Culp v. Holbrook
Decision Date | 15 December 1920 |
Docket Number | 10,571 |
Citation | 129 N.E. 278,76 Ind.App. 272 |
Parties | CULP ET AL. v. HOLBROOK |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
Rehearing denied February 18, 1921.
Transfer denied June 30, 1921.
From Allen Circuit Court; Sol A. Wood, Judge.
Action by Charles A. Holbrook against John W. Culp and another. From a judgment for plaintiff, the defendants appeal.
Affirmed.
Kenner & Sapp and Cook & Krieg, for appellants.
Knowlton H. Kelsey and Aiken & Peters, for appellee.
Complaint by appellee for damages, alleging that the appellee entered into a contract with a corporation in which the appellants were stockholders, to purchase certain shares of the preferred and common stock and that the appellants in order to induce the appellee to purchase such stock agreed in writing to purchase any and all of said stock of appellee at a fixed price provided the appellee notified the appellants between August 10, and September 10, 1916, of his desire to sell said stock; that relying upon said contract with appellants, appellee purchased 150 shares of the preferred stock and seventy-five shares of the common stock of said corporation, and that on September 9, 1916, he exercised his option and right to sell said shares of stock at the fixed price in the agreement, and demanded that the appellants purchase said stock which they refused to do.
Judgment against the appellants for $ 1,700 from which they appeal and assign as error the action of the court in overruling their demurrer to the second paragraph of complaint and in overruling their motion for a new trial.
The fact that the agreement was signed by the appellants alone does not prevent appellee from maintaining an action for its breach. Appellants owned stock in the corporation and were interested in having appellee purchase the stock in question from the corporation. This was a sufficient consideration to support their agreement to purchase the stock from appellee. When appellee purchased the stock, appellants had the benefit of the consideration and are bound by the terms of the contract even though it be a unilateral contract.
Neither was the contract of appellants invalid for want of mutuality. It is well settled that an agreement founded on a consideration is not invalid for want of mutuality because one party has an option and the other has not, or because it is obligatory on one and optional with the other. Want of mutuality cannot be set up as a defense by the party who has received the benefit simply because it was left optional with the other party whether he would enforce his right under the contract. 13 C. J. 336, § 183. The contract was sufficiently certain and appellee having purchased the stock from the corporation in reliance upon appellants' agreement shows an acceptance of such agreement. There was no error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.
Appellants insist that the court erred in giving instructions Nos. 1 and 2 as requested by appellee. These instructions were to the effect that the contract for the sale of shares of stock in the corporation being for an amount in excess of $ 50 was under the statute of frauds required to be in writing and could not be varied by parol.
Mechem, after quoting the English law as laid down by Mr. Benjamin, wherein it is stated that the statute does not apply to "shares, stocks, documents of title, choses in action, and other incorporeal rights and property," says: ' * * *
" 1 Mechem, Sales §§ 330 and 331. See also, 25 R. C. L. 616, § 230; 20 Cyc 243; and Smith, Law of Frauds § 373.
Appellants cite Rogers v. Burr (1898), 105 Ga. 432, 31 S.E. 438 in support of the proposition that a contract for the sale of corporate stock is not within the rule. This case, however, was overruled in Hightower v. Ansley (1906), 126 Ga. 8, where the court said:
The only other American case cited by ap...
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