Jackson Land Co. v. Harbeson

153 So. 2d 826, 1963 Fla. LEXIS 2764
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 29, 1963
DocketNo. 32041
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 So. 2d 826 (Jackson Land Co. v. Harbeson) 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
Jackson Land Co. v. Harbeson, 153 So. 2d 826, 1963 Fla. LEXIS 2764 (Fla. 1963).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The respondents were the owners of a one-ninth interest in the outstanding stock of Pensacola Hotel Company, operator of the San Carlos Hotel. On 28 March 1960 they entered into an agreement with Jackson Land Company for the sale to the Company of their interest, aggregating 175 and %5 shares of the capital stock, for $310,-000, payable $50,000 in cash and $3,750 on 15 July 1960 and a like amount on the 15th day of each third month following until the entire balance had been paid. Deferred payments were not to draw interest if made before default and the purchaser was privileged to make advance payments which would be credited to the last maturing installments. There was provision also for discharging the entire remainder at a discount.

Under the contract, the sellers agreed that the stock certificates be re-issued to the purchaser in the form of five certificates of 35 and 14,5 shares each representing, of course, the ninth interest of the respondents. The purchaser, petitioner here, agreed to endorse the five certificates and deposit them with The First Bank and Trust Company of Pensacola or some other person or corporation acceptable to the parties, and upon payment of the entire purchase price the escrow agent was to deliver the certificates to the purchaser. In the interim, unless and until default, the buyer was entitled to vote the stock and collect dividends on it. Payments received by the escrow agent were required to be distributed to the sellers in five equal parts. Subsequently the parties [827]*827agreed that Southern National Bank of Fort Walton Beach serve as escrow agent instead of the Pensacola bank.

Upon default in any payment for IS days or longer a majority of the sellers could declare the remainder of the purchase price due by written notice to the escrow agent whereupon the agent should notify the purchaser of the notice and the purchaser would have 20 days to discharge the balance of the debt. If the purchaser, in such circumstances, failed to pay the remainder of the price within that period, the escrow agent was to return to each of the sellers one ■of the certificates and the “liability” of the agent then ended. By the agreement a lien was retained on all the shares for unpaid sums. The purchaser was not to receive any share until the purchase price for all had been paid.

The first payment of $50,000 and four installments of $3750 each were made then the purchaser defaulted and the sellers notified the escrow agent of the fact in consequence of which the agent informed the purchaser that unless the balance of the purchase price was paid within 20 days with interest at six per cent, its rights would terminate and the certificates would be returned to the sellers.

Before proceeding it should be recorded, inasmuch as there were five holders of the ninth interest and there are but four respondents, that one of the stockholders meanwhile died and one of the other four stockholders inherited her interest.

In their complaint the respondents detailed the transaction and specifically stated that all the stock of the corporation, including the stock in controversy was that of a closely-held corporation and was owned by the beneficiaries of the late W. B. Harbeson. The significance of these allegations will be clear when we digest the opinion of the District Court of Appeal. The respondents sought a decree commanding the petitioner specifically to perform.

The petitioner moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that since the respondents had elected to take back the stock and set in motion the procedure to that end, they could not then force the petitioner to perform the contract. The chancellor granted the motion and an appeal was taken by the respondents to the District Court of Appeal, First District, where the order of dismissal was reversed.

The District Court of Appeal observed that the respondents, who were appellants in that court, had presented two questions for determination, namely, entitlement of the respondents to specific performance and whether or not “the contract provision, relative to termination of purchaser’s rights in case of default, [was] an exclusive remedy which would prevent the sellers from obtaining specific performance.” (Italics supplied.)

In dealing with the first point the District Court of Appeal observed that the remedy of specific performance was available to coerce the sale of stock in a closely-held corporation, citing Baruch v. Haggerty, Inc., 137 Fla. 799, 188 So. 797. As we understand the decision in that case, it announced the rule that specific performance would not ordinarily be granted to enforce the transfer of stock unless the stock was of peculiar value, and could not be bought and sold in the market in which case it could not be readily replaced or the value easily ascertained. The court held that because of the need for mutuality of remedy a seller of stock could resort to a court of equity for relief against a prospective buyer who defaulted. This accounts for the allegations of the complaint about the impossibility of determining the value of the stock although it would appear from the very nature of the relationship of the parties and the interest of the respondents themselves in the corporation that the values of the stock in suit was either known to them or easily ascertainable by them.

The District Court of Appeal after alluding to our opinion in Chace v. Johnson, 98 Fla. 118, 123 So. 519, speculated that “had Jackson [Land Company] paid all but a few [828]*828thousand dollars upon the purchase price and the Harbesons [respondents here] attempted to retake the stock upon such default, it is conclusive that equity would have intervened to have prevented such a forfeiture * * * ” and “had the Harbesons failed to deliver their stock certificates to the escrow agent * * *, then Jackson would have been entitled to specific performance.” These observations are immediately followed by the terse statement that “mutuality of remedy requires a like remedy for either party,” and the pronouncement that the allegations of the complaint “with consideration of the contract as a whole, were sufficient to state a cause of action for equitable relief” therefore it was error for the chancellor to dismiss it.

We understand from the treatment by the District Court of Appeal that the determinative feature of the case in the court’s estimation was the mutuality of remedy available to the parties.

Our difficulty with the ultimate decision of the District Court of Appeal lies in the final statement, in effect, that as failure of the Harbesons to deliver the certificates would have warranted specific performance in behalf of Jackson Land Company and payment of all but “a few thousand dollars” by the latter would have worked intervention of a court of equity, it followed that by the imposition of the rule of mutual remedy the respondents’ complaint withstood the attack upon it.

Neither situation obtained. There was no failure on the part of the Harbesons to deliver the stock. That was accomplished when the contract was signed. And there seems to be no occasion to make an excursion into the law relative to equity-abhorred forfeitures. Actually the petitioner who would benefit by application of the rule does not present the point.

The pleadings and the facts, which are undisputed in the main, are convincing that even if application of the principle of mutuality of remedy was appropriate up to the time that the sellers exercised their option under the contract, it vanished at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 2d 826, 1963 Fla. LEXIS 2764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-land-co-v-harbeson-fla-1963.