104 Misc. 254 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
Kellner, Kener, Bricka and Breitweiser were stockholders in the Buffalo Co-operative Stove Company. For the purpose of increasing their several holdings of the capital stock of the corporation and controlling its affairs, it was orally agreed between them on January 1, 1910, that their several purchases of the shares of stock from other stockholders should be divided among themselves, the division to be made so as to keep their holdings substantially equal, each to pay for the stock received by him on the division; the stock when bought to be divided among the four; if there were only three, it was to be divided among the three; if there were only
In 1914 plaintiff bought two shares of stock from one Poe, paid the purchase price himself, caused the certificates thereof to be transferred, one to Bricka and one to Breitweiser, each of whom reimbursed plaintiff for the moneys he had paid Poe for one share of stock. In 1916 the defendant Kener purchased of Bricka. thirty-one shares of stock in the corporation, surrendered the certificates therefor and caused new certificates to be' issued in his name, and he asserts that he is the owner of the same, free of all claims of the plaintiff. Plaintiff brings this action to compel the defendant to transfer one-third of such Bricka stock to him upon being paid one-third the sum paid Bricka by the defendant.
It is urged by the defendant that the agreement above stated is unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds for the reason that it is a contract to sell all the shares of stock in the corporation that might be purchased by any one of the four men to the remaining three men in severalty (one-third to each), of the value of more than fifty dollars and no note or memorandum thereof in writing having been made and signed by the parties. The plaintiff asserts that the agreement is not void under the Statute of Frauds for the reason that the contract has been partly performed; that the two shares of stock purchased by plaintiff of Poe and sold and delivered by plaintiff to Bricka and Breitweiser were so delivered in pursuance of the contract, and that such delivery constituted an acceptance by the buyer, within the meaning of the statute, and was such a compliance "with the statute as to relieve the contract from the penalty thereof.
If this were an action by plaintiff against Bricka or
Assuming the plaintiff’s contention to be correct, it is a several contract, calling for a sale of one-third of the stock to the plaintiff. The sale thus provided for is a separate and independent transaction, involving the sale by the defendant to the plaintiff of part
The only proof of the agreement in the case at bar is the testimony'of the plaintiff; that testimony is of doubtful construction. Giving the plaintiff the bene
If the contract applied only to stock purchased by any one of the four from a stockholder not one of their number, then the plaintiff has no contract for the purchase of the Bricka stock. What few shares of stock the defendant had purchased from outsiders cannot be a ground of complaint on the part of the plaintiff. They simply evened up the holdings of the defendant, and the plaintiff was satisfied with, the result. If it be assumed that the purchase of the Bricka stock by the defendant was covered by the contract, it is seen that the Statute of Frauds is a complete defense to the action. The contract not being in writing, and being for the sale of property of more
The plaintiff’s complaint must he dismissed, hut without costs.
Judgment accordingly.