Cooper v. Girdler

39 S.W.2d 1009, 239 Ky. 565, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 825
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 1009 (Cooper v. Girdler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Girdler, 39 S.W.2d 1009, 239 Ky. 565, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 825 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Bratcher

Affirming.

The appellant, Arch R. Cooper, and the appellee, Walter H. Girdler, were the plaintiff and the defendant, respectively, below. This action was instituted by the appellant to recover the sum of $10,808 upon an alleged contract. The appellant claims that the appellee sold him 80 shares of stock in the Kentucky Oxygen Hydrogen Company. He states that by the terms of the contract, “the purchase price of said stock was to be loaned to the plaintiff by the defendant and that the defendant was to hold said stock as security until said loan with interest was paid. ’ ’ He avers appellee breached the contract and refused to deliver the stock, and asks for judgment for amount of stock and dividend, less loan and interest.

The defendant, by answer, denied the contract or that he agreed to sell the plaintiff 80 shares or any number of shares. Upon a trial by a jury on October 9,1929, this verdict was returned: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff in the sum of $6,350.00, based on a -contract of fifty (50) shares instead of eighty (80,)” The verdict was signed by ten of the jurors, and a judgment entered in favor of the appellant for $6,350. The defendant filed motion and grounds for a new trial, which was sustained, *566 and a new trial granted. Upon the second trial, the jury failed to agree. The third trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant. A judgment was rendered thereon dismissing plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff thereupon filed motion and ground for a new trial, which the court overruled, and he prosecutes this appeal. The sole ground relied upon for reversal is that the court erred in granting a new trial, after the funding for the plaintiff for $6,350, upon the first trial.

The facts in this record briefly stated, disclose that the Kentucky Oxygen Hydrogen Company is a Kentucky corporation. Its principal place of business is in Louisville, Ky. The appellee, Walter H. Grirdler, is its president, and owned a considerable amount of its stock. The appellant, Cooper, was employed as a salesman by the company. Some time in 1924 he was sent to Birmingham, Ala., and was connected with the Standard Gras Products Company, which is owned by the Kentucky Oxygen Company. The defendant, Grirdler, instituted a plan whereby the employees might purchase stock in the company. To that end he acquired a number of shares of stock from his brother at a price of $125 per share The money to pay for this stock he borrowed from the National Bank of Kentucky, to be repaid upon the sale of the stock to the employees of the Kentucky Oxygen Hydrogen Company. In order to enable these employees to pay for the stock, Grirdler arranged with the Louisville National Bank to loan these employees an amount equal to the price of the stock purchased; the stock to be paid for in monthly payments over a one-year period. The stock was made out to the employees and delivered to them; in turn they pledged it to the Louisville National Bank as security for the loan, the loan being made direct to the employees, and the full purchase price was paid by them to G-irdler. The plaintiff purchased 11 shares of this stock at $125 per share. It is stated that, under a special concession to Cooper, it was arranged with the Louisville National Bank that he have eighteen months instead of one year to pay for his stock. There is no dispute about the 11 shares of stock.

A few days after the sale of the 11 shares of stock, the appellant, Cooper, says he went to Grirdler and expressed his desire to purchase 80 shares of the stock; that his mother had sufficient deposit with the Louisville Trust Company to make the payment. He states he told Grirdler she would let him have the money. Upon this *567 occasion, lie says, Girdler sold him the 80 shares of stock, bnt advised against borrowing the money from his mother, stating, as he already had it financed, he could just pay the interest, and he would accept the stock as collateral. He accepted this offer, and purchased the. stock and pledged it as collateral for the loan.

In September of 1925, the Kentucky Oxygen Hydrogen Company declared a 50 per cent, stock dividend. The 80 shares of stock under that dividend earned 40 shares, making 120 shares. The 80 shares and the 40 shares drew regular dividends in addition to the stock dividend. The market price of these shares was, at the time the alleged contract was breached, $175 a share. The appellant says that in November, 1926, he offered to pay the loan and the interest at 6 per cent, and demanded the stock, but that the appellee refused to deliver it to him. The stock and the dividends less the loan and the interest on the loan, at the time of the alleged breach, amounted to the sum of $10,808, without going into the arithmetical calculations. The appellant introduced a man by the name of Bridges, who was a friend of both appellant and appellee. Bridges testified that Girdler told him in Birmingham that he had sold $10,000 worth of stock to Cooper. It will be observed that 80 shares of stock at $125 a share would amount to $10,000.

Girdler denied he had at any time made a contract with Cooper to sell him 80 shares of stock, or any amount of stock except 11 shares sold him as an employee of the company and under its employees’ stock-purchasing plan. He did say that, some time after the purchase of the 11 shares of stock, Cooper approached him in regard to the purchase of some additional stock in the company. He told Cooper that he would sell him the stock, provided he (Cooper) would make arrangements for the money to pay for it. He states that they discussed Cooper’s plans for raising the money. He said he held out 50 shares for four months, and that he was perfectly willing for him to have the stock, provided he could make arrangements to pay for it. He never told Cooper he was holding the stock for him, and that there was never any definite arrangements between them as to any certain amount of stock. That Cooper never raised the money, and therefore the stock was not sold to him.

The sole question upon this appeal is whether the court erred in setting aside the verdict obtained by the plaintiff in the first trial and granting the trial which *568 resulted in a verdict for the appellee. The issue, as made up by the pleading’s and the proof, was the contract between the appellant and the appellee for the 80 shares of stock. At the conclusion of the evidence on the first trial, the court instructed the jury as follows:

“1. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff Arch R. Cooper, during’ the latter part of January, or early part of February, 1925, purchased of the defendant Walter H.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 1009, 239 Ky. 565, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-girdler-kyctapphigh-1931.