Johnson v. Metzinger

156 So. 681, 116 Fla. 262
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 10, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 156 So. 681 (Johnson v. Metzinger) 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
Johnson v. Metzinger, 156 So. 681, 116 Fla. 262 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Brown, J.

Grace P. Johnson, a citizen of Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, on May 1, 1931, exhibited her sworn bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Orange County, Florida, against Emil Metzinger, Arthur McKean, Hugh Ferguson, Fort Gatlin Hotel, Inc., a Florida corporation, and certain other defendants to foreclose a mortgage upon the leasehold interest in a certain tract of land in Orlando, Florida, upon which a hotel was located, which was built after the leases were executed, and which had been sublet to the Fort Gatlin Hotel Corporation. The owners of the land were not made parties defendant; nor was this essentially necessary, as the mortgage only covered the leases and the leasehold estates.

The salient facts alleged in the bill are briefly as follows: On October 1, 1925, Emil Metzinger and Arthur McKean *264 executed five promissory notes to Hugh Ferguson in. the aggregate sum of $100,000, the notes being for $20,000 each, and payable one, two, three, four and five years after date, with interest at 8%, payable semi-annually. Complainant was the owner and holder of one of said notes, being the note payable two years after date, which she purchased from Ferguson, paying him $20,000 therefor, and which had been assigned and delivered to her at the time, which was on or about March 15, 1928, by the original payee, by endorsement in writing on the reverse side of the note, reading: “For value received, I do hereby sell, assign and set over to Grace P. Johnson all my right, title and interest in and to the within note. (Signed) Hugh Ferguson.”

In order to secure the payment of each of said notes, Met-zinger and McKean and their wives, executed a mortgage deed to Hugh Ferguson upon certain leases and leasehold estates which they held under two duly recorded ninety-nine year leases, covering adjoining tracts of land. One of these leases was executed May 30, 1925, by J. S. Wynne and Lula B. Wynne, his wife, to Emil Metzinger, by which the Wynnes leased a certain described lot to Metzinger. The other was a lease by Edith I. Babcock and Vinton S. Babcock, to Metzinger, made in June, 1925, covering the west 224.75 feet of an adjoining lot, less a small described portion of said lot. The mortgage to Ferguson covered the leasehold interest in both tracts, and also all buildings and improvements erected, or which might be erected, on the described property, together with the rents, issues and profits thereof, and all the rights, title and interest of the lessees under said leases. The mortgage provides that if the mortgagor failed to pay the rentals reserved under said leases, that Ferguson should have the right to pay the same and charge the amount paid to the mortgagors and against the described leasehold estates. There was also a clause to *265 the effect that if the mortgagors or their assigns should make default in payment of any of the.principal or interest for thirty days after the due date, or any part thereof, or in the performance of any of the mortgage covenants, then the whole of the unpaid principal should become due and payable and said leasehold estates subject to foreclosure.

The bill alleged that the assignment and delivery to complainant of said note, and the endorsement thereof by the original payee and mortgagee, for which she paid the mortgagee $20,000, carried with it as incident thereto the mortgage securing said indebtedness, and entitled complainant to priority of payment out of the proceeds of the mortgaged estate. That there had been default in the payment of three installments of interest, falling due on said note after the assignment; that the principal of said note was part due and unpaid; that the property had been sold for 1929 State and county taxes in the sum of $3,539.33; that taxes for 193Q were due and unpaid; that the city taxes for several years were in default; that the mortgage securing said note was therefore in default and subject to foreclosure under the terms thereof.

It was also alleged that because of the non-payment of taxes the said leases were subject to default, as each of the leases contained a clause whereby the leasehold estate and the buildings and improvements located thereon would revert to the owner and holder in the event of such defaults and the giving of thirty-day notices to the lessees. That by reason of the many defaults above referred to, the security represented by the mortgage was in immediate danger of being lost and destroyed and complainant’s interest under said note and mortgage' wiped out unless a receiver be promptly appointed by the court to preserve and protect the interests of complainant. That the mortgage expressly pledged the rents, issues and profits from all buildings and *266 improvements on the property, in addition to the leases and the leasehold estates.

The bill further alleged that there were located on the property a hotel building containing 150 rooms and a number of stores fronting on Orange Avenue, some of which were unoccupied, and also several occupied dwelling houses. That respondent, Fort Gatlin Hotel,.Inc., was in possession of all of said buildings under a lease executed to it by Arthur McKean and wife and dated March 15th, 1928, said Arthur McKean having become the leasehold owner by means of assignments and conveyances of the leases and leasehold estates described in the mortgage. That while the Fort Gatlin Company was receiving the, rents and profits and had been paying large sums of money on its lease from McKean, that neither Ferguson, nor McKean, nor the Fort Gatlin Company had paid complainant any of the sums required by the note and mortgage, non the delinquent taxes, thus wasting and depleting the security. That the hotel building was badly in need of certain necessary repairs, and infested with termites which were destroying the woodwork; that it was necessary to install a heating system, which would cost about $10,000; that none of the income was being applied to these purposes; that the makers of said note were insolvent and the security afforded by the mortgage inadequate at the then market value; that the ground rents on the two leases were based on boom-time values and amounted to approximately $12,000 per year, and within a short time would increase to $16,000 per year, making it impossible for the holders of the leasehold, as well as for the lessees holding under the same, to pay the ground rents, taxes, insurance and other obligations provided for in said leases; that the operating expenses of the hotel- were approximately $27,000 per year, and that Fort Gatlin Hotel, Inc., then in possession, was unable to pay its operating e-x *267

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Boogaart of Florida, Inc.
17 B.R. 480 (S.D. Florida, 1981)
Gould, Inc. v. Hydro-Ski Int'l Corp.
287 So. 2d 115 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1973)
Oliver v. Mercaldi
103 So. 2d 665 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1958)
Hollywood, Inc. v. Clark
15 So. 2d 175 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 So. 681, 116 Fla. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-metzinger-fla-1934.