Yates v. St. Johns Beach Development Co.

160 So. 197, 118 Fla. 788
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 160 So. 197 (Yates v. St. Johns Beach Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. St. Johns Beach Development Co., 160 So. 197, 118 Fla. 788 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Davis, J.

This is another episode in the litigation previously considered by this Court in the following phases: Yates v. Peninsular Securities Corp., 107 Fla. 802, 144 Sou. Rep. 664, 145 Sou. Rep. 69; Yates v. St. Johns Beach Development Co., 112 Fla. 229, 150 Sou. Rep. 284. The present case is now before us on an appeal from an order dismissing the complainant’s second amended bill of complaint for want of equity.

The bill as amended alleged that certain individual defendants desiring to acquire lands encumbered by several mortgages and to obtain time within which to pay for same, agreed with the holders of certain second mortgage bonds then in default, that if such second mortgage bondholders would waive existing defaults, accept a delayed interest payment and reinstate an agreement for’ extension of their mortgage, that then such defendants described in the bill as “the Dupont Interests” would form and adequately capitalize a corporation to take over the property in which event either said defendants, or said corporation, would at all times meet the payments of principal and interest to become due on said second mortgage bonds and would give protection thereto against the first mortgage, so as to make the second mortgage good in all respects. The first mortgage bonds aggregated $600,000.00; the second mortgage bonds were $125,000.00.

*790 It is further alleged that on June 1, 1927, said second mortgage bonds were in default as to principal and interest and were then f oreclosable; that on June 1, 1928, said “DuPont Interests,” said defendants (appellees here) through their thereunto authorized representative, one N. D. Suttles, duly made the arrangement and agreement aforesaid; that the second mortgage bondholders, and their then trustee (since succeeded by one James A. Yates) accepted and agreed to said proposal of the “DuPont Interests”; that in • pursuance thereto they afterwards accepted a delayed payment of interest and reinstated an agreement previously made by them for extension of the second mortgage for a period of five years from June 1, 1927; that subsequently said “DuPont Interests” complied with the Suttles agreement and undertaking on their behalf for a considerable length of time; that according to said partially executed plan Mr. Edward Ball, one of the defendants, who is alleged to constitute one of the defendants described as the “Dupont Interests,” actually formed a Florida corporation under the name of St. Johns Beach Development Company, into which was passed the title to the land first hereinbefore referred to; that after making the agreement and arrangement aforesaid, and before an interest payment was made on June 11, 1928, that Suttles, still acting as agent for the “DuPont Interests,” suggested a proposal for foreclosure of the second mortgage in order to carry out a plan being arranged for by Mr. Ball in conjunction with certain third mortgage bondholders; that some time thereafter the said defendants, “The DuPont Interests,” and the corporation, St. Johns Beach Development Company, undertook to repudiate their agreement and undertaking to protect the second mortgage bondholders against foreclosure of the first mortgage, in consequence of which suit to foreclose the first *791 mortgage had been brought to the prejudice of the second mortgage bondholders who are represented in this case by the appellants who sue as owners of the second mortgage bonds and as trustee.

The prayer of the second amended bill is as follows:

“Orators therefore pray that the defendants, severally, be required to answer this' amended bill, but not under oath, the answer under oath being hereby expressly waived; and upon hearing may the Court decree that the defendants, Edward Ball, Alfred I. DuPont and Almours Securities, Inc., severally obligated themselves to give protection to the bonds of your orators and to meet the payments of principal and interest due thereon, so as to made said bonds good in all respects; may an appropriate decree be entered requiring said defendants to comply with their said undertaking, either directly or through their corporation (the defendant, St. Johns Beach Development Company) and, if defendants elect to comply through said corporation, may they be required to supply said Company with funds adequate for that purpose; may an accounting be taken in this cause to determine the sums which orators are lawfully entitled to receive and may orators have such other and further relief in the premises as the nature of the case may require and as to your Honors' shall seem meet and proper.”

The theory of appellants’ suit was in the nature of a bill for specific performance to compel the defendants, described in the bill as “the DuPont Interests,” to perform and carry out their alleged promise) undertaking an engagement to make good the second mortgage bonds in manner and form as alleged in consideration of the acts and things done by said second mortgage bondholders.

Partial performance of the alleged contractual engagement is alleged, and if the agency of Suttles to act for the *792 “DuPont'Interests” in other particulars be regarded as established as it must be for our consideration of the questions involved on this appeal wherein the defendants’ motion to dismiss the amended bill must be taken as admittting the allegations of said second amended bill for the purpose of determining its sufficiency) a claim of equitable cognizance on the face of the complainants’ pleading is unquestionably made out by the allegations of the second amended bill of complaint, which bill must be taken as true on this appeal. See City of Jacksonville v. Shaffer, 107 Fla. 363, 144 Sou. Rep. 892.

If, as alleged in the bill of complaint as now amended, the defendants, Alfred I. DuPont, Edward Ball and Almours Securities, Inc., for their own special benefit and advantage as prospective owners of the mortgaged property, and for the considerations stated as a part of the collateral undertaking relied upon as the foundation of the present suit, entered into a contractual obligation with appellants to give protection to their second mortgage bonds, which were at the time due and foreclosable to the prejudice of said defendants as then situated, and said defendants have now repudiated said undertaking and are refusing to carry it out, to the detriment of the complainants' below, as second mortgage bondholders, the equitable right of said second mortgage bondholders, which entitled them to resort to a court of equity to enforce and protect their mortgage lien, extends to the right to have specifically enforced in equity any specifically enforceable contractual obligation entered . into by third parties for the exoneration of the land, which is the subject of their lien, from liability under a prior lien by which it might be defeated. See Brogen v. Ferguson, 101 Fla. 1311, 133 Sou. Rep. 317, for the reasoning upon *793 which the right to maintain such an exoneration suit in equity is' founded.

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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 197, 118 Fla. 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-st-johns-beach-development-co-fla-1935.