The plaintiff commenced this action to recover the amount alleged to be due on a promissory note executed by J. S. McAllister to A. W. McAllister, and by A. W. McAllister endorsed to the plaintiff, dated 8 January, 1891, and payable on or before 8 December, 1891, in the sum of $500, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum. The execution of the note and its endorsement as alleged were admitted by the defendants, but they aver in their answer that (342) the plaintiff, through his fraudulent representations and practices, procured its execution, and that no value was received by the debtors in the transaction out of which it grew. The facts as they are averred in the answer, and as to which the alleged fraudulent representations of the plaintiff in procuring the execution of the note were made, are substantially these:
In June, 1891, the defendant A. W. McAllister, as trustee for four persons, including the defendant, J. S. McAllister, contracted with the plaintiff for the purchase from him of three-fourths of a promoter's interest, as it was called, in the Virginia Steel, Iron and Slate Company, a corporation incorporated and organized under the laws of Virginia; that the plaintiff represented to A. W. McAllister that a promoter's interest in the concern consisted of one hundred shares of full paid-up stock of the company of the par value of $100 per share, and also that it secured to the owner thereof 55 town lots on the lands of the company in and near the village of Howardsville, in the State of Virginia, and $5,000 in money to be paid to the owner of the promoter's stock out of the first net profits of the company; and that the defendant J. S. McAllister and the three other beneficiaries, represented by A. W. McAllister as their trustee, were to have under the contract of purchase the *Page 211 three-fourths interest, to wit, 75 shares fully paid up of the plaintiff's stock, three-fourths interest in the 55 town lots, and three-fourths of the $5,000 of the money to be derived out of the first net profits of the company; that for the above consideration the four beneficiaries, or their trustee for them, were to pay to the plaintiff $4,000, $2,000 in cash and $2,000 in their notes; that the $2,000 was paid in cash and the notes executed and delivered, of which the one in suit is one; that the notes were executed by the makers to A. W. McAllister without any (343) consideration from him to them, as well known to the plaintiff when he received them, and that the notes were endorsed and delivered by the trustee to the plaintiff at the time the contract was made. The fraudulent representations which the defendants aver were made to them by the plaintiff are as follows:
"That at the time of making the contract the plaintiff fraudulently represented himself to be the bona fide owner of said promoter's interest of 100 shares of paid-up stock in the company, which he represented fraudulently and falsely to be of the value of $100 per share, and the company to be prosperous and in good condition and perfectly solvent, when he in fact knew said representations were false and untrue, he being at the time a director as well as the treasurer of the company; and that plaintiff also falsely and fraudulently represented said promoter's interest to consist of 100 shares of paid-up stock of the company, that the stock was worth $100 per share and secured to the owner thereof 55 town lots on the land of the company and $5,000 of the first net profits of the company, well knowing the same were not true; by which false and fraudulent representations the defendant and the other three persons above named who relied upon the truth thereof were induced to enter into the contract and to pay the money, to wit, $2,000, and execute said notes, and to endorse and deliver them to the plaintiff."
The defendant J. S. McAllister also set up a counterclaim against the plaintiff for $500, which he had paid at the time of the making of the contract of purchase.
The plaintiff in his reply denied that he agreed to sell the three-fourths of the promoter's interest described in the answer to A. W. McAllister, but alleged that he sold the same to one Watkins, who (344) assigned his interest in the contract of sale to A. W. McAllister, trustee for J. S. McAllister, and three other beneficiaries, on the terms that the four persons should pay to the plaintiff the cash payment of $2,000, and secure the deferred payment of $2,000 by the notes; that he did not know anything of the relation of A. W. McAllister to J. S. McAllister or to the other three beneficiaries in the transaction when the sale was made, but that he believed they composed a syndicate of which A. W. McAllister was the head, formed to make this purchase, and *Page 212 that the notes passed to him for the deferred payments were executed to cover a part of the purchase price. And the plaintiff in his reply further stated that he never made any representations of any sort to A. W. McAllister in reference to the value of the promoter's interest; that he never had any negotiations with him or any of the beneficiaries; that he sold the stock to Watkins and never knew of McAllister and his associates in the transaction until after the sale had become a finality.
Upon the pleadings the important questions raised were, first: Was the contract of sale of the promoter's interest made by the plaintiff to A. W. McAllister as trustee for the defendant J. S. McAllister and the other three beneficiaries, or was it made with Watkins in the manner and under the terms as alleged by the plaintiff? and, second, if the contract of sale was made to A. W. McAllister, trustee, did the plaintiff make representations which induced the defendant to purchase, and were such representations false within the knowledge of the plaintiff?
The evidence was conflicting on the question whether Watkins was the purchaser of the stock or whether A. W. McAllister bought (345) for J. S. McAllister and others; and yet his Honor substantially, in number nine of the defendant's prayers for instructions, which he gave and repeated in his general charge, instructed the jury to find that the plaintiff sold to A. W. McAllister as trustee and agent of J. S. McAllister — one of the main points at issue in the case. There was error in this.
His Honor gave Nos. 1 and 2 of the defendant's prayers for instructions, which are in the following words: "1. That the contract entered into by the promoters and stockholders of the Virginia Steel, Iron and Slate Company, made on 15 December, 1890, is void, and the plaintiff obtained no interest thereunder which he could sell or convey, and that no consideration passed from him to the defendants for the note sued on, and plaintiff can recover nothing in this action. 2. That if the jury find from the evidence that the promoters, on 15 December, 1890, held proxies of a majority of the shares of the company and organized the company, and voted the same in making the contract with the promoters under which the promoters were to receive $200,000 in nonassessable, paid-up stock, $100,000 in cash upon the contingencies admitted upon the trial and detailed in the evidence, then the contract is fraudulent in law and void, and the plaintiff had no interest which he could sell or convey, and no consideration passed from him to the defendants upon the note sued on, and the plaintiff cannot recover." They ought not to have been given.
If the contract between the corporation and the promoters, made at the meeting of the company on 15 December, 1890, at Howardsville, Va., was void in law because the stockholders made the contract instead *Page 213 of the directors, the court should have ruled the contract to be (346) void and not have submitted the question to the jury.
And the same is true of the second of the defendant's prayers for instruction (given). The matters set out there were admitted to be true in the answer, and in the reply they are emphasized as true; and if they, on their face, made the transaction fraudulent in law and void his Honor should have so held as a matter of law and not have submitted the matter to the finding of the jury. But they did not, upon their face, constitute legal fraud. They may have been evidence, as badges of fraud, in an action to set aside the contract of 15 December, 1890, between the stockholders and the promoters for fraud; but it cannot be said that they constitute fraud in themselves, because, so far as we know (though it is highly improbable), the consideration given by the promoters to the stockholders was of such value as made it a bona fide transaction.
The instructions, too, were not pertinent to the pleadings and to the issues. There was no fraud averred by the defendants in the transaction that occurred in the meeting of 15 December, 1890. The defendants charged fraud only in the representations made in the sale of the promoter's interest, and there was no pleading or motion on the part of the defendants intimating even that the contract of 15 December, 1890, was made without authority, and void because the stockholders made it and not the board of directors.
Our opinion on the main question in the case being such as we have expressed, we deem it unnecessary to consider the other matters brought up on the appeal.
There was error, for which there must be a
New trial.
DOUGLAS, J., did not sit, having been of counsel.
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