U. S. Fire Apparatus Co. v. G. W. Baker Machine Co.

95 A. 294, 10 Del. Ch. 421, 1915 Del. Ch. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 30, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 A. 294 (U. S. Fire Apparatus Co. v. G. W. Baker Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. S. Fire Apparatus Co. v. G. W. Baker Machine Co., 95 A. 294, 10 Del. Ch. 421, 1915 Del. Ch. LEXIS 30 (Del. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This being a bill filed by a vendor to enforce specific performance by the vendee of an agreement for the sale of shares of stock of a corporation, the jurisdictional question must first be considered. In this State, in two reported cases, the power and duty of the Chancellor to decree specific performance of agreements concerning property other than real estate was considered. The first one, Satterthwait v. Marshall, 4 Del. Ch. 337, 349, was a bill to compel an assignment of a patent. There Chancellor Bates explicitly asserted the power to grant the relief, the inadequacy of money damages at law being the jurisdictional test, and used these words:

“Whenever, from the nature of the chattel interest contracted for, or from any circumstances a sufficiently certain and adequate redress cannot be afforded by a suit at law, a court of equity will relieve without respect to the question whether the subject-matter of the contract is real or personal estate.”

In the other case, Diamond State Iron Co. v. Todd, 6 Del. Ch. 163, 14 Atl. 27, affirmed without an opinion in 8 Houst. 372, 14 Atl. 27, Chancellor Saulsbury refused to order a vendor to specifically perform an agreement to sell shares of stock of a private manufacturing company, not because the subject-matter was shares of stock, but because the contract was [427]*427uncertain, unfair and inequitable. Indeed, the Chancellor recognized that the remedy was not limited to agreements concerning land, and was applicable where the complainant had a special reason for desiring to acquire the particular property sold, and stated the test to be that “legal damages might be too uncertain and conjectural to constitute an adequate compensation.” He referred to the argument of the vendee, the complainant, that the absence of a market value gave jurisdiction, and without affirming or denying the principle the Chancellor refused to apply it in the case before him, because, as he said, the value of the shares could have been proved in that case.

These decisions indicate that if the inadequacy of legal remedy exist because the money damages to be given in a suit at law cannot be calculated with sufficient certainty, or it be impossible or impracticable to ascertain them, a court of equity will give relief by requiring performance according to the agreement under consideration in this case. It is true that both of these cases were brought to obtain specific property, in the one case the particular patent, and in the other the particular shares of stock; but as stated hereinafter, the remedy would be equally available for the assignor and the vendor in like case.

It is now well established by decisions elsewhere that a court of equity will under some circumstances decree specific performance of contracts for the sale of shares of stock of corporations, and the rule is thus stated in Cook on Corporations, §338:

“If the stock contracted to be sold is easily obtained in the market, and there are no particular reasons why the vendee should have the particular stock contracted for, he is left to his action for damages. But where the value of the stock is not easily ascertainable, or the stock is not to be obtained readily elsewhere, or there is some particular and reasonable cause for the vendee’s requiring the stock contracted to be delivered, a court of equity will decree a specific performance, and compel the vendor to deliver the stock.”

See, also, 2 Pomeroy on Equitable Remedies, §452, and [428]*428note of cases in 12 L. R. A. 776; 50 L. R. A. 501; 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 496, where many cases are cited..

In the present case the defendant, the vendee, would have been entitled to a decree of specific performance against the complainant, the vendor, if there had been a valid contract between them for the sale of the shares of stock in question. Here the buyer purchased a majority of the shares of stock of a corporation solely because that corporation owned a certain claim to a patent and the object of such ownership was admittedly the control of the patent. There was, then, a particular and reasonable cause why the vendee required a delivery of the stock of that company rather than that of any other company,' or even than money damages if they could have been adequately ascertained.

It is urged by the complainant that inasmuch as the vendee could have specifically enforced the contract in this case, the vendor should be given the same right as against the vendee. It is true that this rule is applied respecting contracts for the sale of land. Pomeroy thus stated the.rule:

“Where an equitable remedial right in the vendee is recognized, a corresponding remedial right should be admitted to the vendor.” 2 Pomeroy on Equitable Remedies, §747.

But it is not to be assumed that it will be applied to contracts of sale of property other than land where the relief obtained is only the recovery of money based on the purchase price. There are cases which, hold that as applied to sales other than of real estate, the foregoing rule stated by Pomeroy should not be applied. In Eckstein v. Downing, 64 N. H. 248, 9 Atl. 626, 10 Am. St. Rep. 404, where there was a contract by the complainant to exchange his yacht for a certain number of shares of stock owned by the defendant in a corporation, and the value of each article in the exchange was ascertainable, the court refused specific performance. The value of both articles was proved. The court therefore refused specific performance, saying:

“When payment is to be made in money, mutuality * * * ' is not [429]*429the test for the right to this remedy; and when the exchange on one side differs neither in purpose nor reason from a sale for money, the remedy of specific performance need not be mutual. The mutuality required is that which is necessary for creating a contract enforceable on both sides in some manner, * * * but not necessarily enforceable on both sides by specific performance.”

See, also, Jones v. Newhall, 115 Mass. 244, 15 Am. Rep. 97, and Hissam v. Parish, 41 W. Va. 686, 24 S. E. 600, 56 Am. St. Rep. 892, which hold that equity will not decree specific performance of a written contract of sale of an interest in certain corporations at the instance of the vendor when all that is to be done by the vendee is the payment of money, for which the vendor may maintain an action at law after a tender of performance.

Two cases were cited by the complainant to establish the application of the principle of mutuality: Bumgardner v. Leavitt, 35 W. Va. 194, 13 S. E. 67, 12 L. R. A. 776, and McCullough v. Sutherland, 153 Fed. 418. The former case is inconsistent with the later case in West Virginia, cited above, though not referred to in it, and the federal case does not apply.

Chancellor Saulsbury in Todd v. Diamond State Iron Co., 8 Houst. 372, 387, 14 Atl. 27, 35, in referring to specific performance of contracts relating to property other than real - estate, said:

“And, since the remedy must be mutual, the vendor may also maintain the action in such cases.”

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95 A. 294, 10 Del. Ch. 421, 1915 Del. Ch. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-s-fire-apparatus-co-v-g-w-baker-machine-co-delch-1915.