Storer v. Florida Sportservice, Inc.
This text of 115 So. 2d 433 (Storer v. Florida Sportservice, 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.
Opinion
George B. STORER, Appellant,
v.
FLORIDA SPORTSERVICE, INC., and Sidney Salomon, Jr., and Elliott Stein, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.
*434 Scott, McCarthy, Preston, Steel & Gilleland and Jerry B. Crockett, Miami, for appellant.
Aronovitz, Aronovitz & Haverfield, and Richard H. Hunt, Miami, for appellees.
CARROLL, CHAS., Judge.
The appellant, who was the plaintiff in a suit for declaratory decree in the circuit court in Dade County, has appealed from an adverse final decree.
The determinative question is whether the decree was proper and justified, on defendants' motions for judgment on the pleadings.
The allegations and prayer of the amended complaint, or petition as it was styled, for declaratory decree, filed September 16, 1958, were as follows:
"1. Plaintiff is a resident of Dade County, Florida and Florida Sportservice, Inc. is a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Dade County, Florida. The contracts sought to be construed herein were executed in Dade County, Florida.
"2. On June 22, 1949 the agreement appended hereto as Exhibit A[1] was entered into between defendant Florida Sportservice, Inc., Magic City Baseball Club, Inc., and Miami Stadium, Inc., hereinafter referred to as `1949 concession agreement.' *435 Said agreement governed the relationship between the Magic City Baseball Club, Inc., Miami Stadium, Inc., and the defendant Florida Sportservice, Inc., relating to concessions operated at Miami Stadium to and including September 30, 1959.
"3. In accordance with a lease executed on January 26, 1956 between the City of Miami and the Miami Baseball Company, a Florida corporation, the Miami Baseball Company commenced operating under the terms of the 1949 concession agreement. Defendant Salomon was the president of the Miami Baseball Company at the time Miami Baseball Company assumed the obligations of the 1949 concession agreement.
"4. At some time thereafter, defendant Salomon and Florida Sportservice, Inc. signed the agreement bearing date of February 28, 1956 and attached hereto as Exhibit B,[2] hereinafter referred to as the `1956 concession agreement.' The agreement purports to have been executed on behalf of Miami Baseball Company. However, the agreement was not authorized by the Board of Directors, and was, in fact, executed without the authority of Miami Baseball Company. The 1956 concession agreement purported to bind the Miami Baseball Company to a term of twenty years and was in other respects more onerous to the Miami Baseball Company.
"5. Plaintiff George B. Storer purchased all the stock of the Miami Baseball Company in 1956. In order to induce plaintiff Storer to purchase such stock, the defendants Salomon and Stein executed an indemnification agreement, attached as Exhibit C, the pertinent portion of which reads as follows:
"`[E] That the Sellers have disclosed to Buyer all material matters which will affect the Corporation's financial standing, whether favorable or adverse, including working agreements, concession contracts, lease agreement with City of Miami, a Florida municipal corporation, franchise agreements, player contracts, option contracts with players, etc.
"`2. Sellers represent unto and covenant and agree with Buyer that the Corporation has no liabilities of any kind accruing or to accrue by reason of any transactions had or liabilities incurred by the Corporation except player contracts and agreements that are not reflected by the statement of the Corporation's financial position as of December 3, 1956, subject to confirmation by audit of Ring Mahony & Arner, Certified Public Accountants.'"
In truth and in fact, defendants Salomon and Stein did not disclose to plaintiff the 1956 concession agreement.
"6. After the sale of all of the stock of the Miami Baseball Company to the plaintiff, the Miami Baseball Company had no knowledge of the 1956 concession agreement, and both it and defendant Florida Sportservice, Inc., operated under the 1949 concession agreement until the time of the dissolution of the Miami Baseball Company in 1957.
"7. By virtue of dissolution of the Miami Baseball Company on May 31, 1957, plaintiff is now the owner of the baseball club formerly operated by the Miami Baseball Company.
*436 "8. At the time plaintiff purchased all of the outstanding stock of the Miami Baseball Company in December 1956, there was no disclosure made to him regarding the 1956 concession agreement and it was represented to him that the 1949 concession agreement was the only agreement extant governing the concession relationship. Plaintiff further alleges that there was no mention whatever of the 1956 concession agreement in any of the records of the corporation, that it is not mentioned in the minute book of the corporation, and that there was no resolution by the Board of Directors authorizing the execution of such an agreement.
"9. Plaintiff further alleges that at the time he became the individual owner of the Baseball Club formerly owned by the Miami Baseball Company, he had no notice or knowledge of the 1956 concession agreement. Plaintiff in no way assumed or ratified the 1956 concession agreement, and in fact rejected and repudiated it immediately upon learning of its existence.
"10. The defendant, Florida Sportservice, Inc., contends that the 1956 concession agreement is valid, and binds the plaintiff personally. By reason of the fact that the plaintiff has never agreed to become bound by the 1956 concession agreement, plaintiff is in doubt as to whether the contract binds him personally, and does not know which of the two concession agreements he must operate under.
"11. The defendants, Salomon & Stein, contend that the 1956 concession agreement was disclosed to the plaintiff at the time of the aforementioned sale of the stock of the Miami Baseball Club to the plaintiff, and that the indemnity agreement attached hereto as Exhibit C does not impose on them the duty to discharge and release the plaintiff from any liability under the 1956 agreement. By reason of defendants, Salomon & Stein's contention, the plaintiff is in doubt as to his rights under Exhibit C attached hereto.
"Wherefore, plaintiff prays:
"1. That this court take jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties.
"2. That the court determine whether the plaintiff is bound by the 1949 concession agreement or the 1956 concession agreement.
"3. That in the event this court determines the 1956 concession agreement to be valid and binding on the plaintiff, the court determine the rights of the plaintiff under the indemnity agreement executed by defendants, Salomon & Stein, that they be afforded an opportunity to defend against the 1956 concession agreement, and that in the event they do not discharge and release the plaintiff from any and all liability under the 1956 concession agreement, that this court declare defendants Salomon & Stein responsible for damage caused the plaintiff by reason of their failure to disclose the 1956 concession agreement.
"4. That this court order such other relief as it deems just and proper."
The defendants filed motions to dismiss the plaintiff's amended petition for declaratory decree, and the cause was noticed for hearing on those motions.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
115 So. 2d 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storer-v-florida-sportservice-inc-fladistctapp-1959.