Myers v. Van Buskirk

119 So. 123, 96 Fla. 704
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 5, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 119 So. 123 (Myers v. Van Buskirk) 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
Myers v. Van Buskirk, 119 So. 123, 96 Fla. 704 (Fla. 1928).

Opinion

Strum, J.

This is an appeal from a final decree awarding specific performance of a contract to convey lands.

The lands in question were owned by O. A. Myers, one of the defendants below. On April 15, 1925, Myers, as vendor, entered into a written contract with the complainant below, Justin Van Buskirk, by the terms of which Myers agreed to sell to Van Buskirk, and the latter agreed to buy, the lands in question, the total purchase price to be $7,750.00, payable $2,000.00 on delivery to the purchaser of warranty deed and abstract showing good title in the vendor, and the remainder at intervals thereafter. At the time of the execution of said contract of sale and purchase, a cash payment of $10.00 was made by the purchaser, Van Buskirk, to the vendor, Myers, and accepted by the latter as the consideration for his agreement to convey . This contract of sale was not recorded until November 19, 1925.

On July 1, 1925, Myers entered into a second contract with Marigold Belli and Elizabeth Cunningham, whereby he agreed to convey the same lands to Belk and Cunning *707 ham for the total sum of $8,750.00, upon which contract a cash consideration of $100.00 was paid to Myers by Belk and Cunningham. This contract was recorded in the public records on July 1, 1925.

It appears that during the latter part of October, 1925, E. M. Cobb and L. E. Cambrón, two of the defendants below, were desirous of purchasing the lands in question. Learning of the contract held by Belk and Cunningham, they employed an attorney to search the public records to determine the status of the title. The attorney made the search and reported that the record title in Myers was good except for several formal defects which were then being corrected by a suit to quiet title. The contract between Myers and Van Bushkirk, the complainant, had not yet been recorded. Neither Cobb nor Cambrón, nor their attorney, then, nor at any time prior to November 19, 1925, had any notice, actual or constructive, of its existence.

After preliminary negotiations with Belk and Cunningham, and after being assured by Myers that he recognized the Belk and Cunningham contract as valid and would convey in accordance therewith, and knowing noth'ing of the Van Buskirk contract, Cobb and Cambrón on October 31, 1925, purchased the contract held by Belk and Cunningham, paying the latter a consideration of $5,000.00 in cash for their equitable interest in the lands under their contract. Belk and Cunningham on October- 31, 1925, executed a quit-claim deed whereby they “remised, released and quit-claimed” unto Cobb and Cambrón all of their “right, title, interest, claim and demand” in and to said lands. This deed contained no words of conveyance and no covenants of warranty or otherwise.

Simultaneously, with the delivery to Cobb and Cambrón of the quit-claim deed from Belk and Cunningham, on October 31, 1925, Myers executed a warranty deed bearing that date conveying the lands to Cobb and Cambrón. This *708 warranty deed was delivered by Myers, the grantor, to the attorney for the purchasers, Cobb and Cambrón, as their agent. The attorney testified that he was authorized by Myers to record the deed immediately, but did not do so because he feared he might complicate the suit, apparently brought by Myers, to quiet the title to the lands, which suit was then pending and in which a final decree had not yet been rendered. So that deed, as well as the quit claim deed from Belk and Cunningham, were withheld from record for the time being. No money was paid by Cobb and Cambrón to Myers upon delivery of the warranty deed, but Cobb and Cambrón at that time delivered to their attorney a check dated October 31, 1925, for $3,000.00 to apply on the purchase price to Myers. This check was drawn ,by Cambrón on the State Bank of Orlando, and was made payable to the Orange Bank & Trust Company, the bank with which Mr. Myers did business. This cheek, within a day or two, was turned over by Cobb and Cambrón’s attorney to the payee bank, with instructions that it was “to be delivered to Mr. Myers when E. W. and R. C. Davis (Mr. Myers’ attorneys) had finished that title, ’ ’ referring apparently to the suit to quiet title. • This form of transaction was apparently with the approval of Mr. Myers. It was clearly the intention of the parties that the proceeds of the check should not be paid over to Mr. Myers until a decree quieting the title in Mr. Myers had been rendered. The remainder of the purchase price was to be represented by promissory notes secured by a mortgage.

With affairs in this status, the original contract between Myers and the complainant Van Buskirk was recorded in the public records on November 19, 1925. On that day or the next the attorney for Cobb and Cambrón, who was their agent in the transaction, learned that Van Buskirk claimed an interest in the lands, and upon inquiry and *709 immediate inspection of the public records found Yan Bus-kirk’s contract to be of record. So far as is disclosed by the evidence, this was the first notice, either actual or contractive, had by either Cobb, Cambrón or their attorney of the existence of the Yan Buskirk contract. The recording of the Yan Buskirk contract on November 19, 1925, was, of course, constructive notice of its existence. Cobb and Cambrón’s attorney also received actual notice at about the same time, and from and after November 23, 1925, Cambrón was also on actual notice of the prior contract, communicated directly and personally to him by Yan Bus-kirk.

On November 30,1925, Cobb and Cambrón recorded their quit-claim deed from Belk and Cunningham and their warranty deed from Myers, both of which had been delivered to them on October 31, 1925.

Myers at all times remained in possession of the property ; and was still in possession when' this suit was brought.

Final decree in the suit to quiet title was signed by the chancellor on November. 27, 1925, but was not recorded until during the month of January, 1926. The $3,000.00 check above mentioned was paid by the payee bank on either December 5th or 7th, 1925. Mr. Myers testified without contradiction, however, that he had never at any time received the proceeds of the check, and that he did not know what became of the notes and mortgage representing and securing the deferred payments; that.he had never seen them and supposed they were in the bank. Why Myers did not receive the proceeds of the check is not made apparent by the testimony.

On December 4, 1925, the complainant Yan Buskirk filed his bill of complaint against Myer, Cobb and Cambrón seeking specific performance. The theory' of the bill, as *710 amended on December 9, 1925, was that Cobb and Cambrón received tbeir conveyance from Myers “having full knowledge of complainant’s contract with the said defendant Myers” and that complainant’s contract should therefore be enforced against Cobb and Cambrón in the same manner and to the extent as it could have been against their grantor Myers. See Drake Lumber Co. v. Branning, 66 Fla. 543, 64 So. R. 263; Drake v. Brody, 57 Fla. 393, 48 So. R. 978; Hammond v. Holz, 84 Fla. 1, 92 So. R. 874; Hall v. Northern & Southern Co., 55 Fla. 235, 46 So. R. 178; Tate v. Pensacola L. & B. Co., 37 Fla. 439, 20 So. R. 542; 25 R. C. L. 327; 27 R. C. L. 561, 686.

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 123, 96 Fla. 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-van-buskirk-fla-1928.