194 P. 178 | Or. | 1921
The length of the pleadings and the volume of the testimony have necessitated a preliminary statement exceeding the usual compass, and even with every abridgment possible it is difficult to make the issues tried entirely clear.
Leaving out of consideration the question of fraud assigned by the defendant as a reason for not complying with the terms of his agreement,'we must determine by the terms of that covenant what the defendant promised to buy and plaintiffs agreed to sell. All previous negotiations and conversations of the parties, so far as the contract is not affected by false representations and deceit, are merged in that document. The written, contract is npt difficult .of interpretation. The plaintiffs were contracting to sell and the defendant to buy all the stock of the Durkee Mercantile Company. It was an agreement for the sale of that stock. Incidentally, such purchase would give the defendant entire control of the merchandise and property of the company, the value of which represented the value of the stock, and without which the stock itself would be of little or no worth, unless the goodwill of the corporation had in itself some value. In the present instance the parties agreed upon the value of the store and the land upon which it stood, and agreed among themselves as to the method of fixing the value of the stock, or rather the amount that defendant should pay for it, by adding to the value of the store, fixtures, and ground, which was placed at $3,500, the flat cost of the merchandise as it should appear from an inventory to be taken for that purpose.
“Plaintiffs’ prayer is for general relief as well as for specific performance of the contract. Since there can be no rescission under the state of facts proved and no damages, and since by his acts in the premises defendant has in any event precluded a restoration of the statu quo either by return of the property or its equivalent, and has refused to carry out that part of the contract which calls for execution of the promissory notes, plaintiffs would be entitled to a decree carrying out the provisions of the contract in its ultimate effect. No such decree, however, can be entered or enforced as to compel the execution of promissory notes and compelling the faithful conduct of the business until such notes become due; nor can the court by any decree and through a receiver assume to superintend such a business with its numerous details during so great a length of time.
*414 “By the written contract defendant agreed to-execute- and pay when due interest-bearing notes as follows: $2,000 due April, 1919; $1,000 due November 1, 1919; the balance of the inventory price of the merchandise November 1, 1920; and $3,500, the agreed value of the realty, due November 1, 1921. His default consists in his refusal to pay the amouiits past due and in refusing to execute the notes as agreed to.
“It is further to be observed that under the terms of the written contract and the negotiations between the parties the defendant was given possession of the property, with power and authority to sell the merchandise and from such sales to pay the promissory notes. The foregoing outlines the only remedy whereby the contract as a whole may by a decree be carried out in its ultimate effect, having in mind in this connection the facts heretofore mentioned that the negotiations and the manner and means whereby the parties set about to carry the written contract' into effect incontrovertibly establish that the merchandise and the store and ground were, upon completion of the payments of the notes, to be the property of defendant, while in the meantime the funds whereby those notes were to be paid were to be realized by defendant from sales of that merchandise. Under such state of facts the seller could not maintain assumpsit as upon such notes as would not, under the terms of the contract, be due at the time of commencement of the suit; but where the defendant is in default in payments that were due arnf he also refuses to perform the contract by executing the notes that would become due, at the future dates under the terms of the contract, the seller is on such state of facts entitled to the remedy against such breach by immediate enforcement of the whole obligation, such right existing by reason of the buyer’s breach of agreement as a whole: 24 R. C. L., pp. 97, 98; Kelley v. Pierce, 16 N. D. 234 (112 N. W. 995, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 180); Stephenson v. Repp, 47 Ohio St. 551 (25 N. E. 803, 10 L. R. A. 620); Pasha*415 v. Bohart, 45 Mont. 76 (122 Pac. 284, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 1250).
. “Before outlining in terms what is in the opinion of the court the only proper and consistent remedy, reference may be had to the matters of what occasioned the ñecessity of a receiver and the consequent expenses thereof, with a, view to equitable adjustment in view of all the circumstances. On the one hand, had the defendant executed the notes and proceeded to manage the business in the manner each of the parties contemplated, the plaintiffs could have had no cause of suit until those notes became due, unless he violated the agreement in the meantime. Such a course, had it been chosen, could not have deprived defendant of adjustment of or redress for any errors, mistakes, or other defects, if any, that might exist, and not open and known to him at the time, and which he might, while acting in good faith, subsequently discover. For reasons that appear obvious in view of the nature of the contract, had the contract been thus consummated, self-interest of each of the parties to the present controversy would itself have virtually compelled co-operation to the end of the success of defendant’s venture. On the other hand, had plaintiffs proceeded as greater care and prudence would have suggested, no absolute delivery of possession and control and no mingling of goods should have been permitted until the transaction was closed and the notes delivered simultaneously. In either of these events the transaction would have been either wholly consummated or wholly rescinded. These circumstances, however, do not obviate or alter the fact that defendant did take possession and thereupon proceeded as heretofore mentioned and obligated himself as stated above. The result was the necessity of a receiver. That does not effect the remedy, except that in view of all those circumstances the court is of the opinion that when it comes to application of the proceeds, from which the expenses of the receivership must be met, those expenses should be so apportioned as to be*416 borne equally between plaintiffs and defendants: 23 R. C. L. 106. _
_ “In connection with the remedy heretofore suggested, the following facts are observed: That the legal title to the property named, i. e., the merchandise and the realty, was not under the agreement vested in defendant, but he has an equitable interest therein by virtue of the agreement and the payments he made; that the subsequent payments to be made were in the main to be realized from sales of the merchandise; that the merchandise and the realty together constitute the buisness institution — the property involved in the contract; that defendant continued as long as he was in charge so to mingle the merchandise delivered into his possession by plaintiffs with the merchandise that he brought and later supplied, and so mingled the proceeds of sales made from the indiscriminate whole, and so managed and treated the same as one and the same stock and as one fund and as one business that it cannot be segregated.x Therefore, and consistent with the ultimate effect of the contract, and those several acts, the only available remedy whereby the rights of each are subserved and enforced is a decree for the payment of the balance due under the contract, to .be secured by sale of the property in question, such sale to be effected by and through the receiver at the highest obtainable price after due publication of notice of such sale; and the proceeds of such sale, when such sale shall have been confirmed to be applied in the following order: To the expenses of the receiversliip and of the sale; to any unpaid bills contracted by defendant in the purchase of goods thus mingled; to the balance found due to plaintiffs, less one half of said receivership expenses, upon due transfer of all of the capital stock; the remainder to the defendant as his interest in such proceeds. In connection with the authorities last cited, see 24 R. C. L., pp. 445, 446, par. 744; 23 R. C. L., p. 98; 39 Cyc. 1794. The court is further of the opinion that*417 upon equitable principles neither party should recover costs or disbursements of the other.”
These observations appear sound, and we adopt them.
The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.