OPINION
SCOTT, Justice.Max Winter, his three daughters, and PJ Acquisition Corporation brought a declaratory judgment action to establish the invalidity of a March 21, 1984, instrument, which purported to subject Winter’s Class B voting stock of Vikings II, Inc., to a right of first refusal. The defendants, Vikings II, Inc., and the other holders of legal or beneficial interests in Vikings II, Inc., Class B voting stock, counterclaimed. They sought specific enforcement of the rights of first refusal purportedly provided in both the March 21, 1984, instrument and in a December, 1977, instrument.
In a bifurcated trial, the district court, sitting without a jury, found that neither the 1984 nor the 1977 instrument created an enforceable right of first refusal and, therefore, concluded that Winter and his daughters could sell their Vikings II stock to PJ Acquisition Corporation without first offering it to either the corporation or the other holders of voting stock. The defendants’ post-trial motions were denied and judgment was entered pursuant to Minn.R. Civ.P. 54.02.
The defendants appealed, and this court granted accelerated review. We affirm.
Minnesota Pro Football, Inc., now Minnesota Vikings Football Club, Inc. (Vikings I), was incorporated and acquired a National Football League (NFL) franchise in 1960. The original shareholders of Vikings I were Max Winter, E.W. Boyer, H.P. Skoglund, *788Northwest Publications Inc., and Oluf Haugsrud.
In January, 1970, Winter, Boyer, and H.P. Skoglund entered into a voting trust agreement. Apparently the parties voted in concert with respect to managing the corporation and electing directors, but the voting trust was never formally implemented.
In September, 1970, Boyer transferred his voting stock to an inter vivos trust of which he was the settlor and a trustee. When Boyer died in 1973, his shares were then registered in the name of the First National Bank, “as Trustee of the E. William Boyer Living Revocable Trust Agreement dated September 30, 1970, as said agreement may thereafter have been amended by E. William Boyer during his lifetime.”1 John Steele, Boyer’s son-in-law, succeeded Boyer as an officer and director of Vikings I and voted the stock held by the Boyer trust.
In 1977, Northwest Publications, Inc., which had increased the percentage of its publicly held shares, had to divest itself of its Vikings I stock because NFL rules barred substantial ownership of a franchise by a publicly held corporation. Winter and H.P. Skoglund borrowed three million dollars to buy Northwest’s Vikings I stock. Following this transaction, Winter and Sko-glund each owned 350 voting shares of Vikings I; 200 voting shares were held in the name of First National Bank of Minneapolis, as the Boyer trustee; and 100 voting shares were held by the Haugsrud trustees.2
Vikings II was then formed, and that corporation acquired the Vikings I stock held by the Haugsrud trustees. On September 29, 1977, Winter, H.P. Skoglund, Vikings II, and First National Bank of Minneapolis, as the Boyer trustee, requested rulings from the Internal Revenue Service with respect to the tax consequences of certain proposed transactions designed to vest in Vikings II ownership of 100 percent of the voting shares of Vikings I and 80 percent of the Vikings I non-voting shares.
In December, 1977, Winter, the Estate of H.P. Skoglund and John Skoglund,3 and First National Bank of Minneapolis, as trustee of the Boyer trusts, entered into an agreement in which the parties agreed to use their best efforts to carry out the transactions described in the revenue ruling request so that Vikings II would become the holder of all of the voting shares of Vikings I and so that Winter, the Boyer trust, and the Skoglund interests would each own one-third of the 600 Vikings II voting shares.
The 1977 agreement also provided a right of first refusal with respect to voting shares of Vikings I and Vikings II exercisable by holders of voting shares. Transfers within a family and transfers occasioned by the death of the holder were exempted. The agreement also provided that the restrictions against sale or transfer embodied in the right of first refusal should be noted as a legend on the certificates representing Class B voting shares, and the parties were to surrender their certificates for that purpose. The legend does not appear on the certificates issued by Vikings I or on those subsequently issued by Vikings II.
*789The agreement also contained this provision:
This Agreement may be executed in counterparts and each counterpart shall be deemed an original hereof. It is further understood and agreed that this agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of those parties who are signatory hereto, whether or not executed by all parties.
The agreement was executed by Max Winter, by Margaret H. Skoglund, as the representative of the H.P. Skoglund Estate, by John Skoglund, and by First National Bank of Minneapolis, as trustee of E. William Boyer Living Revocable Trust Agreement dated September 20 [sic] 1970, as said agreement may thereafter have been amended by E. William Boyer during his lifetime.
A favorable revenue ruling was issued on October 27, 1978, and the holders of the voting shares of Vikings I transferred their shares to Vikings II. Certificates representing Class B common (voting) shares of Vikings II, Inc., were issued to: Max Winter, 200 shares; the Estate of H.P. Sko-glund, 200 shares; First National Bank of Minneapolis as Trustee of the E. William Boyer Marital Trust under Agreement dated September 30, 1979, 106 shares; and First National Bank of Minneapolis, as Trustee of the E. William Boyer Residuary Trust under Agreement dated September 30, 1979, 94 shares. Legends describing the two classes of shares and whether they were voting or non-voting and noting that the shares had not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933 were affixed to these certificates.4 The certificates do not bear notice of any right of first refusal.
Max Winter, John Steele, Jr., John Sko-glund, Sheldon Kaplan, and Michael Lynn III became the directors of Vikings II, Inc. Winter was elected president of Vikings II, Steele was vice president, Skoglund was treasurer, and Sheldon Kaplan was the secretary. In March of 1984, when these officers and directors of Vikings II were in Hawaii for an NFL meeting, Winter declared that he “needed protection,” and Sheldon Kaplan proposed an agreement providing a right of first refusal with respect to the sale of voting shares. During the discussions regarding this agreement, Barbara Boyer Steele pointed out that the parties already had such an agreement. There was testimony that John Skoglund and John Steele also commented on an existing agreement for a right of first refusal. Nevertheless, on March 21, 1984, Winter, Skoglund,5 and the Steeles entered into an agreement which provided for a right of first refusal in Vikings II and, if Vikings II did not exercise it, a right of first refusal in the other holders of voting stock.
Included in the agreement is this provision:
WHEREAS, it is understood that the obligations and commitments of Steeles with respect to the Boyer Trust as expressed herein are subject to the approval and agreement of the trustees of those trusts and that the joinder of Steeles herein is only a covenant on their part to use their best efforts to have said trustees so commit and agree[.]
A day or two later Lynn asked Winter to extend and revise Lynn’s employment contract. Winter refused to discuss the matter and suggested that it could wait until his return to Minnesota. In early April, without notifying Winter, Lynn arranged an unscheduled meeting with the other directors in Miami. Lynn secured the signatures of Skoglund and Steele to Lynn’s prepared minutes of action of the directors recording the following actions: election of officers; increase in Skoglund’s and Steele’s compensation; and revision of Lynn’s employment contract. Skoglund and Steele also called a special directors’ meeting to be held in Dallas on April 10, 1984. Armed with the minutes of action and the notice of the special meeting, Lynn flew to Hawaii to demand Winter’s concur*790rence. After Lynn agreed to a provision assuring Winter’s retention as president without reduction in compensation for as long as he is able to perform the duties of his office, Winter signed the minutes of action. From this time, Winter’s role in the management of the Vikings was diminished.
On October 12, 1985, following a period of what Winter characterizes as profound alienation from the other officers and directors, he and his family entered into an agreement with PJ Acquisition for the sale of all Winter’s Class B voting shares and his daughters’ Class A non-voting shares.6 After announcement of the sale of the Winter shares, the Boyer trustees executed a formal confirmation of the March 21, 1984, agreement.
The issue is: Did either the 1984 or the 1977 instrument subject Winter’s voting shares of Vikings II to a right of first refusal?
The appellants mount a four-pronged attack on the trial court’s determination that the document of March 21, 1984, is invalid, unenforceable, and not binding on Winter. First, they contend that the trial court’s conclusion rests on a discredited common law doctrine — mutuality of obligation. The court’s conclusion, however, was not that the contract was unenforceable because of lack of mutuality of obligation but rather that because of the absence of the mutual assent essential to form a contract, there was no contract for a right of first refusal made on March 21, 1984. Because no contract was formed, there were no mutual obligations.
Second, the appellants attack as clearly erroneous the trial court’s finding that the parties intended that all or none of the voting shares be subject to a right of first refusal. We do not so regard it. The trial court found as fact that the purpose of the March 21, 1984, agreement, “to provide for rights of first refusal in the event any of the holders of voting stock of Vikings II, Inc. desire to sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of all or any of their shares of voting stock of Vikings II, Inc.,” could not be achieved unless all of the holders of voting shares were bound by the agreement. He found that John Steele was not authorized to act as an agent of the Boyer trustees and that the signatures of the Steeles did not bind the trusts — facts expressly recognized in the agreement itself. The trial court also found that the parties to the March 21, 1984, agreement intended that the agreement of the Boyer trustees be a condition precedent to the enforceability of a right of first refusal against any of the parties.
Relying on voting trust agreements of January 13,1970, and March 7, 1980, the appellants also insist, despite the language to the contrary in the March 21, 1984 instrument, that John Steele’s signature binds the Boyer trusts. As we noted earlier, however, these voting trusts were never implemented within the contemplation of Minn.Stat. § 302A.453 (1986). The best that can be said of the voting trust is that the parties honored it as a shareholder voting agreement pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 302A.455 (1986). Steele held the Boyer trustees’ proxy that authorized him to vote the Boyer trusts’ shares, thereby permitting him to carry out the purpose of the voting trust — the continuity of the management of Vikings II. The proxy, however, can hardly be construed to authorize exercise of any of the attributes of ownership other than voting the shares. Whether Steele intended to act as a voting trustee or as the holder of the Boyer proxy, he had no authority to encumber the Boyer trusts’ shares with a right of first refusal.
Indeed, the Steeles did not purport to bind the Boyer trustees but undertook only to use their best efforts to have the trustees agree to the right of first refusal, an undertaking which the trial court found was breached. Moreover, counsel for the Boyer trustees advised the Steeles before they signed the document not only that they were not authorized to bind the Boyer trusts but also that he would recommend to *791the trustees that they riot encumber the shares and limit their marketability by agreeing to a right of first refusal — a recommendation which the Steeles did not disclose to the other signatories.
We recognize the general rule that absent testimony of an intention not to be bound until the instrument is signed by others or an agreement to such effect, a party who signs and delivers an instrument is bound by the obligation he therein assumes. Naylor v. Stene, 96 Minn. 57, 104 N.W. 685 (1905). We also recognize that, as a practical matter, a right of first refusal imposes a significant burden on the marketability of corporate shares, and that when some, but not all, of the shares of a corporation are so burdened, both the marketability and the market value of the unencumbered shares may be enhanced. Furthermore, John Skoglund testified that he intended that the Boyer stock, as well as that held by Winter and Skoglund be subject to the right of first refusal. On the record before us, we cannot say that the trial court’s findings that the stated purpose of the March 21, 1984, agreement could not be achieved unless all of the holders of voting stock were bound and that the parties intended approval of the Boyer trustees to be a condition precedent to the enforceability of the instrument against any party are clearly erroneous.
Appellants also claim that Winter is estopped from contesting the enforceability of the March 1984 agreement. While it is true that the trial court made no express findings with respect to appellants’ estop-pel defenses, it is also true that there simply is no evidence that Winter made any misrepresentations upon which any party relied to his detriment.
Finally, the appellants contend that the “memorial” executed by the Boyer trustees on October 14 and 15, 1985, is a ratification relating back to March 21, 1984. Steele did not purport to act as agent for the Boyer trustees, and inasmuch as the trial court found that the approval of the Boyer trustees was a condition precedent to the formation of a contract, ratification and relation back are inapposite concepts. Winter clearly manifested his withdrawal from the agreement before the condition precedent to the formation of an enforceable contract occurred. Acceptance came too late.
We therefore affirm the trial court’s conclusion that the instrument of March 21, 1984, did not subject the Winter voting shares to a right of first refusal.
There remains, however, the question of whether the 1977 instrument subjected Winter’s stock to a right of first refusal. The appellants contend that the Boyer trustees are bound by the 1977 agreement. In his trust agreement, E.W. Boyer named Thomas Yennum as his co-trustee and appointed First National Bank of Minneapolis and Dorothy Lee Boyer as successor trustees to serve with Vennum upon Boyer’s death. The trust charged the Bank, the corporate trustee, with “custody of all assets” and provided that the trustees could “hold any trust asset in bearer form or in the name of any one trustee.” The trust also contained this provision:
No person or corporation dealing with the trustee * * * shall be required to ascertain whether or not the trustee is acting with another co-trustee of the trust but may deal with the trustee * * * as if the trustee were then the sole trustee hereunder.
Characterizing the foregoing provision as an “apparent authority” clause, the appellants assert that pursuant to the terms of the trust instrument the Bank’s signature bound the trust to the December, 1977, agreement.
Had the Bank been dealing with a stranger, the appellants’ argument would be cogent. The Bank was the record owner of the Vikings I voting shares, and the trust itself relieves one dealing with the Bank of the obligation to inquire about the existence of co-trustees. The other voting shareholders, however, were not unaware of the co-trustees. When, after E.W. Boyer’s death, counsel for the trustees had requested reissuance, of the Vikings I shares in the name of the Bank alone, he sent counsel for Winter and the corporation *792copies of the Bank’s and Mrs. Boyer’s acceptance of appointment as trustees and of Thomas Yennum’s advice that he would continue to exercise his powers as a trustee, and trust counsel expressly advised that although held by the Bank, the shares were subject to ultimate control by the three trustees. Counsel also stated that the trust instrument provided that a majority of the trustees could exercise the powers relative to the trust. Thus, the Bank could not be said to have “apparent authority” to act alone on behalf of the trust when it executed the 1977 agreement. See Truck Crane Service Co. v. Barr-Nelson, Inc., 329 N.W.2d 824, 826 (Minn.1983); Barton-Parker Mfg. Co. v. Wilson, 96 Minn. 334, 104 N.W. 968 (1905).
The trial court found that a majority vote of the trustees was required for entry of the Boyer trusts into the 1977 agreement. Neither Mrs. Boyer nor Vennum had any recollection of the transaction. The trial court found that neither individual trustee had delegated to the Bank in writing sole authority to exercise discretionary powers, that the Bank had not conferred with either of the individual trustees, and that neither individual trustee had ever received a copy of the document. These findings are not clearly erroneous.
The conclusion that the Boyer trusts were not bound by the Bank’s execution of the 1977 instrument does not, however, dispose of the question of whether Winter’s shares were encumbered by that instrument. The trial court found that this instrument had two purposes — to bring about reorganization of the Vikings and to require any holder of voting stock to offer it to the voting shareholders before selling to an outsider. That court further found that “[njeither of these purposes could be achieved unless all of the holders of the Vikings voting stock were bound by the instrument.” Despite a clause which stated: “It is further understood and agreed that this agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of those parties who are signatory hereto, whether or not executed by all parties,” the trial court also found that “it was the mutual intent of the parties that unless all holders of voting stock were bound, none of them would be bound.”7 Because the trial court concluded that the Boyer trusts were not bound by the Bank’s signature, it held that there was a failure of consideration and a lack of mutuality of obligation between the parties, making the instrument unenforceable. We agree that the December, 1977, instrument is unenforceable.
As Skoglund admits in his brief, and the trial court found, the instrument was clearly intended to be executed by all parties. The purposes of the agreement could not be accomplished without the participation of all the voting shareholders. It is for a similar reason that the 1984 instrument is unenforceable.
The December, 1977, instrument was signed in counterparts. The Bank, as a trustee of the Boyer trusts, signed first. Winter and Skoglund did not sign until after Vikings attorney Sheldon Kaplan received the counterpart executed by the Bank. Kaplan thought the Bank’s signature bound the Boyer trusts and told Winter that they were bound. Skoglund also thought the Boyer trusts were bound by *793the Bank’s signature and disputes before this court the trial court’s conclusion that the trusts are not bound. Winter and Sko-glund were, therefore, mutually mistaken.
If there is a mutual mistake concerning a material fact,8 parties to a contract may avoid the contract. See Gartner v. Eikill, 319 N.W.2d 397, 398-99 (Minn.1982); Brecht v. Schramm, 266 N.W.2d 514, 520 (Minn.1978); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 152(1) (1981) (“Where a mistake of both parties at the time a contract was made as to a basic assumption on which the contract was made has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances, the contract is voidable by the adversely affected party unless he bears the risk of the mistake * * *.’’)
Here, the trial court found that the purposes of this 1977 instrument could not be accomplished unless all voting shareholders were bound. Winter and Skoglund believed that the Boyer trusts were bound and, therefore, that when they signed all parties would be bound. This was a basic assumption on which the contract was made and its falsity would materially change the bargain. If the Boyer trusts were not bound they could sell to an outsider or to either Skoglund or Winter, thereby making the Boyer stock more valuable and the Skoglund and Winter stock less valuable.
A contract may be avoided on the grounds of mutual mistake if the party seeking to avoid the contract did not assume the risk of the mistake. See Gartner, 319 N.W.2d at 399; Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 152 (1981). Because both Skoglund and Winter assented to the contract on the assumption that the Boyer trusts were already bound and that there was no risk that the trusts were not bound, neither Skoglund nor Winter assumed the risk that the Bank’s signature would not bind the trusts. Cf. Gartner, 319 N.W.2d at 399; 3 A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 605 at 641 (rev. ed. 1960). See generally, Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 154 (1981) (describing when a party bears the risk of a mistake).
Skoglund and Winter were mutually mistaken about a basic assumption that had a material effect on the agreed-upon exchange and neither assumed the risk of this mistake. The contract is, therefore, voidable. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 152 (1981).
We therefore affirm the trial court and hold that Winter’s shares are not subject to a right of first refusal under either the 1984 or the 1977 instrument.
Affirmed.
. E. William Boyer died on February 19, 1973. The E. William Boyer Living Revocable Trust Agreement of September 30, 1970, as amended, named E. William Boyer and Thomas Vennum as trustees. The trust instrument also provided that, upon Boyer’s death, First National Bank of Minneapolis and Dorothy Lee Boyer should serve as trustees with Vennum. Mrs. Boyer accepted the appointment as trustee on February 27, 1973, and the First National Bank’s acceptance was dated February 28, 1973. At the direction of counsel for the trustees, a certificate representing 200 Class B voting shares issued on March 6, 1973, named only First National Bank, as trustee, as owner.
. Margaret Haugsrud and Northern City National Bank of Duluth were trustees under the last will and testament of Oluf Haugsrud, deceased.
. H.P. Skoglund died on November 5, 1977, prior to issuance of the requested revenue ruling. His widow, Margaret H. Skoglund, was named executrix of his will, in which his son, John Skoglund, was designated the specific legatee of H.P. Skoglund’s Class B voting shares of Vikings I. The Estate of H.P. Skoglund and John Skoglund, frequently referred to as the Skoglund interests, are consistently treated in this and other agreements as a single party.
. In 1982 a legend that transfer is invalid without the approval of the Minneapolis City Council was added.
. Margaret Skoglund, personal representative of the Estate of H.P. Skoglund, had assigned the 200 voting shares registered in the name of the estate to John C. Skoglund on July 8, 1983.
. Although the Class A non-voting shares are registered in Max Winter’s name, each of Winter’s three daughters is the beneficial owner of 200 shares.
. Although this clause is some evidence of intent, the trial court examined all the evidence regarding the December, 1977, instrument and found that the intent of the parties was that no one should be bound unless all were. This is not construing a contract, but is instead determining whether an enforceable contract exists. Parol evidence is admissible for this purpose. Hamilton v. Boyce, 234 Minn. 290, 292, 48 N.W.2d 172, 173-74 (1951) (“In determining whether parol evidence is admissible, a distinction is drawn between evidence tending to show that no contract has ever been made and evidence to contradict, vary, or add to the terms of a written contract.”) The trial court heard all the evidence and saw all the witnesses. It concluded that Winter and Skoglund did not intend to be bound unless the Boyer trusts were also bound. We do not disturb this conclusion. See Minn.R.Civ.P. 52.01 ("Findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses."). This is not a case concerning only the interpretation of documentary evidence, but one in which there is significant oral evidence regarding intent. The clearly erroneous standard, therefore, applies. See Toombs v. Daniels, 361 N.W.2d 801, 805 (Minn.1985).
. That the mistake may be one of law rather than of fact is not significant. See Gartner v. Eikill, 319 N.W.2d 397, 399-400 (Minn.1982); see also Peterson v. First National Bank, 162 Minn. 369, 375, 203 N.W. 53, 55 (1925) ("The idea that equity has no relief from mistakes of law had its origin in the almost humorous and wholly supposititious presumption that all know the law — a proposition contrary to both law and sense.”).