Dehuy v. Osborne

118 So. 161, 96 Fla. 435
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 25, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 118 So. 161 (Dehuy v. Osborne) 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
Dehuy v. Osborne, 118 So. 161, 96 Fla. 435 (Fla. 1928).

Opinion

*437 Strum, J.

This is a suit in equity seeking the specific performance of a contract to convey certain lands on which is located a'hotel known as the Osborne House in the City of Daytona Beach, together with all furnishings in said hotel contained. The purchaser, DeHuy, was complainant below and is appellant here. After the pleadings were settled and the testimony of the parties taken, the chancellor entered a final decree dismissing the bill. This appeal is from that decree.

The vendors resisted the suit on the ground that complainant is guilty of laches in asserting his rights. To this the complainant-purchaser replied that the vendors first breached the contract in that they never tendered complainant a marketable title of record to the lands, and the defendants thus being in continuing default themselves can not put the complainant in laches until the defendants have purged their own default.

The contract was executed on April 14, 1923. Amongst other things it contained the following provisions:

“And the said party of the second part (the purchaser) agrees to buy the above described property, and to pay therefor to the said parties of the first part, the sum of Forty Th.ou.sand ($40,000.00) Dollars in the manner following: Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars cash, upon the signing of this agreement, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged by the parties of the first part; Nineteen Thousand Five Hundred ($19,500.00) Dollars upon delivery of warranty deed properly executed, and abstract showing good and merchantable title to the property herein described, in parties of the first part, which said title as shown by said abstract, shall be approved and passed- by the attorney for the party of the second part before the *438 acceptance of said deed, and the payment of Nineteen Thousand Five Hundred ($19,500.00) Dollars, and the balance of Twenty Thousand ($20,000.00) Dollars to be paid * * * etc. ’ ’

Time was not the essence of the contract. On May 1, 1923, the purchaser’s wife demanded possession, but possession was then refused by the vendors because only $500.00 had been paid, the sale had not been fully consummated. The purchasers were never at any time in possession. Abstracts were thereafter furnished by the vendors, and on May 9, 19'23, the purchaser’s attorney rendered his opinion that the title as shown by the abstracts was not a good merchantable title of record, pointing out the deficiencies in the record title upon which he based his conclusions. Soon thereafter the purchaser visited the vendors and told the latter that he was willing to call the trade off provided the vendors would pay the expense the purchaser had been put to, but the vendors declined to pay the expense, whereupon the purchaser said, “Yei’y well, we will go ahead with the trade then. I am perfectly willing.”

Negotiations then ensued between the attorneys for the parties, as a ’ result of which the vendors procured two quit claim deeds from other persons curing certain of the defects pointed out by the purchaser’s attorney. The vendors ’ attorney then rendered an opinion on the title, pointing out that the defects specified by the purchaser’s attorney were based on ancient matters which were not of any consequence, and calling attention to the fact that the vendors had been in exclusive and peaceable possession for twenty-seven years. The vendors refused to remedy the remaining matters claimed by the purchaser to be defects in the record 'title..

*439 On June 22, 1923, the vendors executed and left with their attorneys a warranty deed conveying the property to the purchaser, which deed, on that day or the next, was tendered by the vendors ’ attorney to the purchaser’s attorney, the former then advising the latter that the vendors “had made the only and last move for them to make and that the next move was the complainant’s (purchaser’s) move.” While not expressly rejected in terms, the deed was not then nor thereafter accepted by the purchaser.

About June 28, 1923, the vendors left the City of Daytona for a vacation, returning about September 5th or 6th, resuming their residence in the property in question. The purchaser also left on a vacation the latter part of. June, returning during October.

During the latter part of August, 1923, the vendors wrote their attorney in Daytona to the effect that if the purchaser had not accepted the deed they did not care to go ahead with the deal. The vendors’ attorney communicated these instructions to-the purchaser’s attorney and notified the latter that the deed would not be delivered.

Beginning about November 1, 1923, the vendors begun improvements on the property, completely painting the hotel on the outside and partly on the inside, at a cost of about $600.00, renovated the hotel and got it ready for business and purchased certain linen, carpet and fuel for the winter season at a cost of about $400.00, aggregating “something over $1,000.00,” after which the vendors opened up the hotel for business. While the improvements were being made the purchaser passed by the property frequently, but the record' fails to show that he took any action in regard thereto.

On December 20, 1923, the purchaser’s attorney wrote the vendors that unless steps were taken to clear the title, the purchaser would take steps to compel the vendors to *440 comply with the contract. The vendors took no action, and on January 24, 1924, the purchaser tendered the second payment of $19,500.00, and a note and mortgage evidencing and securing the remainder of the purchase price, which tender was declined, the vendors then stating that they had ‘ ‘ considered the deal off for sometime. ’ ’ At that time the hotel was filled to capacity with guests. On the same date this suit was instituted.

The above quoted provisions in the contract contemplated, not merely that the title of the vendors shall be a “good, merchantable title,” but that the Abstract shall show such a title in the vendors. An abstract is an epitome of the record evidence of title. It is evident therefore that the parties contracted with reference to the record title. 2 Warevelle, Vendors, 764; Maupin Market. Tit. (3rd ed.) 25, and cases cited. That such was the case is emphasized by the further provision of the contract that “in the event of the title as shown by the abstract being defective the vendors agree to have.such defects remedied without delay in manner satisfactory to the purchaser.” Such an undertaking is not fulfilled by the tender of a title resting partly upon record evidence but also depending in material respects upon matters in pais, such as adverse possession. Barclay v. Bank of Osceola County, 82 Fla. 72, 89 So. R. 357. The undertaking of the vendors in this case differs materially from that involved in Felt v. Morse, 80 Fla. 154, 85 So. R. 656, and in McCaskill v. Dekle, 88 Fla. 285, 102 So. R. 253. The parties having elected to contract with reference to the record title only, the question of title based in part upon adverse possession, or other matters in pais, is irrelevant to a determination of the rights and liabilities here involved.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 161, 96 Fla. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dehuy-v-osborne-fla-1928.