Moresi v. Burleigh

127 So. 624, 170 La. 270, 1930 La. LEXIS 1707
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 5, 1930
DocketNo. 29865.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 127 So. 624 (Moresi v. Burleigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moresi v. Burleigh, 127 So. 624, 170 La. 270, 1930 La. LEXIS 1707 (La. 1930).

Opinion

BRUNOT, J.

This is a suit for the Specific performance of an option to buy 375 shares of the capital *274 stock of the Burleigh-Moresi Sugar Company, Inc., a corporation chartered under the laws of the state of Louisiana and domiciled in the parish of Iberia. The agreement is as follows:

“Jeanerette, La., Feb. 14, 1928.

“We, Robert Burleigh and Mrs. Robert Burleigh, hereby offer to sell, transfer and deliver to Demás Moresi at any time within four (4) months from that date, for the price of Twenty-Five thousand ($25,000.00) Dollars in cash, U. S. Currency all of the 375 shares of capital stock owned by us in the Burleigh-Moresi Sugar Company, Inc., which shares are represented by stock certificates No. 53 and 55 thereof; and for the price of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars paid me in cash, we hereby sell, transfer and deliver to the said Demás Moresi the right and option to purchase our said capital stock under and in accordance with said offer and with the stipulations thereof, at any time, within Four Months from this date.

“It is agreed that the amount given as the price'of said option herein granted, is not earnest money, but shall form part of the price of said stock sale if the option herein granted be exercised.”

It is admitted that the plaintiff timely exercised the option granted in the foregoing agreement, and was ready to pay the price agreed upon, for the 375 shares of stock, but the defendants refused to transfer the stock and waived a formal tender of the price. Plaintiff thereupon filed this suit and made the Burleigh-Moresi Sugar Company, Inc., a nominal defendant. The prayer is for judgment against Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burleigh, ordering the specific performance of the contract within fifteen days from the date the judgment shall become final or upon the deposit of the purchase price of the stock in the registry of the court, that the judgment itself shall constitute the sale, transfer, and delivery of the stock, and that the proper officers of the Burleigh-Moresi Sugar Company, Inc., shall cancel upon its stock book certificates Nos. 53 and 55, representing 375 shares of its capital stock and shall issue .to plaintiff, in lieu thereof, two certificates for corresponding numbers of shares of the stock of said corporation.

The defendants first-excepted to the suit upon the ground that the contract sued upon is one in which earnest money was given, and that plaintiff had refused to accept the tender of twice the earnest. They further except upon the ground that the agreement is a unilateral contract. The answer is lengthy. To some extent it is an amplification of the grounds of exception followed by a recital of the purpose for which the Burleigh-Moresi Sugar Company, Inc., was organized; the destruction of its sugar factory by fire; the profitable adjustment of its fire loss with the insurers; and that the destruction by fire of its factory resulted ipso facto in the dissolution of the corporation, with the result that the assets of the corporation became the property of the stockholders in indivisión.

. Judge Simon has written a very creditable opinion in this case. We shall take the liberty of quoting it and adopting it as our own:

“Defendants contend firstly that the contract sued on is an innominate contract, without consideration, and that this is so because the $100 was to be returned to plaintiff upon the execution of the act of sale.

“Prior to Act 249 of 1910, option contracts were not originally recognized by our Civil Code. Because of this hiatus in our law, article 2462 of the R. C. C. was amended by said act, appending a second paragraph. It is evident that the continuity of thought which formerly existed between articles 2462 and *276 2463 was broken by said act, and matters foreign to provisions relative to promises to sell were' interjected. But it in no wise changes the plain meaning of said provisions.

“Act 249 of 1910 was amended by Act 27 of 1920 only to the extent that options may be purchased for any consideration therein stated. It must therefore be readily conceded that the common-law precedents must govern, it having been lifted bodily into óur law by ■said amendatory statutes.

“An agreement to sell must be distinguished from an option contract. In the former, the contract binds the one to sell and the other to buy. In the latter, the option is simply an election to purchase, with a continuing offer to sell, during the time limits, supported by a consideration. The continuing offer to sell cannot be withdrawn before the expiration of the time agreed upon. If the option or right of election be exercised, it then no longer exists, but on the other hand an agreement to sell arises by virtue of such acceptance which may be specifically enforced.

“Readingd the contract which controls the issues, there is but one conclusion, and that is that the $100 was paid for the option, and was the consideration therefor. The cheek in payment thereof (Document marked P 3) was collected by the defendants. It became their own and plaintiff could not have reclaimed it. The verbiage of the agreement, to wit, ‘And for the price of $100.00 paid me in cash, we hereby sell, transfer and deliver to the said Damas Moresi the right and option to purchase, * * * ’ destroys the contention of defense counsel. Defendants admit to have received the amount and acknowledge that it is received by them for the option to purchase granted plaintiff. Such unambiguous and express provisions preclude any other interpretation.

“Defendants contend, however, that this is not consideration because if the option be exercised, the amount should be considered as part of the purchase price of the stock.

“In James on Option Contracts, § 322, after stating that a consideration is necessary, the paragraph continues: ‘But it does not follow that because money paid by the optionee at the time of the execution of the option contract is to be applied to the price, such payment does not furnish consideration for the option contract. The application or credit of such payment on account of the purchase price is a secondary matter. The question is whether in the first instance the money was paid as a consideration for the option contract.’

“This same principle is expressly stated in 27 R. C. L. p. 838, as follows: ‘But the fact that if a sale of the land afterwards follows the option the payment or consideration for the option is to be applied as part of the price of the land does not render it insufficient to support the option. Ide v. Leiser, 10 Mont. 5, 24 P. 695, 24 Am. St. Rep. 17.’

“The consideration was paid in cash, accepted by the defendants, and became theirs whether tlie option was exercised or not. The parties having bound themselves accordingly, and which is not rare, must so remain bound.

“However, even though consideration be totally lacking, which is clearly not the case here, the offer to sell was accepted before being withdrawn and by reason of its acceptance became a binding contract enforceable against either party.

“In Ide v. Leiser, 10 Mont. 5, 24 P. 695, 696, 24 Am. St. Rep. 20, the court, after saying that the option was without consideration, says: ‘But upon acceptance and tender, was *278

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Bluebook (online)
127 So. 624, 170 La. 270, 1930 La. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moresi-v-burleigh-la-1930.