136 Wis. 75 | Wis. | 1908
The defendant contends that the finding of the jury that he agTeed to repurchase the stock sold the plaintiff within one year from the date of sale is not supported by the evidence, and consequently that such an agreement, if made, no part thereof having been reduced to writing, was void under sec. 2307, Stats. (1898). The plaintiff testified that the defendant stated to her repeatedly, when frying to sell her the stock: “If you buy these shares, if you
A more difficult question arises on the application of sec. 2308, Stats. (1898). T^he third subdivision of that section renders the agreement to repurchase the stock void, if it be treated as an independent contract, unless the plaintiff at the time it was made paid some part of the consideration therefor. The plaintiff maintains that the statute does not apply because the agreement to buy the stock by the plaintiff and to repurchase the same by the defendant at her request within the year was one entire contract, which had been fully performed by the delivery of the shares and the payment of the original purchase price. The defendant contends that the sale of the stock to the plaintiff and the agreement to repurchase were separate and independent contracts and that the latter is avoided by the statute. The trial court apparently
If the agreement to sell and the promise to repurchase are parts of the same transaction there is but one entire contract, for which the consideration was paid and under which the property was delivered, and consequently the statute of frauds has no application. The agreement to take back the stock expressly provided for the payment of $1 per share. There was no stipulation for rescission upon any other terms. It is difficult to see how this part of the contract can be treated as divisible and a repurchase compelled upon repayment of the purchase price. This would be to make a new contract for the parties, which neither party has ever assented to and which both parties repudiate. If there is a right of rescission on the part of the plaintiff it must be enforced in accordance with the terms of the contract as established by the evidence.
The jury found that the defendant agreed, as a condition to tire sale of the stock to the plaintiff, that he would purchase back the stock at $1 per share, and that the repurchase would be made within one year from the date of sale, and that the plaintiff offered back the stock to the defendant at $1 per share within the year. The evidence is sufficient to support all these findings, and we conclude, therefore, that this was an entire contract for the sale of the stock, the consideration
Tbe legal principle underlying tbe foregoing proposition is fully supported by tbe adjudicated cases: Williams v. Burgess, 10 A. & E. 499; Lumsden v. Davies, 11 Ont. App. 585; White v. Knapp, 47 Barb. 549; Wooster v. Sage, 67 N. Y. 67; Fitzpatrick v. Woodruff, 96 N. Y. 561; Hilliard v. Weeks, 173 Mass. 304, 53 N. E. 818; Henderson v. Touchstone, 22 Ga. 1; Fay v. Wheeler, 44 Vt. 292.
Tbe agreement in all tbe cases cited, except tbe two first, was that tbe seller would take back or repurchase tbe thing sold at tbe original purchase price, in some instances with interest; but a stipulation for an advanced price would not affect tbe principle involved, but might be considered as proof tending to establish an independent contract void under tbe .statute. An application of tbe doctrine is well illustrated in tbe English cases cited. In Williams v. Burgess, supra,
“The promise and undertaking sought to be enforced was a part of tbe plaintiff’s purchase by tbe original contract, and so material a part that tbe purchase would not have been made without it. Tbe original contract was taken from tbe operation of tbe statute by a part performance by both parties, by tbe delivery of tbe stock by tbe defendant, and by tbe payment of the money by tbe plaintiff.”
Browne on Statute of Erauds (sec. 293) says: “A stipulation that tbe subject of tbe sale may be returned in a' certain event is not to be regarded as a contract for resale, so as to be affected by tbe statute,” and be there makes reference to Williams v. Burgess, above referred to. He says in sec. 293a:
“But it may be necessary to distinguish between such a case as this, where tbe stipulation to return is annexed to tbe original sale by way of condition, and tbe case of a stipulation to resell at a future time for tbe same or a different price, although made contemporaneously with tbe original sale.”
He cites no decision which recognizes tbe distinction, where tbe stipulation was made by tbe parties to tbe original contract, and defendant’s counsel has referred to none, although insisting that the stipulation in tbe present contract is for resale and not for rescission. Tbe intention of the parties to a contract must be determined by tbe language employed as generally understood and not by a technical definition of words in common use in ordinary transactions. Tbe use of tbe word “repurchase,” in defining tbe stipulation, sufficiently expresses the understanding of the parties, as testified to by tbe plaintiff, that she bought the stock relying upon tbe promise of tbe defendant that be would take it back
The plaintiff, upon the evidence in this record and upon the authorities cited, is entitled to recover the price stipulated upon a return of the stock as part of the original contract, with interest from the date of defendant’s refusal to fulfil his promise in that regard.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed on plaintiff’s appeal, with directions to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion; the defendant to take nothing on his appeal.