Robert F. Davis and Mrs. Louisa McCrary Davis, as executors and trustees under the will of J. A. McCrary, brought an action against their daughter and beneficiary under the will, Mrs. Louisa Davis Peacock; J. B. Mc-Crary Company, Inc., J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation,
J. B. McCrary, life interest, reversion 48 shares
J. A. McCrary — 26 shares and
A. P. McCrary — 22 shares
J. A. McCrary 46 shares
A. P. McCrary 44 shares
C. E. Faust 20 shares
Frank A. Wilson 18 shares
Qualifying Shares 4 shares
Total _______________________________________________________________________ 180 shares.”
(b) “Resolved by the stockholders of the J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation the 956 shares here represented being the entire outstanding capital stock except for qualifying shares standing in the name of the officers, J. B. McCrary, J. A. Mc-Crary, A. P. McCrary and C. E. Faust, be distributed in the manner set forth below:
J. B. McCrary, life tenancy, reversion 258 shares
J. A. McCrary and A. P. McCrary J. A. McCrary 248 shares
A. P. McCrary 241 shares
C. E. Faust 114 shares
Frank A. Wilson 95 shares
Qualifying shares now outstanding in the names of J. A. McCrary, A. P. McCrary and C. E. Faust 4 shares
Total Outstanding Stock_____________________________________ 960 shares.”
Following each of these resolutions made by the respective cor
J, A. McCrary, the testator under whose will direction was sought, died on January 8, 1953. Shortly after his death the stock which he owned outright in the said corporations was sold to the respective corporations. This left J. A. McCrary’s estate owning 26 shares of J. B. McCrary Company, Inc., and 129 shares of J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation subject to a life estate in J. B. McCrary. J. B. McCrary died on October 28, 1961. On March 2, 1964, C. E. Faust, as president of J. B. Mc-Crary Engineering Corporation and J. B. McCrary Company, Inc., sent letters to Mrs. Louisa McCrary Davis, as trustee under J. A. McCrary’s will, seeking to exercise the stock purchase resolutions of August 10, 1948, on the “stock of J. A. McCrary.” The plaintiffs, executors and trustees under J. A. McCrary’s will, sought the direction of the court as to whether or not they were required to sell the stock to the respective corporations or their stockholders. The corporate defendants and the defendants Faust and Wilson filed a joint answer. Mrs. Louisa Davis Peacock filed a separate answer and subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion was granted and the order stated in part “that neither J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation nor the stockholders thereof have or hold a valid option to purchase the one hundred twenty-nine (129) shares of the common stock of said company issued to J. B. McCrary for life with reversion or remainder to J. A. McCrary, . . . that neither J. B. McCrary Company, Incorporated nor the stockholders
The appellants, J. B. McCrary Company, Inc., J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation, C. E. Faust and Frank A. Wilson, assign error on this order granting the summary judgment.
The sole issue to be determined is whether or not the two defendant corporations or their stockholders, on March 2, 1964, had the option to purchase, at par value plus &% interest per annum, certain shares of J. B. McCrary Company, Inc., and certain shares of J. B. McCrary Engineering Corporation in which J. A. McCrary held a vested remainder interest at the time of his death.
“Estate is the quantity of interest which an owner has in property. It is applicable equally to realty and personalty. An estate that can be created in the former may be created in the latter, and the rules of construction as to both shall be the same. The provisions of this Code, under this Title, when not restricted to one, shall apply to both.” Code § 85-104. Clearly the resolutions of August 10, 1948, of the said corporations created a life estate in J. B. McCrary in the stock in question with a vested remainder interest in J. A. McCrary in that the remainder was limited to a certain person upon the happening of a necessary event. Code § 85-703. While the resolutions use the word “reversion” to describe the estate of J. A. McCrary, it is apparent that the estate created is a vested remainder; and, further, the rights of a reversioner are the same as those of a vested remainderman. Code § 85-701.
If the remainderman shall die before the time arrives for possessing his estate in remainder, his heirs shall be entitled to a vested remainder. Code § 85-704. See Anderson v. Burney, 147 Ga. 138 (2) (93 SE 93). Thus, upon J. A. McCrary’s death his vested remainder interest in the stocks in question passed to the executors and trustees under his will. “A vested remainder is an actual estate and ... is susceptible of a sale and trans-
The resolutions of both corporations state that “upon the death of a stockholder, the Company (or Corporation) and thereafter the stockholders” shall have the privilege of purchasing the stock of the deceased stockholder. This language related to the stock in which J. A. McCrary held a vested remainder interest and upon his death in 1953 the privilege to purchase said stock recited in the resolutions became exercisable. The death of J. B. McCrary, as life tenant, merely vested the right of possession in the remaindermen and had no effect upon when the corporations or their stockholders could exercise the options to purchase the said stock. Therefore, the attempt by the appellants on March 2, 1964, to exercise the option to purchase under the resolutions of August 10, 1948, is fatally late in that eleven years had elapsed since J. A. McCrary’s death.
The appellants argue that in recognition of an oral agreement subsequent to the death of J. A. McCrary in 1953 by the syndicate, constituted by the stockholders named in the August 10, 1948, resolutions, it was agreed by all parties concerned that the stock in which J. B. McCrary held a life estate would not be subject to said August 10, 1948, resolutions until his death. This argument is without merit. “A contract for the sale of stock in an incorporated company at a price of $50 or more is within the provision of Code § 20-401 (7) (statute of frauds), which requires contracts for the sale of goods, wares, and merchandise, to the amount of $50 or more, to be in writing.” Samford v. Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank, 216 Ga. 215 (1) (115 SE2d 517)
Judgment affirmed.