Nielsen v. Swanberg

278 P. 876, 99 Cal. App. 270, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 537
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6754.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 278 P. 876 (Nielsen v. Swanberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielsen v. Swanberg, 278 P. 876, 99 Cal. App. 270, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 537 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This action is for the purpose of recovering the purchase price of certain stock and is *272 predicated upon a clause in a written agreement executed on June 25, 1923, between the Altomont Creamery, Inc., (respondent’s assignor), as the party of the first part, Acme Ice Cream Company, as party of the second part, and C. 0. Swanberg (appellant), as party of the third part, which is as follows: “The Third Party further agrees that at any time prior to July 1, 1926, should the first party not have exercised the option next hereinabove given it to exchange the said preferred stock for common stock, he, the Third Party, at the option and upon the request of the First Party, will purchase the said 130 shares of preferred stock at the price of $100 per share, payable at the rate of $1000 upon transfer of the said stock, and not less than $1000 per month thereafter until the entire sum of $13,000 is paid, provided, however, that in case the First Party shall desire to exercise either of the options herein granted, it shall so notify the Third Party not less than 30 days prior to the time when such option shall be exercised, said stock to be pledged as security for payment of the said repurchase price.” Respondent A. T. Nielsen, the assignee of Altomont Creamery, Inc., was the owner of all of the stock of the Altomont Creamery, Inc., with the exception of .two shares, one of which was owned by his wife and the other by one R. W. Johnstone, and while one Roseberg was the general manager of the Acme Ice Cream Company, appellant C. O. Swanberg appears to have been the controlling spirit of the corporation—at least he dictated its action with reference to the agreement under consideration .in which he agreed to purchase the Acme Ice Cream Company stock from Altomont Creamery, Inc., respondent’s assignor, which stock was to be pledged as security for the payment of the “repurchase price.” Judgment was entered for plaintiff for $3,000, as the monthly installments found to be due under the contract up to the filing of the • complaint, and from such judgment defendant has appealed.

Appellant specifies the following errors: the court erred in finding that respondent elected to exercise the option contained in the agreement sued upon; that respondent tendered the stock to appellant; that the Altomont Creamery, Inc., or its assignee, performed all the terms and conditions of the agreement sued upon on their part; that defendant did breach, break and repudiate said agreement, *273 and that there is now due, owing and wholly unpaid and was at the time of the commencement of this action due, owing and wholly unpaid by appellant to respondent the sum of $3,000. The first and main question presented is, did respondent exercise his option, for under the terms of the agreement sued upon it was incumbent upon him to notify appellant thirty days prior to July 1, 1926, that he elected to do so.

The testimony relative to the demand or notification that respondent desired to exercise his option is without dispute that respondent called upon appellant at the Granada Hotel in San Francisco in February, 1926, and said to him: “I asked him if he bore in mind that I had 130 shares of stock that would be due and payable about June or July, and he said ‘yes,’ he was aware of that fact and that it would be taken care of. Q. Did he say anything as to what was meant by the expression ‘taken care of’? The Court: You say you made a demand upon him? A. Yes. Q. Now, what was that demand? A. The demand that he pay me $1000 a month on the preferred stock, which he had guaranteed to repurchase. Q. Did you say that to him in the same language you have used here, or substantially that language: A. I said to him exactly as I said before. I asked him if he was aware of the fact that that would be due and payable at that time, and he said yes, that he had that in mind, and that it would be taken care of.” In this conversation respondent requested that appellant purchase the stock, ‘‘that he pay me $1000 a month on the preferred stock, which he had guaranteed to repurchase.” Appellant contends that this statement that he demanded that appellant pay him $1,000 a month on the preferred stock is qualified by respondent’s answer to the question by the court: “I said to him exactly as I said before. I asked him if he was aware of the fact that that ($1000 a month) would be due and payable at that time and he said yes, he had that in mind, and that it would be taken care of.” We question appellant’s claim that respondent intended to qualify his statement that he demanded that appellant pay him $1,000 a month on the preferred stock. In any event, appellant must have understood that respondent was exercising his option and request *274 ing him to purchase the preferred stock. This is shown by his answer: “Yes, he was aware of that fact and that it would be taken care of.” This is further evidenced by ap i pellant’s statement to respondent when the latter called at the Granada Hotel in July, as testified to by respondent: “I know what you are here for and I have a long story to tell you . . . He was very sorry to have to tell me that he wasn’t able to pay me for the stock right now, but if I would not get excited about it and go to court about it, he would make arrangements to pay me a little later on.”

In Flickinger v. Heck, 187 Cal. 111, 114 [200 Pac. 1045], the court says: “The particular act or acts which constitute an election may be fixed by the terms of the option, as also the time when, the place where and the persons to whom it shall be made (James on Option Contracts, secs. 801, 807). The language of the contract itself controls as to what act or acts constitute an election. Under the terms of one option, the election may consist of a tender of the property to be sold or purchase price to be paid; under the terms of another option, it may consist of a mere notice of election to purchase or sell, leaving payment of the price and delivery of the property as subsequent matters in performance ofo the executory contract raised by the election (Breen v. Mayne, 141 Iowa, 399 [118 N. W. 441].” The contract in the present case provides that to exercise the option “it (Altomont Creamery, Inc., respondent’s assignor) shall so notify the third party (appellant) not less than 30 days prior to the time when said option shall be exercised.” There is no question but that the notification given was within the period provided in the contract, the only point raised being as to its sufficiency.

As to appellant’s contention that the notification should be in writing to take it out of the statute of frauds, it may be said that appellant had bound himself in writing in the original contract to perform his obligation to purchase the stock upon Altomont Creamery, Inc., respondent’s assignor, notifying appellant of its desire to exercise the option. Furthermore, as no objection was interposed at the trial nor motion for nonsuit made, the objection cannot now be insisted upon (Nunez v. Morgan, 77 Cal. 427 [19 Pac. 753]; Armstrong v. Barceloux, 34 Cal. App. 437 [167 Pac. 895]).

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 876, 99 Cal. App. 270, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielsen-v-swanberg-calctapp-1929.