Lange v. Lange

182 So. 807, 133 Fla. 447, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1001
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 14, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 182 So. 807 (Lange v. Lange) 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
Lange v. Lange, 182 So. 807, 133 Fla. 447, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1001 (Fla. 1938).

Opinions

Chapman, J.

—-This cause is here on an appeal from a final decree dated August 12, 1937, entered in the Circuit Court of Escambia County, Florida, finding the equities of the suit, largely, with the plaintiff below. The final decree, broadly speaking, held that: (a)'the capital stock of the Gulf Securities Holding Corporation appearing in the names of Fred A. Lange, Jr., Lillian Lange and Walter W. Lange was and is now the property and assets of the Estate of Fred A. Lange, Sr., and that the plaintiff, Helen Dawson Lange, wife of the late Fred A. Lange, Sr., was entitled to dower therein; (b) that all properties, real and personal, standing in the name of the Gulf Securities Holding Cor *449 poration, including Cashier’s checks in the sum of $38,-501.68, at the time of the death of Fred A. Lange, Sr., were the assets of Gulf Securities Holding Corporation, and that no other parties to this suit own a beneficial interest therein, except Maryland Casualty Company, and plaintiff was entitled to dower therein; (c) the sum of $4,800.00 in the form of Traveler’s checks in the possession of Fred A. Lange, Sr., shortly prior to his said death, and subsequently found in the possession of deceased’s son, Walter W. Lange, was the individual property of Fred A. Lange, Sr., and assets of his estate, and in and to which plaintiff was entitled to dower.

From a final decree entered by the court below in behalf of the plaintiff, defendants perfected their appeal here and a large number of assignments of error are predicated or based on the final decree, but it appears to us that the merits of the case can be decided by a consideration of the items enumerated as (a), (b) and (c), supra.

The portion of the final decree appealed from and identified as (a), supra, is viz.:

“(1) That all of the capital stock of the Gulf Securities Holding Corporation, a corporation, held by the defendants, Fred A. Lange, Jr., Lillian Lange, and Walter W. Lange, being all of the capital stock of said corporation, was and now is the property and assets of the estate of Fred A. Lange, Sr., deceased, whereof the plaintiff is dowerable and that the pretended transfer thereof by the said Fred A. Lange, Sr., in his lifetime to the then several transferees thereof was not intended to pass the beneficial interest therein, and that each of said holders held the same with notice of such facts, and as the holders of the naked legal title thereto, for the use and benefit and subject to the absolute control of the said F. A. Lange, Sr.”

*450 The evidence shows that Fred A. Lange, Sr., a Prussian by birth, in the early 90’s, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with a limited capital of approximately $2,000.00, entered the steel business. From the beginning, under good management, the business was prosperous and with the years, it expanded and grew until the owner became financially independent and accumulated a considerable fortune. He married and had five children, when his wife died. One of the children died leaving three sons, viz.: A. C. Lange, W. W. Lange and Fred A. Lange, Jr., and Mrs. Caldwell. The three sons worked in the steel plants, A. C. Lange as a foreman in one of the plants, W. W. Lange as president, and Fred A. Lange, Jr., as secretary of the corporati'on. During the year 1923 Fred A. Lange, Sr., intermarried with O. Lena Larson, commonly known to the family as “Lee.” Shortly after the marriage Fred A. Lange, Sr., and wife came to Florida, and for some time lived near Camp Walton. He left his sons in the management of the two steel plants. During the latter part of 1929 he organized the Gulf Securities Holding Corporation, as a family corporation, and conveyed and otherwise transferred all his property to this corporation. In 1932 he obtained a divorce from his second wife and shortly thereafter intermarried for the third time with Janey Bell, and about one year thereafter intermarried with the plaintiff to this suit, the date of the marirage being January 25, 1935, and at the time she was employed as a clerk in a real estate office in the City of Pensacola, Florida. She had previously worked as a clerk in some of the stores in said city, earning some $15.00 or $20.00 per week. She owned but little money or property at the time of their marriage. Fred A. Lange, Sr., died on February 2, 1936, in the City of New Orleans, and with him at the time of his death was the plaintiff in the court below, his son, W. W. Lange, and Mrs. Lillian Lange.

*451 On September 13, 1929, Fred A. Lange, Sr., gave to his sons, W. W. Lange and Fred A. Lange, Jr., 499 shares, each, of the capital stock of Gulf Securities Holding Corporation. It was contended by the plaintiff below that, regardless of these alleged transfers of stock from Fred A. Lange, Sr., to his sons, he (Fred A. Lange, Sr.) was the beneficial owner thereof, as well as of all other property, real and personal, transferred or conveyed by him into the Gulf Securities Holding Corporation, all of which was done in fraud of the dower interest of the plaintiff. The cases, of Smith v. Hines, 10 Fla. 258, and Williams v. Collier, 120 Fla. 248, 158 So. 815, are relied on in this Court to sustain plaintiff’s contention. The transfer of the stock of the Gulf Securities Holding Corporation is alleged to have occurred on September 13, 1929, while the plaintiff here married Fred A. Lange, Sr., on January 25, 1935. In the case of Smith v. Hines, 10 Fla. 258, cited by counsel for plaintiff below, the wife involved was the same wife with whom the donor was cohabiting at the time the conveyance was made. The case at bar presents different facts in that the now plaintiff was not the wife of the donor on September 13, 1929, but that he was then married to wife number 2, Lee Lange. Fred A. Lange, Sr., divorced two wives prior to his marriage with plaintiff.

Where a father tríade a gift of certain property to infant child prior to a second marriage, dower rights of the second wife did not attach to property,- although it was left in possession of the father. . See Haynes v. Gwin, 137 Ark. 387, 209 S. W. 67.

Husband’s conveyance of property five months before marriage held not fraudulent as to wife in the absence of evidence that they were engaged or contemplated marriage at the time when the deed was executed. See Griffin v. Griffin, 225 Mich. 253, 196 N. W. 384.

*452 A widow is not entitled to dower in lands, conveyed by her husband, before marriage, although such conveyance was fraudulent and void as against creditors. See Whited v. Mallory, 58 Mass. (4 Cush.) 138.

See: Hounshell v. Hounshell, 232 Ky. 532, 23 S. W. (2nd) 959; Gaines v. Gaines 48 Ky. (9 B. Mon.) 295, 48 A. Dec. 425; Tate v. Tate, 21 N. C. (1 Dev. B. Eq.) 23; Collings v. Collings, 29 Ky. Law Rep. 51, 92 S. W. 577; Nelson v. Brown, 164 Ala. 397, 51 So. 360; Sederlund v. Sederlund, 176 Wis. 627, 187 N. W. 750; In re Mann's Estate, 201 Iowa 878, 208 N. W. 310; Givens v. Marbut, 259 Mo. 223, 168 S. W. 614; Gross v. Lange, 70 Mo. 45.

The transfer of the 998 shares of stock occurred on September 13, 1929, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the office of Joseph U. Lademan, when Mr. Lademan testified that Mr. Fred A.

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 807, 133 Fla. 447, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-lange-fla-1938.