Rork v. Las Olas Company

23 So. 2d 839, 156 Fla. 510, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 912
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 2, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 839 (Rork v. Las Olas Company) 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
Rork v. Las Olas Company, 23 So. 2d 839, 156 Fla. 510, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 912 (Fla. 1945).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

The chancellor entered a final decree commanding appellant, the seller, to execute a deed conveying certain property to appellee, the buyer, “in accordance with the terms of the instrument signed by him [the seller] on February 12, 1944.” It was alleged in the original bill of complaint that the parties entered into a contract 12 February 1944 whereby the defendant (appellant) had agreed to convey the property fox $11,000, $1,000 of which was acknowledged to have been received, and $10,000 of which was to be paid upon consummation of the sale. Other details of the transaction were set out, but we purposely omit them, now because the kernel of the case is the existence or non-existence of a contract.

The answer simply denies each allegation of the bill.

After some of the testimony had been taken the plaintiff was allowed to amend its bill “to conform to the proofs *513 adduced.” Among other averments in this new pleading were ones that the “agreement sued upon, filed as Plaintiff’s evidentiary Exhibit 1 . . . was signed and acknowledged by the Defendant in the presence of two witnesses on February 12, 1944” also that “thereafter on the 14th day of March, 1944, the date Defendant was to go to the office of the mutual attorneys and accept the balance of the purchase price and deliver the deed, Defendant . . . refused to deliver” and persisted in declining to effectuate the contract.

Defendant denied each and every paragraph of the pleading also.

Before proceeding further we reiterate that in the original bill the plaintiff rested solely on a contract of 12 February 1944. The significance of this date will appear as we analyze “Exhibit 1,” the “agreement” mentioned in the amendment to the bill, and compare it with an exhibit offered by the defendant and lettered “A.” Both, as filed by the master, have been sent to us with the record. Obviously these two papers were originally the same, the former being a carbon copy of the latter. They were prepared by the law firm of Saunders and Patterson. The title of each is “AGREEMENT OF SALE.” Exhibit 1, the carbon copy, bears the recital that it was entered into February “12th,” 1944, but the numeral “12th” was inserted in ink in a blank space left by the scrivener. At the end of the paper appears, in a, space provided for a signature, the name “J. H. Rork” in ink, and under it “LAS OLAS COMPANY BY [in longhand] H. E. Adelsperger, Jr., Pres.-Treas.” In the usual position opposite the signatures appears “Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of:” followed by names purporting to be the signatures of J. B. Patterson and Grace D. Weigel. Underneath the latter is the notation in ink, “as to J. H. Rork.” Appended is a certificate originally prepared to show acknowledgment of execution of J. H. Rork and H. E. Adelsperger, Jr., as “President of Las Olas Company,” but all reference to the latter has been stricken with ink. Again, in the notary’s certificate appears the month of February and the year 1944, and in the space left for insertion of the day, “12th” in ink. The signature of the notary is “Grace D. Weigel.”

*514 We have been at some pains to describe the appearance of the introductory and concluding parts of this carbon copy for reasons which will become readily apparent as we proceed with a discussion of the case.

Now, these exhibits were identical when signed by appellant and delivered to Saunders and Patterson, described as “agents” of the purchaser. Upon request by appellant for return of the papers he was given only the original, in the precise condition it was when both were deposited. Later suit was brought, based on the carbon copy, but it had been signed by appellant and by witnesses and executed by a notary who certified to the appearance before her of appellant, but not of the person who supposedly affixed his signature as an officer of appellee.

It is especially significant that the copy, Exhibit 1, purports to have been executed by both parties 12 February, and to have been acknowledged the same day by appellee only. In short, excepting the signature of Rork, the original of this so-called agreement, at the time of its introduction by appellant, was exactly as written on the typewriter, while the carbon copy, at the time it was offered by appellee, had definitely been altered in the sense that it had been completed except for the acknowledgment of appellee.

We think that almost entirely upon the circumstances surrounding this metamorphosis depends the decision of this case. This is true because it is on Exhibit 1, according to the amended bill, and ón the contract of February 12, according to the original bill, that plaintiff relies for recovery.

It may be fitting here to allude to two findings of the master. He concluded that the seller could not withdraw his “offer,” after receiving the first payment of $1,000, without giving the other contracting party reasonable notice of his intention “unless the buyer actually signed the contract.” He had already determined that, although the defendant (appellant) had signed and acknowledged the agreement in the presence of two subscribing witnesses 12 February 1944, it was not by “fair influence . . . signed by the plaintiff [appellee] until sometime after March 14th, 1944, the date wpon which the defendant rescinded .or undertook to rescind *515 or withdraw the contractHe considered Saunders and Patterson “mutual attorneys” and decided that after the buyer had fully performed the obligations of the “contract” by delivering to these “mutual attorneys” the remainder of the purchase price “without any strings attached which would enable the buyer to recall the deposit there remained no longer any further reason for any formal signing of the contract by the defendant, and it became too late for the seller to withdraw his offer” (All italics in this paragraph supplied. )

Incidentally, all findings of the master were confirmed by the chancellor.

We encounter some difficulty in or attampt to follow the master to the first and last of these conclusions. Evidently the appellant was thought to have made an offer which could not be withdrawn without reasonable notice, a rule which would only apply in the absence of the execution of the contract by the buyer. It occurs to us that this is hardly an appropriate rule because in the original bill of complaint it was alleged definitely that the contract was made 12 February 1944 by plaintiff and defendant, by which the one agreed to sell certain property and the other agreed to buy it. (It is cnly fair to interpolate that in the amendment there was merely the allegation of signing and acknowledging by the defendant, but we think the initial pleading prevails because it was represented to the court in the petition for leave to file the latter that it was only intended to make “clear and more definite the allegations” of the original; that no new or different issues or matters inconsistent with the then issues would be introduced. The last of these findings, immediately under study, seems to be predicated on the status of the attorneys as “mutual” representatives of buyer and seller, but this does not seem to be borne out by the record.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 839, 156 Fla. 510, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rork-v-las-olas-company-fla-1945.