Gardenia Estates v. Grove Land & Timber Co.

140 So. 787, 104 Fla. 284
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 So. 787 (Gardenia Estates v. Grove Land & Timber Co.) 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
Gardenia Estates v. Grove Land & Timber Co., 140 So. 787, 104 Fla. 284 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

Davis, J.

—This suit was commenced in the Circuit Court in and for Pinellas County, Florida, by the appellee, Grove Land & Timber Company, a Missouri corporation, filing a bill to foreclose a mortgage on approximately thirteen hundred acres of land in that County against the appellant, Gardenia Estates, a Florida corporation. The bill of complaint was in the usual form and the appeal is from a final decree of foreclosure .entered by the Chancellor after sustaining demurrers to certain portions of the answer which had been filed by the defendant to the bill of complaint.

The original answer of the defendant raised the question of the interpretation to be placed by the Court upon the following release clause contained in the mortgage:

“The party of the second part, the Mortgagee, hereby agrees that upon payment to it of Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) per acre by the party of the first part, the Mortgagor, its successors, legal representatives or assigns, it will release, by proper instrument in writing, any of the lands in Sections Thirty-five (35) and Thirty-six (36), Township Twenty-nine (29) South, Range Sixteen (16). East in Government lots, and any of the lands hereinbefore described in Sections One (1), Two (2"), and Twelve (12) Township Thirty (30) South, Range Sixteen (16) East, and the lands hereinbefore described in Section Six (6), Township Thirty (30) South, Range Seventeen (17) East in Forty acre tracts or any multiples thereof (all forty acre tracts to be released in Quarter Quarter Sections except fractional Quarter Quarter Sections which are to be released on the basis of the actual acreage in each respective fractional Quarter Quarter Section) any such release payments so made to the party of the second part shall be applied on the note or notes last to become due under this mortgage.”

*287 The theory of the defendant was that it had the right to show by testimony the surrounding circumstances and conditions of the parties to the mortgage deed at and before the date of its execution in order that the Court might be advised of the proper construction to be placed upon said release clause. It was contended that the release clause of the mortgage was worded in such a way that it can reasonably be construed to mean that release payments might include payments made on maturity date of notes or payments made prior to the date of the mortgage; that the defendant had the right to show by parol testimony that it was agreed by the parties to the mortgage deed that the sums already paid would be considered release payments and that such showing would not be the proving of a collateral, contemporaneous and inconsistent agreement in contradiction of the release clause as written. This was attempted to be done by pleading two contracts entered into by the complainant with a third party and assigned thereafter to the defendant prior to the time a deed and mortgage was executed.

While it is undoubtedly true that where the language used is ambiguous, surrounding circumstances, such as the situation of the parties at the time of executing a mortgage, and the nature and purpose thereof, should be considered, and such surrounding circumstances may be looked to in aid of interpreting the mortgage (McGhee Interests vs. Alexander National Bank, 102 Fla. 140, 135 Sou. Rep. 545) the answer to which the demurrer was sustained in this case does not warrant the application of that rule.

The answer sets up allegations concerning down payments and claims the benefit of pre-existing contracts executed with others than the defendant for the purpose of showing a right to releases of land from the mortgage in proportion to the amounts paid prior to and at the *288 time of the execution of the mortgage being foreclosed.

Since the release clause in the mortgage only and not that of the contracts was involved, the defendant so answering showed no right to take advantage of any release clause contained in the outside contracts referred to, which would have been in derogation of the release clause as expressed in the mortgage. The contracts with the release clauses relied on, appear to have been merged in and superseded by the provisions of the mortgage which provisions of the mortgage had no doubt been incorporated in it to cover that subject. Therefore, no error was committed in sustaining the demurrer, which was the appropriate method by ‘which to attack the answer for insufficiency in law to state a defense. See Chapter 13660, Acts of 1929, Laws of Florida.

Following the sustaining of the demurrer to the first answer and a subsequent amendment, to which a demurrer was also sustained, the defendant filed an amended one. By the amended answer as amended, it was alleged that the release clause as contained in the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, utterly failed to show the true understanding of the parties,—that the clause in question, as phrased, was due to a mutual mistake of the parties and was not in accordance with their actual agreement.

In substance the amended answer as amended alleged that the mortgage release clause did not express the true agreement of the parties to it; that the actual agreement intended to be evidenced thereby was that a release clause would be placed in said mortgage in order to secure M. "W. Goodell and J. George Young, and the defendant as well, the right to obtain a certain portion of the lands, even though the mortgagor should be unable to carry out the agreement and make all payments required by it; that at the time of the execution of the mortgage, it was supposed that the release clause therein *289 set forth carried out the intent and understanding of the parties to that effect; that the release clause, however, was erroneously made in the mortgage in the form which appeared in the pre-existing contracts and was not in accord with the true agreement, because of a mistake of the scrivener who prepared the mortgage deed; that such mistake in the mortgage was not noticed by either party until long after its delivery; that because the mortgage and the release clause incorporated in it was through mistake of the scrivener made to follow a similar clause contained in the contracts that the release clause expressed in the mortgage did not reflect the true intent of the parties; that the mistake was mutual and that defendant upon learning of it, immediately took steps to have it corrected by reformation.

Defendant prayed for affirmative relief by a decree reforming the mortgage by striking therefrom the release clause and by so reforming the mortgage that it would correctly set forth the true agreement of the parties (as the Court might- find such agreement or contract to be), and for accounting. To this amended answer as amended, the Chancellor sustained a demurrer, and his order thereon is assigned as error.

We are of the opinion that this assignment of error is well taken.

The contracts, deed and mortgage referred to in the amended answer as amended, appear to have been co-related parts of one and the same general transaction.

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Related

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15 So. 2d 451 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 787, 104 Fla. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardenia-estates-v-grove-land-timber-co-fla-1932.