Court Opinion

ID: 8192854
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:15:58.44759+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:39.943105
License: Public Domain

Eschweiler, J.
The objections to the judgments entered by the court below are substantially as follows: (1) That the written agreement set forth above, dated January 16, 1915, was not a valid and binding agreement because the defendants were not to be bound by such writing until and unless it were so signed by all of the stockholders participating in the meeting of January 13, 1915, and that two of such stockholders did not sign; (2) that there was no legal acceptance of the writing of January 16th, if such were an option; (3) that such writing is void under the statute of frauds for uncertainty; (4) that it is null and void on the theory that, there being a reservation of the right to sell to third persons, there can be no exclusive right to purchase given; ( 5 ) that there was no consideration for the promise to keep the offer open for three years, and that it could be and was revoked;'(6) that oral testimony was improperly admitted as to the transactions at the meeting of January 13th so far as such tended to affect or change the writing of January 16th; and (7) that such of the defendants as had transferred or delivered their respective certificates of stock to their respective spouses had the right so to do as against the plaintiffs and that the court should not have disregarded such transactions; and further (8) that the court erred in allowing separate bills of costs in each of said six actions.
The court found and the evidence supports the finding that at the meeting of January 13th, where the matter was *491discussed respecting the cancellation of the indebtedness of John J. Hoberg and Maud Hoberg to John Hoberg Company, it was then understood by all present that two of the then present stockholders, though consenting to the purchase by the company of the stock and its distribution among the respective stockholders, did not and would not consent to be bound to retransfer such stock they respectively would receive as a result of the transaction. As a result of such finding, which was upon disputed evidence, the defendants were properly held to have become bound when all signed who it was understood were to sign.
The second objection, to the effect that there was wanting in this case a sufficiently legal acceptance of the option to repurchase, is based upon the contention that inasmuch as the writing of January 16th recited that a certain amount of shares of the capital stock of the John Hoberg Company had been bought by each of the signers from John J. Hoberg and his wife, Maud, while the undisputed fact was that the shares in controversy had been purchased by the corporation and not by the individuals and then distributed or divided by the corporation, that therefore the description in the writing of January 16th did not fit such dividend stock. A further objection is made on the ground that, inasmuch as it appeared that there was a slight discrepancy in the exact number of shares ultimately received by such individual stockholders on the dividend distribution from that which was their respective exact proportionate amount, there was a failure in description. This discrepancy arose from the fact that in the distribution certain stockholders received fractional shares, and by agreement among themselves such fractional shares were bought up by two of the stockholders so that the distribution might be of undivided shares.
Under the undisputed facts and those found by the court where there was any dispute, neither of these objections could well be considered material, and in any event they must be deemed to have been waived by the silence of the de*492fendants as to such points at the time when the demands were made upon them for the retransfers and their assertion of, and apparent reliance upon, other distinct grounds for their refusal to comply with such demands.
The third objection, to the effect that the writing is void under the statute of frauds for uncertainty on the ground that it fails to specify the exact number of shares demanded from each defendant respectively, is not well taken. There was sufficient in the notice itself, together with the surrounding facts and circumstances with knowledge of which the defendants were properly charged, to warrant the court below in making the disposition of this objection that it did. Inglis v. Fohey, 136 Wis. 28, 33, 116 N. W. 857.
Fourth, that the reservation of the right to sell was a nullifying of any right of purchase, is not under the facts a valid objection. Before there had been any bona fide sale or transfer of the stock demand was made for a retransfer. There-' fore the right which they reserved unto themselves of making a sale and disposition of such stock at any time within the three j^ears had not been exercised by them, and was still dormant at the time of the demand. Having failed to exercise the right so reserved by themselves to themselves, they cannot be heard to successfully interpose such unexercis.ed right to defeat the plaintiffs in the exercise of their right given to them by defendants.
The fifth point is in effect that there was no consideration for the promise on the part of the defendants to keep the offer alive for three years, and, there being no consideration, such promise was not enforceable, and in any event could be and was revoked.
If the agreement to sell such stock had been made subsequent to and independent of the purchase by the company of the stock and cancellation of the indebtedness there might be force and merit in this and in several of defendants’ contentions. It is found by the court, and the evidence supports such finding, that this was all in effect one transaction; the purchase by the company, the cancellation of the indebted*493ness, and the agreement that the plaintiffs were to have the option of obtaining their stock back again. As one indivisible transaction there was ample consideration to support it and all parts thereof.-
What has been said on the preceding propositions disposes of and dismisses the sixth point raised, which is to the effect that it was improper to receive or consider evidence as to the oral transactions at the meeting of January 13th as tending to vary, affect, or change the writing of January 16th. The rights of the parties were established by what took place at the meeting and are not dependent upon the writing itself. The contract then made and partly performed was taken out from the statute of frauds. Hankwitz v. Barrett, 143 Wis. 639, 128 N. W. 430. The plaintiffs, therefore, do not need to base their right to recover upon the writing of January 16th. It only served the purpose of additional evidence as to the transaction.
The seventh objection is to the effect that the transfer by certain of the defendants to their respective spouses of the shares of stock in question put it beyond the power of the court to decree specific performance of the agreement to re-transfer. What has been said above on the other objections sufficiently indicates the proper disposition to be made of this objection. There was no such bona fide sale as was the evident intent of both letter and spirit of the contract there must be.
As to the taxation of costs: there having been no consolidation of the six cases so as to make but one action, and the actions being each of such a nature that it would not permit of the joinder of any of the defendants in the other actions therein, and the rights of the plaintiffs being several and not joint, as against the several defendants, there was no error by the court in allowing the separate bills of costs, nor does the situation come within the provisions of sec. 2919, Stats., as contended for by defendants.
By the Court. — Judgments affirmed.