8 Ga. App. 634 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
E. E. Riser brought suit in the city court of Tifton against P. D. Phillips, J. J. L. Phillips, and'C. W. Young, as guarantors. Young is a citizen of Tennessee and was not served with process. The defendants demurred to the petition, but the demurrers were overruled. The plaintiff then moved to strike the defendants’ pleas, and, this motion being granted, the defendants have filed this writ of error to' review these rulings. It appears from the petition that Riser purchased thirteen shares of.stock in the Southwestern Brokerage & Investment Company; of Memphis, Tennessee, on May 8, 1908. Attached to the stock certificate evidencing his ownership of these shares was the following guaranty, which formed the basis of the suit: “This guarantee, attached to stock certificate No. 115 for thirteen shares of the capital stock of the Southwestern Brokerage & Investment Company, witnesseth, that whereas the undersigned, P. D. Phillips, Fender, Ga., J. J.- L. Phillips, Tifton, Ga., and C. W. Young, Memphis, Tennessee, are largely interested in said corporation and the sale of its stock, now, -therefore, it is understood and agreed by and between said parties and the owners of the shares of stock represented by said certificate that, should said owner desire to sell said stock after eighteen months from the date of the issuance of said certificate, said parties will, after eighteen months from said date, purchase the same, paying therefor the face value of the certificate, together with six per cent, interest per annum thereon from the date of issuance to the date of payment. Should said owner elect to avail himself of this guarantee, he must so notify in writing said parties of his election to do so, giving them six months notice before the date he will ash repayment. After two years from the date of issuance of said certificate this guarantee shall cease, and become null and,void. Witness the hands of said parties, this 8th day of May, 1908. [Signed] P. D. Phillips, J. J. L. Phillips, C. W. Young.”
The petitioner alleges, that being desirous of selling his stock, he notified each of the defendants on April 30, 1909, by mailing to each of them, from Woodford, Oklahoma, by registered mail, the following notices: “Dear Sir: In accordance with your agreement dated May 8th, 1908,-in which you and others guaranteed the stock (13 shares) of the Southwestern Brokerage & Investment Company purchased by me, I hereby notify you that I desire to
As to the plaintiff’s signing the contract: if there was consideration moving to the guarantors, it is entirely immaterial whether the plaintiff signed the writing or not. It is not necessary for both parties to a contract to sign it, to prevent the contract from being unilateral; and a contract is sometimes unilateral if both parties do sign it. The demurrer which raised the point that the
The suit was not prematurely brought. The guaranty expressly provides that if the owner desires to sell the stock after eighteen months from the date of said certificate, the parties will, after eighteen months from said date purchase the same. It is true that a notice of six months in advance of the proposed sale is required, but the plaintiff gave the defendants such notice. He gave more than six months notice. If the construction suggested by one of the demurrers were placed upon the guaranty, the effect would be to absolutely destroy it; and if this was the original purpose of the phraseology employed, the contract would be an unconscionable fraud. We assume that the Southwestern Brokerage & Investment Company is a reputable concern, not intended to “break” those who buy its stock, nor to put the purchaser’s money in a fictitious security, where the “investment” would be permanent because it was. worthless and therefore unsaleable. It therefore could not have been intended that the holder of the guaranty, if he should desire to sell his stock, should not be able to give the notice until eighteen months had expired, when the effect of this would be to complete a term of two years, and that thus, upon the expiration of the six months prescribed in the notice, the guaranty itself would be null and void by express limitation. We can not imagine that the defendants had any such intention, when making the guaranty. And yet it is possible for this to have been the effect upon the plaintiff if he had waited until eighteen months expired and had then given the notice, because there is no exception to the broad statement that at the end of two years the guaranty is void; and it is expressly stipulated that the requisite notice must be given full six months before payment can be exacted. Of course, the contention, that the suit could not be brought until after May 8, 1910, is disposed of by the ruling just made; for if the certificate had to be held until November 8, .1909, had passed,, the requisite notice could not be given, because the six months necessary to perfect it would not intervene. The time remaining in which the notice must be given would, at the very best, lack one day of being six months.
The fact that the plaintiff could not exercise his right to sell the certificate to the defendants until eighteen months had elapsed
The defendants’ plea was properly stricken; it stated no substantial defense. If the proposed plea (urging that the suit was prematurely brought for the reasons already referred to, and that the plaintiff could not sue until the expiration of six months after he had held the certificate for a term of eighteen months prior thereto) is not a plea in abatement, the judge nevertheless could properly have rejected it as an amendment, because it was not accompanied by the affidavit required by law (Acts 1897, p.. 35). •
Judgment affirmed.