Wescott v. Mitchell

50 A. 21, 95 Me. 377, 1901 Me. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 25, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 A. 21 (Wescott v. Mitchell) 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
Wescott v. Mitchell, 50 A. 21, 95 Me. 377, 1901 Me. LEXIS 78 (Me. 1901).

Opinion

Savage, J.

Action for breach of contract to purchase and pay for the rights and interest of the plaintiff in five hundred and twenty-two shares of the capital stock of the St. Croix & Penobscot Railroad Company.

The plaintiff and defendant had the contract for building the Washington County Railroad, and for reasons satisfactory to themselves, they deemed it to be for their interest to secure a controlling interest in the capital stock of the St. Croix & Penobscot Railroad Company. Accordingly, on August 17, 1894, they made a contract with one C. A. Boardman, Trustee, for the purchase of five hundred and twenty-two shares of the stock of that company, at $23 per share, and paid for the same. The sale by Boardman was on condition that the purchasers should construct an extension of the St. Croix & Penobscot Railroad from its then terminus to the Maine Central Railroad, the extension to be commenced before July 1, 1895, and completed before December 31, 1896; and it was provided that if the construction of the extension should not be commenced before July 1, 1895, the agreement for the sale of stock should be null and void, and the stock, if [379]*379demanded within four months after July 1, should be re-transferred to Boardman, on his paying the purchase price and interest. The stock itself was transferred to a trustee to hold for the benefit of the plaintiff and defendant. The extension not having been commenced within the time limited, Boardman elected to cancel the contract and tendered back the money due under it. Whereupon a new contract was entered into between Boardman and the plaintiff Wescott, September 21, 1895, by which Boardman agreed that the stock should be assigned and delivered to Wescott, and Wescott agreed to pay tbe purchase price of $23 per share, and make certain other payments to Boardman. It was agreed that Wescott should hold the stock for the joint account of Boardman and himself, and that no sale of the stock should be made within three years, except by mutual agreement. The profits arising from the holding or sale of the stock were to be divided equally between the plaintiff and Boardman. Afterwards, on October 25, 1895, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written agreement between themselves concerning the use of this stock, and in that agreement the later Boardman contract was referred to and some of its particulars specified. In this agreement it was recited that the defendant had paid one-half of the price of the stock; that the Boardman contract, though made in the name of the plaintiff, was and stood for the joint benefit of the plaintiff and defendant; that the defendant had an equal interest with the plaintiff in the stock and all rights thereunder; that the defendant was entitled to an equal share with the plaintiff in all profits derived from the stock, or from the Boardman contract; and that the defendant, on the date of the Boardman contract, September 21, 1895, had ordered the trustee to transfer his half of the stock to the plaintiff, who paid no consideration therefor. These recitals establish the fact that the defendant then owned one-half interest in the stock, but subject to the Boardman contract.

On March 2, 1896, the plaintiff withdrew from the contract for building the Washington County Railroad, and assigned his interests under the contract to the defendant, and in the agreement of settlement between themselves, of that date, is found the following: [380]*380“And said Wescott agrees to hold said St. Croix & Penobscot R. R. Co. stock as it now stands in accordance with the provisions of the agreement between himself and C. A. Boardman, Trustee, dated Sept. 21,1895, and the agreement between said Mitchell and himself dated Oct. 28,1895, and not to make any re-pledge of said stock for any purpose at any time during the time limited in said Boardman’s agreement; that he will transfer to said Mitchell at said Mitchell’s option, with the consent of said Boardman, Trustee, all his rights in and to and all his interests under said agreement dated Sept. 21, 1895, upon said Mitchell paying to him all sums that he may have advanced on account thereof, with interest thereon, and assuming all his obligations thereunder and guaranteeing him against all loss, cost, damage or expense on account thereof.”

Still later the plaintiff and defendant made a further agreement concerning this stock, which we incorporate herein in full, as follows :

“ Memorandum of a supplementary agreement between George P. Wescott of Portland, Me. and James Mitchell of Portland, Me. made this fourth day of December, 1897, supplementary to and explanatory of an agreement entered into between the same parties dated the second day of March, 1896, Witnesseth, that in order to make said contract of March 2nd, 1896, clearly conform to the original understanding of the parties thereto, the said James Mitchell hereby agrees to and with the said George P. Wescott to purchase and pay for the baid Wescott’s interest in the St. Croix & Penobscot Railroad stock therein referred to, and pay said Wescott therefor the sum of seven thousand six hundred and fifty-seven dollars with interest thereon from September twenty-first, 1895, on or before September 21st, 1898, and upon such purchase and payment while said Mitchell is not to have an actual transfer of said stock except by the consent of said Boardman during the time limited as subject to said Boardman’s consent, he is upon said purchase and payment to succeed to and have all of said Wescott’s rights in said stock subject to said agreement between said Westcott and Board-man dated September twenty-first, 1895.” It is for a breach of [381]*381this latter contract, on the part of the defendant, that this action is brought.

The defense is twofold. First, that by the terms of the contract the time of its performance is made essential, and that the plaintiff on his part failed and refused to perform within the time limited, namely, September 21,1898, and that, therefore, the plaintiff is not now in position to compel performance on the part of the defendant, or to recover damages for non-performance; secondly, that there was no consideration for defendant’s promise.

Without assenting to or discussing the correctness, as a matter of law, of the first position taken by the defendant, we need only say that we think the evidence is plenary that for many days, even weeks, after September 21, 1898, the defendant and his attorneys were treating the contract of December 4, 1897, as still subsisting. Although the correspondence was voluminous, it gives no hint of any purpose on the part of the defendant to claim that the contract was at an end. We think this defense, if it otherwise had any. merit, must be regarded as waived.

But the second and real defense presents a serious difficulty. It is undoubtedly true that the contract of March 2, 1896, so far as relates to the purchase of the plaintiff’s stock was unilateral. It gave to the defendant an option on the stock, without any expressed limit of time for the exercise of the option, but he was under no obligation whatever to buy. On the other hand, the plaintiff expressly bound himself to transfer his interest in the stock to the defendant, at the defendant’s option, with the consent of Boardman, and further agreed not to re-pledge the stock for any purpose at any time during the time limited in the Boardman agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 21, 95 Me. 377, 1901 Me. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wescott-v-mitchell-me-1901.