Houston v. Welch

223 S.W. 1076, 204 Mo. App. 279, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 36
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 1076 (Houston v. Welch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston v. Welch, 223 S.W. 1076, 204 Mo. App. 279, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 36 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

This is an action in equity to rescind a sale of corporate stock and to compel a return of the purchase price. The case was tried before the court sitting asi a jury, but at the close of plaintiff’s evidence defendant’s demurrer thereto was sustained and plaintiffs have appealed.

The defendant, a woman, owned a certificate of 1000 shares of a corporation named “Consolidated Arizona Copper Mines Company” and, some two or three weeks before the sale thereof which is herein sought to be annulled, called plaintiff over the ’phone and inquired as to its value. It is conceded she gave the correct name over the telephone. She was told it was worth about $1500' less the commission. Nothing was done toward a sale at that time, however. But on January 29, 1919, defendant in company with her sister went to plaintiffs’ place of business, produced the certificate of stock and offered it for sale, and asked what she could get for it. Plaintiffs took the certificate of stock, examined it, read the name of the corporation of which it was a certificate, retained it and told defendant they would ask New York the price it could be sold for. No other information was given defendant, but plaintiffs telegraphed a firm in New York asking at what price a thousand shares of Consolidated Arizona Copper Mines Company could be sold, giving the date of the certificate. The New York firm replied in a telegram which, in addition to naming a price of “1/8” also stated the number of shares of stock and the name of the corporation as hereinbefore given. The plaintiffs, thinking the price of. “1/8” was perhaps an error, asked for a correction and again the New York firm tele *281 graphed giving the name of the aforesaid corporation but saying that the price was “1-1/8”. Thereupon the plaintiffs figured up the amount due at that price, deducted therefrom the commission and the tax and gave the memorandum of the amount to- defendant telling her the stock “could possibly be sold for that price.” The defendant then ordered plaintiffs to sell the stock, and the defendant and her sister went awav taking the memorandum with her, the plaintiffs telling her the stock was “being sold in New York.” While she was gone plaintiffs received a wire from the New York firm saying they had sold the- stock at 1-3/16 which was $62.50 more than they had previously quoted. Shortly thereafter defendant returned and was informed that her stock was sold and plaintiffs made a'calculation of the amount due, deducting $20.40 for commission and tax, and drew a check to defendant for $1167.10 in payment for the stock. At the same time plaintiffs delivered the check to defendant they also gave her a statement of the transaction showing that plaintiffs had charged defendant the $20.40 for commission and tax. That was all she knew about it. Plaintiff’s had defendant to assign the certificate in blank and she took the check and went away with it and afterwards cashed it.

Plaintiffs sent the certificate of stock to the New York firm who thereupon inserted their name as assignee in the blank endorsement, but afterwards returned the certificate to plaintiffs and refused to pay the r price thereon. It seems that there was another corporation by the name of “Consolidated Arizona Copper Smelting Company” and the New York firm made a mistake in the name of the corporation and thought it was dealings with a certificate of stock in that company.

'There is nowhere in the case any evidence tending to show that defendant had any knowledge whatever of any relationship between plaintiffs and 'the New York firm. Defendant made no representations concerning *282 said stock, nor was there any fraud or deceit upon her part. There was no mistake on the part of plaintiffs for they had the stock certificate before them and wired-the exact name of the company to the New York firm and the- New York firm in the two telegrams concerning the price stated the name of the company exactly. And after the New York firm received the stock certificate they inserted their name in the blank assignment. Hence there was no mutual mistake between plaintiffs and defendants nor was there any unilateral mistake made by either of the parties hereto and there is no claim that there is any fraud or deceit upon the part of defendant. Indeed there could be none since she, a woman and apparently unexperienced in business, merely took the certificate of stock to the plaintiffs, turned it over to them and took what was offered and given her therefor." ,.

The petition charges that defendant employed plaintiffs to sell for her 1000 shares of Consolidated Arizona Copper Mines Company” stock; that pursuant to such employment plaintiffs sold the same <in New York through a brokerage firm of that place; that plaintiffs received the certificate of stock from defendant and paid her $1167.10 and forwarded said certificate to the firm in New York, and they, the New York firm, wired that they had understood the shares they had been ordered to sell were shares of “Consolidated Arizona Copper Smelting Company” stock, that thereupon plaintiffs demanded the return of the money which the defendant refused to do and they offered to return the stock. In other words, the petition states no fraud or deceit in the matter, no mistake on the part of either plaintiffs or defendant, but does show that whatever mistake, if any there was, was the mistake of the New York firm; while the evidence not only shows these facts, but furthermore discloses that whatever mistake the New York firm made, it was one of their own negligence, for they were given the correct name of the stock offered and used that name themselves when they replied naming the price.

*283 The petition does not disclose that plaintiffs were the agents of both defendant and the New York brokers.; and, as stated, the evidence shows that defendant knew only that the stock was being sold in New York. Indeed, the New York firm bought the stock themselves since they inserted their name in the blank assignment. [Keller v. Eureka, etc., Mfg. Co., 43! Mo. App. 84, 88.] So that at best, the evidence shows that the defendant sold, through plaintiffs, a certificate of stock' to the New York firm, and the plaintiffs, being acquainted with and having confidence in the firm’s meeting its obligations, and according to the usual practice in such matters, paid defendant the money therefor, and then when the New York firm discovered that it has made a mistake. (and that through no other ca.u'se than their own negligence), it refuses to pay; whereupon plaintiffs sue to recover of defendant on the ground of mistake.

It would seem that the petition stated no cause pf action in equity for a rescission of the contract on the ground of mistake. [Benn v. Pritchett, 163 Mo. 560, 571; Mason v. Commerce Trust Co., 192 Mo. App. 528, 582; Meek v. Hurst, 223 Mo. 688, 696; Grand Lodge, etc., v. Sater, 44 Mo. App. 445, 453; Robinson v. Karns, 250 Mo. 663, 675; Doughery v. Doughery, 204 Mo. 228, 240.]

But aside from, and without regard to, the sufficiency or insufficiency of the petition, the evidence does not disclose a, cause of action in equity against the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 1076, 204 Mo. App. 279, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-welch-moctapp-1920.