Feore v. Avent

58 So. 727, 4 Ala. App. 551, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 351
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 So. 727 (Feore v. Avent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feore v. Avent, 58 So. 727, 4 Ala. App. 551, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 351 (Ala. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

WALKEN, P. J.

This was an action to recover damages for the alleged breach by the defendant (the appellant here) of his written contract with the plaintiff, [553]*553which, omitting the date and the sign ature, was as follows: “I hereby agree to buy the stock of B. 0. Avent in the Merchants’ & Marine Bank of Scranton, 20 shares, for the sum of $2,100.00 cash, twenty-one hundred dollars. The complaint duly averred the plaintiff had offered, and remained ready and willing to comply with the contract on his part, but that defendant refused to accept and pay for the stock upon the terms set forth in the agreement. In several special pleas the defendant alleged the existence of the following state of facts: The original issue of capital stock by the bank mentioned in the contract amounted to $25,-000, divided into shares of $50 each. Subsequent to that original issue, and before the making of the contract sued on, the bank increased its capital stock to $75,000 in the following manner: ' A stock dividend of 100 per cent, was declared on the original capital stock then outstanding, and the increase of $25,000 of capital stock thus made was distributed to the shareholders in the bank by calling in the old certificates of stock representing the shares under the original issue, and reissuing to the stockholders new certificates for stock; each old stockholder thus receiving two shares of stock for each share that he had before had of the old stock and the par value being the same in both the original and the new issue. The remaining $25,000 of increase was sold in the open market for cash, which was added to the capital of the bank. It was averred that an un surrendered certificate evidencing 20 shares of the original stock issue was of greater market value than a certificate evidencing 20 shares of the increased issue. Two of the special pleas averred that just before the making of the agreement sued on, and as an inducement thereto, the plaintiff represented to the defendant that the certificate of stock held by the plaintiff, and which was the subject of the [554]*554contract sued, on, represented 20 shares of the original issue of capital stock of the said hank; that the defendant entered into the agreement on the faith of this representation, the plaintiff’s certificate not being exhibited at the time the contract was entered into, and he then being ignorant of the true state of facts touching the said stock; and that the certificate of stock tendered by the plaintiff did not represent 20 shares of the original issue of stock, but was a certificate representing that number of shares of the new and increased capital stock issue. Others of the special pleas referred to omitted any charge of misrepresentation, and averred that the shares of stock mentioned and intended by the agreement declared on were 20 shares of the original stock, evidenced by a certificate issued by the bank before the above-described increase of its capital stock was made, but that the certificate tendered by the plaintiff was issued subsequent to the increased capital stock issue, and was worth less in the market than the certificate of shares of the original issue of stock intended in the agreement. The rest of the special pleas above referred to, also omitting any charge of misrepresentation, averred, in effect, that in law no contract was entered into between the parties, because at the time the supposed contract Avas made the parties thereto did not have in mind the same subject-matter of contract, as the plaintiff had in mind and intended to contract concerning a certificate evidencing shares of stock of an issue made by the bank upon or after an increase of its capital stock, while the defendant had in mind and intended to contract concerning a certificate evidencing shares of the original stock issue of the bank before there had been an increase of its capital stock. In short, by those pleas the defendant undertook to assert three separate grounds of defense, namely: (1) That the defendant was induced to enter into the [555]*555agreement sued on by a false representation of tbe plaintiff as to the identity of its subject-matter: (2) that both parties intended a sale of one thing, while the plaintiff was undertaking by the suit to hold the defendant liable in damages for his refusal to accept and pay the stipulated price for another and different thing; and (3) that the instrument sued on never amounted to a contract, as, at the time of its execution, one of the parties had in mind one thing as its subject-matter, while the other party intended to contract Avith reference to something else, the result being that the minds of the parties failed to meet on one of the essential terms of the supposed contract. The plaintiff’s demurrers to these pleas were sustained. The pleas above described represented the final effort of the defendant to present the special grounds of defense relied upon by him. They had been preceded by other pleas framed along the same lines, to all of AAdiich demurrers had been interposed. The record shows that the demurrers to some only of those previously filed pleas were sustained, and fails to show that the court ruled at all on the demurrers to the rest of those earlier pleas; but the rulings made in the course of the trial of the issues of fact in the case does not indicate that the court recognized as valid defenses any of the matters set up by special pleas. In view of this situation, the court will confine its attention to the pleas above described, which were the final expression by the defendant of the matters relied on by him to defeat the plaintiff’s right to recover.

The demurrers to the pleas in question assigned a multitude of grounds. The grounds upon which the ruling on them is sought to be sustained by the argument of the counsel for the appellee are those based upon the ideas or proposition: (1) That, the contract sued on being a plain and unambiguous agreement to purchase 20 [556]*556shares of corporate stock, the result of holding the pleas to be good would be to let in parol proof of a representation as to the identity of the subject-matter of the contract which the terms of the contract itself unequivocally identified, in disregard of the rule against allowing the provisions of a written contract to be altered or varied by parol evidence; and (2) that, as each share of the capital stock of a corporation having but one class of stock must be worth exactly the same as every other share, the effort of the pleas to show that some shares of stock issued by the corporation mentioned were worth more than other shares of stock issued by it was an attempt to show the existence of a legal impossibility. The inquiry then is as to the soundness or correctness of these two propositions as applied to the state of facts disclosed by the pleas.

The first in order of the propositions just stated ignores the distinction between a patent and a latent ambiguity, and also the familiar rule of law that an ambiguity of the latter kind in the description of its subject-matter contained in a written instrument may be shown to exist and may be removed by extrinsic parol evidence. The law on this subject was thus stated by Stone, J., in delivering the opinion of the court in the case of Chambers v. Ring staff, 69 Ala. 140: “The distinction between latent and patent ambiguity has long existed, and the general rule applicable to each class of cases should not be disturbed. When a contract or conveyance, on its face, or aided by judicial knowledge, equally describes two or more pérsons, things, etc., this is a patent ambiguity, or ambiguity apparent.

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 727, 4 Ala. App. 551, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feore-v-avent-alactapp-1912.