Court Opinion

ID: 3306197
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:20:59.951337+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:58:36.770398
License: Public Domain

This is an action to recover from the defendants the purchase price of certain bank stock. The agreement for this purchase was in writing, dated March 15, 1911. The money was to be paid within six months. It was provided that "said stock shall be placed in escrow with R.J. Waters to be by them delivered upon payment to said bank by said second parties (defendants) for the first parties (plaintiff's) said sum of $24,480. In case said second parties fail or neglect to pay said sum of $24,480 within six months, said first parties shall have the right and option to either declare said sale canceled or recover said $24,480." Subsequently, *Page 183 
on March 24, 1914, escrow instructions directed to R.J. Waters as escrow-holder were signed by the parties plaintiffs and delivered to him, with said 288 shares of stock. These instructions provided that the stock was to be delivered in whole or in part whenever payment was made therefor at the rate of $85 per share, plus three per cent interest from March 24, 1911, and also provided that "In case the said stock has not been delivered to the said parties named therein on or before six (6) months from date, you will return said stock or such portions thereof as shall then remain, to the Hughes Manufacturing  Lumber Company." The purpose of this agreement was undoubtedly to secure to the plaintiffs the purchase price of the stock and to give possession of the unpaid for stock to the escrow-holder. The provision for the delivery of the possession of the certificates of stock unpaid for to the vendors at the expiration of six months was not inconsistent with the actual vesting of title of all the stock in the vendees at the time of the delivery of the stock to the escrow-holder on March 24, 1911. The escrow instructions did not provide that the sale should be rescinded at the expiration of six months. They merely provided that the shares unpaid for should be delivered into the possession of the vendors at that time, while the contract of March 15th gave the option to confirm or rescind the sale to the vendors. After the expiration of the six months the vendors of the stock gave notice to the vendees that they would expect them to pay the full purchase price for the stock, and that "said stock is still with said escrow-holder, R.J. Waters, subject to your order." Under these circumstances the trial court was justified in finding that the title passed. (Civ. Code, secs. 1140, 1141, 1748, 1756; Cuthill v. Peabody, 19 Cal.App. 304, [125 P. 926]; Hoover v. Wolfe, 167 Cal. 337, [139 P. 794]; ProvidentGold Mining Co. v. Manhattan Securities Co., 168 Cal. 304, [142 P. 884]; Provident Gold Mining Co. v. Haynes,173 Cal. 44, [159 P. 155].)
After the deposit of the bank stock with R.J. Waters, it was undertaken by the stockholders of the bank to exchange a majority of the stock of the bank for stock in an insurance company. At the request of the defendants the plaintiffs signed the various agreements necessary for such exchange. This was done in pursuance of a written agreement between the plaintiffs and defendants, which agreement provided, *Page 184 
"but said exchange shall in no way or manner affect the sale of said 288 shares of the said Oil  Metal Bank  Trust Company's stock, except that said Vulcan Fire Insurance Company's stock shall be substituted in place thereof." In the agreement of exchange by which the insurance company's stock was to be substituted for the bank stock, it was provided that the insurance company's stock received in exchange for the bank stock was to be deposited in escrow with the bank and to remain on deposit with the bank as security for certain agreements on the part of the bank stockholders. The president of the bank, finding that the proposed exchange was disapproved by the bank commissioner and by the insurance commissioner, returned the original certificate for 288 shares of bank stock to R.J. Waters, and it remained with him until the trial. But appellants claim that the agreement of exchange was consummated; that the attempted cancellation of that agreement by the president of the bank was unauthorized; that the title to the bank stock passed to the insurance company or to one Galloway, and that title to the insurance company's stock passed in accordance with the agreement of exchange, and that such consummated exchange was not affected by the unauthorized act of the president of the bank in returning the certificate for the bank stock to Waters. It is immaterial whether or not this deal was consummated. If it was consummated, the effect of the transaction was that the bank held the substituted insurance company's shares under the agreement of exchange entered into by the plaintiff for and on behalf of the defendants. If not consummated, the mere cancellation of the 288 shares of bank stock shares, for the purpose of issuing a certificate to effect said exchange, was of no consequence. The reissue of the original certificate for 288 shares and its redeposit with Waters placed the matter substantially where it was in the first instance. In either event the whole transaction having been at the request of the defendants, they are in no position to complain. Upon payment of the purchase price they would secure all plaintiff's rights in the bank stock or in the stock so substituted therefor. If the transactions with reference to the exchange of the stock have any significance, they merely emphasize the fact that both parties regarded the stock as the property of the defendants. *Page 185 
Defendant Montgomery, after the execution of the original contract, signed the same as a party thereto, and in all subsequent proceedings in relation thereto he was recognized as such by the plaintiffs. We see nothing in the case to distinguish his obligation from that of the other defendants. Judgment affirmed.
Melvin, J., and Victor E. Shaw, J., pro tem., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.