McIntire v. Industrial Securities Corporation

158 So. 849
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 1935
DocketNo. 14909.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 So. 849 (McIntire v. Industrial Securities Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntire v. Industrial Securities Corporation, 158 So. 849 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

D. C. Mclntire claims of Industrial Securities Corporation $554.50, alleging that to be the fair market price of certain shares of stock of various homestead and building and loan associations, represented by stock certificates deposited by the said Mclntire with defendant for sale, and alleging also that, although the stock has been sold, the proceeds have not been remitted to him.

Defendant corporation admits that the said certificates of stock were deposited with it for the purpose of sale, and that they have been sold, and it avers that plaintiff authorized defendant to sell the said stock at the current market price and to invest the proceeds in 150 shares of stock of Interstate Department Stores Corporation at the price then current on the stock market, and agreed that, since the proceeds of the homestead and building and loan association stocks manifestly would be insufficient to pay for the Interstate Department Stores stock in full, defendant might hold the certificates for the latter stock, and that he (Mclntire) would pay the balance due in twenty-four equal monthly installments. (In the answer it is stated that 100 shares of Interstate Department Stores shares would be purchased, but this is manifestly a clerical error and should be 150 shares.)

Defendant further seeks to show that the market price of the homestead stock was $552, and that the said stocks were sold for this amount, and that a fair commission for making the sale is $6T50, and that thus the net *850 proceeds amounted to $545.50, and not $554.60 as alleged by plaintiff. (In tbe answer it is admitted that' tbe agreed balance resulting from the said sales is $554.50, but here again we find that this must be a clerical error, as the other allegations show a contention that the correct balance is $545.50.)

Defendant further alleges that the price paid for the stock of the Interstate Department Stores Corporation was $1,237.50, and that to this should be added a service charge of 10 per cent, or $123.75 made by defendant for purchasing the stock and for financing or “carrying” for a period of twenty-four months, the balance due. Thus defendant claims that as the net result of the said agreement Mr. Mclntire became indebted to it for a balance of $815.75, payable at the rate of $33.93 per month, and that the said Mclntire would have been entitled to the certificates for the said stock had he made all of the payments.

Assuming the position of plaintiff in reeon-vention, defendant corporation alleges that the market value of the said Interstate Department Stores stock dropped to such an extent that the total value thereof was less than the balance due thereon by Mr. Mclntire, and that, when it called upon him for a further deposit to protect it against loss, he refused to comply with the said demand; that it thereupon sold the said stock for an amount which, because of taxes and commissions, represented $26.75 less than the balance due by Mclntire to defendant. Por this balance defendant seeks judgment in reeonvention.

In the district court there was judgment for plaintiff for $554.50 as prayed for, and the reconventional demand was dismissed.

The-record shows with reasonable certainty that the homestead and building and loan association stocks deposited for sale were sold for $552, and we feel that $6.50 is a fair commission for handling such a transaction. We thus conclude that the net amount for which plaintiff was entitled credit as a result of that transaction was $545.50. The proof that there were other sales of similar stocks on the same day at slightly higher prices does not outweigh the positive evidence that these particular shares were sold for the price shown.

The more important controversy arises over the question of whether or not Mclntire agreed that the proceeds might be invested in Interstate Department Stores stock on the terms and conditions contended for by defendant corporation. He admits that his attention had been focused upon that corporation and that he had in fact actually instructed defendant to purchase for his account 150 shares at the current market price, but he insists that he had made the said purchase conditional upon the price being not in excess of $8 per share, and he also insists that he was not told that there would be a service charge made by defendant amounting to 10 per cent, of the total price of the stock.

An analysis of the testimony on behalf of both parties shows that on only two matters were there serious disputes:

(1) Mclntire contends that his authority to purchase stock of the Interstate Department Stores corporation was qualified by a price limit of not over $8 per share, whereas defendant maintains that the only qualification was that it should be bought at the current market price, whatever that might be.

(2) Mclntire asserts that he had no knowledge that there would be a service charge of 10 per cent, on the total purchase price, whereas defendant maintains that that feature of the agreement had been explained thoroughly.

Mclntire contends that, at the time of his visit to New Orleans, no verbal agreement was entered into with reference to the purchase of the stock in Interstate Department Stores, Inc., and, as indicating that no such contract was entered into at that time, he points to the fact that, after he had left his homestead stocks with defendant and had departed to his home in a nearby parish, defendant prepared and sent to him for his signature a written contract under the terms of which, had he, signed it, he would have agreed to purchase, and defendant would have agreed to sell, stock in the Interstate Department Stores, Inc. He contends that the preparation of the contract indicated that, whatever prior negotiations might have been carried on, the parties contemplated placing their understanding in writing, and that thus, until the said writing could be prepared and signed, there was no contract.

In this connection he relies on the doctrine which prevailed in Laroussini v. Philip Werlein, 52 La. Ann. 424, 27 So. 83, 90, 78 Am. St. Rep. 350, in the syllabus of which is found the following: “ * * If, when a verbal contract of lease is agreed on, it is understood, contemplated, and intended that it should be reduced to writing, that there should be a written lease, and that the written lease should take the place of, and stand for, what has been agreed on verbally in respect to the leasing of the property, then until the writ *851 ing is drawn up and signed the contract is inchoate, incomplete, and either party, before signing, may * * * recede.”

Plaintiff also asserts that the written contract prepared by defendant itself provides that “this instrument recites the entire agreement and supersedes all previous representations, promises, oral or written, on either side,” and he maintains that, since the defendant’s officers suggested that such a written contract be executed, it is evident that they did not, at that time, feel that a valid and complete agreement had already been reached.

Counsel for defendant concedes the soundness of the view expressed in the Laroussini Case, but maintains that the facts here are different and bring this matter rather under the ruling set forth in Knights of Pythias v. Fishel et al., 168 La. 1005, 123 So.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintire-v-industrial-securities-corporation-lactapp-1935.