Gainsburg v. Bachrack

241 A.D. 28, 270 N.Y.S. 727, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8160
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 241 A.D. 28 (Gainsburg v. Bachrack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gainsburg v. Bachrack, 241 A.D. 28, 270 N.Y.S. 727, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8160 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for the failure of the defendant to comply with the terms of an agreement to repurchase certain stocks of a corporation which plaintiff says he was induced to buy because of defendant’s misrepresentations and a promise to repurchase.

Set forth in the complaint are three causes of action. The first two are based upon agreements by the defendant to purchase certain shares of stock of The Ross Stores, Inc., acquired by the [29]*29plaintiff from that corporation. The third cause of action is in fraud, predicated upon alleged oral representations by the defendant which it is asserted induced the plaintiff to acquire the stock.

To the first two causes of action the defendant interposed general denials with an affirmative defense of the Statute of Frauds (Pers. Prop. Law, § 85, subd. 1). To the third cause of action the defendant interposed a general denial.

The plaintiff in his bill of particulars set forth the agreement upon which he relies, as follows: The agreement alleged in paragraph 1 15 ’ of the complaint was written, a copy of which is hereto annexed marked Exhibit ‘A,’ except that it was orally agreed that the same shall apply to the purchase of the 150 shares of first preferred stock, as well as to the 250 shares of second preferred stock.”

The Ross Stores, Inc., is a New Jersey corporation organized in 1919. The defendant, Benjamin Bachrack, was at all times a large stockholder therein and an officer and director, having been treasurer in 1923, secretary in 1925, and president in 1928. The corporation owned and operated a chain of department stores throughout the country. In 1923 it owned seventeen and each year thereafter acquired new stores.

As revealed by the consolidated balance sheet of January 31, 1923, the capital structure of the corporation then consisted of $1,000,000 authorized common stock, $400,000 thereof being outstanding, and $500,000 authorized preferred stock, $100,000 being issued. At that time the corporation appears to have been prosperous and in a sound financial condition.

In 1925 it was reorganized and refinanced, as a result of which the entire capital structure was changed. The original preferred stock was retired and a new issue of 10,000 shares of no par value second preferred stock created. The new second preferred stock was given to the holders of the original preferred stock in exchange therefor. The holders of the original preferred stock received with the new second preferred stock a dividend of new common stock. In addition thereto, a new issue of 7,500 shares of first preferred stock, par value $100, was created, for sale to the public. There was also issued $600,000 worth of common stock represented by 100,000 shares thereof. The bankers sold the new first preferred stock for the corporation. Dividends were paid on the first and second preferred stock without interruption until 1928, after which time it continued to pay dividends upon the first preferred stock but not upon the second preferred stock.

On or about May 1, 1923, the plaintiff, an attorney, who acted at times for The Ross Stores, Inc., and for the defendant and his brother individually, purchased 250 shares of the preferred stock [30]*30of The Ross Stores, Inc., under a written agreement that the defendant Bachrack would repurchase the stock if required to do so within a certain time, regardless of the amount paid therefor. By the terms of the agreement defendant was to pay $100 per share for said stock if redeemed during the first year, $105 per share if redeemed within two years and $110 per share if redeemed within three years.

It was further agreed as follows: It is understood that this is not only a guarantee of payment of the stock represented by certificate number—but that the undersigned upon one week’s notice in writing immediately agrees to buy and pay for same as herein provided.’’

It is here important to note that there were no further written agreements with reference to this stock. Although this contract giving the plaintiff the right to call upon the defendant at any time within the three years to repurchase the stock was made in 1923, it appears that another arrangement was made in 1925. At that time an oral agreement was entered into, the terms of which are in dispute. It is claimed by the plaintiff that he surrendered his stock and accepted 250 shares of second preferred stock, purchased additional stock and received 325 shares of common stock under a new arrangement. He contends that at that time there was an oral agreement made with him that the written contract was to continue. This is denied by the defendant. In any event, a determination of this case does not depend upon the existence of the oral agreement but on its validity.

The exact proposition which the plaintiff says was made is that if the plaintiff would exchange his 250 shares of preferred stock for 250 shares of second preferred stock with no par value, he would receive a bonus of 325 shares of common stock and he would have stock in a company which would be in better financial condition than before; that with the reorganization it would maintain a sufficient reserve to retire the second preferred stock.

When the exchange was made, the defendant says plaintiff was given the option of taking cash or new stock. With respect to this option the defendant gave the following testimony: I told Mr. Gainsburg of an arrangement that had been made with some bankers by the name of Kelly, Drayton & Converse, 40 Exchange Place, New York City, who had agreed to buy an issue of $750,000 of first preferred stock. So he asked me what did I intend to do about his stock, which was preferred stock in that company? I said he had two options; one to get bis cash or secondly he could take second preferred stock that was to be created and for which there would be a dividend given of one share of common, of new common, for one share of the preferred stock in the old company; and he says, ‘ That’s pretty good. It looks as if your business is going to [31]*31come along and I will take that.’ Q. Was anything else said in that agreement? A. At the same time I showed Mr. Gainsburg the figures as they would appear. I showed him figures before the financing and after the financing.”

Irrespective of the form of the arrangement, it was established that the entire proposition to exchange the stock was oral and not in writing.

The plaintiff’s first and second causes of action are based upon the oral agreement which the defendant says was never made, but, if made, is unenforcible because of the Statute of Frauds. The trial court held that such an agreement was enforcible and need not be in writing and he so charged the jury.

In our opinion the Statute of Frauds was an absolute bar to a recovery upon the first and second causes of action. There is no claim that defendant accepted or received the stock herein involved, or that he gave anything to bind the alleged oral contract or in part payment thereof, so that the question presented is whether the alleged oral agreement for the repurchase of stock by a third party should have been in writing to be enforcible.

In Morse v. Douglass (112 App. Div. 798) the court, in deciding a similar proposition, said: The defense is that such an agreement is void under the Statute of Frauds. * * * If there was but a single agreement involved in the whole transaction, the statute does not apply.

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Bluebook (online)
241 A.D. 28, 270 N.Y.S. 727, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gainsburg-v-bachrack-nyappdiv-1934.