Estate Realty Corp. v. Taubel

154 So. 222, 114 Fla. 409
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 So. 222 (Estate Realty Corp. v. Taubel) 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
Estate Realty Corp. v. Taubel, 154 So. 222, 114 Fla. 409 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

— The facts in this case are more numerous than obscure, and present a situation less involved than intricate. It has required in the estimation of counsel three comparatively large volumes of typewritten matter of about two hundred and seventy pages each to contain the pleadings and evidence introduced. It is not so difficult to understand the interests of the many persons who appear from time to time in the story of the transaction as to follow the devious ways and bypaths which they followed to attain their objective. To trail each person’s activities through the period of a few weeks during which he or she was interested in the subject matter of the litigation and ascertain their relation, if any, to another’s activities, except in so far as all constitute together one component whole, is like following the intricate tracery of an arabesque. Aside from the motif or dominant feature of the transaction considered in its entirety, many of the incidents may be regarded as more embellishment than structure.

The case originated in a mortgage executed by a corporation named Estate Realty Corporation, on September 6, 1928, upon Lots 4 and 5 of Block 69 of Ocean Beach Addition No. 3, in Dade County, together with all the improvements upon the place, consisting of a hotel building known as the “Admiral Hotel” and all the furniture and furnishings therein contained. The property is located in Miami Beach, Florida. The mortgage was executed and delivered by the corporation to William Taubel to secure the payment of nine promissory notes of $10,000.00 each, payable over a period of nine years, all notes bearing interest at 7 per centum per annum, payable semiannually. The mortgage provided for the payment of attorneys’ fees for *411 collection and contained provisions for the payment of taxes, insurance and repairs by the mortgagor and for the acceleration of the maturity of the debt on certain defaults in the payment of principal and interest and in performance of the covenants and agreements.

On the 14th day of March, 1932, Taubel transferred to his wife, Anna Taubel, the notes and mortgage. The first note was paid and $4,000.00 on the'second was paid. Interest was paid to September 6, 1931, but the note falling due on that date has not been paid. Since that date to February 1, 1933, there have been paid to the owner of the note $6,931.00 and to July 7, 1933, she has disbursed for insurance and taxes $6,382.02.

Four years after the execution of the.mortgage the Estate Realty Corporation leased the hotel to Tavern Investment Company, a Florida corporation, for a term of one year, to expire August 31, 1933. The rental to be paid was $5,000.00 and 50 per cent of the net profits from operation. When the lease was made the mortgage was in default. The lessee agreed to make the lease but required Mrs. Taubel to agree that she would not evict the lessee before the expiration of the.lease, which proposition she agreed to on payment to her of $4,500.00 of the fixed rent and 66 2/3 per cent of half of the net profits from the operation of the hotel, Mrs. Taubel to pay taxes which were to be paid in September, 1933.

On August 4, 1933, Mrs. Taubel, joined by her husband, exhibited her bill in the Circuit Court for Dade County to enforce the ■ mortgage lien upon the mortgaged property. Estate Realty Corporation, Frank Geiselman, Bond & Share Corporation, Sylvia Blum and her husband, Blum, and Tavern Investment Company were made defendants. Bond & Share Corporation was made a defendant because it held *412 a judgment against Estate Realty Corporation in the sum of $175.00. The execution had been levied on the hotel property and it was being advertised for sale under the execution.

It was alleged that the Estate Realty Corporation was insolvent; it had failed to make necessary repairs and was permitting the property to deteriorate; the building leaked and plastering was falling; that the mortgagee had to cause the roof to be repaired at an expense of $225.00 which the mortgagor had refused to pay; that it failed to pay taxes and that Sylvia Blum had acquired the legal title to the property from Estate Realty Corporation but had not assumed to pay the mortgage indebtedness; that the deed was dated in July, 1933, and was in form a warranty deed and duly recorded.

The bill prayed for a receiver to take charge of the property and to rent it to the best advantage and to apply the proceeds therefrom to the necessary upkeep of the property, the payment of taxes, insurance and court costs and the excess to payment on the debt due to complainant. No deficiency decree was asked for against the Estate Realty Corporation. .

At the time the bill of complaint was filed the sum of $76,000.00 was alleged to be due to the complainant on account of principal, and several thousand dollars for interest, approximating a total of $80,000.00.

When the mortgage was executed, E. Scott McKnight was president of the Estate Realty Corporation. When the property was conveyed to Sylvia Blum in June, 1933, J. R. Humphries was president of the corporation and McKnight vice-president and acting secretary. The deed bore the required documentary and internal revenue stamps.

On August 5, 1933, the court appointed R. H. Gardner *413 as receiver. The amount of bond required of him was $5,000.00, which he executed and approved. No notice of the application was given to Sylvia Blum as she was a nonresident of the State and her exact place of residence was unknown, but notice was given to Tavern Investment Company, lessee in possession, and evidence was heard in behalf of both complainant and Tavern Investment Company.

The complainants were also required to execute a bond in the sum of $2,000.00 conditioned to pay all damages which the defendants or either of them might sustain as a result of the receivership in the event the “final decree of the court” should be reversed by the Supreme Court.

The receiver was directed to take possession of the property and manage, operate and control it.

The Bond & Share Corporation on motion of the complainant was dismissed as a party defendant a month later. The reason for the dismissal of that corporation as a defendant was that the Estate Realty Corporation had paid the debt due to the Bond & Share Corporation after the commencement of the proceedings to foreclose.

The Estate Realty Corporation and Sylvia Blum, on August 31, 1933, moved the court to vacate the order appointing the receiver. The substance of the grounds upon which the motion was made is that the Tavern Investment Company is a corporation composed of Albert Rausen and members of his family and the lease to that company was the result of a conspiracy between that company and the complainants, the purpose of which was to obtain the appointment of a receiver and then to obtain a lease from the receiver for the “sum of $3,600.00 a year net”; that the lease from the Estate Realty Corporation to the Tavern Investment Company was made with the consent of the complainant who guaranteed peaceful possession of the *414

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Related

Hicks v. Gibbs Corp.
20 Fla. Supp. 79 (Duval County Circuit Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 222, 114 Fla. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-realty-corp-v-taubel-fla-1934.