MacArthur v. North Palm Beach Utilities, Inc.

202 So. 2d 181, 1967 Fla. LEXIS 3390
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 26, 1967
Docket35677
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 202 So. 2d 181 (MacArthur v. North Palm Beach Utilities, Inc.) 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
MacArthur v. North Palm Beach Utilities, Inc., 202 So. 2d 181, 1967 Fla. LEXIS 3390 (Fla. 1967).

Opinion

202 So.2d 181 (1967)

John D. MacARTHUR, Petitioner,
v.
NORTH PALM BEACH UTILITIES, INC., a Florida Corporation et al., Respondents.

No. 35677.

Supreme Court of Florida.

July 26, 1967.
Rehearing Denied October 2, 1967.

*183 Fisher, Prior, Pruitt & Schulle, West Palm Beach, and Sam Daniels, Miami, for petitioner.

Alley, Maass, Rogers, Lindsay & Chauncey, Palm Beach, and Bedell, Bedell, Dittmar & Smith, Jacksonville, for respondents.

ROBERTS, Justice.

By conflict certiorari we review a decision of the District Court of Appeal, Fourth District, affirming a decree of the chancellor below which denied a decree of specific performance to the plaintiff, the petitioner here. The District Court set forth the history and facts in the following language: —

"The appellant, MacArthur, has perfected his appeal from an adverse decree entered in his suit for specific performance of an option to purchase executed by defendant, North Palm Beach, Inc., whose name was later changed to North Palm Beach Utilities, Inc. The subject matter of the option is a water supply and sewerage disposal system. The option is contained in a utility agreement entered into between MacArthur and defendant, North Palm Beach, Inc., on June 22, 1955, whereby MacArthur agreed to loan said defendant certain money over a specified period of time to be used to pay the costs of constructing a water supply and sewerage disposal system. The agreement provided that the loans would be evidenced by notes given by North Palm Beach, Inc., to MacArthur and would be secured by a first mortgage upon the property upon which said system was located and upon all distribution facilities, franchises, rights-of-way and easements pertaining to said systems. The utility agreement was a part of an over-all transaction whereby large acreage was sold by MacArthur to North Palm Beach, Inc., under a purchase and sale agreement, likewise of date June 22, 1955.
"The option, set forth in the utility agreement, purported to give to MacArthur the privilege of purchasing `the water supply and sewer disposal water system including all mains from North Palm Beach at the cost to North Palm Beach.' The agreement then specified the items that would determine such cost and provided that MacArthur could exercise his right to purchase at any time from June 30, 1960 (being the due date of the first note), to any time prior to the full payment of any sum due under the agreement. The option further provided that, if North Palm Beach should elect to prepay said loan, MacArthur would have six months' written notice of such intention to make prepayment and that during said time MacArthur could exercise said option to purchase. Before the loan was paid in full MacArthur attempted to exercise the option.
"The option was a part of the utility security agreement and was not supported by any independent consideration." (Emphasis added.) 187 So.2d 681.

The cases cited by the District Court do not apply to the facts in this case. Here was a complex business transaction, not uncommon to the financial community, where a seller agreed to (1) sell a large tract of land for a subdivision, and (2) to finance a water and sewerage disposal system. As a part of the overall transaction, he received an option from the purchasers to purchase the water and sewer system for its construction cost, which obviously was a minor part of the entire deal. He performed his part of the contract, but when he called upon the purchasers to sell the water and sewer *184 system back to him, they reneged. This court is committed to the proposition that A can sell a tract of land to B and reserve an option to re-purchase a part of it. See Rosenthal v. Le May (Fla.) 72 So.2d 289, 44 A.L.R.2d 336, and Blair v. Kingsley (Fla. App.2d Dist.), 128 So.2d 889.

The Rosenthal case involved a transaction where the seller sold an interest in land and reserved an option to re-purchase. The option was upheld. The Blair case involved the sale of a tract of land reserving an option of refusal for twelve years. The option was upheld.

Thus, if MacArthur had sold the land and reserved an option to re-purchase, but had not made the accommodation loan to finance the construction, there would be no doubt under the foregoing decisions that his option would be good; or if he had sold the land, and arranged for a bank to finance the construction, there would be no doubt, although the result to the purchasers would be exactly the same. Then, where is the logic that, merely because he held the mortgage, his option would be unenforceable? Is he to be penalized for accommodating the purchasers? I think not. This is not to be confused with a typical debtor-creditor relationship, which was in general the subject matter of the cases relied on by the District Court. This is a complex transaction with abundant consideration moving between all the parties to support all phases of it. There is no showing of fraud or overreaching. The purchasers made a fair contract to resell for a valid consideration but refused to perform.

All parties to the transactions were sui juris, were represented by counsel, and no showing of lack of disclosure or other disadvantage is made or urged.

"Restrictions on the free and untrammeled use and enjoyment of property are not favored by the law; but they will be upheld and given effect in accordance with the parties' intention as clearly shown by the language of the instrument or determined from the language considered in connection with the apparent object of the parties as determined from the surrounding circumstances." 7 Thompson on Real Property, § 3568; Blair v. Kingsley, Fla.App., 128 So.2d 889.

The decision sub judice produces a legal result in head-on direct conflict with the Rosenthal and Blair cases.

It is noteworthy that the option was not to purchase the utility company, but by the very language of the agreement, dated June 22, 1955, applied to

"The term water supply plant includes well fields, wells, storage tanks, pumps, plant building, treatment equipment and all other things necessary for a public water supply except supply mains and house connections. The term sewage disposal plant includes plant buildings, treatment equipment, lift stations, effluent disposal mains and all other things necessary for public sewage disposal except collection mains and house connections."

The same agreement in paragraph 7 provided:

"MacArthur shall have the option of purchasing the water supply and sewage disposal system including all mains from North Palm Beach at the Cost to North Palm Beach. The cost to North Palm Beach shall include items certified by the engineer as construction costs of water supply plant, sewage disposal plant, supply mains, collection mains and shall include land, engineering and legal expense but shall not include management fees or salaries of officers or directors during construction of the system. Construction loan interest and costs of such loans shall be included in cost. Any dispute arising out of the failure of the parties to agree on the cost of the water supply and sewage disposal system under this option shall be settled by Arbitrators, one to be selected by MacArthur, one by North Palm Beach and the other to be selected by those arbitrators selected by the parties. *185 The decision of a majority thereof shall be binding upon the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
202 So. 2d 181, 1967 Fla. LEXIS 3390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macarthur-v-north-palm-beach-utilities-inc-fla-1967.