Dreyfuss & Son v. Benson

239 S.W. 347, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 561
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1922
DocketNo. 8623.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 347 (Dreyfuss & Son v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreyfuss & Son v. Benson, 239 S.W. 347, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 561 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

This is an appeal' prosecuted from a judgment of the district court granting appellee’s application for writ of mandamus and directing appellant and its officers to “permit and allow” appellee to examine and inspect the books, records, and papers of appellants at reasonable times during business hours with the aid of such accountants, attorneys, or stenographers as he might select.

The case was submitted to a jury upon two special issues in -connection with a peremptory' instruction that the evidence showed appellee to be a stockholder in the corporation. The special issues submitted a^nd the respective answers thereto were as follows:

“Special Issue No. 1. Do you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s request to examine the books was made in good faith? (Answer yes or no.) . Answer: Yes.
“Special Issue No. 2. Do you find and believe from*the evidence that the request of the plaintiff to examine the books of the defendant was made with the intent to annoy and harass the defendants? (Answer yes or no.) Answer: No.”

Appellee was an employs of Dreyfuss & Son from August, 1911, until about March, 1920. During this time appellant became the owner of 200 shares of the capital stock of Dreyfuss & Son, a corporation. This stock was purchased from S. Dreyfuss, and on the back of each certificate issued to ap-pellee the following indorsement was made at the time of the purchase:

“⅞ consideration of the sale and transfer to the undersigned of the shares of capital stock of Dreyfuss & Son, a corporation, evidenced by this certificate, it is agreed and understood that in the event the undersigned shall for any cause cease to be an employé of said corporation, or for any cause desire to disp.ose of his stock at any time, then and in any such event, there is hereby granted tó S. Dreyfuss, transferor hereof, the right, at his option, to purchase said stock at its book value as shown by the date of the next preceding inventory of said corporation, and this stock shall not be transferable in any wise, either law or equity, to any other person unless said S. Dreyfuss shall have refused to exercise his said option.”

About the 1st day of March, 1920, appel-lee’s employment was terminated. Two or three days thereafter he made demand upon the officers of the corporation for the privilege of inspecting the books and records. After conference between appellee and the officers of the company concerning the "matter, appellee’s request to be permitted to inspect and examine the books, records, etc., was refused. Following this action, on the 5th day of March, he made application for the writ of mandamus. Subsequently, on March 15, 1920, appellant Sol Dreyfuss wrote and transmitted to appellee by special delivery the following communication:

“Upon your severing your connection as an employ-S with the corporation of Dreyfuss & Son, I exercised my option to buy your shares of stock in that association which I had transferred to you and which I had and still have in my possession, at the book value as shown by' the audit, of $147,035.54 per-share; which, after crediting you with the amount of your indebtedness to me by note for the purchase of said stock, left me due you a balance.
“Against this balance I am offsetting the amount of your indebtedness to Dreyfuss & Son, which has been transferred by the corporation to me, amounting to $3,287.90. I also hold your note for $1,750, which I signed as surety for you, executed on December 13, 1919. and payable to the order of the City National Bank of Dallas, and I am charging this amount to your account on the indebtedness due by me to you for the shares of stock hereinbefore mentioned.
“Kindly advise if this is satisfactory and kindly take notice of my action, which I trust you will find satisfactory.
“I shall be very glad to pay you the balance due for your stock, arrived at on the basis herein indicated, as soon as you express your wish to receive it.”

Appellants insist that at the time the audit was demanded appellee was not a stockholder in the corporation, and assert that the evidence without conflict showed that he had severed his connection with the corporation, that the contract reflected by the indorsement on the stock certificates gave Sol Dreyfuss the right at his option, in the 1 event of appellee’s severing his relations *349 with the company, to purchase the stock under the conditions there recited, and that Sol Dreyfuss had notified him oí his exercise of such option, so that when the suit was brought the only act left to be performed to completely execute the contract was the payment of the book value of the stock when such value was ascertained; Sol Dreyfuss being ready, willing, and able to make payment at such time.

Under the foregoing views appellants assert that appellee had ceased to be a stockholder before the suit was filed, and that therefore the jury should have been instructed to return a verdict for appellants.

Complaint is made that the court erred in instructing the jury that the appellee was a stockholder in the corporation because the testimony was insufficient to warrant the court in taking this issue from the jury and giving such peremptory instruction. This complaint is based upon the same view of the facts upon which is based the above-mentioned assignment of error complaining that the jury should have been instructed to return a verdict in favor of appellants.

[1] The indorsement which each certificate of stock transferred to Benson bears, as above copied, gave S. Dreyfuss the right, at his option, to purchase the stock at the value to be ascertained as prescribed by the terms of this indorsement. Upon such stipulation alone rested the right to exercise the option. There is no proof that it was exercised beyond the proof revealed by and. relating to the terms of the communication dated March 15, 1920. The indorsement was not in the nature of an agreement to buy the stock. It did not constitute a contract of sale, but was only an option to be exercised by appellee upon the terms it provided. It did not obligate Dreyfuss at all. In this respect it is distinguished from the transaction considered in the case of State v. Wheless, 104 La. 125, 28 South. 922, relied upon by appellants. The option had not been exercised when the suit was filed. The stock was then owned by appellee, and we do not think the act of sending the letter dated March 15, 1920, operated to effect a transfer of ownership from appellee to Dreyfuss. It was rather notice of his purpose to exercise it in the manner indicated in the letter. The letter contained a proposition of general settlement of account mutually existing between the two, as well as notice of a purpose to buy the stock under the option. Dreyfuss could obtain the right asserted only by actual performance through making or tendering payment. Killough v. Lee, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 21 S. W. 970. But appellants insist that, tender in this case would have been an idle ceremony, because the record conclusively shows that it would have been declined. If this is conceded, so that the question of actual tender ceases to have any controlling effect, yet we think the result of what Dreyfuss did was not to put the ownership of the stock in him.

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239 S.W. 347, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyfuss-son-v-benson-texapp-1922.