Wilson v. Wilson Sr.

211 So. 3d 313, 2017 WL 621242, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 2029
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 15, 2017
Docket3D14-2576
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 211 So. 3d 313 (Wilson v. Wilson Sr.) 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
Wilson v. Wilson Sr., 211 So. 3d 313, 2017 WL 621242, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 2029 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WELLS, Judge.

Church of God Tabernacle, Inc., Church of God, True Holiness of Miami, Inc., Nationwide Holiness Church of Brotherly Love, Inc., Operation Keep Cool, Inc., Silver Stone Singing Convention, Inc., Star of Dave’s Temple, Inc., and Young Land USA, Inc., appeal from an order determining that the properties owned by these entities were in fact the personal property of Reverend John Wilson, the incorporator of each of these entities, thereby making their assets subject to probate as part of the estate of Reverend Wilson. Because no basis was alleged and no evidence adduced to support disregarding the corporate identity of these entities, we reverse and remand for adjudication of the claims raised by the pleadings below.

This action was commenced in March of 2012 by Mamie Wilson, Deshawn Green and Joseph Warren, Jr., on behalf of the plaintiff corporations, claiming to be the lawful board members of these corporations formed by the Reverend John Wilson. According to the verified complaint, following Reverend Wilson’s death in December of 2010, a number of Reverend Wilson’s children, specifically Darrell, Emanuel, and Elwyn Wilson (a/k/a A1 Allen), as well as Steven Higg and Robert Watts, through trickery and deceit attempted to name themselves as members of the board of directors of these corporations; to oust the legitimate board members of these corporations; and to take over the operation of the properties and businesses *315 owned by these corporations. The plaintiff corporations requested that the court below declare their right “to reinstate their original board members,” and to enjoin the defendants from further interfering in the management, operations, and business of these entities.

Darrell, Emanuel, and Elwyn Wilson admitted that they were Reverend Wilson’s sons as alleged in the complaint and that each had “filed documents with the State of Florida naming themselves as board members of the plaintiff corporations.” (Emphasis added). They also admitted that Robert Watts “had placed himself in the State of Florida Corporate Records as a board member” of the plaintiff corporations. Robert Watts also admitted that he had “placed himself in the State of Florida Corporate Records as a board member.” Steven Higg filed an answer, but neither identified himself as a member of Reverend Wilson’s family nor stated how he became a corporate board member.

Darrell and Emanuel Wilson ultimately were allowed to file a counterclaim seeking to be declared the rightful directors of the plaintiff corporations alleging only that “[u]pon information and belief’ Reverend Wilson had “conducted a meeting of the Board of Directors at which time he had appointed ... [Darrell and Emanuel Wilson] to the Board” of the plaintiff corporations. 1

In April of 2013, Gamalyah Israelion, another of Reverend Wilson’s fourteen children, although not named as a defendant in this action, sought leave to intervene below. Israelion, initially appointed as personal representative of Reverend Wilson’s estate but later removed and replaced by Mamie Wilson, sought intervention after having been unsuccessful in having the probate court include as assets in Reverend Wilson’s estate the properties owned by the corporations at issue here. According to his motion to intervene, Is-raelion asserted that because these corporations had not “been properly run as tax exempt[] ‘not for profit corporations,’” the assets belonging to them belonged to Reverend Wilson individually and had to be included as assets in Wilson’s estate.

A few months later, all but one of the plaintiffs and defendants executed a settlement agreement resolving all issues regarding board of director membership and sought court approval of the agreement. The intervenor and one of the original defendants, Elwyn Wilson, objected to the settlement and the agreement was not approved by the court below. The intervenor then filed a complaint naming Mamie, Darrell, and Emanuel Wilson, as well as Desh-awn Green, Joseph Warren, Jr., Steven Higg, and Robert Watts as defendants in which he claimed that because the corporations created by Reverend Wilson were not actually “Not For Profit” corporations, the assets of these corporations belonged to Reverend Wilson individually and now to his estate.

Darrell and Emanuel Wilson moved to dismiss the intervenor’s complaint but the motion was denied. They then counterclaimed alleging that documentation online with the Secretary of State confirmed that the corporations at issue here “began as Not For Profit Corporations and ha[d] always maintained their status as Not For Profit Corporations.” They further alleged that there was “no legal basis or authority for this or any other court to convert a Not For Profit Corporation into a For Profit *316 Corporation for the purposes of distributing corporate assets through intestate succession.” Otherwise stated, they claimed that no legal basis existed to disregard a corporation’s identity based on its failure to function as a not for profit corporation.

This matter was finally tried over a period of four days in May, June, July and September of 2014, By the time of trial, literally countless motions and orders thereon had been filed resulting in a record exceeding 3000 pages. Additionally, many thousands of dollars had been expended in receivers’ and attorney’s fees.

On September 29, 2014, a final order was entered. That order determined that neither plaintiffs nor defendants proved “that they duly formed a properly constituted Board of Directors for the ... Plaintiff corporations or in any way carried out any of the proper functions to constitute a duly formed corporation(s) for the business of Rev. Wilson.” The order further determined that because the plaintiff corporations neither operated as not for profit corporations nor conducted regular director and shareholder meetings or maintained corporate minutes or books, records and bank accounts, they were not corporations at all. As a consequence, the final order determined that the businesses conducted by the plaintiff corporations were “businesses owned by Rev. Wilson personally” essentially subject to distribution as part of Reverend Wilson’s estate as requested by the intervenor.

We reverse this final order because the action was decided on a matter wholly outside the issues raised by the parties in their pleadings and because it is unsupported by controlling law.

The pleadings filed below by the plaintiffs and defendants herein raise but a single claim: whether the board of directors of each named corporation was comprised of the plaintiffs or the defendants. No issue was raised as to whether the named corporations were corporations, whether for or not for profit. That issue, which is the issue decided by the court below, was raised mid-proceeding by an intervenor and not by the parties to this action and should not have been determined in this action.

Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.230 no doubt authorizes intervention by a party claiming an interest in a pending litigation. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.230 (providing that “[a]nyone claiming an interest in pending litigation may at any time be permitted to assert a right by intervention”). However, the general rule long-ago stated is that the interest that will support intervention is one of such direct and immediate character that the intervenor will be affected by a judgment:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 So. 3d 313, 2017 WL 621242, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-wilson-sr-fladistctapp-2017.