Tewksbury v. Noyes

23 A.2d 204, 138 Me. 127, 1941 Me. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 2, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 204 (Tewksbury v. Noyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tewksbury v. Noyes, 23 A.2d 204, 138 Me. 127, 1941 Me. LEXIS 43 (Me. 1941).

Opinion

Thaxter, J.

This bill in equity for specific performance of an alleged contract was heard by a single justice who entered a decree sustaining the bill and granting the relief prayed for. The defendant filed an appeal which is now before us.

The substance of the bill is that the defendant acting through his son, G. Howard Noyes as agent, entered into an oral contract with the plaintiff in October, 1927, under the terms of which the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiff fifty per cent of the capital stock of the Stonington Opera Company, then represented by forty shares, for a price of $4,000.00; that payments were to be made in installments “over such a period of time as the plaintiff might require to pay said price in full,” and interest was to be paid at six per cent; that April 1, 1928, one-half the dividends on the stock were paid to the plaintiff, in part by a check and in part by a credit, on account of the purchase price; that on October 9, 1928, the plaintiff paid to the defendant, through his agent, G. H. Noyes, $900.00, for which he received a receipt, the notation on which read “to date on a/c purchase half interest in Stonington Opera Company. Bal. due $3100.00”; that on January 18,1929, the plaintiff paid $100.00 on account of interest, receiving a receipt from G. H. Noyes as agent for the defendant, the notation on which read “on a/c Opera Co. interests, making $1000.00 pd. on $4000.00 half interest. Interest paid to date”; that on February 10,1932, there was a further payment of $540.00 for which a receipt was given by the agent with the notation, “in full for [130]*130interest on balance due for one-half interest up to Jany. 1, 1932. a/c now stands with $3000.00 due on principal.”; that on June 4, 1935, there was a further payment by check of $900.00, the notation on which reads, “For interest and payment on principal on a/c purchase of half interest in stock of Stonington Opera Company,” which check was endorsed “B. L. Noyes by G. H. Noyes.” The bill then goes on to allege that the stock of the Stonington Opera Company was closely held and not listed and that the plaintiff has asked for the delivery of the stock in accordance with the agreement, on payment of the balance due, but that the defendant has refused to deliver the same.

The answer contains a plea setting up as a defense, firstly, laches, and secondly, the statute of frauds, the laches being based on the fact that the son, G. Howard Noyes, died in 1939, and due to that and to the delay by the plaintiff in bringing his bill, the defendant has been placed at a disadvantage in presenting his case. The answer to the merits denies the allegations of the bill except that the defendant refused to transfer the stock, such refusal being justified on the ground that he never made the agreement with the plaintiff as alleged and that he never authorized any person or persons to make it.

The sitting justice found that the allegations of the bill were true. He specifically called attention to the payment of one-half of the dividends to the plaintiff and to the payments which were made to the defendant on account of the purchase price; and it is apparent that, in the light of the documentary proof and the defendant’s own testimony, he took very little stock in the claim of the defendant that he knew nothing about the agreement until after his son had died. It appeared that certain additional stock had been issued since the original agreement had been made, and the decree, which overruled the plea, ordered the defendant, on the payment of the balance due, which was found to be $3,611.96, to turn over to the plaintiff forty-eight and one-half shares, being one-half the total amount of stock found to be issued and outstanding.

[131]*131On the issue raised by the denial of the defendant of the allegations of the bill, the question before the sitting justice was one of fact, and it is well settled that on such an issue his finding will not be reversed unless the party who appeals shows that it is manifestly wrong. Androscoggin County Savings Bank v. Tracy, 115 Me., 433, 99 A., 257; Tebbetts v. Tebbetts, 124 Me., 262, 127 A., 720; Meader v. Cummings, 131 Me., 445, 163 A., 792.

The plaintiff testified that from 1923 to 1927 he was in the business of exhibiting moving pictures in Stonington and that during the same period the Stonington Opera Company, of which the defendant was a stockholder, was displaying pictures in competition with the plaintiff. He testifies that in September, 1927, he entered into an oral agreement with George H. Noyes, who was acting as agent for his father. The essential terms of the agreement are stated by the plaintiff as follows:

“A. We agreed, orally, that I should have fifty per cent of the stock of the Stonington Opera Company and that he and I should manage the affairs of the company; that I should close up my theater that I was operating personally and they would allow me four hundred dollars for closing that theater, to offset some liabilities which I had in the building, and that we start operating as partners in the corporation, starting October 1st, 1927.”

Pursuant to this arrangement the plaintiff, according to his testimony, closed his own theater, was paid $400.00 in accordance with the agreement, and October 1,1927, became general manager of the theater run by the Stonington Opera Company. George II. Noyes had charge of the mechanical operation and the finances, and both he and the plaintiff were paid $50.00 per month as salary, which was cut during the years when business was poor. The plaintiff says that B. Lake Noyes took part in at least some of the conferences when theater problems were discussed. G. Howard Noyes died before the filing [132]*132of the present bill and the defendant complains that he is at a great disadvantage in presenting his defense because his son is not here to testify as to his dealings with the plaintiff. There is, however, no vagueness in the plaintiff’s testimony and there is substantial corroboration of it in the exhibits which have been offered in evidence. These show that the plaintiff over a period of years received one-half of the dividends declared by the corporation. One is a statement showing the application of one-half of the dividends of $300.00 declared for the first quarter of 1928. This shows a total dividend of $300.00 and the “proportion to L. G. Tewksbury $150.00,” a deduction of $108.00 for interest on $3,600.00 paid the defendant, and a check to Tewksbury of $42.00 to settle the balance. Another exhibit is a receipt to the plaintiff dated October 9, 1928, showing $900.00 “to date on a/c purchase half interest in stock of Stonington Opera Co. Bal. due $3100.00.” This receipt is signed “G. Howard Noyes.” January 18, 1929, there is another receipt for $100.00 signed “B. L. Noyes, M. D. G. H. Noyes.” This receipt bears the legend, “on a/c Opera Co. interests, making $1000.00 pd. on $4000.00 half interest. Interest pd. to date.” February 10, 1932, there is another receipt for $540.00 for interest “on balance due for % interest up to Jany. 1,1932, a/c now stands with 3000.00 due on principal.” This is signed “B.L. Noyes, M.D. G.H. Noyes.” June 4,1935, the plaintiff drew a check for $900.00 to the order of the defendant bearing the notation that it was “For interest and payment on principal on a/c purchase of half interest in stock of Stoning-ton Opera Co.” This was endorsed “B. L. Noyes by G. H. Noyes” and deposited .to the defendant’s personal account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 204, 138 Me. 127, 1941 Me. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tewksbury-v-noyes-me-1941.