Omwake v. Omwake

70 So. 2d 565, 1954 Fla. LEXIS 1283
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 16, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 565 (Omwake v. Omwake) 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
Omwake v. Omwake, 70 So. 2d 565, 1954 Fla. LEXIS 1283 (Fla. 1954).

Opinion

BARNS, Justice.

Of course these appeals can be affirmed1 without opinion but since the cases were initially assigned to me for proposed disposition and as there is involved a substantial controversy, it seems a statement of the-reasons for our decision is consistent with, our duty.

The appellant-plaintiff, Jacob Omwake,. brought two suits in equity for declaratory decrees and relief concerning the title to-real property of which he claimed to 'be-the owner, alleging that the defendant,. •Marjorie Omwake, was his wife and that she had caused his name to be forged to-warranty deeds purporting to convey the property, one portion to the Robinsons andL [567]*567another portion to the Dicksons, each of whom in turn had given mortgages to the defendant insurance company. The Chancellor rendered final decrees for the defendants and hence these appeals by the plaintiff.

Facts

Jacob B. Omwake and Marjorie Omwake were first married February 23, 1942, and thereafter plaintiff entered into a contract for .deed with Joos for the purchase of the property here involved. At that time, plaintiff was employed and his wife was working. They moved onto this property and plaintiff started building a house. In September, 1947, at which time they had one child, Marjorie Omwake, divorced plaintiff. At this time .the house was not completed. She was awarded custody of the child and support money.

On October 8, 1947, Marjorie Omwake married Samuel LaPrelle and LaPrelle moved in with her on the property. Plaintiff stopped paying her alimony and in settlement, on November 12, 1947, endorsed on the back of the contract for deed from Joos to Omwake an assignment of said contract to Marjorie. Jacob states that in the event of a sale she was to turn part of the proceeds,over to him and keep the balance. Mrs. Omwake and LaPrelle lived on this property from the time of their marriage until it was sold to the defendants. La-Prelle 'finished the inside of the house, put a roof on it and a porch. Plaintiff was their guest for several weeks and saw the improvements being made by LaPrelle.

Plaintiff urged Marjorie Omwake to leave LaPrelle, divorce him, and go with plaintiff to California. The plan was to sell the house that LaPrelle had put his money into. While LaPrelle was on a business trip to Miami she divorced him without his knowledge, and did not tell him of it upon his return. The divorce was granted March 30, 1948, in Bradford County.

Shortly after this divorce she placed the property in the hands of a real estate broker for sale and left the contract with him as evidence of her ownership. After Jacob’s return from California and without the knowledge of Marjorie, he secured .possession of the contract from this broker, crossed through the assignment and wrote “avoid” over it. Marjorie found out about this, and Jacob told her he had merely taken it to get it recorded in her name to protect her. He did not record the assignment but used the contract to get a deed to himself from Joos and a loan from 'Gulf Life Insurance Co.

On July 26, 1949, unaware of the divorce and subsequent developments, LaPrelle secured a building permit to build a concrete block house on the property and started building same. In August, 1949, plaintiff and Marjorie Omwake were secretly remarried. When he encouraged Marjorie to continue to live with LaPrelle and to encourage him to continue his work on the concrete block house, Omwake had told La-Prelle he would borrow money on other property he owned to help them with the improvements for the alimony he was supposed to pay Mrs. Omwake, but instead he placed a mortgage with Gulf Life Insurance Company on this same property.

Plaintiff authorized Marjorie to sell the porperty and she listed the property for sale. .About a week or ten days before the lots were sold, plaintiff gave Mrs. Omwake two blank deeds, signed by him, to use in consummating the sale. During this week or ten days before the lots were sold she visited him repeatedly at his rooming house. They planned, after the sale, to leave Jacksonville and go to Seattle, then to Alaska. She was to quit LaPrelle and follow him to Seattle. She had a truck to sell before leaving. .She was going to bring the children but he, who was going to drive up right after the sale, would take the children’s toys.

Mrs. Black, the realtor, found the defendants, Dickson and Robinson, as buyers. Mrs. Omwake says plaintiff went with her to Mrs. Black’s office and picked up $300, part of the binder payment. Mrs. Omwake gave the blank deeds to Mrs. Black to use in closing the sale, and told the Dicksons and Robinsons she had these deeds from her husband.

[568]*568On March 12, 1951, the sales were closed in the office of 'Burton Bryan, an attorney, Mr. Omwake did not come with Mrs. Om-wake and it was necessary for her to go get him because Bryan refused to use the two deeds signed in blank by Jacob. A man was identified as Mr. Omwake and he and Mrs. Omwake executed deeds and the two told him they were going to Alaska. He gave them a check for the proceeds, after deducting sums to satisfy liens and expenses, and the next day Mrs. Omwake came back to his office and asked him1 to identify her at the bank so she could cash the check, which he did. Mrs. Omwake testified that she went and got Mr. Omwake and brought him back to Mr. Bryan’s office, where he signed the deeds. She says plaintiff went with her to the bank the next day, March 14, 1951, to get the check cashed and the money. These facts are denied by Jacob. She says she took the children’s toys by plaintiff’s place and he packed them in his car; that they then went to the terminal station-to get some traveller’s checks. She says they divided the proceeds of the sale, with her getting $1,000 and the plaintiff $500 (denied by Jacob), and he bought traveller’s checks at the station with this money. Bryan testified that the man who signed the deeds as Jacob Omwake was not the plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified that his wife brought some of the children’s toys by his place and he packed them; that they went down to the terminal station to get some traveller’s checks; that she offered him some travel-ler’s checks she had but he declined them, saying she might need the money; that he bought $500 worth of traveller’s checks at the station at that time; that they had dinner together and he left for Seattle that same evening, (the day that the check was cashed).

Mrs. Omwake left about a week later in her truck for Alaska with -LaPrelle where LaPrelle found a job, and she and,LaPrelle are still living there with the children. However, the plaintiff was not through with her. He got a job in Seattle ánd visited her two or three times in Alaska. Marjorie testified that he proposed that she continue living with LaPrelle and get as-much money as she could from him, but to persuade LaPrelle to let her come to Seattle in the winter on the ground the weather was too cold in Alaska for the children;. that plaintiff would live with her in the-winter, without LaPrelle’s knowledge, and: she would live with LaPrelle in the summer. This she refused to do. Thereupon, Jacob changed courses.

Jacob returned to Florida and brought these suits against these defendants to set aside the deeds. The defendants, Dickson and Roibinson, occupied the property they bought and the first they heard of plaintiff claiming his name had been forged to the deeds was in August, 1951, when he came back to Florida. These suits were filed September 6th, 1951.

Conclusions

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 565, 1954 Fla. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omwake-v-omwake-fla-1954.