152 Wis. 646 | Wis. | 1913
Tbis court bas beld tbat where corporate stock is sold, paid for, and delivered pursuant to an oral agreement, wherein the vendor as a condition of the sale agrees to repurchase such stock at the option of the buyer, the whole constitutes but an entire original contract that is sufficiently performed to take it out of the statute of frauds (sec. 2308, Stats.), so that the vendee may sue and recover from the vendor on the agreement to repurchase. Vohland v. Gelhaar, 136 Wis. 75, 116 N. W. 869; Hankwitz v. Barrett, 143 Wis. 639, 128 N. W. 430. In both of these cases the vendee understood that he was purchasing the stock from the owner thereof and did not know that the vendor was in fact acting as the agent of an undisclosed principal.
The circuit judge had the above rule of law in mind when he awarded judgment notwithstanding the verdict, because he says in his opinion:
“The complaint alleges in substance that the defendant sold 'to the plaintiff stock belonging to the defendant and that the defendant, as part of the agreement of sale, agreed to take back the stock at the price paid at any time the plaintiff might wi'sh. If this were the case, quite likely the case cited by plaintiff’s counsel, Johnston v. Trask, 116 N. Y. 136, 22 N. E. 377, would rule this one.”
The law as declared in this case is in perfect accord with what is said in the two Wisconsin cases referred to.
The trial judge held, however, that the present case did not come within the rule of law above set forth, because the agreement involved was “nothing more than an agreement by a third person to purchase stock sold by one party to another,” and because the agreement to repurchase was “distinct and separate from the agreement between the parties to the sale, consummated.” Continuing further he says:
“But the proof shows conclusively that the defendant never owned or had in his possession the stock purchased by the plaintiff, and that the stock was issued and delivered by the*650 company [the Church. Furnishing Company] direct to the plaintiff, and that payment was made by the plaintiff direct to the company.”
If the circuit judge had a correct conception of the facts, his legal conclusion drawn therefrom is unquestionably sound. If Madden’s agreement was separate and independent from that made for the purchase of the stock, it was not reduced to writing, no part of the stock bargained for was delivered to him, and he paid no part of the purchase price. He made a mere oral agreement to purchase personal property of the value of more than $50 in case the owner desired to sell, which would fall squarely within the condemnation of the statute. So the real question in the case is: Did the trial court misapprehend the import of the evidence offered ?
The testimony of the plaintiff was to the effect that the defendant wanted her to buy shares of stock in the Church Furnishing Company; that at first she declined to do so, but upon defendant’s representation that he would take the stock off her hands after a little while she consented and took 200' shares, for which she paid $200 on August 2d, and that upon substantially like representations she made an additional purchase of 150 shares for $150 on August 12th, and that in each instance she relied on the defendant’s promise to buy the stock from her on request. The plaintiff is in error in stating the number of shares purchased. The shares were $10 each and her first purchase was of twenty shares and the second was fifteen. The plaintiff admits that the stock was delivered to her by the secretary of the corporation, and her testimony, fairly construed, shows that she paid the purchase price to such officer.
The defendant testified that he had been placing some insurance for the plaintiff; that he called on her in reference thereto; that she told him she had a little money to invest; that he advised her to buy some of the stock in question; that he held fifty shares of stock in the corporation at the time and
From the foregoing synopsis of the evidence it will be observed that the evidence does not show that defendant agreed to sell any stock to the plaintiff or that plaintiff agreed to buy any stock from the defendant, although defendant undoubtedly knew that the corporation had stock for sale. It does not appear that the matter of price was mentioned between them. It does appear that after defendant had urged plaintiff to buy and had said he would take the stock off her hands and she had expressed a willingness to purchase, the secretary of the corporation was called in and he explained the condition of the company and fixed the price on the stock, and that plaintiff agreed to take it and did receive it from the corporation and paid the representative of the corporation the purchase price. On this state of the evidence the trial court con-
Having arrived at this conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider whether, if defendant bad acted as tbe agent of tbe corporation in making tbe sale, and as part of tbe contract bad entered into an individual agreement to repurchase tbe stock, such individual promise would be within tbe statute of frauds.
Tbe statute of frauds sometimes works hardships, but it is tbe law as written by our lawmaking power, and it is tbe duty of tbe courts to enforce it in all cases which come fairly within its scope. Our statute is substantially taken from Stat. 29 Car. II, which has stood tbe test of over two centuries of time and change. Tbe English statute was incorporated in our statute law in 1849 and has since remained there without substantial change or amendment. This • is pretty substantial evidence that the good which it has accomplished far outweighs any wrong that has resulted from its operation.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.