H.L. McNORTON, Appellant,
v.
PAN AMERICAN BANK OF ORLANDO, N.A., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*394 David B. King of Peed & King, P.A., Orlando, for appellant.
Frederic B. O'Neal of Johnson, Motsinger, Trismen & Sharp, P.A., Orlando, for appellee.
COBB, Judge.
In this relief from forfeiture case, McNorton, plaintiff below, appeals from the order of the circuit court granting defendant Pan American Bank of Orlando's motion to strike Counts I, II and III of his amended complaint, wherein the court also ruled that the motion to dismiss the amended complaint was moot and from entry of final judgment in favor of the Bank.
In March of 1977, McNorton and the Bank entered into an agreement whereby McNorton was to purchase the mortgage lien interest of the Bank in specified real property. The agreement stated in pertinent part:
2. That H.L. McNorton agrees to purchase and the bank agrees to sell the interest of the bank in the aforementioned mortgage to H.L. McNorton, or nominee, for the sum of ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND and No/100 ($100,000.00) DOLLARS payable as follows:
(a) Fifty Thousand Dollars upon the execution of this agreement; and
(b) Fifty Thousand Dollars due on the 27th day of April, 1977.
.....
*395 8. That the $50,000.00 paid to the bank by McNorton, or nominee, upon the execution of this agreement shall be earned by the bank upon the execution of this agreement. In the event McNorton fails to pay the balance of the funds due to the bank for the execution of this agreement by 5:00 P.M. on the 27th day of April, 1977, then this agreement shall be void and the bank shall be free to negotiate the sale of the mortgage lien to any other party whatsoever. The $50,000, having been earned upon the execution of this agreement, shall be the bank's property completely and shall not be subject to any claim by McNorton, or nominee. (emphasis added).
McNorton did not pay the second $50,000 on time; the deal fell through and McNorton was out $50,000. In May of 1978, McNorton filed a three-count complaint against Pan Am Bank seeking damages in the amount of $50,000. Counts II and III of the complaint were dismissed. Defendant filed an amended motion to dismiss Count I of the complaint on the grounds that the complaint on its face showed that plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law against a third party, National Car Rental Systems, for wrongful garnishment or malicious prosecution; therefore, the court was without jurisdiction to grant equitable relief. The circuit court granted defendant's amended motion to dismiss with leave to file an amended complaint. McNorton filed an amended three-count complaint and in Count I alleged the payment of $50,000 contemporaneous with the agreement which was attached as Exhibit 1. McNorton alleged that on April 27, 1977, he was unable to pay Pan Am Bank the remaining $50,000 because on April 26, 1977 a writ of garnishment was filed against his ComBank/Pinecastle account by National Car Rental Systems causing McNorton to be deprived of the use of some $28,000 which he intended to use towards partial payment of the $50,000 owed April 27, 1977; that he was still deprived of the use of the money due to the garnishment action at the time of filing the complaint, despite a directed verdict in his favor, due to a stay pending appeal; that he did not have the remaining $23,000 necessary to make the full $50,000 payment on Wednesday, April 27, but that he would have had the $23,000 on Friday, April 29, 1977, and had requested an extension; that if he had not been wrongfully deprived of the money in his ComBank account he would have paid the defendant $27,000 on April 27 and been granted the extension. Attached to the complaint as an exhibit was a letter from the Bank's attorney claiming the $50,000 previously paid and terminating all further obligation on the Bank's part by reason of the inability of McNorton to pay the remaining $50,000 pursuant to the agreement. McNorton's complaint further alleged that he negotiated with the Bank, but the negotiations were unsuccessful because he was unable to obtain a rapid dissolution of the writ of garnishment; that in August of 1977 the defendant Bank sold the two mortgages that it would have sold to the plaintiff, pursuant to an agreement attached as Exhibit 4, to National Car Rental Systems for $100,000; that as a result of this sale, the defendant Bank sustained no actual damages as a result of McNorton's inability to consummate the purchase; that the $50,000 deposit paid by the plaintiff to defendant bears no relationship to any damages sustained by the Bank and constitutes an unconscionable penalty and a forfeiture; that he had made a demand for repayment of the $50,000, but that the defendant Bank refused his demand; and that he had no adequate remedy at law to recover the $50,000 deposit. McNorton prayed that the court declare the retention by the Bank of the $50,000 unconscionable and relieve plaintiff of the forfeiture which constituted 50% of the purchase price; that the court enter a judgment rescinding the agreement attached as Exhibit 1; and that the court enter a final judgment in favor of plaintiff for $50,000 plus costs and interest.
The primary issue before us[1] is whether Count I of McNorton's complaint stated a *396 cause of action against the Bank for relief from forfeiture.
McNorton's cause of action is based on the rule announced in Hutchison v. Tompkins,
The Bank offers five reasons why McNorton's complaint did not state a cause of action: first, that the equitable remedy is used to affirm and reinstate one's rights under a contract and not to rescind; second, that since relief from forfeiture is a method of affirming rather than avoiding a contract, to state a cause of action plaintiff must allege that he tendered full performance; third, that the agreement between the parties is, as a matter of law, an option and not a deposit receipt or purchase and sale agreement; fourth, that plaintiff failed to allege that his timely performance was prevented by a misfortune beyond his control; and fifth, that plaintiff failed to allege facts which show no adequate remedy at law.
The Bank argues that Hutchison did not set out a rule for providing for relief from forfeiture in other cases or other situations; that the language on which plaintiff is relying is dicta, and cites for our consideration 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence, §§ 448-460(d) (Fifth Ed. 1941). We believe the Hutchison case does set out a rule of law concerning relief from a forfeiture. So does the Fourth District Court of Appeal, which stated that Hutchison:
held that whether a clause in a contract is one for liquidated damages or a penalty depends upon whether or not the damages flowing from a breach are readily ascertainable at the time the contract is executed. If the damages are ascertainable on the date of the contract, the clause is a penalty and unenforceable; if they are not so ascertainable, the clause is [usually] one for liquidated damages and enforceable; however, if subsequent circumstances demonstrate it would be unconscionable to allow the seller to retain the sum in question as liquidated damages, equity may relieve against the forfeiture.
Bruce Builders, Inc. v. Goodwin,
The better result, in our judgment, as Hyman [v. Cohen,73 So.2d 393 (Fla.)] contemplates, is to allow the liquidated damage clause to stand if the damages are not readily ascertainable at the time the contract is drawn, but to permit equity to relieve against the forfeiture if it appears unconscionable in light of the circumstances existing at the time of breach. For instance, assume a situation in which damages were not readily ascertainable at the time the contract was drawn, and the parties agreed to a liquidated damage provision of $100,000. Purchaser later repudiated the contract; vendor resold the land to another party, which because of fluctuations in the real estate market, resulted in a loss to himself of only $2,000. In such a case a court *397 following the Hyman theory would allow the liquidated damage clause to stand, because damages were not readily ascertainable at the time of drawing the contract, but would, as a court of equity, relieve against the forfeiture as unconscionable.
Hutchison,
Beatty v. Flannery [49 So.2d 81 (Fla. 1950)], retention of a $3,000 deposit on a $30,000 contract created no pangs. And in O'Neill v. Broadview, Inc., [112 So.2d 280 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959)] forfeiture of a $1500 deposit on a $10,440 contract could be tolerated. However, in Hook v. Bowmar,320 F.2d 536 (5th Cir.1968), loss of a $30,000 deposit on a $95,000 contract was found unconscionable. In the case at bar, the contract was for $173,800, and the deposit was only slightly more than 4% of that sum. Thus, based upon precedent the amount is not shocking to "the court's conscience."
Bruce Builders,
Nevertheless, it appears that the Chancellor, not having found it necessary to consider the rule at all, appears not to have considered or determined the nature of the purchasers' default, that is to say, whether willful and capricious, or whether resulting from an unfortunate inability to perform. If the latter, he might well have considered the forfeiture of deposit the size of the one here, without a showing of actual damage, to be `shocking to the conscience of the court.'
Haas,
Second, the Bank argues that McNorton failed to allege that he had ever tendered full performance and cites 30 C.J.S. Equity § 56(d) (1965); 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence, § 436. However, Pomeroy in § 451 suggests that
if the party bound by it has been prevented from an exact fulfillment, so that a forfeiture is incurred, by unavoidable accident, by fraud, by surprise, or by ignorance, not willfull, a court of equity will interpose and relieve him from the forfeiture so caused, upon his making compensation, if necessary, or doing everything else within his power.
McNorton argues that equity does not require appellant to perform a useless act and that the complaint alleged that the bank had already sold the mortgages to a *398 third party. In addition, McNorton argues that under the rule of Hutchison and Bruce Builders, tender of performance is not required. We hold that under the present circumstances an allegation of tender of performance was not required, in order to assert the rule of Hutchison, Bruce Builders, and the unjust enrichment exception to the rule of Beatty v. Flannery. See also, Hook v. Bomar,
Next, the Bank argues that as a matter of law the agreement was an option because McNorton was not obligated under the agreement to purchase the mortgage, and that McNorton only lost the purchase price of an option. See 33 Fla.Jur. Vendor & Purchaser, § 15 (1960). The Bank relies upon language in the agreement which states that should McNorton fail to pay the balance of the funds due, then the agreement shall be "void." The Bank cites three cases which it asserts turned upon the use of the word "void": McCall v. Carlson,
Next, the Bank argues that under the unjust enrichment exception as articulated in Beatty v. Flannery, McNorton, to have stated a cause of action, must have alleged that his failure to make payment was due to a misfortune beyond his control. The bank argues that although McNorton may have arguably had a bona fide misfortune concerning the $27,000 wrongfully garnished, he alleged no reason why he did not have the other $23,000 on time. Assuming an allegation of misfortune beyond control is required, McNorton alleged evidentiary facts showing an ultimate fact of misfortune beyond his control. See Orlando Sports Stadium, Inc. v. State ex rel. Powell,
Finally, the Bank argues that the face of the amended complaint reveals an *399 adequate remedy at law which precludes equitable jurisdiction; that McNorton had an adequate remedy against National Car Rental for wrongful garnishment and that McNorton would be able to recover the $50,000 in a wrongful garnishment or malicious prosecution action for damages. Florida courts recognize the general rule that where a complaint shows on its face that there exists an adequate remedy at law, there is no jurisdiction in equity. E.g., Greenfield Villages, Inc. v. Thompson,
The mere existence of a legal remedy does not prevent a suit in equity unless the legal remedy be plain, certain, prompt, speedy, sufficient, full and complete, practical and efficient in attaining the ends of justice.
Citizens & So. Nat. Bank v. Taylor,
[T]he test of whether law or equity affords the most adequate remedy may be revealed by the answer to the question, which remedy will afford the most expeditious relief to the person wronged... If the remedy at law is not as sensitive to the prompt administration of justice as the remedy at equity, then the latter should be adopted.
Id.
In summary, we hold the trial court erred in granting the motion to strike Count I of McNorton's complaint[3] and entering final judgment in favor of defendant Bank. McNorton did state a cause of action under *400 the rule of Hutchison and Bruce Builders concerning relief from forfeiture and the unjust enrichment exception to Beatty v. Flannery. There was no adequate remedy at law against the Bank or against National Car Rental at the time McNorton sought to commence this equitable proceeding. Accordingly, the order of the circuit court striking Count I of McNorton's amended complaint and the judgment in favor of the Bank are
REVERSED.
ORFINGER and FRANK D. UPCHURCH, Jr., JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] If the court did not err in dismissing McNorton's complaint for failure to state a cause of action, then a motion to strike would have been proper. See Mack Roth, Inc. v. Gardiner,
[2] The garnishment appeal was recently decided in favor of McNorton. National Car Rental Systems, Inc. v. Bruce A. Ryals Enterprises, Inc., et al.,
[3] The trial court's dismissal of Counts II and III were not made points on appeal and, therefore, we do not consider the propriety of the trial court's striking those counts in reaching our decision. See Jim Walter Corp. v. Bracht,
