Marshall Et Ux. v. Hartman

139 So. 441, 104 Fla. 143
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 139 So. 441 (Marshall Et Ux. v. Hartman) 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
Marshall Et Ux. v. Hartman, 139 So. 441, 104 Fla. 143 (Fla. 1932).

Opinion

Brown, J.

—Viola Hartman, an unmarried woman, residing in New York, on May 30, 1927, exhibited her bill of *145 complaint against W. W. Marshall and wife, residents of Volusia County, Florida, for the rescission and cancellation of a certain contract, dated November 2, 1925, evidencing the purchase by her from Marshall of described real estate in Daytona Beach, the purchase price being $150,000., $25,000. cash and the remainder payable $2,500. every six months thereafter with interest, and for the recovery of what she had paid on said contract less rents collected by her during the period o'f about eighteen months since the execution of the contract. The gravamen of the bill was that the execution of the contract had been secured by- Marshall’s falsely representing that the land had riparian rights, which representation was alleged to have been a very material one, and that the contract itself called for riparian rights, whereas complainant had thereafter, in April, 1927, discovered that the property had no riparian rights appurtenant thereto. The defendants answered the bill, denying that any such representation had been made, or that the contract obligated them to convey any title or rights other than such title or rights as defendants had, as shown by an abstract of the title furnished to complainant when the contract was made, and alleged that defendants had never assumed or claimed that the property had any riparian rights; that the words “and riparian rights” were embraced in the contract merely to make the contract correspond to the -deeds by which Marshall had acquired title to the property. By way of affirmative relief, defendants prayed that complainant be required to specifically perform the contract. Upon final hearing on pleadings and proof the circuit court rendered a decree as prayed for by complainant, cancelling the contract and ordering that the defendants pay the complainants $49,831.01, and that in default of payment the property be sold to satisfy the amount so found to be due. From such decree appeal with supersedeas was taken to this court.

*146 In all the negotiations with reference to the purchase of the property and the execution of the contract, and all that transpired thereafter, the complainant was represented by her brother, Albert Hartman,■ who was her agent-and attorney-in-fact, with whom she was associated in the warehouse business in New York City. The complainant herself never came to Florida. The entire transaction was handled for her by her brother.

Albert Hartman visited Daytona Beach for ten or twelve days in the latter part of July, 1925. He says he made the trip to recuperate from an attack of illness, and also' with the idea of securing a good location for a concentration warehouse, with riparian rights, to which he could “barge in” freight; there -being in existence at that time the embargo on railroad freight shipments South o'f Jacksonville. Soon after his arrival in Daytona Beach, he called on a Mr. Levenstein, an acquaintance of his who ran a shoe store on Beach Street, but who was also in the real estate business. He told Levenstein o’f his desire to buy such a warehouse site with riparian rights, and engaged Levenstein to help him buy a piece of property suitable for this purpose. Levenstein called in a Mr. Gille, a real estate broker, who, Levenstein says, tol-d him that he had a piece of property on Beach Street, belonging to Mr. Marshall, which had riparian rights, and which would suit him. Levenstein testified that he knew there was some property fronting on Beach Street which had riparian rights and some which had not. Gille is referred to by Hartman and Levenstein as Marshall’s agent, though Hartman paid him a commission; but it appears from Marshall’s testimony that before leaving for Vermont for the summer, he had engaged Gille to collect for him the rents as they fell due on this property, and gave him a “probable” sales price of $150,000. The property was shown to Hartman, who inspected it several times. It had a frontage of 150 on Beach Street, and a depth of 350 feet, running *147 back in a somewhat irregular shape to Daytona Street, on which latter street it had a frontage of 80 feet. There were five stores located on the property, fronting on Beach Street, which was a paved street 50 or 60 feet wide, running in a Northerly and Southerly direction, parallel with the Halifax River, a wide, navigable body of water. The property in question was located on the West side of Beach Street. Across Beach Street, on the East side, there was a strip of recently filled in land, about 150 to 200 feet wide, between the street and the River, running for soine distance North and South. Hartman appears to have assumed, without asking any questions, that the portion of this land between the East side of Beach Street and the River, opposite the Marshall property, constituted “riparian rights,” appurtenant to, and which went with, the Marshall property. Gille, he says, had told him that the property had riparian rights. Gille denied this, but said that he said no more than that the abstract stated that riparian rights went with the property; that “this was of record with the title to' that property, whatever that amounts to.” That he never told Hartman or Levenstein that Marshall' had any title to any land lying East of Beach Street; and that he also told Hartman that the city claimed the land East of Beach Street, and had ordered all structures thereon to be removed and was not permitting any others to be erected.

Hartman testified further that he knew nothing of the previous history of the property and relied on Gille’s representation without investigation or legal advice. But he must have known that the land he was buying was all located on the West side of Beach Street, and even though he may have honestly believed that the land he was buying had riparian rights, the fact remains that by an inspection of the property (which he visited several times), he was confronted with the obvious fact that between the property he was buying and the River there was not only a public *148 street, but also 150 feet or more of land, recently filled in land, it is true, but land nevertheless. As land is not appurtenant to the land (Rivas v. Solary, 18 Fla. 122), and as riparian rights are not appurtenant to' land which has no water boundary (45 C. J. 570 et seq.), all of which Hartman must be presumed to have known, this was enough to have put him upon inquiry. And if he had inquired he could easily have ascertained that the city had constructed a bulkhead and had filled in this and the remainder of the strip of land between the East edge of Beach Street and the River several months before Hartman’s arrival, for the purpose of making it into' a public water front park, and that the city claimed to be the absolute owner of the strip of land thus filled in. If, as Hartman testified, the property was worthless for the purpose for which he wanted it unless riparian rights went with it, it would seem that he would have made some investigation in view of the apparent physical facts above alluded to. It also appears from his testimony that he did not intend to build the warehouse on the River, as alleged in the bill, but on the property West of Beach Street on which' the stores were located, and planned to remove the store buildings as soon as the leases expired to make room for the warehouse buildings.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 441, 104 Fla. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-et-ux-v-hartman-fla-1932.