Kaminsky v. Wye

132 So. 2d 44, 1961 Fla. App. LEXIS 2844
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 26, 1961
DocketNo. 2065
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 So. 2d 44 (Kaminsky v. Wye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaminsky v. Wye, 132 So. 2d 44, 1961 Fla. App. LEXIS 2844 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

ALLEN, Acting Chief Judge.

The appellant, as plaintiff in the lower court, filed an action for rescission of a contract of purchase of a motel and cancellation of the purchase money mortgage against the appellee-defendants alleging that the defendant, the former owners and operators of the motel, fraudulently misrepresented the past earnings of the motel; that plaintiff relied upon these fraudulent misrepresentations in purchasing the motel; and that plaintiff was therefore entitled to be placed in status quo. The defendants answered denying fraud and counterclaimed seeking foreclosure of a second mortgage which had been executed to defendants by plaintiff at the time of purchase. The plaintiff put on its case after which the defendants moved to dismiss on the ground that plaintiff had failed to prove actual fraud. The lower court took the matter under advisement and subsequently dismissed plaintiff’s complaint stating that plaintiff had proved material fraud on the part of the defendants but that plaintiff had failed to reasonably apprise himself of the facts before consummating the purchase from defendants. It is from this order that plaintiff has appealed. The counterclaim is still pending in the lower court.

During the fall of 1958 the plaintiff, George V. Kaminsky, (hereafter referred to as Kay) inquired of H. N. Wimmers, a real estate broker in Venice, concerning any income producing properties on the market in the Venice area. The real estate broker showed the Holland Shores Motel to tire plaintiff and introduced the plaintiff to the defendants, who owned and operated the motel. After various inspections of the premises and conversations with defendants, plaintiff requested a statement of past earnings of the motel.

The defendants furnished some information to the broker, who in turn prepared a statement, which was turned over to plaintiff, showing the earnings for September, 1957, through August, 1958, to have been in excess of $24,000.

Various offers and counter-offers were made and on January 10, 1959, the parties entered into a contract of purchase of the motel for a price of $122,500. Throughout this period defendants contended they had sent all their financial statements, books, etc. to their bookkeeper in Boston for the preparation of income tax forms. The plaintiff insisted on verification of the past earnings and defendants subsequently permitted him to see the guest registration books of the motel. The plaintiff requested further proof and informed the defendants that if further proof was not forthcoming the deal was off. The plaintiff requested defendants to release to him a record of the sales tax receipts on the rentals. The defendants refused but did furnish the plaintiff a checkbook containing,- among other checks, the stubs purporting to be the stubs from checks sent to the Comptroller’s office. By totaling up the tax, which is [46]*463% of the rentals, the plaintiff ascertained that this would indicate a figure within 10% of the $24,000 alleged income. After this was ascertained, the parties entered into the contract referred to above.

After the transaction was consummated and the plaintiff took over the operation of the motel, the plaintiff discovered that the earnings for the preceding year had been actually around $16,000 instead of the $24,000 alleged by the defendants.

The plaintiff went into possession on January 16, 1959. He states that he discovered the alleged fraud one week later. The plaintiff waited until April to demand rescission but explains the reason as being that since February and March are the best months, he wanted to see what the maximum per cent of occupancy would be.

The judge below, in an opinion granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss, said:

“From plaintiff’s testimony and that of his witnesses, it appears Plaintiff purchased the motel after extensive negotiations and living in the motel for a period of time. The information given to the realtor regarding rental income was evidently ‘blown up’. After extended negotiations, a contract of sale was entered into * *, with the provision that proof of alleged income be made. Defendant sellers consistently, up to just prior to closing, refused to supply any evidence of the supposed past income. Defendants claimed that all the books and records were in the hands of their accountant in another city. Plaintiff attempted then to get permission from Defendants to secure copies of sales tax reports from the Comptroller in order to verify income. This was also refused by Defendants. The records show, without contradiction, that Defendants consistently refused all such proof and indicated that they would continue to refuse, even at the expense of the deal falling through. The Plaintiff persisted in his effort to obtain this information up to the day before the closing when the deal was called off. Later that day, some of the defendants called and offered to show check stubs showing the amount paid to the State for sales tax on rentals, by way of proof of earnings. The stubs were looked at by real estate agent and the Plaintiff, and the amounts verified1 with the ‘blown up’ figures on income. The deal was then closed the next day.
“Taken at its best, Plaintiff has presented a case of material fraud which was relied on and did in fact induce the purchase complained of. On the other hand, Plaintiff’s own testimony presents a case in which Plaintiff had every conceivable notice of the fraud and chose to close the transaction with proof of the fraud before him, as to a part thereof (as to represented advance registrations), and enough evidence of other fraud (represented income) to have warned any reasonable person to have checked further and secure additional proof before closing the transaction. Plaintiff lived at the motel some six to eight weeks prior to the closing. During this time he made every effort to get proof of the income claimed. Defendants consistently evaded giving of proof. Finally Plaintiff wanted access to records he knew were available if Defendants, would consent to his having them, (sales tax records). Defendants refused this request and yet Plaintiff, being denied, without any excuse by Defendants, access to such reports,, blindly went forward in an attempt to-get proof, and finally, at the last minute, claims to have relied on check book stubs, which were not authenticated in any way, to prove to his satisfaction that all was rosy and the deal was entirely as represented. Not only did Plaintiff accept such proof but the next day, upon closing, Defendants furnished a list of advance reservations [47]*47which disclosed reservations for ‘about four to six people’ when ‘While I was negotiating for this Motel I was told that they were booked solid for the winter season — they were booked for about ten or twelve weeks in advance’. Even with all this he still closed the transaction. Upon closing the transaction the Plaintiff, within about a week, obtained the information on sales tax which he had been refused (he then being the owner, such records became available to him). He subsequently consulted his attorney within the next few weeks and the attorney, for Plaintiff, notified the Defendants of his desire to rescind the latter part of April.
“Under all these circumstances, it appears to the Court that the Plaintiff wanted the motel so badly that he went into the transaction with every warning conceivable being given and notice of fraud apparent to anyone who cared to look.”

In the opinion of the lower court, the case of George E. Sebring Co. v. Skinner, 100 Fla. 315, 129 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 So. 2d 44, 1961 Fla. App. LEXIS 2844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaminsky-v-wye-fladistctapp-1961.