Court Opinion

ID: 3612046
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:55:56.050302+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:24:17.689496
License: Public Domain

The plaintiff has sought by this action to recover of the defendant the purchase price of 200 shares of the capital stock of the Congress Springs Company; which, in his complaint, he alleges to have been included in a sale of 1,985 shares to the defendant, as effected for the several owners through the agency of one of their number. It is therein, further, averred that the agreement with respect to the sale of the 1,985 shares was that it should be conditioned upon the defendant's purchasing, and paying for, the whole thereof at the price fixed, and that, in pursuance of the agreement, 1,785 shares were delivered to, and paid for by, the defendant; but that, by reason of the plaintiff's certificate having been mislaid, his shares were not included at the time of the delivery. The defendant, by his answer, admitted the purchase of the 1,785 shares of stock, but denied the allegations of the complaint relating to the plaintiff's shares and, as a further defense, alleged the invalidity of the agreement referred to in the complaint under the Statute of Frauds.
The circumstances, as developed upon the trial with respect to this controversy, showed that in February, 1890, a block of 1,985 shares of the stock in question was purchased from *Page 620 
one Hotchkiss by five persons, of whom the plaintiff was one. The purchase would appear to have been made at the instance, or suggestion, of the defendant; who, soon thereafter, through the controlling interest of this holding, was able to elect his own board of directors and to become the president of the company. The 1,985 shares were registered upon the books of the company in the names of the five persons by whom they had been bought, in the several amounts to which their interests in the purchase entitled them. Subsequently, and in December of the same year, the defendant, through a lawyer, approached Mr. Bockes, who held 496 of the 1,985 shares, with the proposition to buy the whole block of stock. Bockes communicated directly with all of the holders of the shares, except the plaintiff, who was at the time in Chicago, and received their consent to a sale at the price which they had paid for them, with interest at the legal rate added to the date of delivery. Mr. Bockes telegraphed to the plaintiff and testified that he received a reply, assenting to the sale of his shares. That telegram appears to have been lost and the only one produced by the plaintiff was sent the day after the shares of the other four persons had been delivered to the defendant. On a certain day in December, Mr. Bockes delivered to the defendant, and received from him the agreed price for, 1,785 shares. He had not received the plaintiff's certificate of stock before the closing of the transaction with the defendant, by reason of its not having been found, and when he did receive it, a few days later, he left it at the office of the defendant's attorney; where it remained for some time, before he returned it to the plaintiff by reason of the defendant's refusal to consider it as included in his purchase of the stock. On behalf of the plaintiff, the evidence went to show that the sale was expressly conditioned upon the 1,985 shares being sold as an entirety and that the defendant agreed to that arrangement. On the part of the defendant, the evidence was that the plaintiff's shares were not included in the transaction; the defendant's testimony, and that of his attorney, contradicting explicitly the testimony given for the *Page 621 
plaintiff and denying that there was any other arrangement entered into than one for the purchase of the 1,785 shares. The issue of fact, as to what the agreement was between Mr. Bockes, acting for himself and the other holders of the Hotchkiss stock, and the defendant, was submitted to the jury, who found in favor of the plaintiff. It was the view of the trial judge, and he so instructed the jury, that if the agreement was to purchase 1,985 shares of stock, the plaintiff's 200 shares being included in that number, and the delivery to the defendant was made with the understanding that the plaintiff's shares were to be delivered as part of the entire purchase of 1,985 shares, the case would be taken out of the operation of the Statute of Frauds. Exceptions were taken to the charge in this respect, as they had also been taken to the refusal of the trial judge to dismiss the complaint for the invalidity, under the Statute of Frauds, of the alleged parol agreement for the sale or purchase of the plaintiff's shares of stock.
The question of law, which is thus presented, is sought to be met and answered by the plaintiff, who is respondent here, upon the ground that it was proved, and found as a fact by the jury, that the contract of sale was the joint contract of the plaintiff and the four other persons, who, with him, had become the owners of the Hotchkiss shares. That being the fact established by the verdict, he argues that the delivery of a part of the shares made the contract valid under the Statute of Frauds. In our opinion, however, the facts of this case were not such as to prevent the operation of the statute; which provides that every contract for the sale of any goods, chattels, or things in action, for the price of $50.00 or more, shall be void, unless a note or memorandum be made in writing and subscribed by the parties to be charged thereby; or unless there be acceptance by the buyer, in whole or in part, or a part payment of the purchase money. (2 R.S. 136, sec. 3.) Whatever the understanding or agreement between the plaintiff and his associates with respect to the Hotchkiss shares, in the purchase of which they had combined, it is undisputed that that stock was divided up between them and, thereafter, held in *Page 622 
severalty; each one becoming the separate and registered holder of the shares allotted to him. When it was proposed by the defendant to purchase these shares there was no agreement, nor any memorandum in writing concerning it, between him and Mr. Bockes, as representing the five owners of the stock. There was none between the stockowners themselves, affecting their ownership. They were, as between themselves, as they were to the world, the separate owners of the shares standing in their names and there was nothing in the transaction conducted by Mr. Bockes for a sale of the stock which legally bound them to it. The mere fact, which must be deemed to have been established by the verdict, that the defendant had agreed with Mr. Bockes to buy all of the 1,985 shares, would not make it any the less as to each stockholder a separate transaction which he might elect to carry out, if he chose. There was not such an agency in Mr. Bockes as would have been effectual to bind his associates and certainly nothing, so far as this plaintiff is concerned, beyond his telegraphic expression of a willingness to sell his stock, if the other owners would sell. The separateness of interest in the transaction is illustrated in this very action, which is commenced by the plaintiff alone to recover as for the sale of his own stock. It is the distinct and several ownership of the shares, which interposes a difficulty in the way of the plaintiff's recovery, that is not to be overcome by the finding of the jury that the actual agreement of the defendant was to buy all of these shares. The cardinal purpose of the Statute of Frauds was to lessen the opportunities for the perpetration of fraud by compelling the parties to put their agreements in writing, when their transactions involve more than a certain pecuniary value; but it recognized that an incontestable fact might equally establish what the agreement between them was and, therefore, provided that acceptance, or a part payment, would be sufficient and would obviate the necessity for the production of some written evidence.
The provisions of the Statute of Frauds may not be availed of to effectuate a fraudulent purpose and, where that is clearly *Page 623 
seen to be the case, it not infrequently has happened that the court has found a way to afford the relief, which an equitable consideration of the facts would warrant. But this is no such case. The question is, purely, one whether this plaintiff shall recover from the defendant, under an alleged agreement on his part to buy 200 shares of stock; which he denies and when the evidence as to its making rests in parol and is irreconcilably conflicting. Under the circumstances, there is no legal reason why the defendant may not insist upon his strict legal rights under the Statute of Frauds.
It is the plaintiff's misfortune that the matter of the sale of his stock rests in parol; as it was, also, his misfortune, upon his version of the facts, that his certificate of stock could not be found in time to be delivered with the certificates of the other stockholders. It is a misfortune for which no legal remedy is available, and the case may be said, not inaptly, to illustrate that precise situation between the parties to a transaction, which the statute was intended to apply to and to provide for.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.