Diamond State Iron Co. v. Todd

6 Del. Ch. 163
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 Del. Ch. 163 (Diamond State Iron Co. v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diamond State Iron Co. v. Todd, 6 Del. Ch. 163 (Del. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant in this suit, a. corporation existing under the laws of this State, states that there stand in the name of Jethro T. McCullough, one of the defendants in this cause, 105 shares of the-capital stock of said company which were transferred to-[175]*175the said defendant on the 28th day of December, A. D. 1878, by George C, Simpson, executor of Jethro T. McCullough, deceased. That in the latter part of the year-1881, the president of the said corporation complainant was notified by the defendant George W. Todd that he had become purchaser of said stock, then and theretofore appearing in the name of the said defendant McCullough on the boobs of the said corporation. It appearing that McCullough having refused to assign said shares of capital stock of said company to Todd, he, Todd, gave notice to the president of the corporation that he had purchased of Jethro T. McCullough his entire interest in the company, including all his stock and the accrued dividends thereon, and all his shares of the surplus fund and the accrued interest thereon;^ and that, although McCullough refused to make him proper transfers thereof, he should insist upon his compliance with his contract. “Tour company,” he says, “is hereby notified and required to make no transfers of said stock or payments of said dividends, surplus fund, or interest, except to me or upon my order.”

Subsequent to the date of said notice, McCullough, through his attorney, made a formal demand upon the complainant for the payment to the said McCullough of' all dividends then and theretofore accrued upon the said 105 shares of stock, which demand, in view of the conflicting claims upon the complainant with respect to the stock, it says it was unable to comply with. A suit was afterwards instituted against the company, in the District. Court of the United States by McCullough.

It appears by the bill that Edward Darlington claims-an interest in said stock by way of an assignment of the same to him as collateral security for a debt. The bill prays that Todd, McCullough, and Darlington may inter-plead with each other with resjiect to their several inter[176]*176ests and rights in the subject-matter in dispute. A decree of interpleader was entered by consent and agreement of all the parties, complainants and defendants. It was also ordered, upon like consent and agreement, that the complainant (at or before the first day of the next ensuing term of the Court of Chancery, in and for New Castle County) pay into court the sum of $9,149.80, being the amount in the bill mentioned as the amount of accrued dividends and interest on said stock—the said sum when so paid into court to abide the decision of the court as to the rights therein of the parties respectively.

It was also ordered by like agreement and consent that the complainant “ pay into court all such other and further dividends, interests, and moneys as have accrued upon said stock since the filing of said bill, and which may hereafter accrue upon the same when and as the same shall become due and payable.”

The whole proceedings up to this stage of the cause seem to have been amicably arranged and agreed upon by the solicitors for the parties respectively, as per agreement in writing filed in the cause.

The answers of the defendants have been filed and the proofs taken. There seems to be no controversy as to the rights of Darlington, the stock having been pledged to him without notice of any controversy in respect to the same between Todd and McCullough. The question, therefore, for me to decide is to whom the stock, dividends thereon and interest on the surplus in controversy in equity belongs; or, in other words, Was the contract in respect thereto between Todd and McCullough such a contract as a court of equity will by its decree specifically enforce ?

Specific performance as to contracts has been defined “ the actual accomplishment of a contract by the party bound to fulfill it.” Performance of a contract in the [177]*177precise terms agreed upon; strict’ performance.” This is a sufficient definition for the purposes of this case. A court of equity must interpret a contract between parties •as it is made by them. It cannot make a contract for parties. It is the established rule that “ a specific performance of a contract of sale is not a matter of course, but rests entirely in the discretion of the court upon a view of all the circumstances.”

Says Chancellor Bates, in Godwin v. Collins, 4 Houston, 47: “A court of equity will not interfere to set aside a contract upon any ground short of incompetency or fraud; but when called upon to enforce a contract specifically, the court will go further and inquire whether the contract is an equitable one—such as a court •of equity, seeking only to do equity, ought to enforce— not that this court will weigh nicely the relative advantages or disadvantages of a bargain fairly made; but it will consider whether, either from gross inadequacy of consideration or inequality of term's, such as shocks the common sense of justice, or from anything in the relations of the parties or in the circumstances of the contract, it is unconscientious for a party to exact his advantage. How, as it is impossible to reduce within the limits of a legal definition or rule the various and complicated transactions which may render a contract inequitable, the court must unavoidably deal with each case upon its own circumstances. Herein, precisely, appear the nature and limits of the discretion assumed by the court for this branch of its jurisdiction, and also in what sense it is that a specific performance is said to be ‘not a matter of course.’ The relief lies in the discretion of the court so far, and only so far, that it must necessarily judge whether under the circumstances of the case the contract is or is not an inequitable one.”

Again; the same chancellor says in the same case: [178]*178“ But, whatever be the grounds of the doctrine, the discretionary character of the jurisdiction for specific performance, the power to grant or refuse relief according to the equities of the particular case, has become settled, by authority of the most eminent judges of all times.”

Without further elaboration on this point it is suificient to refer to the opinion in the case of Godwin v. Collins, where this and other principles applicable to-this case are satisfactorily discussed.

In order to determine whether Todd, one of the defendants, is or is not entitled to a decree in his favor, it, is necessary to consider whether his contract of purchase from McCullough, of his interest in the Diamond State Iron Company, which is hereafter set out, is or is not such as a court of equity, in the exercise of a reasonable and just discretion, would enforce specifically upon a bill filed by him for that purpose. It is not material to the proper decision of this case that such a bill has not been filed. The principles which would govern a court of equity in the determination'of a bill for the specific performance of the contract necessarily arises in this bill of interpleader in which the rights of the parties are to be determined.

It is a general rule that courts of equity will not interpose by decree for specific performance of contracts for the sale or delivery of goods or chattels, because compensation at law is generally adequate in such cases; yet there are exceptions to this general rule as in articles of exceptional value.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Del. Ch. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-state-iron-co-v-todd-delch-1888.