Nussey v. Caufield
This text of 146 So. 2d 779 (Nussey v. Caufield) 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.
Opinion
Carrie H. NUSSEY, a Widow, Lloyd C. Nussey and Chester M. Nussey, Appellants,
v.
E.B. CAUFIELD, Rose M. McDevitt and E.M. Clark, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*780 Clyde H. Wilson, Sarasota, for appellants.
Edgar J. Johnston, Jr., Harrison & Johnston, Bradenton, for appellees.
ALLEN, Acting Chief Judge.
Appellants, plaintiffs below, filed suit in equity for rescission and cancellation of a deed and mortgage concerning a trailer park which had been sold to plaintiffs by defendant-appellees. The amended complaint upon which the case was tried was founded upon a claim of mutual mistakes between the parties in connection with the purchase and sale of said trailer park.
Defendants answered, denying the material allegations in the complaint and counterclaimed to foreclose the mortgage sought to be canceled by the complaint, said mortgage then being in default. Plaintiffs replied to the counterclaim for foreclosure, setting up in defense to said counterclaim the grounds relied upon in their complaint for rescission and cancellation. The issue to be tried as framed by the pleadings thus involved the existence of any mutual mistakes between the parties which would justify rescission of the contract for sale of the trailer park and cancellation of the deed and mortgage executed in connection therewith.
A hearing was held and extensive testimony taken, with numerous exhibits being introduced by both sides. In his final decree, the chancellor found in favor of defendants, denied the prayer for rescission and cancellation of the deed and mortgage and decreed the foreclosure of the mortgage sought by defendants in their counterclaim. A monetary decree entered in favor of defendant E.M. Clark, the selling broker, is not involved in this appeal.
The only material question for determination in this appeal is whether or not the chancellor misapprehended the legal effect of the evidence as a whole in denying the equitable relief sought in the complaint.
The very comprehensive final decree entered by the chancellor states the case and his findings which are germane to this appeal as follows:
"THIS CAUSE, having come on before the Court to be heard upon the *781 amended Complaint of the plaintiffs, and the answers thereto of the defendants, E.B. CAUFIELD, ROSE M. McDEVITT and E.M. CLARK, and the counter claim of the defendant, E.B. CAUFIELD, and the counter claim of the defendant, E.M. CLARK, and the answers thereto of the plaintiffs, and the Court having heard the testimony of the parties hereto and their respective witnesses and argument of counsel; and it appearing to the court that the substance of the Complaint, the material allegations of which were denied by the defendants' answers, alleges that the plaintiffs purchased from the defendants, E.B. CAUFIELD and ROSE M. McDEVITT, a certain trailer park located in Manatee County, Florida, commonly known as the Villa Del Sol Trailer Park, and that incident to the purchase of said trailer park, and in accordance with the contract between the parties, a part of the purchase price was evidenced by a promissory note from the plaintiffs in the principal amount of $99,746.00, payable to the defendant, E.B. CAUFIELD, and that the plaintiffs contend that in connection with said purchase, there were numerous mutual mistakes which occurred between the parties and as a result, the plaintiffs are entitled to rescind the transaction and return the parties to the same position as they were before the transaction, said mutual mistakes being as follows: that the property was represented to plaintiffs as being an entirely different type of property, in a different condition and the nature of the property itself was entirely different from that which had been represented to them by the defendants in that plaintiffs purchased a trailer park which could be used for both the rental of trailer spaces and the sale of trailer spaces, and that after purchasing said trailer park, the plaintiffs maintained that it was impossible for them to either rent or sell trailer spaces in said property due to the zoning regulations in effect in Manatee County, Florida, as same pertain to said property; that in particular, Block A of the plat of Lake Side Trailer Town, as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book 11, page 27 of the Public Records of Manatee County, Florida, which was a part of the property purchased, could not be used for any purpose due to the fact that said property actually constituted a buffer zone as required by the Zoning Regulations of Manatee County, Florida, in connection with trailer parks; that the sewerage system in connection with said trailer park was represented to the plaintiffs that same would take care of 100 trailer spaces and that this was not true and that both, the defendant, E.B. CAUFIELD, and the plaintiffs believed same to be true and that in addition thereto, that said sewerage system was approved by the State Board of Health so that it would take care of 100 spaces; that the mortgage which was given by the plaintiffs to the defendant, E.B. CAUFIELD, did not contain any release clause so as to allow the plaintiffs to sell lots in said property, free and clear of said mortgage so as to enable the plaintiffs to obtain sufficient funds to pay on said mortgage indebtedness when same became due; that plaintiffs were prevented from obtaining an attorney at low to represent them in connection with the purchase of said property by the defendant, E.M. CLARK, as agent of the Seller, and that as a result thereof, plaintiffs were unable to obtain the necessary legal advice in connection with the purchase of said trailer park and were forced to rely on the representations made to them by the defendants, E.B. CAUFIELD and E.M. CLARK, which resulted in the mutual mistakes which occurred; that the remaining allegations in the amended complaint are of no consequence and even if same be true, would not be a sufficient basis for rescission of the *782 transaction on the basis of mutual mistake; and from the testimony and evidence produced by the plaintiffs and defendants and their witnesses, the Court makes the following findings:
"1. That the equities are with the defendants and against the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief prayed for in their amended complaint.
"2. That the plaintiffs acquired title to that certain property known as the Villa Del Sol Trailer Park containing 16.5 acres, more or less, located in Section 19, Township 35 South, Range 18 East, as more particularly described in the amended complaint, pursuant to a contract for sale entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendant, ROSE M. McDEVITT, and that prior to the purchase of said property, the plaintiffs and E.M. CLARK, at the insistence of the defendant, E.M. CLARK, made an investigation with the Manatee County Zoning Department and the Manatee County Health Department to determine the existing zoning of said property and whether same was in compliance with the existing trailer park regulations in effect in Manatee County, and after said investigation, discovered that said property was zoned part commercial, and part trailer park, and that the sewerage system, in the part that had been zoned trailer park, had not yet been completed nor had final acceptance of same been given by the Manatee County Health Department, nor had any license been given by the State of Florida Board of Health for the operation of a trailer park.
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146 So. 2d 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nussey-v-caufield-fladistctapp-1962.