85 Fla. 9 | Fla. | 1922
This cause is now presented upon appeal from the final decree in favor of defendants entered by the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit. At the threshold we are confronted with a question of the jurisdiction of the court entering the decree from which the appeal was taken, The suit was filed in the circuit court of Franklin County, located within and forming a part of the second judicial circuit. On July 11, 1916, the judge, who was then and is now judge of that court, filed his certificate of disqualification in the cause as follows:
“I, E. C. Love, Judge of the-Circuit Court, Second Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida, do hereby certify that I am disqualified to sit in the above stated cause for the reason that prior to my appointment to the bench I was counsel for one. of the defendants in said cause. ’1
Subsequently thereto the case was submitted to the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit on demurrer of defendant's to the bill of complaint; Upon 'this héaring there was an order sustaining the demurrer, from which order com
Complainants thereafter applied for the appointment of a receiver for the properties involved in the litigation. This application was presented to the judge, of the first judicial circuit and upon a hearing a receiver was appointed. From this order an appeal was taken to this court, upon the consideration of which the order was reversed. Apalachicola Northern R. R. Co. v. Sommers, 79 Fla. 816, 85 South. Rep. 361.
Thereafter evidence was taken, upon the completion of which notice was given by counsel for defendants to counsel representing complainants that defendants had set the cause down for final hearing on August 23, 1920, before the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit in his office at Marianna, Florida. This hearing was postponed for two days by the judge and came on for hearing before said judge on August 25, 1920, at Marianna, at which time complainants appeared and filed a plea averring that the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the case.
The contentions upon this point generally are that a final hearing of the case on the merits by the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit amounted tO' a transfer or change of venue of the cause from the second to the fourteenth judicial circuit; that there is no legal authority for such transfer in the absence of a petition of or agreement by the parties for such change, and therefore the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit had no jurisdiction to hear and determinne the case.
Upon a hearing this plea was overruled and the final hearing was continued to be heard by the judge in his
The parties complainant and defendant have proceeded throughout this litigation, until the case came on for final hearing upon motion and notice to complainants by defendants before the judge of the fourteenth ■ judicial circuit, upon the theory that the certificate of disqualification of the judge of the second judicial circuit is sufficient in substance to show disqualification. Both parties have so construed the certificate in making applications to other circuit judges for interlocutory orders in the case. Neither of them will now be permitted to question it but will be held to have waived defects, if there are such, and upon elementary principles of justice estopped from questioning its sufficiency. Finley v. Chamberlin, 46 Fla. 581, 35 South. Rep. 1; Warren v. Warren, 73 Fla. 764, 75 South. Rep. 35.
The statute under which defendants proceeded is section 1481 of the General Statutes, which is as follows:
“1481. (1078) In case of inability and disqualification. —Whenever the judge of any court, other than the supreme and criminal courts of record, shall be unable, from absence, sickness or other cause, or shall be disqualified from interest or any other cause, to discharge any duty*14 whatever appertaining to his office, which may be required to be performed in vacation or between terms, it shall be the duty of any other judge of a court of the same jurisdiction as the court in which the cause is pending, on the application of any party to perform such duties, and hear and determine all such matters as may be submitted to him; and such judge may discharge such duties either in his own or any other jurisdiction, and shall be substituted in all respects in the place instead, in the matter aforesaid, of the judge unable or disqualified to act. ’ ’
This statute limits the powers of the court acting in behalf of a judge who is disqualified to a discharge of dqties “which may be required to be performed in vacation or between terms. ’ ’ .But section 1859 of the General Statutes provides that “circuit courts, sitting in chancery, shall always be kept open' for * * passing interlocutory and final decrees and orders” and that “all action in said matters in vacation shall have the same force and effect as if done in term time. ’ ’ Therefore, the limitation contained in section 1481 upon the powers of a court acting in behalf ■of a judge who is disqualified to a performanace of duties “which may be required to be performed in vacation or between terms ’ ’ can have no application- to circuit courts sitting in chancery for the reason that as to- such courts there are, under the statute (sec. 1859) no such things as vacation and term time.
The constitution expressly provides for the trial and determination of “civil cases at law” in which the judge of the court is disqualified. Any one of several courses may be pursued. Secs. 8 and 9, Art. V Const. of Fla.; Secs. 1470 and 1814, Gen. Stats, of Fla. It forbids the transfer of such eases from one court to another for trial except upon consent .of the parties to the action. State
With respect to chancery cases the situation is different. The constitution provides that the “circuit courts and circuit judges may have such extra territorial jurisdiction in chancery cases as may be prescribed by law.” Sec. 12, Art. XIX, Const. of Fla. Therefore, since, as we have seen, the expressions “vacation” and “term time” can have no application to “circuit courts sitting in chancery” and the constitution places no limitation upon the power of the legislature to confer upon “circuit courts” and “circuit judges” extra territorial jurisdiction, the conclusion would seem to be inevitable that section 1481 of the General Statutes of Florida was designed to and does confer upon a circuit court or a circuit judge acting for another such court or judge who is disqualified, power in “chancery cases” to “hear and determine all such matters as may be submitted to him; and such judge may discharge such duties either in his .own or any other jurisdiction, and shall be substituted in all respects in the place instead, in the matter aforesaid, of the judge unable or disqualified to act.” This conclusion recognizes every applicable constitutional provision and gives effect to every pertinent statutory enactment. The expression contained in the statute, namely* “which may be required to be performed in vacation or between terms,” is applicable in “civil cases at
It follows that the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit had jurisdiction, “upon the application of any party” to this litigation, to hear and determine, ‘ ‘ in his own or any other jurisdiction,” any question arising in the suit and presented to him and make any decree, interlocutory or final, incidental or necessary to a complete determination of every issue involved to the same extent as the judge of the second judicial circuit had but for his disqualification.
On the merits the assignments present the question of the propriety of the findings of the chancellor and the decree dismissing the bill of complaint. It is a stockholders ’ suit. The complainants are, or were at the time of the acts and transactions alleged in the bill to be fraudulent and unlawful, associated with defendants, or some of them, whose acts,are challenged, as stockholders in the several corporations, the validity of whose proceedings is challenged. Neither the states from whom corporate franchises and powers were derived nor creditors of any of the corporation defendants question the validity of the various proceedings made the basis of complaint.
The allegations of the bill are set out in the opinion prepared when the case first appeared in'this court. (Sommers v. A. N. R. R. Co., 75 Fla. 159, 78 South. Rep. 25). No benefit would result from a restatement of them here.
By answers all material allegations of ’the bill, in so far as they charge or impute fraud or misconduct to defendants in the various transactions recited, were denied’. They aver that the defendant Florida Company, referred to as
Such in substance is a condensed statement of the averments of the answers. The several answers cover many pages of the record. Issues of fact only are involved. Controlling legal principles are well established. A great volume of testimony was introduced on behalf of complainants and respondents. It is not difficult to trace the respective original interest of individual complainants from its origin to its extinguishment, or to its substitution accruing under the plan adopted for refinancing the enterprise, but it is not conceived that to do so would be of any benefit as a precedent since it deals with facts only which are peculiar to this case.
The railroad company, the St. Joseph Land and Development Company and the Florida Company, referred to as the holding company, were factors in a common enterprise. The original plan of financing the enterprise contemplated an expenditure of $1,500,000. As it progressed it soon became apparent that this amount was wholly in
It may have been, and no doubt was, unfortunate for complainants that the. obligations of the holding company which were issued and sold to obtain funds to finance the enterprise matured .within three years from the date of issue and the bonds of the railroad company and the land company which, together with the stocks of such companies, were assigned and transferred to the holding company as security for its bonds matured at a later date. But complainants are, and were at the time of the various transactions of which they now complain, sui juris. This arrangement was in accordance with the contracts of May 10 and 11, 1905. Evidence introduced for the purpose of showing that the execution of these contracts was fraudulently accomplished or that deception was practiced as an inducement to their execution is not conclusive. It is denied by defendants. The burden of proof is on complainants. Wilson v. Lott, 5 Fla. 305; White v. Walker, 5 Fla. 479; 12 R. C. L. p. 424. The fact alone that complainants made a hard bargain would not avoid the contracts. Mizell Live Stock Co. v. McCaskill Co., 59 Fla. 322, 51 South. Rep.
Nor can it be said that it appears from the record that in the process of refinancing the enterprise deception and fraud were employed by defendants in the various steps and transactions incident to it to the detriment of complainants. The chancellor held the opposite view and we cannot say that the finding is not supported by the evidence. On the contrary, it appears from the evidence that the participation and acquiescence of complainants as stockholders and officers in the proceedings of the corporation defendants in all their transactions were such as to estop them now from questioning their validity. In Perkins v. Trinity Realty Co., 69 N. J. Eq. 723, 61 Atl. Rep. 157, the court said: “To permit stockholders of corporations to unanimously make a disposition of the corporate property where no one else’s rights are in any way prejudiced, and afterwards to repudiate their action upon the ground that it was beyond the power of the fictional body to do the act, could serve no useful purpose, and would be merely available in aid of-fraud. To hold that, under such circumstances, those who have unanimously done the act cannot repudiate it, is' certainly' consonant with good morals and fair dealings, and violates no principle which is necessary to the protection of the rights of those concerned in and with corporations. In cases where stockholders have all assented to corporate action, and no rights of the state or creditors intervene, the doctrine of estoppel is fully applicable, and the plea of ultra vires is unavailing. ’ ’ The rule generally is that stockholders who participate in and assent to acts of corporations will not afterwards be heard to complain but will be held estopped to question the validity of the proceedings. Cook on Corporations (6th ed.), vol. 1, Sec. 39, vol. 2, Secs. 730, 735; Martin v. Niagara
Tested by tlie foregoing legal principles and applying the familiar rule that the findings of a chancellor on the facts will not be disturbed by an appellate court unless such findings are clearly shown to be erroneous, the assignments on the merits have not been sustained. The decree will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.