Frank C. Uible v. Beverly W. Landstreet, III

392 F.2d 467, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7422
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1968
Docket24633_1
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 392 F.2d 467 (Frank C. Uible v. Beverly W. Landstreet, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank C. Uible v. Beverly W. Landstreet, III, 392 F.2d 467, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7422 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

DYER, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Uible, a resident of Jacksonville, Florida, brought suit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida to recover the face amount of and interest due him on a $490,500 promissory note given by appellees Landstreet, Clark, Nelson, Kirkpatrick and Bass, Jr., 1 all residents of Nashville, Tennessee, in their purchase of 100,000 shares of Uible’s stock in Charter Mortgage and Investment Company, a Florida corporation.

The complaint alleged that Uible’s claim for relief “arises out of a transaction connected with or incidental to a business venture, conducted, engaged in and carried on by the defendants, and each of them in the State of Florida.” The original process was served on Florida’s Secretary of State as agent for the appellees in accordance with section 47.16 F.S.A. 2

Appellees contested the District Court’s jurisdiction over them under *469 Florida’s long arm statute. The court held that the obligation sued on was not created in connection with or incidental to a business venture engaged in by the appellees in Florida and dismissed the action. We affirm.

Each member of Landstreet’s group was in the investment business in Nashville, Tennessee. For about twelve years prior to June, 1962, all except Bass, Jr. were equal owners of the stock of Clark, Landstreet and, Kirkpatrick, Inc., a corporation that acted as a broker in buying and selling listed and over-the-counter stocks and other securities. Bass, Jr. was an employee of Jack M. Bass & Company, another Nashville, Tennessee, investment company competing with Landstreet’s firm. Uible was one of the organizers of the Charter Company, a Florida corporation, and owned a substantial block of its stock.

On March 29, 1962, in Nashville, Tennessee, Landstreet’s group executed and mailed to Uible in Jacksonville, Florida, an agreement to purchase from him 100,-000 shares of stock of the Charter Company. The offer proposed that the purchase be closed in Jacksonville, Florida, on April 10, 1962. It also provided that the total price was $654,000 payable in four equal payments of $163,500, the first on the date of closing and the others in installments on or before one, two and three years thereafter, the deferred payments to be evidenced by a promissory note secured by a pledge of 75,000 shares of the stock purchased, the pledge agreement and the pledged stock to be delivered to a designated Jacksonville bank which would release 25,000 shares at a time upon receipt of the three annual payments. Uible accepted the offer, executed the agreement on March 31, 1962, and returned it by mail to Landstreet’s group in Nashville.

On April 9, 1962, Landstreet’s group executed in Nashville a promissory note for the balance of the purchase price of the stock and a pledge agreement. These documents were mailed to Land-street in care of an attorney’s office in Jacksonville, Florida. On April 10, 1962, Landstreet attended the closing and delivered the note and pledge agreement to Uible'. The funds for the initial payment of the purchase price were transmitted through normal banking channels and the first twenty five thousand shares of stock of the Charter Company were released by Uible. The remaining 75,000 shares of the company were deposited in a bank under the pledge agreement as security for the balance of the purchase price represented by the note.

In July, 1962, Landstreet attended the annual stockholders’ meeting of the Charter Company in Jacksonville. He exercised by proxy the voting rights of the group’s 75,000 shares of stock, and voted 10,000 shares of stock owned by him personally, as well as 1,000 shares of stock owned by one of his customers.

At the request of the president of the company with whom Landstreet had previously dealt extensively, Landstreet nominated management’s slate of directors which included D. R. Buttrey of Nashville, who had agreed to serve on the board at the request of the president.

Following the stockholders’ meeting, Landstreet was invited to and attended a luncheon meeting of the directors. He did not actively participate in the meeting, but he was asked about the possibility of putting together some companies for acquisition by the Charter Company. Landstreet agreed to look into this with the understanding that he would handle the underwriting. After this meeting neither Landstreet nor any of his group attended any stockholders’ or directors’ meeting of the Charter Company.

Shortly after the events here related transpired, the Charter Company suffered financial difficulties. On three occasions Landstreet visited the Company’s offices, mostly in conjunction with other business affairs he had in Florida, to confer with the president and other officers of the Charter Company about the company’s problems. Thereafter, in 1963 and 1964 Landstreet kept in touch *470 by telephone with the company’s officers and visited Jacksonville two or three times each year to discuss the progress of the Company and its operations.

On this showing, made by affidavits and depositions, the District Court rejected Uible’s contentions that his claim arose out of a business venture consisting of (1) the execution of a note and “the purchase by defendants of common stock of the Charter Mortgage and Investment Company” and (2) “the active participation by defendants in the affairs of that corporation for the purpose of increasing the value of such stock so that it could be sold at a profit.”

The argument that the execution of a promissory note by Land-street’s group and its delivery in Florida where it was to be performed constitutes a business venture in Florida within the contemplation of section 47.16 Florida Statutes, F.S.A., may be disposed of summarily. The Florida courts have held the contrary, Odell v. Signer, Fla.App.1964, 169 So.2d 851, 853; aff’d, Signer v. Odell, Fla.1965, 176 So.2d 94; and so must we, e. g., Monarch Ins. Co. of Ohio v. Spach, 5 Cir. 1960, 281 F.2d 401.

We are also unpersuaded by Uible’s contention that Landstreet’s trip to Jacksonville, Florida, for the closing of the stock purchase was an important jurisdictional element. Florida Investment Enterprises, Inc. v. Kentucky Co., Inc., Fla.App.1964, 160 So.2d 733, upon which he relies is clearly distinguishable. In that case the non-resident defendant executed a lease on a motel in Florida and “by this instrument committed herself to the accomplishment of many affirmative acts which amounted to operating, conducting, engaging, or carrying on a business or a business venture in this state. Furthermore, it is clearly evident from the record that the instant motel business would not be in existence had not Mrs. Hayes executed the lease.” Id. at 740. Landstreet’s group made no such commitments.

We must be guided, with respect to the other contentions of Uible, by the accepted principle that causes of this kind “are not susceptible of an inflexible or fixed rule of law, but must be decided on the facts peculiar to each case as it arises,” Williams v. Duval County Hospital Authority, Fla.App. 1967, 199 So.2d 299, 301; accord, Phillips v. Hooker Chemical Corp., 5 Cir.

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Bluebook (online)
392 F.2d 467, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-c-uible-v-beverly-w-landstreet-iii-ca5-1968.