Lang v. Horne

23 So. 2d 848, 156 Fla. 605, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 944
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 30, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 848 (Lang v. Horne) 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
Lang v. Horne, 23 So. 2d 848, 156 Fla. 605, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 944 (Fla. 1945).

Opinion

BUFORD, J.:

Appeal brings for review order dismissing amended bill of complaint. The amended bill of complaint alleges in substance that on March 31st 1943 plaintiff and defendants entered into an agreement in writing whereby the defendants covenanted and agreed to sell and the plaintiff covenanted and agreed to buy for a total consideration of $16,750.00 and upon terms and conditions set forth certain described real estate. Copy of the agreement is attached to the amended bill of complaint and by apt language made a part thereof.

The amended bill alleges in substance that thereafter on November 12th the defendants executed and delivered to the Commercial Bank & Trust Company of Ocala, a banking corporation, a mortgage to secure the payment of $22,000.00, payable 12 months after its date with interest at the rate of *607 4% per annum, which mortgage embraced the lands covered by the contract above referred to and other property and which mortgage was given and accepted subject to the contract between the parties to this suit.

The mortgage also conveyed or attempted to convey as security the interest of the defendants in the contract above referred to, together with all monies secured or to accrue to the defendants thereunder; that the mortgage was duly recorded and remains uncanceled of record.

The amended bill alleges that whatever rights the Commercial Bank & Trust Company of Ocala obtained by virtue of the mortgage are subordinate and inferior to the rights of the plaintiff under the contract. That plaintiff has performed all and singular the terms an*d covenants and conditions of the said agreement on his part to be performed; has made all the payments required of him under the terms of the contract the total of which payments amount to $8,200.00 principal and $510.36 interest, making a total of $8710.36; that plaintiff, relying upon the defendants to carry out the terms of their contract, entered into possession of said land and continued in possession thereof until March 21st 1944, when such possession was disturbed and interrupted by the acts of the defendants, or one of them; that the plaintiff, while in possession of the land, expended divers large sums of money for improvements of a permanent character, which improvements are described in the bill of particulars attached to the bill and made a part thereof; that it was well known to the defendants at the time of the execution and delivery of the agreement that it was the purpose and intent of the plaintiff to improve' said land and utilize same for the purpose of improving the same and that possession thereof was delivered the plaintiff under said agreement in advance of the time for closing title as specified in the agreement.

Plaintiff then claims a lien on the land for the improvements placed thereon less the amounts derived by plaintiff from the sale of pulpwood cut from said land as is in the bill therein set forth.

Plaintiff then alleges:

“5. That under the terms of said agreement there was paid *608 by plaintiff to defendants, Jack Horne and his wife Celeste Horn, the sum of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars in cash, at the time of the execution and delivery thereof; and there was subsequently paid by plaintiff to said defendants on or about April 15, 1943, the further sum of $5,000.00 as provided by said agreement. In and by said agreement the said defendants, Jack Horne and his wife, Celeste Horne, covenanted and agreed that promptly upon payment of said sum of $5,000.00 said defendants would order Florida Title & Abstract Company, and as soon as possible thereafter, deliver to plaintiff complete abstract of title to said land, certified to date; and plaintiff alleges that said defendants breached said agreement and defaulted thereunder in that they wholly failed, prior to the institution of this suit, to deliver or cause to be delivered to plaintiff said abstract of title, although the time allowable for the said defendants to procure and deliver to plaintiff such abstract of title, in conformity with said agreement, has long since elapsed; that such default constitutes an abandonment of said agreement on the part of said defendants and amounts in effect, to an offer on the part of said defendants to rescind said agreement; and the plaintiff prior to the commencement of this suit, accepted said offer and demanded refund of the moneys laid out and paid by plaintiff to said defendants, in the premises, and offered to do all things in equity and good conscience required of plaintiff to be done in order to entitle plaintiff to such refund, but said defendants have failed and refused to make such refund.
“That independent of such acceptance of defendant’s offer to rescind, the said default of the defendants, Jack Horne and his wife, Celeste Horne, entitles the plaintiff under the terms of said agreement, to rescind said agreement and plaintiff elects so to do.
“6. That the defendants, Jack Horne and his wife Celeste Horne, have further and separately breached the terms, covenants and conditions of said agreement in this:
“That the plaintiff being in possession of said land under said contract, and utilizing and improving the same for pasturage purposes and the ordinary uses of husbandry, and in conformity with the understanding of the' parties at the time *609 of the execution and delivery of said agreement, found it expedient to cause certain timber of the character known as pulp wood to be cut from a portion of said land, and thereunto entered into an arrangement for the cutting and sale of such pulp wood to one T. C. Cannady who, in pursuance of said arrangement, commenced such cutting on or about February 1st 1944, and continued thereat until, to-wit, March 21, 1944, since when he has ceased his cutting operations upon said land and has withheld from plaintiff payment for that part of the pulp wood so cut by him and not previously remitted for in the sum of approximately $300.00, and has stopped payment on a certain remittance, by check of $238.68 given on, to-wit, March 18, 1944. That the failure and refusal of said Cannady to continue the cutting of said pulpwood upon said land, and the refusal of said Cannady to remit to plaintiff the unpaid amount due, as aforesaid, and the stopping of payment on said check, is occasioned by the fact that the defendants, Jack Horne and his wife Celeste Horne, or one of them, entered upon said land, to-wit, March 21,1944, and then, and there either (a) ordered the servants and employees of said Cannady, engaged in cutting said pulp wood off of said land, or (b) personally made representations, or thereafter on the same date caused representations to be made through the attorney of the defendants, Frank R. Greene, esq., Ocala, Florida, in part to the purpose and effect that the plaintiff was without right to allow such pulp wood timber to be cut from said land or to sell the same, or to receive the proceeds of such sale, and that said defendants would hold the person or persons cutting the same answerable to account to said defendants for the value thereof. That said acts and representations came to the knowledge of the said Cannady, with the aforesaid result.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 848, 156 Fla. 605, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lang-v-horne-fla-1945.