Detar Distributing Company, Inc. v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company

379 F.2d 244, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 6084
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1967
Docket20-4010
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 379 F.2d 244 (Detar Distributing Company, Inc. v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Detar Distributing Company, Inc. v. Tri-State Motor Transit Company, 379 F.2d 244, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 6084 (10th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

379 F.2d 244

DeTAR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, Inc., an Oklahoma corporation, L. F. Skaggs, Jr., and Goldie E. Skaggs, Appellants,
v.
TRI-STATE MOTOR TRANSIT COMPANY, a Delaware corporation, Appellee.

No. 8693.

United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit.

June 8, 1967.

COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED R. D. Hudson, Tulsa, Okl. (Thomas R. Brett, Tulsa, Okl., on the brief), for appellants.

Richard T. Sonberg, Tulsa, Okl., and Albert W. Thomson, Kansas City, Mo. (Houston, Klein & Davidson, Tulsa, Okl., and Linde, Thomson, VanDyke, Fairchild & Langworthy, Kansas City, Mo., on the brief), for appellee.

Before MURRAH, Chief Circuit Judge, LEWIS, Circuit Judge, and CHRISTENSEN, District Judge.

CHRISTENSEN, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of specific performance of a contract for the sale of corporate stock and for the appointment of receiver, jurisdiction being founded upon diversity of citizenship and the requisite amount in controversy.

Goldie E. Skaggs, appearing with her husband as defendant in the lower court and as appellant here, was the owner of all of the outstanding capital stock of DeTar Distributing Company, Inc., co-defendant-appellant in this case. DeTar was a motor carrier which held contract carrier rights granted by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Prior to March 20, 1964, DeTar filed application with the ICC to convert these rights into common carrier rights. On the day last mentioned Mrs. Skaggs with the approval of her husband, L. F. Skaggs, Jr.,1 entered into a contract with the Tri-State Motor Transit Company, appellee herein, to sell her DeTar stock.2 At the time of this contract DeTar was in a bad financial condition. Thereafter its condition improved and when the time came for performance of the contract by Mrs. Skaggs, she refused, claiming that Tri-State had failed properly to exercise its option. Tri-State sued the Skaggs for specific performance.

Both sides moved for summary judgment. These motions were heard in connection with Tri-State's motion for the appointment of a receiver upon depositions as well as evidence.3

The appellants took the position then, as here, that the contract on its face required the payment not only of the $5,000 which had been paid but an additional $35,000 in consideration of the granting of the option to purchase the stock, all of which the contract required to be paid within ninety days from the date DeTar's application for transfer from contract carrier to common carrier authority was finally approved or denied; that this latter sum did not represent the purchase price but was required additional consideration for the option; and that since the $35,000 was not paid within the period specified the option lapsed and the granting of specific performance for this reason was erroneous. Appellant also says that, "The total purchase price to be paid for the DeTar stock is not to be found in the entire contract except by speculation, surmise and interpretation." It was and is further contended that the provisions governing determination of the purchase price were so indefinite as to preclude specific performance in any event.

The appellee successfully contended, below, and maintains here, that a fair reading of the contract establishes as a matter of law that the $35,000 payment was not simply an additional consideration for the option but represented the balance of the purchase price agreed upon, subject to possible adjustment on the basis of DeTar's balance sheet at the time of payment; that all appellee was required to do in exercise of the option, the $5,000 having been paid, was to give notice of such exercise within ninety days of final approval of the common carrier status; that the balance of the purchase price did not have to be paid until the time of ICC approval of the transfer to it; that this approval had not occurred at the time of the court hearing by reason of the refusal of the appellant to cooperate in making application for such transfer; and that such refusal was in violation of the contract itself and necessitated the granting of equitable relief, including the appointment of a receiver.

We conclude that the court's interpretation of the contract is the correct one.

The following facts were without dispute:

The written contract for the purchase of the stock was executed on or about the date it bears and represented a considered agreement binding upon the parties. At the time of its execution Mrs. Skaggs received the agreed sum of $5,000 in consideration of which the appellee was "given an option to purchase all of said DeTar stock from Mrs. Skaggs under the provisions of the paragraphs" of the agreement thereafter set out. Mrs. Skaggs owned at that time, and continues to own subject to the contract, all of the outstanding stock of DeTar. On March 15, 1965, the ICC approved the application of DeTar to convert its authority from contract to common carrier, and on April 14, 1965, that order became final. Within ninety days from the latter date the appellee Tri-State communicated to the defendants notice of the exercise of its option. The ICC did not approve the transfer of the common carrier rights to the appellee prior to the commencement of this action on June 18, 1965 by reason of the appellants' refusal to cooperate in application for such transfer and their insistence that there was no such obligation on their part. In any event, within ninety days from April 14, 1965, to wit: On July 13, 1965, the $35,000 payment was tendered to Mrs. Skaggs in connection with this suit and was rejected. By its judgment the lower court required the plaintiff to pay the money into court.

The appellants have seized upon the contract designation of the $35,000 payment as the "option price" in an attempt to demonstrate that the $35,000 was not the balance of the "purchase price" contemplated by the parties and that this $35,000 had to be paid within the specified time to exercise the option. The construction is not justified by the contract and is inconsistent with its plain terms.4

Paragraph 1 designates the consideration for the "option" and further provides that such option contemplated the purchase of all of the outstanding DeTar stock on the terms thereafter provided in the contract. Although paragraph 7 expressly states that if the option is not exercised the Skaggs are to retain the $5,000 payment, there is nothing in the contract to suggest that the $35,000 is to be so treated. And manifestly it could not have been so provided consistently with the basic agreement, for it is clearly shown by other provisions of the contract that the later payment was not to be made until after the option actually had been exercised and the transfer had been approved by ICC.

Paragraph 2 provides that the option must be "exercised" within ninety days of the date that DeTar's application for transfer from contract carrier to common carrier authority is finally approved or denied. There is nothing in that paragraph which suggests that the exercise of the option was to be made otherwise than by notice

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