sustained.”

The foregoing holding, however, may be distinguished from the rule which obtains with reference to alleged rep *338 resentations concerning .mere speculative promises and matters of opinion, which do not constitute false representations of existing fact, and which are not shown to have been made with a present fraudulent intent. Sun City Holding Co. v. Schoenfield, supra.

In this case the bill alleges that certain misrepresentations were made by a real estate broker to induce the purchaser to buy two lots in a subdivision. These misrepresentations are charged to have been that certain streets “would be” paved, sidewalks “would be” laid, water mains and water system “were to be” installed, that a complete lighting system “would be” installed, gas mains “were to be” laid, proper dredging of the Florida East Coast Canal for a yacht basin “would be” made, that a hotel “would be” completed and opened to the public within five months, that Marshall Field & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 525, 101 Fla. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-et-ux-v-weadock-fla-1931.