Mizner Land Corp. v. Abbott Gaulden

175 So. 507, 128 Fla. 489
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 So. 507 (Mizner Land Corp. v. Abbott Gaulden) 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
Mizner Land Corp. v. Abbott Gaulden, 175 So. 507, 128 Fla. 489 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

On Rehearing, June 28, 1937. *Page 490
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 491 Several years prior to 1928, Victor A. Searles, an elderly gentleman from New Jersey, an obscure artist and draftsman by profession and without business inclination or experience, inherited an estate valued at several million dollars. He soon after went to Palm Beach, purchased a handsome ocean front home, and contacted some real estate men who sold him 4916.93 feet of unimproved ocean front lands near the town of Boynton, which we hereinafter designate as Mizner mile.

He then organized the Mizner Land Corporation, took one-third the stock in his own name, conveyed one-third to Port Quinn, his real estate agent, and one-third to Addison Mizner, an architect. He conveyed Mizner mile in fee to Mizner Land Corporation without any consideration from Quinn and Mizner for their stock in the corporation or interest in Mizner mile except their promise to develop and sell it. *Page 492

In addition to his inheritance, Searles arrived in Palm Beach with a young wife who had an affinity for the species homosapiens. She gave him a bag of trouble and along with that he became dissatisfied with the bargain he made with Quinn and Mizner. In this dilemma he employed the law firm of Abbott and Gaulden of West Palm Beach to recover the interest in Mizner mile he had conveyed Quinn and Mizner, to litigate his domestic affairs, and agreed to pay them a fee of $50,000.00.

Abbott and Gaulden first organized East Inlet Development Corporation for Searles and on their advice he (Searles) as president of Mizner Land Corporation, deeded Mizner mile to the new corporation. Suits were then instituted in behalf of Searles against Quinn and Mizner to recover the stock held by them in Mizner Land Corporation and they in turn instituted counter suits against Searles for services, et cetera.

After some months litigating, a compromise was reached whereby Searles agreed to pay Quinn and Mizner $100,000.00, for their stock in Mizner Land Corporation, give Quinn exclusive right to sell Mizner mile, and pay him ten per cent of the selling price as a commission when sale was effected. Searles also agreed to have Mizner Land Corporation convey Mizner mile in fee to Abbott as trustee with full power to sell and convey and to pay him (Abbott) ten per cent of the sales price for his services as trustee.

In the latter part of 1928, Searles, having acquired four corporations besides other matters in which he was deeply involved, made a contract with Abbott to give up the general practise of law and devote all his time to his (Searles) business as his personal counsel. The latter contract provided for compensation equal to what Abbott had been making in the practise which was agreed to be over $40,000.00 per year. In September, 1930, when the latter contract *Page 493 had been in effect for nearly three years without any payment thereon, Abbott found a purchaser for Mizner mile at a price of $650,000.00 and advised Searles that if sold for that amount he would insist on payment of his trustee's fee and two years' compensation on his contract as attorney. Searles insisted that he could not spare that amount from the sales price and suggested that Abbott reduce the amount due him. Negotiations between them resulted in a new contract fixing Abbott's total compensation for all services due him by Searles to date at $135,000.00. The Mizner mile was sold in October, 1930, at the price stated and Abbott was paid the full amount due him under the latter contract from the proceeds of the sale.

June 11, 1930, Abbott and Gaulden entered into a written agreement dissolving their law partnership and on September 5, following, Gaulden as plaintiff filed chancery suit No. 9000 against Abbott individually and as trustee for Mizner Land Corporation, Mizner Land Corporation, a corporation, West Palm Beach Atlantic National Bank, and Victor A. Searles, the bill alleging the facts set out herein with others, and prayed that a specific fund of $18,850.00 on deposit in West Palm Beach Atlantic National Bank to the credit of Abbott's wife, be impounded and that an equitable assignment or lien be impressed thereon in favor of Gaulden, whose claim on said fund was based on the partnership dissolution agreement with Abbott.

On May 1, 1931, Mizner Land Corporation, Mavic Corporation, Charlotte Corporation, East Inlet Corporation, and Victor A. Searles, filed equity suit No. 9367 against C.D. Abbott and wife, Josephine Abbott, L.S. Gaulden, West Palm Beach Atlantic National Bank, and Atlantic Title Company, praying for an accounting and recovery from Abbott and Gaulden in behalf of Searles of large sums of money entrusted to them, to impound a part of said fund of *Page 494 $18,850.00 on deposit in West Palm Beach Atlantic National Bank, and to enforce payment of all the balance of said funds found to be due Searles. The bill of complaint is predicated on the theory that Searles trusted Abbott and Gaulden as his counsel and that they deceived, defrauded, and overreached him.

Answers were filed, the issues were made in both suits (No. 9000 and No. 9367), and on motion of Abbott the chancellor entered an order consolidating them. Manley P. Caldwell was appointed Special Master to take testimony and report findings as to whether complainants in suit No. 9367 were entitled to the accounting prayed for. The Special Master, after taking testimony, found that a fiduciary relationship of the highest type existed between complainants and defendants in suit No. 9367, and that complainants had entrusted large sums of money to Abbott and Gaulden prior to the dissolution of their partnership and to Abbott thereafter for which they had failed to account. He recommended that they be required to account for said funds and further found that it was not material that some of them were paid to Abbott alone prior to dissolution of the firm or to Abbott otherwise as trustee, since the relationship of attorney and client existed at all times between complainants and defendants, and that such trust was in pursuance of that relationship.

The Master's report was excepted to by Abbott and Gaulden severally, their exceptions were overruled, and the report was confirmed by the chancellor. The cause was then re-referred to the Special Master to hear testimony and state an account between the parties. Abbott and Gaulden filed their statement of accounts with the Master who required them to be substituted with fuller and more complete accounts. On motion of appellees, the chancellor entered an order relieving Special Master Caldwell, *Page 495 but at the same time ordering that all testimony taken by him be committed to and made part of the files. Hon. Bayard B. Shields was appointed Special Master with instructions to take testimony, state an account between the parties, and report his findings of law and fact.

Special Master Shields took testimony and found that the contract between Abbott and Searles for the payment of the fee of $135,000.00 was void because the minds of the parties did not meet. He also found that Abbott did not waive his rights under the agreement of May 31, 1929, whereby Searles agreed to pay him a trustee's fee of ten per cent of the sales price of Mizner mile when sold.

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175 So. 507, 128 Fla. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mizner-land-corp-v-abbott-gaulden-fla-1937.