74 Colo. 342 | Colo. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
By consent of the parties, causes Nos. 10,512 and 10,513, in which the defendant is the same, and the plaintiffs are different, were consolidated for hearing below and also here. The one opinion is applicable to both, and the decision in each case is the same.
The sole question for decision is one of law, raised by the general demurrer to the amended complaint, which the court sustained and dismissed the action. The plaintiff charged in his pleading that the defendant Petteys, at the time cashier and one of the principal stockholders of the Weldon Valley State Bank, was engaged in the promotion and organization of a corporation to conduct a grain and elevator business in the town of Weldona; that defendant solicited the plaintiff to subscribe for stock in the proposed corporation, which plaintiff declined at first to do because he was engaged in farming and not financially in a position to do so, and thereupon the defendant orally promised plaintiff, if he would come into the proposed company and purchase §2,000 of its capital stock, and help in selling stock of the company to other persons, the defendant would lend him money from the bank with which to purchase the
Plaintiff’s theory is threefold: (1) That the provision of the contract for the repurchase of the stock by the defendant is an essential and inseparable part of the original and only contract between the parties to the suit, and not an independent or collateral contract of sale between defendant and the corporation. Therefore, as the plaintiff has wholly performed on his part, the contract is not within, or is taken out of, the statute of frauds that makes invalid a contract for the sale of goods, etc., unless the same is in writing or a memorandum of such alleged contract is in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith. (2) If such provision constitutes an independent or collateral contract, it is, nevertheless, in the nature of a contract of indemnity, and not a contract for the sale of
1. The defendant concedes that an owner of goods, which he says includes corporate stock, may sell his own goods, payment and delivery being made, and may orally agree to repurchase them upon the demand of the buyer, and that a contract for such sale and repurchase is an entire contract, and thereby the promise of repurchase is taken out of the statute of frauds by such payment and delivery. He says, however, that the rule is otherwise where one, not the owner of stock, orally agrees to repurchase the same. His contention is that the line of cases which hold contracts of this nature without the purview of this statute, are those only where the promisor actually owns the stock at the time of the contract and did, at the same time and as a part of the same agreement, contract to repurchase it; but where the promisor does not own the stock he could not orally make a binding contract to repurchase that which he never owned, and, if he assumed to do so, his agreement would be in the nature of a separate and independent contract, thus making two contracts; the first being completed when the contract for the stock is subscribed, paid for and delivered, and the second being a separate agreement between different contracting parties and wholly within the statute of frauds when orally made,.
It will be observed that this contention of the defendant assumes that the stock, which the plaintiff agreed to buy, and the defendant to sell, was not owned by the defendant, but was stock of a corporation thereafter to be formed, which fact alone brings the case within the statute of frauds.. At the time this contract was made the stock itself was not in existence. The issuing corporation was not then formed. The defendant was its promotor. In the nature of things he could not be, and was not, the agent
The author of the article on the statute of frauds in 27 C. J. p. 237, § 253, says that where an agreement for repurchase is made by a person other than the owner of the goods, or where such an agreement is not a term in the original contract of sale, but a collateral agreement made to induce the buyer to purchase, it is within the statute of frauds. An examination of the cases cited in support of this latter proposition may, or may not, fully bear out the
2. If, however, the defendant did not, at the time of the oral agreement, own the stock, or did not become such owner when he delivered it and received payment, still, under a line of respectable authorities, the contract is to be regarded as in the nature of one of indemnity, and not for’ the purchase of stock from the defendant, and, therefore, even though the agreement was oral, it was not in violation of our statute of frauds, which is restricted to the sale of
The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions that such further proceedings as may be had shall not be inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Mr. Chief Justice Teller and Mr. Justice Sheafor concur.