Lewter v. Price

25 Fla. 574
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 574 (Lewter v. Price) 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
Lewter v. Price, 25 Fla. 574 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

This ease is one of a bill in equity to foreclose a mortgage given to secure two promissory notes executed by the appellees, Mrs. Price and her husband, Jehu S. Price. The mortgage covers two pieces of land in Orange county, one of which may be aptly designated as Mrs. Price’s home place, and the other as the forty acre tract.

The title of the forty acre tract stood in the name of Judge Spear, under a deed of trust which had been made to him by A. M. Hyer. Frederick A. Lewter, the husband of Linnie W. Lewter, and Braxton Beacham, both of whom are appellants, were in the real estate business, under the style of Lewter & Beacham, at Orlando, in Orange county, and had been authorized by the trustee to sell the forty acre tract of land. They were to have as their commissions or compensation for selling, any sum they might realize over and above $1,500. The sale was to “ net” the trustee $1,500.

Though not a material consideration under the view we take of the ease, the negotiations detailed by the witnesses, show that Mrs. Price, and not her husband was to be the purchaser. Price and his wife did not have the ready money with which to pay for the forty acre tract, and there being two mortgages on the home ^place,” one of which they could not arrange to satisfy or at least cause to be cancelled on the records of the county, the party, Mr. Porter, who was to lend $1,500, refused to let them have the money on a mortgage they had executed covering both places and de. livered to him for his principal, Mrs. Wilson, for this purpose. Several months having passed without a consumma[577]*577tion of the sale, the trustee, who had executed a deed conveying the forty acre tract, which deed was in the hands of his attorney to be delivered on the payment of the $1,500, declared the trade off about January 1st, 1887, the time limited for its consummation. Subsequently Price and wile and Mr. Porter made an adjustment by which that instrument was to be retained by Porter to secure him an amount sufficient to cover interest on the money for the tim t had been kept idle by the pendency of the negotiations, which interest Price and wife had originally agreed to pay, as well as $49, the amount due him as fees for the loan, and for recording mortgage and other expenses, the whole amounting to $156.00.

Price and wife also executed on September 17th, 1886, two promissory notes, each for the sum of $250, one payable to Mrs. Lewter, and the other to Beacham, and a mortgage on both tracts of land to secure their payment, and it is to foreclose this mortgage that the bill before us has been filed.

The contention of the appellants, whose bill had been dismissed by the chancellor, is that these notes were given in consideration of services rendered for Mrs. Price, by Lewter & Beacham in negotiating the purchase of the forty acre tract and in securing the loan of $1,500 mentioned above. This is denied by appellees, whose position is that there was in fact no consideration for the notes and mortgage, and that the same were never to be operative until or unless the purchase of the forty acre tract should be consummated.

It is clear from the testimony in behalf of the appellants that two thousand dollars is the lowest price at which Lewter & Beacham ever offered the forty acre tract to Price or his wife. According to Lewter’s testimony’, he was in Price’s shop about the last of May, and Price told him that he would like to buy a small piece of land near town, and [578]*578that if he saw or heard of a cheap and desirable place to let him know. The next day Lewter called on Price and told him of this forty acre tract which Lewter & Beacham “ had,” and that the owner valued'it at $2,500 or $3,000, but they, Lewter & Beacham, could “sell it to him for $2,200.” Some time after this Lewter asked Price to go and see the land, and took him out to look at it, and Price expressed himself as satisfied with the price, and promised to call and see Lewter & Beacham about it. In two or three days Lewter called on Price, who told him that he thought $2,200 too large a price, and that he had failed to realize money which he had stated in their first interview another gentleman was raising for him. To this Lewter replied that he could arrange it so that Price could get the-land for $2,000, and that $1,500 was to be paid to the trustee of ITyer; and Price said he would see his wife and advise her to buy, even if she had to mortgage her home place. The next day Lewter, Mrs. and Mr. Price and another person rode mat to the land and she stated to Lewter that she was satisfied to make the purchase that day, but would talk the matter over and let him know next morning. Lewter told her that $1,500 cash would be necessary to pay the trustee M the property, and the “ balance of $500, that we would arrange.” She remarked that she had no way of raising the money except mortgaging her home, and that she knew of no one who had the money to loan. During Lewter’s next conversation with Price the latter told the former that his wife had decided to make the purchase if Lewter & Beacham could “ help them raise the money,” and Lewter replied that Lewter & Beacham could get the monejr on the home place and the forty acres, and that if they, Lewter & Beacham, could not do any better they would take a second mortgage on the same property for the $500. Mr. Porter after examining the property with Lew[579]*579ter & Beacham, agreed to make the loan, and they riotifie'd Mr. and Mrs. Price that the money was ready, and that the papers had been prepared, and that Porter said he did not have time to examine the abstract, but would do»so at his earliest opportunity. Lewter saw Price during the same day and was informed by him that his wife was making preparations to visit some friends in Georgia, and that if the business could not be fixed up before she went, it would have to wait until she returned. This was in July, and the papers were not executed till in September, and after her return from Georgia, when the $1,500 papers were turned over to Porter, and the others to Lewter & Beacham, who notified Mrs. Price that the deed to the forty acre tract was ready for delivery. After this Lewter & Beacham were informed by Porter that Poyntz, the cashier of a bank in Orlando, held a mortgage on the home place, on which there was a balance of $88 due. Poyntz told Lewter & Beacham to get Mr. Price to give his note for that amount, and that if' they would endorse the note he would transfer the mortgage to Lewter & Beacham, and that Lewter & Beacham again notified Mr. and Mrs. Price that they had arranged the mortgage with Mr. Poyntz, and that the trustee of the property was anxious to have the matter closed up, and then Lewter & Beacham were informed by Porter that there was still another mortgage against Mrs.' Price’s property which would require $600 or $700, and that this mortgage must be can-celled before he could let the money go; and Price said the-mortgage had been cancelled and paid by his wife’s brother, and Lewter told Price that the record should show it, and Price said he had written his brother-in-law in reference tO' cancelling the mortgage, but he had refused to do so.

It is true that Lewter & Beacham state in . their testimony that Mr. and Mrs. Price were to pay them, or they [580]*580were to have, the $5C0, or the notes and mortgage representing the same, tor their services in purchasing the land and negotiating the loan, but the evidence nowhere satisfactorily shows that it was even agreed between, them and Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewter-v-price-fla-1889.