155 Mich. 30 | Mich. | 1908
(after stating the facts). 1. There was no continuing offer to sell the stock at the price of 1154 a share. Defendant’s letter of November ?th, if it can be said to contain an offer to then sell the stock, was not a continuing offer. Moreover, whether it be treated as a present or a continuing offer to sell, it was refused and was not thereafter renewed. The bargain, if one was made, rests in parol.
2. Whether stock in an incorporated company, the shares of which have been actually issued, is goods, wares, or merchandise, within the meaning of the statute of frauds (3 Comp. Laws, § 9516), is a question which has been answered differently in different jurisdictions. In essentials our statute is a copy of the seventeenth section of the statute of Charles II, and was adopted in this jurisdiction in 1819 from the laws of the State of New York. The English courts, to a period as late as 1839, had not apparently determined conclusively, that such shares were or were not within the statute. Mussell v. Cooke, Pre. Ch. 533; Crull v. Dodson, Sel. Cas. in Ch. 41. Lord Denman in Humble v. Mitchell, 11 Ad. & El. 205, a case decided in 1839, held with the concurrence of his associates that “shares in a joint stock company like this [a bank] are mere choses in action, incapable of delivery, and not within the scope of the seventeenth section. A contract in writing was therefore unnecessary.” It is stated in the opinion that no case had been found directly in point. Humble v. Mitchell has apparently been since followed in England. See 29 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) p. 961; 20 Cyc. p. 244; 1 Beach on Modern Law of Contracts, § 558. See, also, note to Weightman v. Caldwell, 4 Wheat. (U. S.) 85-89. In 1838, in Tisdale v. Harris, 20 Pick. (Mass.) 9, the precise converse of the modern English rule was laid down; it being decided that the words “goods” and “merchandise,” are broad enough in meaning to include stocks or shares in incorporated companies. The rule is affirmed in Boardman v. Cutter,
3. The declaration alleged no facts to show whether the contract sued upon was or was not obnoxious to the statute.' It was nevertheless a good pleading. Dayton v. Williams, 2 Doug. (Mich.) 31; Harris Photographic
“No contract for the sale of any goods, wares or merchandise, for the price of fifty dollars or more, shall be valid, unless,” etc.
It is clear that such a contract may be valid and enforceable, although no note or memorandum in writing of the bargain be made and signed by the party to be charged therewith. The plaintiff in his declaration asserts the existence of a valid contract and upon the motion or objection of the defendant must prove such an one. The scope of the plea of the general issue is as a general rule a denial of every material averment of fact in the declaration. The precise question presented was answered adversely to plaintiff’s contention in Third Nat. Bank of New York v. Steel, 129 Mich. 434 (64 L. R. A. 119).
It follows that the judgment must be, and it is, affirmed.