Pennsylvania Re-treading Tire Co. v. Goldberg

137 N.E. 81, 305 Ill. 54
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1922
DocketNo. 14663
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 N.E. 81 (Pennsylvania Re-treading Tire Co. v. Goldberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Re-treading Tire Co. v. Goldberg, 137 N.E. 81, 305 Ill. 54 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, the Pennsylvania Re-treading Tire Company, sued defendant, Sol H. Goldberg, in the municipal court of Chicago, to recover money claimed to be due plaintiff from defendant. There was judgment in that court for plaintiff for one cent, and it appealed to the Appellate Court. That court reversed the judgment of the municipal court and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, against defendant, for $56,132.09. On petition of defendant this court granted a writ of certiorari, and the cause is here for review.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The cause of action arose out of a transaction between the parties evidenced by an agreement in writing between them, May 12, 1919. The agreement recites the Whittier Company had on March 21, 1919, assigned and transferred to plaintiff the exclusive right to manufacture and sell the invention products and process covered by application for United States letters patent, serial No. 265839, filed December 9, 1918. In consideration of mutual covenants it was agreed that plaintiff assign and transfer to defendant all its rights obtained by the assignment of the Whittier Company. Defendant agreed to pay plaintiff $30,000 in cash, which was duly paid, and “third, the party of the first part [defendant] further agrees that within ninety (90) days after payment of said thirty thousand ($30,000) dollars he will organize a corporation and deliver to the party of the second part as much of the capital stock of said corporation as will amount, at the market price at date of delivery, to the sum of one hundred twenty thousand ($120,000) dollars; fourth, the party of the first part shall, however, have the right, at any time prior to delivery of the stock, to pay to the party of the second part the sum of fifty thousand ($50,000) dollars in lieu of delivery of said stock.” Defendant never organized the corporation or paid the $50,000.

The decision of the case depends on the construction of the agreement. The cause was tried in the municipal court without a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence plaintiff moved the court to find it was entitled to recover $120,000, with interest from August 10, 1919, or if the court refused to so hold, that it hold plaintiff was entitled to recover $50,000, with interest. Defendant asked the court to hold there could be no recovery of any sum because the agreement was uncertain, indefinite and incomplete, or in the event the court denied the motion to find for defendant, that it hold plaintiff could not recover more than nominal damages. The court denied plaintiff’s request and held the second proposition of defendant, — that the plaintiff was only entitled to recover nominal damages. Judgment was therefore rendered for plaintiff for one cent.

Defendant’s argument is based on a construction he gives the contract which we cannot agree to. He says in his brief that his “fundamental contention is that the contract is wholly lacking and insufficient in certain necessary terms and elements and is therefore unenforcible.” In support of that statement the argument is that clause 3 of the contract is simply and solely an agreement to deliver stock; that it does not acknowledge an indebtedness by defendant or obligation to pay $120,000, and the failure to deliver the stock did not convert the undertaking in clause 3 into an obligation to pay the sum of money named; that the sum of $120,000 named was not used for any such purpose but merely as one of the elements to measure the amount or number of shares of stock defendant was to deliver. On that basis it is insisted the only recovery authorized is damage for non-delivery. The corporation never having been organized, no stock was ever issued and there is no basis for assessing the damage. Defendant eliminates clause 4 from any consideration in the construction of the contract by saying that clause was solely for the benefit of defendant by giving him the privilege of paying $50,000 in lieu of delivering the stock, but did not in any manner obligate him to pay $50,000 if he failed to deliver the stock. Defendant construes the agreement by the same rules applicable to the construction of an executory contract for the purchase of stock or other commodity where the consideration is not to be paid until delivery. There is no dispute that the consideration for the agreement of defendant was the assignment to him by plaintiff of the letters patent. We are unable to see how the contract, if it had no clause 4 in it, could be reasonably construed otherwise than as the acknowledgment by defendant of an indebtedness of $120,000, which he was given the privilege of paying in stock of the corporation he agreed to organize, at its market price at the time it was to be paid. By the plain terms of the contract defendant agreed that in consideration of plaintiff assigning to him all its right, title and interest in the patent which it had obtained by the assignment of the owner, the Whittier Company, he would pay plaintiff $30,000 in cash and within ninety days after making the cash payment he would pay plaintiff the further sum of $120,000 in stock of a corporation he agreed to organize, by delivering to plaintiff such an amount of stock as would amount, at the market price at the date of delivery, to the sum of $120,000. If the sum mentioned was not the acknowledgment of an indebtedness in that amount we do not see why it was specifically mentioned and agreed to be paid in property at its market price on the date it was agreed to be paid. It was not an agreement to sell stock to be paid for by the purchaser at its market price on the date of delivery. The stock had already been paid for by the assignment of the patent. The contract was executed when the assignment was made by plaintiff and accepted by defendant. Nothing remained to be done. except to pay the balance of the consideration. We see no difference in principle between this contract, construed without reference to clause 4, and the obligation of a debtor to pay a sum named by the delivery to the creditor, on a date specified, of grain, live stock or other commodity at the market price on the date of payment. Under such a contract the debtor is not bound to pay in the commodity if he chooses to pay the sum named in money, but the creditor is obliged to accept payment in money if the^debtor does not choose to avail himself of the privilege of paying in property. Failure to pay in the commodity specified converts the obligation into one for the payment of money.

Borah v. Curry, 12 Ill. 66, was a suit on a note. By the terms of the note the maker agreed to pay the payee $40 on or before a date named, “which may be discharged in good, sound corn at twenty cents per bushel.” Both parties resided in the same county. The maker tendered the corn at his residence, but the payee insisted the corn was to be delivered at his residence and refused to accept it at the debtor’s residence. Suit was brought on the note and the lower court gave judgment for defendant, which was reversed by this court. The court said the instrument was a note for the payment of $40, with a privilege to the maker to pay it in corn at a certain price, and the corn was required to be delivered to the payee at his residence. The court said the payment in corn was a privilege of the maker of the note, of which he was permitted to avail himself if he desired; that his creditor had no option but was obliged to accept the corn at the price agreed upon if tendered at his residence, even if its market price was then only ten cents per bushel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.E. 81, 305 Ill. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-re-treading-tire-co-v-goldberg-ill-1922.