Smith v. Stowell

125 N.W.2d 795, 256 Iowa 165, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 14, 1964
Docket51176
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 125 N.W.2d 795 (Smith v. Stowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Stowell, 125 N.W.2d 795, 256 Iowa 165, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 729 (iowa 1964).

Opinion

Garfield, C. J.

— This is a controversy over the right to own thirty shares of stock in the First National Bank of Marion, Iowa, issued to defendant Stowell in the summer of 1958 as part of a stock dividend, following a transfer of $150,000 from the bank’s surplus of $450,000 to its capital of $50,000. After the transfer, the surplus was $300,000 and the capital $200,000. Three shares of new stock or multiple thereof were issued to each holder of one share of old stock or multiple thereof. (At the direction of the comptroller of the currency the transfer was first from surplus to undivided profits and then to the capital account. We regard this, however, as unimportant.)

Plaintiff Phil Morris held a written option agreement signed by defendant in January 1956, under which Morris was entitled to repurchase ten shares of the stock at $305 a share at any future date that defendant disposed of it. Five of the ten shares originally belonged to plaintiff Maree E. Smith and the other' five to plaintiff Matt H. Biddick. The ten shares were sold to defendant at $290 a share about the time the option was signed, as part of an arrangement under which defendant came to the Marion bank from one at Fairfield to act as executive vice-president and cashier — chief executive officer' — as well as a director of the Marion bank. Biddick died during pendency of this action and his executrix was substituted as a plaintiff, a circumstance we ignore.

When defendant came to Marion, Morris was assistant cashier there. He was acquainted with defendant and suggested to the board of directors that defendant might be available for the Marion position. For some reason which is unimportant here Mrs. Smith and Biddick sold their stock to Morris to be by him transferred to defendant, taking from Morris an option to repurchase it at $305 a share at any future date that defandcmt disposed of it. Morris in turn tgok the option agreement from *168 defendant, previously referred to, for the benefit' of Mrs. Smith and Biddick. Rights of the parties are the same as if sale of the ten shares had been direct from Mrs. Smith and Biddick to defendant with the option to repurchase running from him to them without the intervention of Morris.

When Morris was in the act of purchasing a majority of the stock in 1961, a move which succeeded, defendant decided he wanted to leave the Marion bank. He did so, according to Morris, about October 1, 1961. Defendant offered to' resell to Morris at $805 a share the ten shares acquired by him when he came to Marion. However, the three plaintiffs, Morris, Mrs. Smith and Biddick, insisted they were entitled under the option agreement signed by defendant to his forty shares (the ten shares first acquired and the thirty acquired as a stock dividend) for $3050.

When defendant, who sold the thirty shares for $9000 to a Waterloo banker in August 1961, refused to comply with their demand plaintiffs brought this action in equity September 8, 1961, to have their right to repurchase the forty shares for $3050 established and enforced. Upon the trial Morris and defendant were the principal witnesses. The court held plaintiffs were entitled to repurchase for $3050 only the ten shares first acquired by defendant and that the option agreement did not include the thirty shares acquired by him as a stock dividend in the summer of 1958. Only plaintiffs Morris and Mrs. Smith have appealed.

It is obvious the terms of the option agreement defendant signed are of vital importance. The documents were prepared by Mr. Smith, husband of Maree. He was a stockholder and director in the bank and its attorney. The first paper was a signed offer by Morris, dated January 9, 1956, to purchase from Mrs. Smith and Biddick, accepted by them, ten shares of the stock (five from each) at $290 a share. It provided, “I give you an option to resell to each of you five shares * * * at $305 a share, to be exercised by each of you at any future date that the said Harold A. Stowell * * # make disposition of the ten shares of stock which you will have assigned by delivery to him, * *

Defendant then signed an option agreement which quotes the above and other language from the paper Morris signed and *169 adds this vital provision: “I will fully protect and indemnify you in the performance of your obligation under said option agreement, by not selling said ten shares of stock assigned to me, without first granting you the option to reacquire the same, at

* * * $305 in order that you may in turn reassign the same to said [Mrs.] Smith and Biddick under your offer and acceptance agreement of January 9th, 1956” (emphasis added).

I. It is apparent the agreement defendant signed expressly obligates him to reassign to Morris at $305 only the ten shares assigned to defendant. It contains no express agreement that defendant would also assign to Morris any stock the former might acquire as a stock dividend during his ownership of the ten shares. The agreement signed by Morris, accepted by Mrs. Smith and Biddick, also grants them an option to reacquire only “the ten shares of stock which you will have assigned by delivery to him” (defendant).

The paper signed by defendant is even more definite. He agrees therein not to sell “said ten shares of stock assigned to me, without first granting you the option to reacquire the same at * * * $305 in order that you may in turn reassign the same to said [Mrs.] Smith and Biddick under your * * * agreement * * *” (emphasis added).

“Said” is a word of reference and means “before mentioned”, “already spoken of”, “aforesaid”; it refers to an appropriate antecedent. The expression “the same” also refers to something previously mentioned. Baird v. Johnston, 230 Iowa 161, 164, 297 N.W. 315, 316. See also Holland v. State of Iowa, 253 Iowa 1006, 1011, 115 N.W.2d 161, 164. All such references in these agreements are plainly to the ten shares.

Neither Morris’ agreement nor defendant’s contains language to indicate any party in interest contemplated more than an option to acquire any stock except the ten shares assigned to defendant. There is no evidence defendant suspected, at the time he paid for the ten shares on January 7, 1956, there might be a stock dividend during his ownership of such shares. (Defendant accepted the Marion bank’s offer for him to go there, *170 “provided the situation is as I understand it”, on December 19, 1955.)

There is evidence, however, that Mr. Smith, the attorney who acted for plaintiffs, had some idea on January 10, 1956, there might be a “stock split” in the foreseeable future. He then wrote defendant a letter which included this: “We hope to inaugurate a plan for the reduction of dividends before any stock split, to see if it will not establish a greater movement of the stock, and at lower prices.” (Plaintiffs insist the effects of a stock split and stock dividend are the same.) If the option agreement defendant signed were intended to include stock issued as a dividend, the agreement should have so provided.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W.2d 795, 256 Iowa 165, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-stowell-iowa-1964.