Patterson v. Plummer

86 N.W. 111, 10 N.D. 95, 1901 N.D. LEXIS 6
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 N.W. 111 (Patterson v. Plummer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Plummer, 86 N.W. 111, 10 N.D. 95, 1901 N.D. LEXIS 6 (N.D. 1901).

Opinion

Young, J.

Plaintiff seeks -to recover damages from the defendant for the breach of an alleged contract by the latter to sell and transfer to him 353 shares of the capital stock of the Hillsboro National Bank, at an agreed price of $135 per share. It is alleged in the complaint that said shares were in fact of the value of $165 each. Damages are alleged in the sum $10,590, which is the excess of the alleged actual value of said 353 shares over the price agreed upon in the alleged contract. The defense interposed is twofold: First, that there was in fact no contract to sell; second, that, even if there was plaintiff sustained no damage. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, counsel for defendant moved the Court for a directed verdict. This motion was granted, and the jury, pursuant to the Court’s direction, returned a verdict for defendant. Judg[98]*98ment was thereafter entered dismissing the action and for costs. Within the statutory period, plaintiff caused a statement of case to he settled, embracing all of the evidence introduced at the trial, and a specification of the errors which he relies upon in his appeal from the judgment.

The direction of the verdict for defendant is .assigned as error. It is urged “that, upon all the evidence in the case, it should have been submitted to the jury.” The record discloses that the trial court in granting the motion relied: upon two of the several grounds upon which the motion was made. These were: First, failure to prove the existence of a contract to sell; second, no damages shown. In reviewing this assignment, we find it unnecessary to consider the first ground referred to, namely, the question as to the existence of the contract, for the reason that an examination of the evidence has led us to the conclusion that the order of the trial judge in directing the verdict of which complaint is made was entirely proper upon the second ground before referred to, which is that plaintiff failed to prove damages. The existence or nature of the contract need not, therefore, be discussed; for it is conceded that a recovery, in any event, could not be sustained in the absence of proof of damages. Plaintiff’s contention is that he established the damages alleged in his complaint by competent evidence, and that the direction of a verdict for defendant was therefore erroneous. The merit of this appeal turns upon this contention. Is there any competent evidence of damages? The measure of damages recoverable for the breach of a contract such as that we are now considering is provided by § 4985, Rev. Codes, which reads: “The detrimenc caused by the breach of a seller’s agreement to deliver personal property, the price of which has not been fully paid in advance, is deemed to be the excess, if any, of the value of the property to the buyer over the amount which would have been due to the seller under the contract, if it had been fulfilled.” In the case at bar, defendant agree to pay $135 per share for 353 shares, or the total sum of $47,655. The measure of recovery, then, is the excess of value, if any, of said stock above the purchase price, no part of which has been paid. There is no controversy as to the foregoing being the correct measure of damages applicable to this case. That is conceded by counsel for both parties. The real question in the case, and upon which it hinges, is as tq the proper method of proving the value of the stock. How is the-value of the stock to the buyer to be proved? On this counsel disagree. Counsel for defendant urges that the value of the stock in question could only be proved by evidence of the market value of the stock of this bank at the time of the breach of the alleged contract to transfer, or by the market value of shares in some other bank, and in support of this view relies upon § 5010, Rev. Codes, which provides that, “in estimating damages, except as provided by § § 5011 and 5012 [which have no application here], the value of property to a buyer or owner thereof deprived of its possession is deemed to be the price at [99]*99which he might have bought an equivalent thing in the market nearest to the place where the property ought to have been put .into his possession and at such time after the breach of duty upon which his right to damages is founded as would suffice with reasonable diligence for him to make such purchase.” The rule thus provided is just and equitable, in that it gives to the buyer the benefit of his bargain, and as to such property as has a market value it is controlling; but a cursory examination of the section will show that it has no application to property which is without a market value, and that is this case. The evidence does not disclose a single sale of the stock of this bank at any time'. Its stock was not on the market. The defendant owned 353 of the 500 shares of the capital stock, and the plaintiff owned a large portion of the remaining shares. It was not only not on the market, but there were not even private sales made. It is idle, therefore, to refer to market value as a necessary method of estimating the actual value of this stock. It had no market value. And it is equally idle to assert that, in the absence of a market value for this particular stock, plaintiff must show the market value of its equivalent, namely, the value of stock of other banks. There can be no equivalent intrinsically, and none in fact, unless it be of the same value; and that begs the question. The section relied upon refers to property which in itself or through an equivalent has a market value, such as cereals, produce, and such stocks and bonds as are the subject of daily sales in the open market. Furthermore, proof of market value is merely one way of proving actual value. And the rule making market value proof of actual value applies only when an article or its equivalent has a market value. Counsel for respondent cite Bullard v. Stone, (Cal.) 8 Pac. 17, in support of their contention that market value of the stock in question must be shown under the section last quoted, which is identical in language with the statute which the California Court had under consideration. The case is not in point. The property involved was wheat, which had a market value, and it plainly came under the measure laid down by the statute. No cases have been, or, in the nature of things, can be, found, holding that the rule relied upon is applicable to property which has no market value.

What, then, is the rule for ascertaining the value of stock which is shown to have no market value ? Counsel for appellant urge that it is ascertained by proving what they call its “book value,” and it is wholly upon certain evidence as to the so-called book value, to which we will now refer, that the contention is based that damages have been proved. No other evidence was offered as to the value of the stock. Plaintiff called the cashier of the bank — one J. E. Larsham — as a witness on his behalf. This witness identified an original written report made by him as cashier, and verified by his oath, and attested by three directors, to the comptroller of the currency pursuant to § 521 x, Rev. St. U. S., which report purported to show in detail the financial condition of .the bank, as provided by said section, as of date December 2, 1899, which was approxim[100]*100ately the date of the contract in question. This document, which is known in the record as “Exhibit 6,” was placed in evidence over the objection that it was incompetent, and not the proper method of proving the value of the stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.W. 111, 10 N.D. 95, 1901 N.D. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-plummer-nd-1901.