89 N.Y.S. 963 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
■ This action is in equity to compel specific performance by the defendants of a contract requiring the issue and delivery to plaintiff of certain shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation. The contract was for the personal services of the plaintiff, to ■be paid for in part by the issue and delivery to him of the stock in question, which services the court has found to have been fully performed by him and to have been terminated by his unjustifiable-discharge from the defendants’ employment. The court has further-found that a certificate for ten shares of the stock was issued to-him, but was left by him for safekeeping in the defendants’ possession. The. judgment appealed from, in addition to an award of damages against the defendants for the unexpired term of the contract of service and for accrued dividends upon the stock heretofore-issued to the plaintiff, commands the issue by the defendant corporation and the delivery to the plaintiff of the unissued stock. The decision of the learned trial justice upon which the judgment is based remits the plaintiff, without prejudice, to an action at law to-recover from the defendants the certificate of stock issued to him and now in their possession, together with whatever dividends may be accrued thereon.
The learned counsel for the respondent cites several cases in support of the proposition that equitable relief may be obtained where a corporation refuses to issue stock to one lawfully entitled to it, but they appear to be all cases in which the law furnishes no-adequate remedy by way of damages for the breach of contract involved and in which the stock has been actually issued to or for the benefit of the owner. The question in most if not all the cases related to the power of a court of equity to compel a transfer of stock already issued, or the reissue of other stock in its place. In Cushman v. Thayer Manufacturing Jewelry Co. (76 N. Y. 365)
In Johnson v. Brooks (93 N. Y. 337) the facts were similar in effect to those in the Cushman Case (supra) and the decree was upheld upon the ground that the legal remedy was inadequate or could have been enforced, if at all, only with doubt and difficulty. In Bedford v. American Aluminum Co. (51 App. Div. 537) the stock which was the subject of controversy amounted to one-half of the corporate issue, giving to its owner a veto power upon any contemplated change in the organization. Moreover the shares had been issued and delivered, and the action was to compel a reissue in smaller 'denominations to a transferee and a transfer to him upon the books of the company. To the same effect as the cases cited are Ernst v. Elmira Municipal Imp. Co. (24 Misc. Rep. 583) and Gilkinson v. Third Avenue R. R. Co. (47 App. Div. 472).
There is no allegation in the complaint in this action, and no proof was made upon the trial, that the stock of the defendant corporation has any peculiar value, or that the plaintiff could not fully recover in an action at law the damages resulting to him from the defendants’ breach of contract. In Bateman v. Straus (86 App. Div. 540), decided since the decision in the case at bar, this court held that such a complaint was; demurrable as not stating a cause of action for specific performance. The defendants there agreed to deliver to the plaintiff 1,000 shares of the capital stock of a corporation as part compensation for certain services rendered by him, and it was held that an action for specific performance would not lie in the absence of allegations showing difficulty or impossb bility in the ascertainment of the value of the stock or other facts permitting the inference that the plaintiff was without an adequate
It follows that the judgment herein must be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.