Nichols Et Vir. v. Bodenwein

146 So. 86, 107 Fla. 25
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 146 So. 86 (Nichols Et Vir. v. Bodenwein) 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
Nichols Et Vir. v. Bodenwein, 146 So. 86, 107 Fla. 25 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

The appellants, whom we will refer to as complainants, filed their bill of complaint against Theodore Bodenwein, D. S. Marsh, Jr., Lee M. Rumsey, Jr., Luther Gross, Administrator with the Will Annexed of Wilfred Sellers, deceased, William M. Miller, Jerome Cherbino, C. R. Dashiell, J. H. Johnston, W. A. Chaplin, Gilbert H. Chaplin, R. L. Kilby, Lee Rumsey, Sr., Edwin M. Simpson, John G. McKay and Alton Port Commercial, Inc., whom we will refer to as defendants, and therein alleged that on or about the 16th of June, 1925, the defendants Bodenwein, Marsh, the Rumseys, Sellers, Miller, Cherbino, Dashiell, Johnston and Wm. H. and Gilbert Chaplin organized a syndicate for the purchase of certain lots in Ocean Beach Subdivision Number 3, Miami Beach, Dade County, for a consideration of approximately $600,000.00; that the said defendants agreed to subdivide said lots into smaller lots, streets and terraces and that such subdivision should be known as Alton Port Commercial subdivision; that they used a plat, a photostatic copy of which is attached to the bill of complaint as Exhibit "A," to make sales and recognized it as a plat of said subdivision, but that the same was never approved as required by law; that the defendants or their agents, servants and employees on or about July 3, 1925, falsely and fraudulently represented to complainants the blue prints of the plat, —

"(a) To be a true and exact plat of the subdivision known as Alton Port Commercial, giving the correct size and correct location of certain lots and streets which are hereinafter described;

(b) That upon the representations that the said property belonged to the defendants or one of them and that the plat or blue print heretofore described as Exhibit "A" was a true and correct blue print and plat of said subdivision;

(c) That it was in fact a subdivision located in Dade

*Page 28

County, Florida, and known as Alton Port Commercial;" that upon such representations the defendants sold to the complainant Effie Smith Nichols, certain lots in said subdivision, which were represented to have a total frontage of fifty feet facing East on Alton Road and West on Port Avenue, well knowing that such plat had not been approved and filed for record, as provided by law, and that there was no such street as Port Avenue, nor certain numbered terraces in said subdivision, and that they knew that said representations were false and untrue and that they were made for the purpose of deceiving said complainant and with the intention that they be relied upon; that the said complainant believed and relied upon said representations to her damage, having no knowledge of their falsity. It was further shown that complainants also fraudulently represented that there "existed a corporation known as Alton Port Commercial, Inc., which was duly incorporated under the laws" of Florida, that said corporation had a marketable title to the property and that the said lands were free of encumbrance, or, if there were encumbrances thereon, they consisted of long-time mortgages with proper release clauses for each lot, and that it had lawful right to sell and convey the same; that on July 3, 1925, no such corporation had been incorporated in Florida; that on July 14, 1925, Letters patent was issued by the Secretary of State of the State of Florida to John G. McKay, Edwin M. Simpson and Lee M. Rumsey, Jr., but that such Letters patent, charter and affidavit by the Treasurer showing that ten per cent. of the capital stock of said corporation had been paid were not filed and recorded in Dade County where the principal office and place of business of the corporation was located, until August 7, 1925, and that the Treasurer's affidavit was not filed with the Secretary of State until August 7, 1925; that an attempt was made to deed property to the "Alton Port Commercial," a corporation *Page 29 on July 16, 1925, and not to "Alton Port Commercial, Inc.," a corporation, but that the deed was void because the property was described as being lots in Ocean Beach, Florida, Number 3, subdivision, without stating that they were in Miami Beach of Dade County; that pursuant to such representations, and relying thereon, the said complainant Effie Smith Nichols, and Gilbert H. Chaplin, one of the defendants, as joint purchasers, on July 3, 1925, entered into four certain written contracts, with "Alton Port Commercial, Inc.," a corporation, for the purchase of said lots on the installment plan with a down cash payment, copies of said contracts being attached to the bill as a part thereof; that on March 13, 1926, the said Gilbert Chaplin assigned to the said complainant his interest in said contracts, at which time the said complainant had no notice or knowledge that a fraud had been perpetrated upon her; that the defendants as a part of the consideration for the purchase of said lands agreed to construct suitable water and electric light connections for the same, complete and grade streets in the said subdivision, and dredge a channel twenty feet from the bay front bulkhead line, one hundred fifty feet in width and twenty feet deep, the same to be completed eighteen months from date of agreement; that said contract was breached by the defendants in that they did not make the improvements within a reasonable time from the making of the contracts, and did not complete the said channel within the agreed time; that the complainant, Effie Smith Nichols refused to make deferred payments, that she was induced to make the said contracts through fraud, that the Alton Port Commercial, Inc., did not have title to the property, that it had put it out of its power to fulfill said contracts, having dissipated its assets in an unlawful manner, and because it had breached its contract as shown by the bill; that when the second payment became due said complainant was ready, willing and *Page 30 able to comply with her contract, but defendants were in default upon the mortgage given upon the entire subdivision for the purchase price thereof.

It is alleged further that prior to the incorporation of Alton Port Commercial, Inc., a syndicate of the defendants was formed, each of them contributing to a common fund for making the initial cash payment for the land comprising the alleged subdivision, and that the names of the members of the syndicate and the amount paid in by each of them is as follows:

"Theodore Bodenwein .................. $12,500.00 D. S. Marsh, Jr. .................... 12,500.00 Lee Rumsey .......................... 12,500.00 Wilfred Sellers ..................... 12,500.00 William M. Miller ................... 25,000.00 Jerome Cherbino ..................... 25,000.00 C. R. Dashiell ...................... 12,500.00 J. H. Johnston ...................... 25,000.00 W. A. Chaplin and Gilbert Chaplin ... 25,000.00;"

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 86, 107 Fla. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-et-vir-v-bodenwein-fla-1932.