Travers v. Tilton

134 So. 2d 807
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedNovember 17, 1961
DocketNo. 2381
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 134 So. 2d 807 (Travers v. Tilton) 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
Travers v. Tilton, 134 So. 2d 807 (Fla. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

WHITE, Judge.

Appellants Walter E. Travers and wife were defendants in a mortgage foreclosure suit which they contested on grounds that the plaintiffs, appellees here, had willfully exacted usurious charges and had otherwise estopped themselves from foreclosing the mortgage in question. The chancellor ruled for the plaintiffs and the cause is before us on appeal from the final decree of foreclosure.

On February 17, 1958 the parties entered into a contract by which the plaintiffs agreed to sell the defendants 40 acres of land in Martin County, Florida, for $25,-000.00. The transaction was closed on April 28, 1958 and the property was deeded to the defendants subject to an existing mortgage [808]*808which the defendants assumed and agreed to pay as part of the purchase price. The defendants executed and delivered to the plaintiffs their note and mortgage securing •.the $15,000.00 balance of the purchase price payable in three annual installments of $5,-€00.00 with interest at 5% per annum until maturity.

The defendants failed to pay the $2,733.00 balance of the assumed first mortgage when due on February 9, 1959, and the holders called upon the plaintiffs for payment. The defendants, however, made good the default. The subject of the present litigation is the $15,000.00 purchase money mortgage on which the first $5,000.00 installment with interest became due on April 28, 1959. Approximately a month thereafter the defendants delivered to the plaintiffs their check for $5,788.33 in payment of principal and interest to date. The check was returned to the plaintiffs marked ‘‘insufficient funds.” Several days later, on June 1, 1959, the plaintiffs’ attorney notified the defendants that the plaintiffs had elected to declare the entire principal of the mortgage indebtedness due and payable plus interest from April 28, 1958.

The defendant mortgagors apparently continued to be short of funds. They offered to sell the plaintiffs two waterfront lots, purportedly at a discount, to obtain the means of paying the past due installment. The offer was refused. Through an agent the defendants then submitted to one of the plaintiffs, who was then in the area, the offer of one lot for an extension of one year. This offer also was refused. On the latter occasion it appears that the local plaintiff, after communicating with the other plaintiff out of the state, suggested that the defendants might “come up with something better.”

On June 30, 1959, a little over a month after the expiration of the agreed thirty day period of grace, the plaintiffs extended the installment payments for one year. They received from the defendants two lots, one to each plaintiff, for which they paid the equivalent of $2,450.00 by way of release on the lots and credits to the defendants’ account. The true value of the lots was not clearly shown. There was some testimony on behalf of the defendants indicating a net value of $2,700.00 per lot, after discounting $300.00 commission under an exclusive sales agreement, which would make the net value of both lots $5,400.00. The plaintiffs submitted that the value of the lots was fixed by the actual consideration. There was no documentary evidence of recent sales of comparable lots and the evaluation by the defendants was disputed by the plaintiffs as far more than the lots were worth.

The defendants defaulted on the first payment under the extension agreement which was due on April 28, 1960. Thereafter on June 1, 1960, just prior to the filing of the foreclosure complaint, the plaintiff Tilton went to the tax collector’s office to see whether the taxes had been paid and, if not, to pay them. There coincidently he encountered the defendant Travers who paid the delinquent taxes as apparently he was there to do. The parties conversed briefly, but the subject of foreclosure was not mentioned. On June 2, 1960 the complaint was filed.

Of the two principal questions on appeal, viz., estoppel and usury, we shall consider first whether the chancellor erred in not finding that the plaintiffs had wrongfully accelerated the mortgage and estopped themselves from prosecuting the foreclosure. It is contended on behalf of the defendants that the plaintiffs misled them to their detriment by permitting them to pay the taxes when foreclosure was imminent; that the defendants were led to believe that they had additional time with respect to the major obligation and were about to explore other avenues which might have enabled them to make good their default had not the plaintiffs’ suit intervened.

It would serve no good purpose to expound the legal definitions or to cite and reconcile numerous decisions on the subject of estoppel. While the doctrine remains [809]*809constant, the case results vary because each decision rests upon the facts and circumstances of the particular case. It is generally recognized that the trial court, in considering questions of estoppel in pais,.is in a specially advantageous position. If, therefore, it is found and adjudged that the conduct complained of was not intended nor reasonably calculated to mislead to his detriment the party asserting an estoppel, such determination at the trial level will not be reversed on appeal unless manifestly erroneous. 19 Am.Jur. Estoppel § 204.

It appears in the instant case that the defendants were continually delinquent while the plaintiffs were constantly expressing their desire for their money, and only their money, inasmuch as they were “property poor.” The defendants repeatedly pressed for deferments and delays contrary to the wishes of the plaintiffs. The defendant Walter Travers stresses the point that when he was in the tax collector’s office on June 1, I960 the plaintiff told him that he was there to pay the taxes if the defendants did not. Assuming that Tilton could, with propriety, have informed Travers of the previous instructions to plaintiffs’ attorney to begin foreclosure, his failure to do so was not sufficient to raise an estoppel against foreclosure based on the major delinquency.

In paying the taxes on what was still their own property, the defendants were doing what they had obligated themselves to do and this relatively small item would necessarily be taken into account on any subsequent settlement- or redemption by the defendants. Instead of presuming on further forebearance, the defendants might reasonably have inferred that Tilton’s appearance at the tax office indicated that the plaintiffs had no great faith in the defendants’ ability to meet their obligations and that plaintiffs were simply taking available measures to protect their interests. There appears no satisfactory basis for holding contrary to the chancellor’s conclusion that the plaintiffs were not estopped to foreclose the mortgage in question.

The remaining and more serious contention on appeal is that the plaintiffs, by accepting the two lots in conjunction with the extension of the mortgage, willfully exacted usurious charges calling for a forfeiture of part or all of the mortgage indebtedness under Florida Statutes, Chapter 687, F.S.A. Section 687.03, F.S.A. provides that when a creditor makes a charge, directly or indirectly, whereby the debtor is obligated to pay á sum of money greater than the principal sum received plus interest at 10% it is usurious. Section 687.04 provides that whoever willfiitty violates the provisions of preceding Section 687.03 shall forfeit to the party from whom such usurious interest has been exacted double the amount of the interest so exacted.

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John T. Wood Homes, Inc. v. Air Control Products, Inc.
177 So. 2d 709 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1965)
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142 So. 2d 749 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 2d 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travers-v-tilton-fladistctapp-1961.