Perry v. Shaw

13 So. 2d 811, 152 Fla. 765, 147 A.L.R. 352, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 30, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 811 (Perry v. Shaw) 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
Perry v. Shaw, 13 So. 2d 811, 152 Fla. 765, 147 A.L.R. 352, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 749 (Fla. 1942).

Opinions

From a final decree entered by the Circuit Court of Dade County, Florida, making findings of fact, appointing a receiver, with directions, ordering the liquidation and sale of designated assets of the Flagler Country Club, Inc., and other conclusions as expressed therein, an appeal therefrom has been perfected to this Court. We have been favored with exhaustive briefs and able oral argument and many questions are posed for a decision by this Court.

The property here involved at one time was the homestead of Charles H. Perry, but later converted into a golf course, and when this suit was instituted was being operated under the name of Flagler Country Club, Inc., a Florida corporation. The latter corporation was authorized to transact business by the State of Florida as a corporation on February 28th, 1933, as shown by a certificate of the Secretary of the State of Florida. The title to the land constituting the golf course on March 21, 1933, appeared in the names of Charles H. Perry and wife, Mary S. Perry, by the entireties.

The Perrys, on March 21, 1933, executed a lease of indenture to the Flagler Country Club, Inc., of the lands formerly embracing the Perry homestead and subsequently used as a golf course. The lease of indenture contained numerous provisions unnecessary to mention except the period of time named therein was 30 years. The Flagler Country Club, Inc., went into possession and operated the golf club under the lease of indenture until October, 1937, when by an appropriate instrument the term of 30 years was amended and extended to the year 1967.

The Flagler Country Club, Inc., on December 18, 1937, by proclamation of the Governor of Florida was dissolved under the provisions of Chapter 16880, Acts of 1935, Laws of Florida, for its failure to file reports and to pay the capital stock levied under Chapter 14677, Acts of 1931, Laws of Florida. Charles H. Perry, as Trustee of the Flagler Country Club, Inc., brought an equity suit against the officers and stockholders of the corporation and others. Pursuant to an order on April 30, 1940, C.H. Perry and Mary S. Perry, owners by the entireties and lessors of the land on which the Flagler *Page 767 Country Club, Inc., operated a golf club, filed a bill of intervention praying for an order or decree cancelling, annulling and voiding the lease of indenture dated March 21, 1933, with the amendment extending the period of time named until 1967.

It was alleged by the intervenors that under the terms of the lease and amendment, that the sole and only consideration for the execution by the lessors was that the lessees, Flagler Country Club, Inc., would operate the golf course or other business on the land for which the intervenors and lessors would receive as rents a stated proportion of the earnings of the property and not otherwise. That the dissolution of said corporation constitutes a breach of the executory contract which as a matter of law entitles the lessors and intervenors to a decree cancelling and declaring void the lease and amendment.

Considerable space in the briefs and time during the oral argument of counsel at the bar of this Court were consumed by the question posed, namely: Does such dissolution of the corporation, as disclosed by the record, effect a breach of the lease and amendment thereto which justifies the lessors and intervenors in treating and considering the same as terminated? In the case of City of Hollywood v. Bair, 129 Fla. 93,178 So. 850, 130 Fla. 742, 178 So. 850, it was shown that O. W. Collins, Inc., a Florida corporation, had defaulted in payment of capital stock tax and required corporate returns for the years 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935 and 1936, and it was held that a cause of action against such a corporation does not abate because Section 7 thereof excepts judgments against such defaulting corporations. See Lyman v. Smith, 137 Fla. 310,188 So. 337. Section 9 of Chapter 16880, supra, provides that directors of dissolved corporations . . . shall be trustees for any property owned by the corporation . . . but the corporations as such, after being dissolved, shall have no corporate rights or be authorized to transact any business as a corporation. The trustees shall handle and dispose of the property of the corporation for the benefit of the corporation.

Counsel for intervenors and lessors contend that it was within the power of the officers and stockholders of the *Page 768 Flagler Country Club, Inc., to make the annual reports and to pay the capital stock tax required by the provisions of Chapter 16880, supra; that the failure and neglect on their part to conform to these provisions should be construed as an intentional breach and termination of the lease from the lessors to the Flagler Country Club, Inc.; that the actions of the officers and stockholders in permitting the corporation to be dissolved is an anticipatory breach of the lease and the lessors had the lawful right to so declare by filing suit on April 30, 1940. An example of the application of the rule is where an engagement to marry exists and the defendant breaches the agreement by marrying another, or by his other acts or deeds renders it impossible to perform. The Supreme Court of Florida has recognized this principle in Sullivan v. McMillan,26 Fla. 543, 8 So. 450; Behrman v. Max, 102 Fla. 1094,137 So. 120; Slaughter v. Barnett, 114 Fla. 352, 154 So. 134, 102 A.L.R. 1073.

Williston on Contracts Vol. 5 (Rev. Ed.) par. 1326, p. 3728, states the rule that any voluntary affirmative act which renders performance of a contract impossible, or apparently impossible, is an anticipatory breach, and upon the breach the party has a right, first, to rescind the contract altogether; second, to elect to treat the repudiation as a breach by bringing suit or by making some change in position; or, third, to await the time for performance of the contract and bring suit after that time has arrived. See par. 1337, p. 3753,supra.

Elliott on Contracts, 1913-1923 Cumulative Supplement, is in accord with the rule laid down by Williston on Contracts, supra, as expressed in paragraphs 2040, 2041, and 2042, pages 507-509, viz:

"2040. Creation of Impossibility of Performance by Death of Party. — Contracts for the performance of purely personal services are discharged by the death of either party, but the death of a party to a contract by which a corporation agrees to make payment of a certain sum annually so long as a certain condition exists, or the death of a payee of a contract binding the maker to pay a specified sum as nearly as possible to meet such payee's requirements, or the death *Page 769 of a father who has agreed to convey land to his children upon the making of certain payments by them does not discharge the contract, as in none of these cases does the contract come within the personal service rule. Ordinarily a contract is not extinguished by the death of one of the parties, if it may be performed by his personal representative. The question is largely one of the intention of the parties.

"2041. Creation of Impossibility of Performance Where Promisor is Disabled by Act of Promisee.

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Bluebook (online)
13 So. 2d 811, 152 Fla. 765, 147 A.L.R. 352, 1942 Fla. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-shaw-fla-1942.