Marinovich v. Kilburn

96 P. 303, 153 Cal. 638, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 507
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4692.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 P. 303 (Marinovich v. Kilburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marinovich v. Kilburn, 96 P. 303, 153 Cal. 638, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 507 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

Appeal by the defendant from the judgment' and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

On July 21, 1903, the defendant executed the following, contract in writing:—

*640 “Whereas, F. P. Marinovieh is the owner of fifty shares ■of the capital stock of the Watsonville Transportation Company, for which he has paid the sum of $3,000.00, or $60.00 j>er share, in full payment therefor:
“Now, these presents witnesseth: That in the event of the non-payment of an annual dividend of not less than three and one half per cent upon the purchase price of said stock, I hereby agree to pay to F. P. Marinovich that sum, viz: three and one half per cent upon his investment of $3,000.00, in said stock, myself.
“I further agree that in the case of any default in the payment of an annual dividend of not less than three and one half per cent upon each of the fifty shares of said stock owned by said F. P. Marinovich, to purchase the same at any time he may request me to do so, after such default; and to pay therefor the sum of $60.00 per share spot cash, upon the delivery to me of the certificate of stock properly indorsed.”

The company never paid any dividend upon the stock, whereupon, on March 30, 1905, the plaintiff tendered to defendant his certificate of stock, properly indorsed, and demanded that defendant then and there repurchase said stock and pay plaintiff three thousand dollars therefor. Defendant refused and the plaintiff began this action to recover the price so agreed upon. The action was tried by a jury, which returned a verdict for the plaintiff for three thousand dollars.

The complaint declared upon the above contract according to its legal effect, averring, in substance, that the defendant thereby agreed to purchase the fifty shares of stock in question at the price of three thousand dollars, if the company did not pay an annual dividend of not less than three and one half per cent upon said stock. Upon the trial, the introduction of the contract in evidence, in support of the allegation, was objected to on the ground that there was a variance between the contract alleged and that offered in proof, and the objection was overruled.

The claim that there is a variance is made upon the theory that the agreement does not bind Kilburn to buy the stock, except upon the failure of the company to pay an annual dividend equal to one hundred and five dollars, and his own failure to make it good. It cannot properly be so construed. *641 Kilburn agreed to make the yearly dividend good to the extent of one hundred and five dollars, or three and one half per cent of three thousand dollars, in the event that the company failed to pay a dividend of that amount upon plaintiff’s stock of the par value of five thousand dollars. He agreed to buy plaintiff’s stock, not upon the failure of the company to pay an annual dividend of one hundred and five dollars upon that stock, coupled with his own failure to make it good, but upon plaintiff’s request “in. the case of any default in the payment of an annual dividend of not less than three and one half per cent upon each of the fifty shares of said stock owned by” plaintiff, without any reference to the added failure of Kilburn to make it good to the extent of one hundred and five dollars. The two provisions relate to different events and are independent of each other. The payment claimed to have been made by Kilburn of a sum equal to three and one half per cent upon the three thousand dollars invested by Marinovich, on failure of dividends by the company, as provided in the first clause of the agreement, did not relieve him of his obligation to buy the stock, imposed on him by the last clause in case of such failure by the company. Plaintiff’s right to insist on the sale to Kilburn was made to depend solely on the failure of the company to pay the required dividend, and not at all upon the added failure of Kilburn to make good the company’s default. There was no variance.

The defense chiefly relied on was want of consideration. The plaintiff had bought the stock from the company at the price of three thousand dollars, paying therefor at the time of purchase the sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars. In July, 1903, the company was urging Marinovich to pay the two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars remaining unpaid upon the purchase price, and plaintiff refused to pay it, stating as his reason that he had heard that there was going to be promoters’ stock issued. The defendant was a director of the company and much interested therein. He thereupon, in order to induce plaintiff to pay to the company the balance of his stock subscription, executed the contract sued on, and plaintiff, in consideration thereof, paid said sum of two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars to the company, and thereupon his certificate was by the company indorsed as fully paid stock.

*642 The principal contention of the plaintiff, upon this appeal,, is that the fact that the plaintiff was unwilling to perform, his contract to pay to the company the balance of his subscription, and was refusing to do so, and the fact that he-agreed to, and did, perform it because of the agreement sued on, constituted a sufficient consideration for the agreement on the part of Kilbum to buy the stock and pay him three thousand dollars therefor. We think this proposition is not tenable. This court has said, “It is well settled that neither a promise to perform a duty, nor the performance of a duty, constitutes a consideration of a contract.” (Sullivan v. Sullivan, 99 Cal. 193, [33 Pac. 862].) In Ellison v. Jackson Water Company, 12 Cal. 553, Ellison was bound by contract to do-certain work for the Jackson Water Company. Thereafter, one Bayerque, a defendant in the action, promised that if Ellison would proceed with the work, he, Bayerque, would pay to Ellison the amount due under the contract. The court says: “A promise to Bayerque to perform this contract could furnish no consideration for a promise by him,. The consideration of the original contract could not attach to the subsequent promise.” (The italics are ours.) In Schuler v. Myton, 48 Kan. 282, [29 Pac. 165], the principle is thus stated: “An agreement to do, or the doing of, that which one-is already bound to do, does not constitute a consideration for a new promise.” To the same effect, see 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 752 ; 9 Cyc. 354, and many eases cited therein. In the case at bar the plaintiff was already under obligation to the company to pay the balance of his subscription. According to this' contention all he agreed to do in consideration of the agreement of Kilbum was to pay the obligation to which he was already bound. The case comes precisely within the principle above stated. We cannot perceive anything in section 1605 of the Civil Code contrary to the principle just stated. Upon the theory we are now discussing, no benefit would accrue to Kilburn by the payment of the stock subscription, beyond that which he was already entitled to as a stockholder in the company, and no prejudice would be caused to Kilbum by the payment of the stock subscription, except that which he was already bound to suffer.

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96 P. 303, 153 Cal. 638, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marinovich-v-kilburn-cal-1908.