Florida Discount Centers, Inc. v. State Attorney

31 Fla. Supp. 54
CourtCircuit Court of the 13th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Hillsborough County
DecidedAugust 13, 1968
DocketNos. 170733 and 170775
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Fla. Supp. 54 (Florida Discount Centers, Inc. v. State Attorney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 13th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Hillsborough County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Discount Centers, Inc. v. State Attorney, 31 Fla. Supp. 54 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

JOHN G. HODGES, Circuit Judge.

Findings of fact, conclusions of law and final judgment: This matter, involving two suits which have heretofore been declared to be companion causes and consolidated for trial by this court, came before the court on July 25, 1968, for final hearing on the issues formulated by the pleadings.

The complaint in the first suit, no. 170733, brought by Florida Discount Centers, Inc., a Florida corporation, Robert H. Carlton, Lawrence Duffy and Doris Lott, as officers of the corporation and individually, and as members of a class of persons participating in the market plan of the corporation, plaintiffs, against Paul Antinori, Jr., as state attorney in and for the thirteenth judicial circuit of Florida, and Fred O. Dickinson, Jr., Broward Williams and Earl Faircloth, constituting and being the Florida Securities Commission, defendants, alleges that the plaintiffs are at the present time engaging in and participating in a sales market plan in the state of Florida, principally in Hillsborough County.

The complaint further alleges that the plan and its operation are set forth in a manual attached to the complaint and made a part thereof. It is further alleged that the plaintiffs have been [56]*56entering into contracts with other persons in the implementation of the plan, and a copy of the contract used is also attached and made a part of the complaint.

Plaintiffs then allege that there is a justiciable question as to whether or not the plan and contract fall within the provisions of chapter 517 of the Florida Statutes pertaining to the sale of securities in the state of Florida and also as to whether or not the plan and contract constitute a violation of the criminal laws of the state of Florida, and in particular chapter 849 of the Florida Statutes pertaining to lotteries.

Concluding the factual allegation portion of their complaint, the plaintiffs state that the market plan and contract being employed by them have never been operated in the state of Florida and that a cloud of doubt and suspicion has been cast upon the plaintiff’s activities, because of the possible violations involved, which is causing or will cause irreparable losses to the plaintiffs. They state that this uncertainty as to the applicability of the sales market plan and contract, or either of them, as they pertain to the statutes prohibiting lotteries and certain types of securities, places them in an awkward and untenable position.

The plaintiffs pray for a declaratory judgment determining that the sales market plan and contract, and both of them, do not fall within the provisions of chapter 517 or chapter 849 of the Florida Statutes.

The answer of Paul Antinori, Jr., as state attorney in and for the thirteenth judicial circuit, one of the defendants in the said cause, admits certain allegations of the complaint but denies that there is any doubt as to the applicability of chapters 517 and 849 with regard to the sales market plan involved, but to the contrary alleges that the plan involves the sale of securities as defined by chapter 517 and constitutes an illegal pyramid or chain club organization as defined by chapter 849 of the statutes.

The answer then prays for a declaratory judgment determining that the sales market plan and contract entered into between the plaintiffs and other persons are a security transaction as defined by Florida law, requiring the registration of such securities with the Florida Securities Commission, and that the sales market plan constitutes a lottery as defined by chapter 849 of the statutes.

In the second suit, no. 170775, wherein the state of Florida, by Fred O. Dickinson, Jr., comptroller, Earl Faircloth, attorney general, Broward Williams, state treasurer, as and constituting the Florida Securities Commission, is plaintiff, and Florida Discount [57]*57Centers, Inc. and the other plaintiffs in the initial suit are defendants, the complaint alleges that the defendant corporation, by and through the defendants, has offered for sale and has sold, and is now offering for sale, and may continue to offer to sell to the public, securities in the form of an interest in or under a profit-sharing or participation agreement, or scheme or investment contract. It is further alleged that these securities have not been registered with the commission, as required by law, nor have any of the individual defendants registered as securities dealers, as required by law.

The complaint avers that the defendants have sold such contracts to more than 340 investors. They state that the defendants, as of July 1, 1968, had collected approximately $151,000 from investors and that approximately $100,000 of that amount has been expended for commissions paid to the individual defendants and to investors for commissions in return for soliciting additional investors and for other expenses.

Other allegations of the complaint set forth purported facts relative to the alleged profit-sharing agreement and sales promotional plan being employed by the defendants, concluding that the essence of the said plan is a “Ponzi”-like pyramid and prohibited by law because it involves a lottery.

The plaintiffs in this suit state that unless the defendants are restrained and enjoined from engaging in the unlawful and fraudulent acts complained of, as set forth in the complaint, they will continue to engage in said acts, contrary to law, and pray that the court will enter a temporary and final injunction against the defendants, enjoining and restraining them from continuing the alleged unlawful operations which, if continued, would result in a fraud upon the purchasers of the contracts involved.

To that complaint the defendants have filed an answer denying all of the material allegations of the complaint relative to the unlawful nature of the sales market plan and contract involved, and request the court to dismiss the complaint and vacate the temporary injunction which has heretofore been ordered in the cause by the court.

A temporary injunction, as requested by the plaintiffs, has heretofore been entered herein by the court upon showing made at the initial hearing in the matter. Immediately prior to the commencement of the final hearing, a petition for intervention, under Rule 1.230, was filed in this cause by Alabama Market Centers, Inc., an Alabama corporation, alleging a purported contract between the intervenor and one of the officers and directors [58]*58of the defendant, Florida Discount Centers, Inc., and proposing to file a complaint seeking an injunction and monetary damages for breach of said contract. After a brief legal discussion with the court, counsel for the petitioner withdrew the claim for monetary damages.

The subject matter of the intervention requested was not germane and would have injected new issues into the suit relative to the purported contract and its alleged breach and would have interfered with the trial of the issues in the main proceedings. The court, therefore, denied the said petition for intervention and granted petitioner an exception to its ruling. The petitioner was offered the right to intervene as a party defendant operating the same type of sales market plan in another area of Florida, but declined the offer.

It is quickly observed that the pleadings in the two suits present one question which is common to both.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Fla. Supp. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-discount-centers-inc-v-state-attorney-flacirct13hil-1968.