Hildinger v. Bishop

8 A.2d 813, 126 N.J. Eq. 334
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 813 (Hildinger v. Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hildinger v. Bishop, 8 A.2d 813, 126 N.J. Eq. 334 (N.J. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

The defendant Greenwood Avenue Realty Co. is a close corporation with an issue of one hundred shares of stock, the only stockholders being Helen B. Hildinger (who is a complainant herein), James Lamont and Gertrude H. Bishop (who are defendants) and Isaac Levy and Philip Blaustein, the five stockholders owning twenty shares each. The shares are not procurable in the open market and their value is not readily ascertainable.

June 6th, 1938, the defendant Gertrude H. Bishop borrowed $6,000 from the defendants James Lamont and Margaret Lamont, giving them her note whereby she promised to pay the borrowed money one year from said date with six *Page 336 per cent. interest and she pledged and delivered to the lenders her twenty shares of Realty Co. stock as security for payment of her note. The same day she executed an option agreement to the Lamonts (therein designated as optionees), for the stated consideration of $1, whereby she agreed not to dispose of her said shares for a period of five years, until she had first offered them to the optionees at a price to be named by her and that the optionees should have thirty days in which to determine whether to accept her offer. The option agreement contains other provisions to which reference will be made hereafter.

March 9th, 1939, Mrs. Bishop acknowledged in writing the receipt of $500 from complainants Helen B. Hildinger and Frank Henry on account of $22,500, purchase price for her said stock and agreed to deliver said shares to said purchasers on or before March 17th, 1939, on payment of the balance of the purchase price. That agreement to sell was made without first offering said shares to the Lamonts and without their knowledge; also without knowledge on the part of Mrs. Hildinger and Henry of the option agreement Mrs. Bishop had executed to the Lamonts. Six days after Mrs. Bishop had made her agreement with complainants, an offer was made to the Lamonts on behalf of Mrs. Bishop or complainants, to pay off the Lamont loan, and return of the pledged shares was requested, which offer and request were declined by the Lamonts except upon condition that they should inscribe on the certificate for said shares, a notation that the stock was subject to the option of June 6th, 1938, held by them. Payment of the note on such condition was not made and three days later the complainants filed their bill herein against Mrs. Bishop, the two Lamonts and the Realty Co. alleging that the option given the Lamonts was invalid and void; that it had been assigned to the Realty Co. and praying that the Lamonts and the Realty Co. be ordered to deliver the stock in question to Mrs. Bishop and that she be ordered to transfer it to complainants on payment to her of the balance due under her agreement with complainants.

The Lamonts answered asserting a prior right to have the stock under the terms of their option as against complainants' *Page 337 claim thereto. They also filed a counter-claim against Mrs. Bishop and complainants wherein they set out their option and alleged that their first knowledge that Mrs. Bishop was willing to sell her stock for $22,500, was obtained on March 15th, 1939, when offer to pay their note was made; that two weeks later they made their offer in writing to Mrs. Bishop to purchase her stock for that price and that they are now ready to pay her that sum, less the amount due on their note. They pray that Mrs. Bishop be decreed to specifically perform the option she gave them and that her agreement with complainants be decreed of no effect against them (Lamonts).

Mrs. Bishop by answer joined in complainants' prayer for relief and she answered the Lamonts' counter-claim and counter-claimed against them and the Realty Co., admitting that she had received the offer made by Lamonts to pay $22,500 for her stock and alleging that when she entered into her option agreement with the Lamonts she was informed by their representative then acting for them, that the term of the option was co-existent with the loan the Lamonts had made her and that she did not understand it was to run for five years; that she received no consideration for the option and therefore it is void, and that it is also void because, when she borrowed $6,000 from the Lamonts she agreed to repay that sum with six per cent. interest, being the maximum lawful rate, and that the execution of her option was in addition to lawful interest and contrary to the usury statutes. She prayed that her option given the Lamonts be declared invalid and that they and the Realty Co. be ordered to surrender her certificate of stock without any inscription thereon referring to their option, upon payment of the balance due on her promissory note with six per cent. interest.

The Realty Co. by answer admitted that since the bill of complaint was filed it had acquired the Lamonts' option to purchase the shares in question at the same price the Lamonts agreed to pay for the stock.

There is no serious dispute as to the circumstances under which the option was given or, save in one respect, as to agreement on its provisions. Mrs. Bishop needed $6,000 and when she applied to Lamont for a loan, offering her stock as *Page 338 security, he told her he would think it over. A few days later he informed her he would make the loan and made an appointment to meet her at his lawyer's office to complete it. I believe they met there on the morning of June 6th, 1938 (although Mrs. Bishop said she thought no meeting was held until the afternoon of that day) and the terms of the loan were then discussed and settled. Lamont had brought with him Isaac Levy and Philip Blaustein, two fellow stockholders in the Realty Co., whom he had informed of his intention to make the loan. They were not interested in the loan and I think they were present in the hope of inducing Mrs. Bishop to option her stock. After the terms of the loan had been settled, they and Lamont told her they did not want an outsider coming into the company and they asked her for the first chance to buy her stock in case she intended to sell and she agreed, without objection. The terms of an option were then discussed (except the period for which it should run), and settled. Mrs. Bishop was given a dollar as a binder on the option and the parties left the lawyer's office to return that afternoon after he had prepared papers to carry out the two transactions. The same persons were present in the afternoon and the lawyer produced the collateral note and option agreement, both typewritten, which he had prepared in triplicate. They were read aloud to the parties, Mrs. Bishop following the reading from copies in her hand, and were found satisfactory to all, but the option agreement stated no term for which it was to be effective, and it is here that the only dispute arises between the parties over the contents of the option. Mrs. Bishop is intelligent and has had some business experience and she admitted that, except as to the period for which the option was to run, its terms were fully understood by her and that she had no objection to them. In fact it appears that she was always willing to have the option stand until she was ready to pay off her note.

On the question of the term of the option, the testimony for the Lamonts was that of Lamont himself, Isaac Levy, Blaustein and the lawyer. They testified that Mrs. Bishop agreed to a five-year term and that words to that effect were then typed in the option at the end of a paragraph, before *Page 339 she signed. Her testimony denied that she agreed to such term and she said that the five-year provision was not in the option when she signed it.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 813, 126 N.J. Eq. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hildinger-v-bishop-njch-1939.