Glass v. Craig

91 So. 332, 83 Fla. 408
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 22, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 91 So. 332 (Glass v. Craig) 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
Glass v. Craig, 91 So. 332, 83 Fla. 408 (Fla. 1922).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

This is a suit for the recission of an executed contract for the sale of lands and reconveyance by the parties of the consideration each paid and received and for an accounting between the parties of the money which the defendant derived from the property received by him and disbursements made thereon.

J. W. Craig and F. Morqus were the owners of four hundred acres of land in DeSoto County, Craig owned one hundred and sixty acres and Morqus two hundred and forty. The defendant, J. W. Glass was the owner of certain parcels of land in St. Lucie County which he had sold to W. H. Turner for fifty thousand dollars, -fifteen thousand of which had been paid, the remainder was represented by seven promissory notes of five thousand dollars each executed by Turner and which were in the possession of Glass. The notes were dated October 5, 1916, the first payable May 1, 1919, and. bearing interest at seven and one-half per centum per annum. Glass had given [410]*410his bond for title to Turner obligating himself to convey the property to Turner upon the payment of the notes and interest.

By some arrangement between Craig and Morqus, not disclosed by the pleadings, Craig seems to have acquired the latter’s interest in the litigation.

There was an exchange of properties between Craig and Morqus on the one hand and Glass upon the other by which Craig and Morqus conveyed to Glass the DeSoto County property and Glass delivered to Craig and Morqus the seven notes of five thousand dollars each and executed to Craig a conveyance of the St. Lucie County property subject to the bond for title to W. H. Turner. The transaction occurred on April 24, 1918.

The complainant seeks a rescission of the sale and an accounting from the defendant of the rents and profits derived from the property conveyed to him by the complainants upon the ground of fraud which they say consisted of false and fraudulent representations made by the defendant Glass and his agent, R. F. Lewis, concerning the value of the St. Lucie County property and the financial responsibility of W. H. Turner, the maker of the promissory notes and his satisfaction in the trade he made with Glass whereby the former acquired the St. Lucie property.

In substance the allegations of the amended bill regarding the alleged false representations made- by Glass-and his agent, Lewis, are that Glass and his agent Lewis,- proposed the trade to the complainants, offering to give them seven notes for an amount aggregating thirty-five .thousand dollars-to-.the complainants for the DeSoto County property, and that one- .of- the notes for five.: thousand [411]*411dollars was to be retained by R. F. Lewis as compensation for his services in “negotiating said purchase.” That Glass and Lewis offered to deliver six of the notes in consideration for the conveyance to Glass of the DeSoto County property.

It was alleged that Glass and Lewis represented the St. Lucie County property to be worth fifty thousand dollars, that Turner had purchased it for that price and had actually paid fifteen thousand dollars of the purchase price and had given his seven notes for the remainder and had executed his note for four thousand one hundred and fifty-six dollars representing the interest on the deferred payments to March 1, 1918, and that he had anticipated the due date of that note and paid it. That the seven notes of five thousand dollars each were each worth one hundred cents on the dollar and that Turner, the maker, was financially able and willing to pay the said notes when they became due and that he was entirely satisfied with the trade he had made for the St. Lucie County property. That Glass was the owner of the St. Lmjie County property and held a good title thereto. That there was situated upon the land a twenty-eight room hotel, nicely furnished and was largely patronized by tourists during the winter months, that the hotel was in first class condition, was a popular resort for northern tourists and was a valuable asset to the property. That there was a valuable orang.e grove consisting of one thousand three hundred trees in good condition and producing well on the property.

That the complainants relying on these representations made by Glass and his agent, Lewis, consented to the transfer of their DeSoto County lands to Glass and executed to him a deed therefor receiving in exchange six [412]*412of tbe Turner notes, the seventh being retained by Lewis as commission for negotiating the trade and a deed from Glass to the St. Lucie County property subject to the bond for title to Turner.

That all the representations made by Glass and his agent, Lewis, were false in that at the time they were made the St. Lucie property was not worth the amount that Glass represented it to be worth, that there was no orange grove upon, the place of the description given by Glass, that the hotel was in bad condition, that Glass did not have a Merchantable title to the place and that Turner' was dissatisfied with his trade and was not financially able to carry it through and moreover was unwilling to do so. That this state of facts was not discovered by the complainants until several months after the trade in which, upon Glass’ suggestion they had conveyed their DeSoto County property to Virginia Glass, the wife of J. W. Glass. That she had paid nothing for such conveyance and that the only consideration which they had received consisted of the six notes which had been delivered to them by Lewis.

Glass and his wife demurred to the bill for want of equity and pointed out that it is deficient in not alleging that the complainants offered to return to the defendants the consideration which they had received in the transaction; that it is not alleged that the complainants were ignorant of the alleged falsity of the representations said to have been made; that no reason is given for the complainant’s failure to make examination of the property in St. Lucie County nor is it alleged that the' complainants believed or had a right to believe the alleged various representations made to them by Glass or his agent, Lewis.-

[413]*413The demurrer' was overruled and the defendants, J. W. Glass and wife, answered the bill of complaint in which it was denied that Lewis was authorized by Glass to retain one of the notes as his commission or that Lewis was authorized to act for them as their agent or otherwise in the transaction and that he was not authorized by them to make any representations with reference to the notes-nor the value of the St. Lucie property or as to the financial responsibility of Turner or any of the representations alleged to have been made by him and that Glass, himself, had made no such representations. It was averred that on the date of the transaction the St. Lucie property was reasonably worth forty thousand dollars and it denies that Glass did not have a merchantable title to the same.

The answer averred that Glass -examined the property in DeSoto County, personally negotiating the transaction on behalf of himself, that he had no knowledge or ever consented to any representations which Lewis may have made concerning the St. Lucie County property and denied that he authorized Lewis to retain one of the notes for five thousand dollars as his commission in the transaction and that if the note was retained by Lewis’ it was paid by the complainants without the knowledge of the defendants and it is averred upon information and belief that Lewis was employed by and acted as agent for the complainants in conjunction with W. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 So. 332, 83 Fla. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glass-v-craig-fla-1922.