Scocozzo v. General Development Corporation

191 So. 2d 572
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 9, 1966
Docket374
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 So. 2d 572 (Scocozzo v. General Development Corporation) 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
Scocozzo v. General Development Corporation, 191 So. 2d 572 (Fla. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

191 So.2d 572 (1966)

John J. SCOCOZZO, Jr., and Sylvia B. Scocozzo, His Wife, Appellants,
v.
GENERAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, a Foreign Corporation, Appellee.

No. 374.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Fourth District.

November 9, 1966.

*573 Chester E. Clem, Jr., of Jackson & Clem, Vero Beach, for appellants.

P.D. Thomson and Richard Brickman, of Paul & Sams, Miami, for appellee.

ALLEN, WILLIAM P., Associate Judge.

The appellants, plaintiffs below, appeal from a decree denying them the right to rescind a contract for the purchase of certain property.

Appellants bought a lot and home in Sebastian Highlands Subdivision from the appellee, General Development Corporation. Negotiations for the purchase began in 1958, possession was taken by the appellants in 1959, and the sale was closed in 1960. Suit for rescission was filed in 1963.

The plaintiffs alleged that they were primarily a "boating" family and bought the home in Sebastian Highlands on Collier Creek because the defendant-appellee's agents represented to them that the creek was being developed into a navigable waterway in the future, which was to ultimately link up with the Sebastian and Indian rivers. However, the creek was only bulkheaded and broadened and is now only a mile long and completely landlocked and useless for boating purposes.

Extensive testimony was adduced in the court below and correspondence, sales brochures, advertisements and depositions were introduced.

The chancellor decided in favor of the defendant-appellee, General Development Corporation, holding that there was insufficient evidence to show fraud; that the contract provisions indicated there was no, or could be no, reliance by plaintiffs on any oral misrepresentations by General Development Corporation; and that there was ratification of the contract by the plaintiffs' acceptance of the new heating system.

The appellant presents the following three questions:

1. Was the proof presented at trial sufficient to prove clearly and convincingly that fraud and misrepresentation was practiced on the plaintiffs by the defendant in an effort to induce them to purchase property on Collier Creek in Sebastian Highlands Subdivision?
2. Were the representations made to the plaintiffs, through the agents of the defendant, General Development Corporation, sufficient to constitute fraud as a matter of law and sufficient to void the contract, thereby allowing the court to set aside the contract on the grounds that it had been induced by fraud?
3. Did the court err in holding that the acceptance of a heating system which the plaintiffs were entitled to receive under a prior agreement was a waiver of the plaintiffs' right to question the failure of the defendant to fulfill its representation that it would extend Collier Creek into the Sebastian River?

The appellee states the following questions:

1. The chancellor's findings and conclusions of fact are supported by substantial evidence in the record and the chancellor applied correct principles of law in reaching his decision. Therefore the final decree may not be set aside.
*574 2. The ruling of the chancellor was correct because even if the alleged misrepresentation were made, and even if plaintiffs had a right to and did rely thereon, plaintiffs waived their right to rescind by having ratified the contract and having accepted the benefits thereunder, and plaintiffs were also barred by laches.
3. The ruling of the chancellor was correct because plaintiffs failed to establish that they had a right to or that they did rely upon the alleged misrepresentation.
4. The ruling of the chancellor was correct because plaintiffs failed to prove any misrepresentation by defendant.

We are indebted to Judge D.C. Smith, the able chancellor who tried this case, for his very lucid opinion containing facts and law and shall adopt a large portion of his opinion as our own. In the final decree, Judge Smith stated:

"The Court finds from the evidence that the plaintiffs first became interested in Sebastian Highlands Subdivision through seeing an ad which appeared in Life magazine. On March 7, 1958, the plaintiffs stopped at the defendant's sales office in the Sebastian Highlands Yacht Club on U.S. Highway 1 and the Indian River at Sebastian, Florida. There they were shown brochures and a map which was on a wall in the Yacht Club, which brochures and map showed the proposed development of Sebastian Highlands Subdivision. The plaintiffs selected a certain lot and were taken out to see such lot and Collier Creek adjacent thereto. They then returned to the Yacht Club and made a $10.00 deposit on the lot, and shortly thereafter proceeded to their home at Islip, Long Island, New York. On March 11, 1958, a contract covering such lot was prepared by defendant and mailed to the plaintiffs, together with certain brochures, at their Long Island address. The plaintiff executed such contract and on April 2, 1958, returned it to the defendant, together with a check covering balance of down payment. Plaintiffs returned to Sebastian Highlands Subdivision about June 12, 1959, and again saw their lot and Collier Creek as then improved and being improved through widening and bulkheading. While at Sebastian Highlands on this occasion, plaintiffs selected a home to be built on their lot and executed a contract with defendant to build it for them and again returned to their home in New York. On December 1, 1959, plaintiffs returned to Sebastian Highlands Subdivision to live in their new home and have resided there since.

"Plaintiffs testified that defendant's agent stated to them on March 7, 1958, that Collier Creek was going to connect with the Sebastian River and plaintiffs could boat from the property they purchase through Collier Creek to the Sebastian River, from the Sebastian River into the Indian River and through the Inlet into the ocean.

"Two of defendant's officers and defendant's land developing architect and engineer testified that the defendant never planned for Collier Creek to be made navigable to the Sebastian River.

"Mr. Robert F. Mackle testified:

`Q During the time you were there, was there any plan or was there any discussion about extending Collier Creek into the Sebastian River?
A No, sir, never at any time.
Q Or extending it any place so it would run into the — so it would become navigable to the Atlantic Ocean?
A No, sir. It is what I would call an engineering impossibility. Nothing is impossible, but from my recollection of this particular land, from a Coast and Geodetic Survey, it would show this at 20-odd feet above sea level. Well, sea level from this property is a matter of — what *575 is it — a mile or a mile and a half? Well, I don't think engineers have found how to make water run uphill. You just couldn't do it. It would be the kind of thing you wouldn't consider doing.'

"Mr. James E. Vensel, land developing architect and engineer, testified:

`Prior to purchase of the property, it was analyzed by me in conjunction with the Mackles, that we would not be able to create a system of waterways within the property that would have access out to tidewater, more or less, with the exception possibly of the two 40-acres disjointed tracts that I mentioned earlier.

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191 So. 2d 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scocozzo-v-general-development-corporation-fladistctapp-1966.