Persan v. Life Concepts, Inc.

738 So. 2d 1008, 1999 Fla. App. LEXIS 10585, 1999 WL 576390
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 6, 1999
Docket98-199
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 738 So. 2d 1008 (Persan v. Life Concepts, Inc.) 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.

Bluebook
Persan v. Life Concepts, Inc., 738 So. 2d 1008, 1999 Fla. App. LEXIS 10585, 1999 WL 576390 (Fla. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

738 So.2d 1008 (1999)

Gail PERSAN, et al, Appellant,
v.
LIFE CONCEPTS, INC. etc., et al, Appellee.

No. 98-199.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

August 6, 1999.

*1009 Michael J. Bittman and Aristides J. Diaz, of Rosenbluth, Losey, Bittman, Morse & Keidaish, P.A., Orlando, for Appellants, Gail Persan, Steven G. Buchbinder and Terry Perrott.

Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and Louis F. Hubener, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, for Appellant, State of Florida.

James V. Etscorn, Robert W. Thielhelm, Jr., and Deborah E. Muntwyler, of Baker & Hostetler, LLP, Orlando, for Appellees.

GRIFFIN, J.

Appellants, Gail Persan, et al., timely appeal a final judgment of involuntary dismissal at the close of the plaintiff's case in a non-jury trial. We affirm.

The action was filed on behalf of disadvantaged adults who claim to be beneficiaries of a charitable or resulting trust created when donors contributed property and funds in 1979 to the Central Florida Sheltered Workshop, Inc. ["CFSW"] to be used to construct living facilities for them. The homes were operated for almost fifteen years until the decision was made to close them and sell the property. The defendant, Life Concepts, Inc., d/b/a Quest, Inc., the entity that closed the group homes, is the successor to CFSW.

In 1979, William Demetree and some twenty partners donated twenty-four acres to CFSW. Demetree, who had a handicapped son, testified that he and his partners donated the parcel:

[T]o build some homes there so their clients or the people who went to Central *1010 Florida Workshop would have a place to go and maybe raise some ... do some gardening, or what have you, and have a place to stay, and the parents would come and help on the weekend and relieve the people in charge. And that's what they did do.

CFSW solicited over $200,000 from the community to raise the additional costs of construction of the homes. The day-to-day operation of the homes was paid for by the residents' social security checks and payments made by their parents.

Although we may agree that it is regrettable that the homes will not continue to operate as residences for the disabled plaintiffs, there is no merit to the plaintiffs' suit and the lower court correctly entered a judgment of dismissal after trial. The lower court found that the donations had been made for a specific purpose but that no trust was proved. The dissent finds this to be inconsistent but it is not. Making a gift to a charity for a specific project or purpose does not create a charitable trust. For this court to suggest that it does would create havoc for charitable institutions. A charity has to be able to know when a donation is a gift and when it is merely an offer to fund a trust for which the charity is taking on fiduciary responsibilities. The creation of such a trust must be express. Besides, as the lower court noted, the object of the gift was carried out—the two homes were built and were operated for almost fifteen years.

We reject appellant's contention that the lower court erred in not finding the existence of a resulting trust, as a matter of law. The evidentiary burden to prove a resulting trust is "clear, strong and unequivocal," beyond a reasonable doubt. Harnish v. Peele, 386 So.2d 8, 10 (Fla. 5th DCA 1980). No evidence of any intent to create any type of trust is present. There is only an intent to donate land and money for the homes to be established. CFSW's plan to make the homes "permanent" does not convert the gift into a trust.

Although the land for these homes was donated by Mr. Demetree and many other persons, and the funds for construction were solicited from the public, only

Mr. Demetree testified:
Mr. Etscorn: Sir, in your professional career, you've created trusts before, have you not?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And you've done that on at least ten occasions, have you not?
Mr. Demetree: I don't know how many, but I've done some trusts.
Mr. Etscorn: Actually, more than ten, isn't it?
Mr. Demetree: I can't stop and count at the moment.
Mr. Etscorn: Okay. When you intend to hold land in a trust, you give it to a trust, do you not?
Mr. Demetree: Yes.
Mr. Etscorn: In this case, however, you did not do that; isn't that correct?
Mr. Demetree: We gave them land, gave them a deed to it.
Mr. Etscorn: Did not give it in trust?
Mr. Demetree: No, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And didn't intend it to be a trust, correct?
Mr. Demetree: Well, the intention was for it to stay there and be used for that. It was not written out as a trust, but I guess the trust was the trust, the trust between people and parties; that if you give them something, they will use it for that.
Mr. Etscorn: Prior to 1979, sir, you've been a trustee or co-trustee on several pieces of property, haven't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: Now, you gave property to Boys Town right next-door to CFSW Group Home; correct?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: You gave that property in fee simple, didn't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yeah. Yes.
*1011 Mr. Etscorn: Now, the property you have to CFSW, pursuant to the deed here, you gave that as a gift, didn't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And the deed that you gave that's been identified previously was not given with any conditions; correct?
Mr. Demetree: That's correct.
Mr. Etscorn: And when you signed this deed, when you went to execute it, you read the deed, didn't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And the deed was clear when you executed it, wasn't it?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And you understood the deed at the time that you executed it, didn't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: In fact, there are no restrictions whatever in this deed, are there?
Mr. Demetree: There are no restrictions in the deed.
Mr. Etscorn: And there are no possible rights of reverter in the deed; correct?
Mr. Demetree: That's correct. I mean I'm not an attorney, but that's what the law says.
Mr. Etscorn: You know what a right of reverter is, don't you?
Mr. Demetree: Yes, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: And there is none here?
Mr. Demetree: No, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: There are no conditions subsequent cited in the deed, are there?
Mr. Demetree: No, sir.
Mr. Etscorn: Now, Tom Ball, the person that you indicated drafted this deed, did I understand you correctly to say that you spoke to him?
Mr. Demetree: Yes.
Mr. Etscorn: Okay. However, you never told Mr.

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