Mease v. Warm Mineral Springs, Inc.

128 So. 2d 174
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 1, 1961
Docket1761
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 128 So. 2d 174 (Mease v. Warm Mineral Springs, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mease v. Warm Mineral Springs, Inc., 128 So. 2d 174 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

128 So.2d 174 (1961)

Dr. J.A. MEASE, Jr., Appellant,
v.
WARM MINERAL SPRINGS, INC., formerly Warm Salt Springs, Inc., a Florida corporation, Appellee.

No. 1761.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

March 1, 1961.

*175 McLean & McLean, Tampa, and Askew, Earle & Hawes, St. Petersburg, for appellant.

Lynn N. Silvertooth, Sarasota, and Fowler, White, Gillen, Humkey, & Trenam, Tampa, for appellee.

KANNER, Judge.

As the result of a suit commenced in 1957 to rescind and cancel a deed of conveyance, the court entered a final decree favoring the plaintiff, Warm Mineral Springs, Inc. Appeal from the decree is brought by the defendant, Dr. J.A. Mease, Jr.

The plaintiff corporation, Warm Mineral Springs, Inc., before purchase of the stock by Frederick M. Daley, bore the corporate name of Warm Salt Springs, Inc. That corporation was engaged in the business of developing a large spring and in selling lots and homesites located in its environs. Pursuant to contract and corporate resolution, it conveyed about five acres of land adjacent to the spring to Dr. Mease, who was at the time an officer, director, and stockholder of the corporation, as well as a member of the management committee. The transfer was made free and clear of encumbrances but subject to an obligation on Dr. Mease's part, either to construct a therapeutic clinic upon the land, or to begin substantial construction within twelve months from the date of the deed.

Title to about 748 acres of land upon which the spring was located was vested in Warm Salt Springs, Inc. The corporation was controlled by Leo Scharf and his wife, Margarete Scharf, who in 1954 approached Dr. Mease concerning the possibility of constructing the clinic referred to, their aim being to enhance the property and expedite its development. As a result, Dr. Mease, the Scharfs, and one H.W. Meyer entered into a written contract dated October 26, 1954, for the purpose of developing the property.

Paragraph nine of the contract delineated the terms under which Dr. Mease was to be entitled to the lands conveyed. Included was the obligation whereby Mease was to surrender the exclusive privileges accorded him under the instrument, together with any claim or demand for the conveyance of land, in the event the clinic described was not built or substantially started within twelve months.[1]

*176 The by-laws of Warm Salt Springs, Inc., provided that the president was empowered to sell, mortgage, or convey real estate, pursuant only to authorization by resolution of the board of directors. At a meeting of the board of directors held on November 10, 1954, such a resolution authorizing the conveyance to Dr. Mease was duly passed;[2] and thereupon the land was deeded to him on May 4, 1955, by warranty deed. That instrument of itself passed to Dr. Mease title in fee simple, with no provision for reversion, condition subsequent, or possibility of reverter, but with a covenant that Dr. Mease would have exclusive use of the waters for therapeutic purposes. There was no consideration for the deed other than Dr. Mease's promise to erect the proposed clinic or start it within the time specified.

Negotiations for the sale of all the corporate stock to Frederick M. Daley were set in motion in the latter part of that same year. At Daley's request Dr. Mease wrote a letter to Leo Scharf dated September 26, 1955, providing additional information concerning the proposed clinic and stating conditions under which Mease would construct it.[3] The Scharfs, together *177 with an escrow agent acting for the other stockholders, on October 1, 1955, entered into an agreement with Daley for sale of the stock to him for $300,000.00, including the 25% interest of Dr. Mease in the corporation. Under paragraph five it was provided that "This contract is subject to the grant of exclusive medicinal therapeutic rights by Corporation to Dr. J.A. Mease, Jr" and under paragraph nine, the contract provided as follows:

"Sellers further warrant that the assets and liabilities of the Corporation, as reflected in said statements, are true and correct, with the understanding that those reflected in Schedule `A' attached hereto have been fully disclosed to Purchaser and are to be considered as to ultimate consequence in connection with such statements."

Schedule "A" of the contract as referred to under paragraph nine contained the following with reference to the contract with Dr. Mease, the deed, and the letter of September 26, 1955:

"Contract with Dr. J.A. Mease, Jr. dated October 26, 1954, and Warranty Deed dated May 4, 1955, and letter dated the 26th day of September, 1955, which clarifies the agreement originally entered into between the corporation and Dr. J.A. Mease, Jr."

On September 30, 1955, the directors held a special meeting at which, upon motion duly made and seconded, all acts of the officers and management of the corporation, all transfers of real property, financial transactions, and books of account to that date were approved and confirmed.

After Daley had bought all the stock, the plaintiff corporation, through a letter to Dr. Mease on February 21, 1956, extended the time for erection of the clinic to July 31, 1956. On August 1, the day following the termination date of the extension, the plaintiff corporation demanded of Dr. Mease a reconveyance of the property based on his failure to fulfill the requirements of the agreement with reference to building the clinic.

It is contended by the plaintiff that it conveyed the lands on May 4, 1955, in reliance on the promise and agreement of the defendant to construct the clinic, that the plaintiff had complied with its part of the agreement but that the defendant failed to fulfill his obligation. Dr. Mease was charged by the corporation with unjust enrichment and breach of confidence and trust through failure to comply with the agreement concerning construction of the proposed clinic.

Admitting the written agreement, the corporate resolution, and delivery of the deed, Dr. Mease asserts, however, that both the agreement and corporate resolution were subsequently modified. He contends that, by the modification of the agreement, construction of the clinic depended upon access to and from its proposed site through extension of the paving of Muscogee Road around the clinic grounds to Ortiz Boulevard and that this was to have been done by the corporation prior to commencement of the construction. Dr. Mease has counterclaimed, urging that the corporation as the alter ego of Daley should be required to specifically perform the claimed agreement to extend the paving of Muscogee Road.

At the trial, all the stockholders of the corporation testified except the Scharfs and another, who was ill; and their testimony indicated that they all knew and approved of the deed to Dr. Mease. One former director and officer testified that the letter of September 26, 1955, from Dr. Mease to Scharf accurately reflected the agreement with the other stockholders and directors concerning construction of the clinic. On this, plaintiff admits that the deed was to be given, but disputes the claimed modification.

In the final decree, the court found that the agreement referred to was entered into upon the condition that the defendant build or substantially start the construction of a therapeutic clinic within twelve calendar *178

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 2d 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mease-v-warm-mineral-springs-inc-fladistctapp-1961.