Ostrander v. Messmer

289 S.W. 609, 315 Mo. 1165, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 610
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 609 (Ostrander v. Messmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ostrander v. Messmer, 289 S.W. 609, 315 Mo. 1165, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 610 (Mo. 1926).

Opinions

The plaintiff had a verdict for $10,000, which the trial court set aside, specifying as the reason therefor that "the verdict is so excessive, that the jury must have entirely misapplied the evidence or been influenced by bias and prejudice." This is the second appeal in the cause. Upon the first trial the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for $7,500, which was reversed by the St. Louis Court of Appeals and the cause remanded. [223 S.W. 438.] The suit is one for damages for alleged breach, by defendants, of a contract to issue and deliver to plaintiff ten shares of stock in the Continental Brass Foundry Company.

The petition upon which the first trial was had pleaded solely a written contract, and did not plead any modification thereof. The petition upon the second trial declared upon a contract, partly in writing and partly by parol, and also set up a modification of the contract by parol agreement, made after the execution of the written portion. Whether the entire contract, as made by the parties at the time the writing was signed, was expressed in that writing, and what were the terms if a modification of it was subsequently made, if any, were contested issues of fact.

The written instrument is set forth in the opinion of the Court of Appeals and will not be set out in full here. Preliminary to a statement of its essential provisions, a brief statement of the events leading up to its execution is necessary.

The written instrument in question was dated December 28, 1913. Prior to that time Louis F. Ostrander, the husband of plaintiff, had controlled the Continental Radiator Foundry Company. That company went into bankruptcy. It owned trademarks and patents for certain articles of manufacture. The articles manufactured under those patents were made by the Messmer Foundry Company, a company controlled by defendants Joseph Messmer and Ferd Messmer, and by the Eagle Foundry Company, a company controlled by defendant G.D. Klemme. At the time of its bankruptcy the Continental Radiator Foundry Company was indebted to the Messmer Foundry Company and the Eagle Foundry Company in the aggregate amount of $2,200. The patents owned by the Continental Radiator Foundry Company were to be sold by the trustee in bankruptcy. Louis F. Ostrander and the plaintiff desired to purchase these patents at the sale in bankruptcy, and engaged Taylor R. Young as their attorney in that behalf. The defendants, in behalf of their respective companies, wished to continue to manufacture the articles covered by the patents. An understanding was reached by the defendants and Young, as attorney for plaintiff and her husband, that Young *Page 1169 should purchase the patents, and that having done so a corporation should be organized to own the patents and to act as a selling agency to sell the manufactured articles. Young bought the patents at the sale, at the price of $1350, which sum at the time was furnished by the Citizen's Trust Company. Later the defendants Ferd Messmer and G.D. Klemme took up that indebtedness, and Young, as security therefor, or in pursuance of the arrangement of the parties, assigned the patents to the defendants. The plaintiff and her husband had agreed with Young that they would assign to him shares in the corporation to be formed, to be taken by him as his fee. These matters preceded the time of the signing of the contract of December 28, 1913. That instrument began by reciting that "the following outlines are those agreed upon between" the named parties, "covering all acts and policies agreed upon." The writing then provided that articles for the incorporation of the Continental Brass Foundry Company were to be made by the three defendants and Louis F. Ostrander, as incorporators; that the capital stock was to consist of patents, patterns and trademarks to the value of $1,850, and cash $650, a total of $2,500, of capital stock, divided into twenty-five shares of the par value of $100 each, to be subscribed for, eight shares by each of the three defendants, and one by Louis F. Ostrander; that said four subscribers were to be directors, and that the three defendants were to be the officers of the company; that after the incorporation, the shares were to be "distributed:" to defendant Klemme, seven shares; to Joseph Messmer, four shares; to Ferd Messmer, three shares; to plaintiff ten shares, and to Louis F. Ostrander, one share. Immediately after statement of the foregoing matters, there was in the said writing the following provision: "In consideration for the eleven shares of stock issued to Jennie Ostrander and Louis F. Ostrander jointly, the latter are to furnish to Ferd Messmer and G.D. Klemme, their joint note for $880." It is proper at this place to observe that an essential claim of plaintiff and of Louis F. Ostrander was, that the note mentioned was to be paid with dividends upon their shares in the company to be incorporated, and also that an important question arose in the case upon the fact that after the signing of the writing in quadruplicate, by the parties, Louis F. Ostrander wrote with pencil into the copy kept by him and plaintiff, after the figures $880, in the sentence above quoted, the words, "to be paid for with dividends from their stock." The contention of defendants was, and is, that thereby there was an unauthorized alteration and the contract was made void.

The writing further provided that Louis F. Ostrander should be employed as sales manager of the company to be incorporated; that dividends of such company should first be applied to any indebtedness of the Continental Radiator Foundry Company to the Messmer *Page 1170 Foundry Company and to Eagle Foundry Company, remaining after the discharge in bankruptcy of the Continental Radiator Foundry Company. It contained provisions regulating the policy of the projected company, in making sales, and as to prices and commissions, and it contained a provision that each of the stockholders, for their mutual benefit, should assign, without further consideration, any and all interest in the patents and trademarks concerning various named articles of manufacture or any improvements thereof which he had or might acquire. The final paragraph of the writing in question was an agreement that each of the stockholders mentioned would give to the others the prior right to purchase his shares at a price known as the book value, and would not sell or offer his shares to other than a stockholder until the other stockholders should decline to purchase such shares.

The amended petition alleged the making of the contract on December 28, 1913, between defendants and plaintiff and her husband; and that the said contract was entered into partly in writing and partly by parol, and pleaded the terms of the contract, as to the agreement to organize the company, and after incorporation to distribute the shares as above mentioned; that the consideration moving from plaintiff and Louis F. Ostrander to defendants was the valuable patent rights and business good-will owned by plaintiff and her husband, and agreed to be, and which were turned over to said corporation. It further pleads that by the contract, partly in writing and partly by parol, plaintiff and her husband were to make the defendants Klemme and Ferd Messmer their "promissory note" in the sum of $880, to be paid with dividends from the eleven shares of stock to be issued to plaintiff and Louis F. Ostrander, and alleged that while that portion of the contract reduced to writing omits the statement that the $880 note was to be paid with such dividends, yet, that contemporaneously with the execution of the writing it was so orally agreed as part of the entire contract.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 609, 315 Mo. 1165, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ostrander-v-messmer-mo-1926.