Seaboard Finance Co. v. Mutual Bankers Corp.

223 So. 2d 778, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5734
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 11, 1969
DocketNo. 68-411
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 So. 2d 778 (Seaboard Finance Co. v. Mutual Bankers Corp.) 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
Seaboard Finance Co. v. Mutual Bankers Corp., 223 So. 2d 778, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5734 (Fla. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PIERCE, Judge.

This is an appeal by appellant Seaboard Finance Company, a Delaware corporation, from a summary final judgment entered against appellant as plaintiff below and in favor of appellees Mutual Bankers Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and W. N. Saunders, defendants below, in a suit brought to recover damages in the sum of $90,000.00 alleged to be due pursuant to a previous written agreement between the parties relating to the sale by defendants to the plaintiff of majority stock holdings in a third corporation, Union Finance Corporation. The three corporations will be hereinafter referred to respectively as Seaboard,_ Mutual Bankers and Union.

On and prior to June 2, 1964, Union was in the small loan business, operating 55 wholly-owned subsidiaries in four States, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee, each subsidiary being a corporation organized in the State where located. Union was a corporation organized under the laws of Florida and was duly licensed and qualified in all respects to carry on a small loan business. The majority stockholders in Union were W. N. Saunders (both individually and jointly with his wife, Ruby Lee Saunders) and Mutual Bankers. Saunders, man and wife, largely owned and controlled Mutual Bankers as well as another corporation, W.N.S. Agency, Inc.

The business connection of W.N.S. was on the insurance end of the individual small loan offices by virtue of an “insurance agency arrangement” between Union and W.N.S. When a loan was made the borrower usually purchased through the loan office various kinds of credit insurance such as life, accident and health, and fire and casualty, invariably written through American Bankers Life Assurance Company of Florida or American Bankers Insurance Company of Florida. Premium [780]*780for the insurance was, of course, prepaid by the borrower at the time the loan was made and was divided fifty per cent to the insurer, five per cent to W.N.S., and forty-five per cent to the subsidiary making the loan. If and when such loan was prepaid or refinanced by the borrower, the unearned insurance premium on that loan was refunded or credited to the borrower by the particular subsidiary, which would later collect or receive credit from the insurer and W.N.S. for the unearned portion of their respective original premium participation. From the heavy volume of business done by the loan subsidiaries, there would inevitably be built up sizeable amounts of accumulated unearned premiums which would actually be held in trust by the local subsidiaries which would be refunded to the borrower if the loan was prepaid or refinanced, subject to proportionate reimbursement by the insurer and W.N.S.

On June 2, 1964, Seaboard entered into a written agreement with Saunders and Mutual Bankers, whereby Seaboard acquired from Saunders and Mutual Bankers a minimum of eighty per cent of outstanding stock of Union in exchange for certain stated preferred stock of Seaboard “on the basis of the representations and warranties” that the parties had expressed in the agreement. (Later Seaboard acquired all outstanding stock). The “representations and warranties” material to the instant suit is that set forth in Article 1(8) which states that “Neither Union nor any of its Subsidiaries has any contingent liabilities known to the officers and directors of Union * * *” other than certain stated liabilities not pertinent here.

The stock ownership transition of Union was smoothly effected and Seaboard took over control of Union’s loan business, including operation of the former fifty-five subsidiary offices of Union. And as time went on, the repayments of unearned insurance premiums refunded by the subsidiaries to borrowers because their loans would be prepaid or refinanced prior to maturity of the loans increased considerably. The subsidiaries were, or course, progressively refunding these unearned premiums as the contingencies arose, because they had originally collected them from the borrowers. On June 1, 1967, these refunds had amounted to a total of approximately $200,000.00, of which Seaboard (through its subsidiaries) had been reimbursed approximately $100,000.00 from the insurer and about $10,000.00 from W.N.S., representing their respective fifty per cent and five per cent of the original premium payments. This left $90,000.00 which to that date had been paid out by Seaboard’s subsidiaries to former borrowers, representing the aggregate net amount of unearned insurance premiums originally advanced to and retained by the subsidiaries prior to the transfer agreement of June 2, 1964, and for which Seaboard had not been reimbursed.

Said agreement in Article X(4) (ii) provided substantially that Saunders and Mutual Bankers would not be liable to Seaboard “for any amount” (such as payment or reimbursement of this $90,000.00 item) unless Seaboard “shall have delivered or served on each of the Principal Stockholders [Saunders and Mutual Bankers] * * * prior to December 31, 1965 * * * a written notice setting forth the amount of any such claim with a full and comprehensive statement of the particulars thereof.”

Not having been able to collect the $90,000.00 or any part thereof from Saunders or Mutual Bankers, Seaboard, on June 1, 1967 filed its complaint against them in the Hillsborough County Circuit Court, seeking recovery of said amount, contending that the retention of the original forty-five per cent of the unearned premiums constituted a “contingent liability” for which defendants would be liable under the warranty contained in the agreement of June 2, 1964, which allegedly protected Seaboard from such “contingent liabilities”.

The usual plethora of motions, depositions, interrogatories, etc., ensued, resulting [781]*781ultimately in an order being entered on March 26, 1968, taking note of the provision of Article X(4) (ii) of the agreement aforesaid requiring written notice of such claim to be made on or before December 31, 1965, and holding that, while “the depositions, exhibits and affidavits, without contradiction, reflect that plaintiff [Seaboard] did not give the contractually prescribed notice”, yet the Court would withhold entering summary judgment “in the present state of the record” until defendants had “filed an answer raising issues upon the merits”. Thereafter defendants Saunders and Mutual Bankers filed written defenses, one of which was that “no notice of plaintiff’s [Seaboard’s] claim was delivered or served on defendants” prior to December 31, 1965, “as required by Article X (4) (ii) of the parties’ agreement dated June 2, 1964.”

On June 27, 1968, the Court entered summary final judgment in favor of defendants Mutual Bankers and Saunders, holding that under the record before the Court there was “no genuine issue as to any material fact” and Mutual Bankers and Saunders were “entitled to a judgment as a matter of law”. We agree and affirm.

Three questions arise and may be stated as follows: (1) whether, in order to set up a valid defense to the warranty provision of the contract, defendants must show not only that they failed to receive the requisite written notice of Seaboard’s claims but also that they were prejudiced by such failure; (2) whether knowledge by defendants that Seaboard or the subsidiaries were making the insurance premium refunds es-topped defendants from asserting they did not receive the written notice of Seaboard’s claim, and (3) whether, under the warranty provision of the contract, the loan subsidiaries were even legally liable to refund to borrowers the unearned portions of the insurance premiums. We will discuss these three matters seriatim.

(1)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 So. 2d 778, 1969 Fla. App. LEXIS 5734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-finance-co-v-mutual-bankers-corp-fladistctapp-1969.