The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted before another referee, with costs to appellant'to abide event.
The action was brought to recover damages for the conversion of twenty-six bales of hops, of the value of $1,121.
The hops were originally, the property of the plaintiff. About November 1, 1892, they were sold and delivered to the Greenway Brewing Company, and while in the possession of that company they were levied .upon by the sheriff of Onondaga county by virtue of. an execution issued upon a judgment against the company in favor of the estate of Lucius Gleason, and were sold February 9, 1893, and bid in for the said estate. After the levy, and before the sale, the plaintiff claimed the hops as its property and demanded the same of the sheriff, .who refused to surrender the same. The estate, with knowledge of the plaintiff’s claim, received the hops under the purchase at the sheriff’s sale and appropriated the same to its own use. It paid no cash for the hops, but applied the amount of the purchase price upon its execution. The plaintiff sold the hops to the brewing company upon credit, never received any part of the purchase price thereof, and its claim of title thereto was based ' upon the allegation that the purchase was induced by fraud and deceit practiced upon it by the brewing company, and by reason thereof no title to the hops passed from it to the brewing company Under the sale and delivery thereof. The question litigated in the case was the alleged fraud and deceit. The referee found that there was no fraud or deceit, and that the title did, therefore, pass to the brewing company. This finding was erroneous and should not be sustained. Fraud and deceit were clearly established by the evidence, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover in the case.
The facts with reference to this issue were not in dispute, and as found by the referee or proven in the case were as follows :
The hops in question were part of seventy bales sold and deliv
Estimated value of merchandise on hand.. ........ $100,000 00
Packages....................................... 64,661 56
Bills receivable .............. 5,590 87
Accounts receivable............................. 295,988 42
Teams........................................ 12,693 19
Total assets ........................... $528,934 04 §528,934 04
Liabilities.
.Bills payable....................... $480,260 73
Bond and mortgage................. 6,950 59
487,211 32
Balance.............................. ...... $41,722 72
Greenway told the agency representative that the item of bills payable, $480,260.73, represented Gleason’s claims, for which beheld security in the form Of title to the real estate, and had been reduced to about $380,000 from collecting their accounts receivable, and that he, Green way, was then trying to negotiate a loan on the real estate to pay most, if not all, of Mr. Gleason’s claim, and with-this object in view had had an appraisal made of the value of all the buildings by two competent and conservative men, who were reliable, and their valuation of the buildings was $545,940, and that in addition to the buildings the ground they stood .on, haying a frontage on Water street of 500 feet) was worth at least '$300 a foot, making the total value of the real estate about $700,000, and these statements of Green way with the figures were .put in the report made to plaintiff. The agency also put into their report the following facts learned from other sources than Green-way or the brewing company: “ The business was established many • years ago by John Greenway, father of the above-mentioned Mr. Greenway. The company has always done a large business, but owing to losses by bad debts, &c., have not made any money of late years. At time of the senior Mr. Greenway’s death the company was quite largely indebted for. loans, the amount being about $490,000 and was owing mainly to Mr. Gleason and one or two local banks; Mr. Gleason being secured by mortgage on the company’s property. About eighteen months ago the property was sold on mortgage foreclosure, and bid in by Mr. Gleason, who now holds title to the brewery and other real estate owned by the company.” The agency also put into its report the following facts learned in. part from Gleason and Greenway, and in part from other sources: “ He (Gleason) executed a contract soon after the purchase agreeing to reconvey the brewery property to Mr. Greenway upon' his paying $12,500 on the first day of April, 1891, and $12,500 every three months thereafter until the whole of his debt is paid,, with a pro
The plaintiff received this report from the agency, relied upon it, believed it to be true, and was induced thereby to sell and deliver the hops on credit and without receiving cash down therefor. The statements made by Greenway and embodied in the report were made for the purpose of being disclosed to the subscribers of the agency and of being relied upon in dealing with the brewing company. The statements were grossly false and untrue, and were known to be so by Greenway when he made them. The item of assets was grossly exaggerated. The merchandise on hand, put at $100,000,'really amounted to only about $82,000, and some of that had been transferred and was pledged for loans. The item packages, put at $64,661.56, was really worth only about one-fifth of that amount, or $15,000. The item of accounts receivable, put at $295,988.42, contained one item of $143,815.52, account against the senior John Green way, which was entirely worthless and was put in judgment and assigned to Gleason in 1890, so that the brewing company did not own it at all when this statement was made. The county and city accounts included in this item, amounting to about $73,000, were mostly old and stale. The bottling account included in this item, $72,512.57, was a nominal account, represent
That was a fraud upon the plaintiff whether Greenway believed the property could be paid for or not; whether he intended it should be paid for or not. It was not necessary to find that the purchase was made with a design not to pay for the property in order to render the company liable. While such a finding might be necessary where there were no representations, but merely a condition of insolvency, and a failure to disclose it, nothing of that kind is required when false representations are made and relied upon and damages result therefrom. (Morris v. Talcott, 96 N. Y. 100; Phoenix Iron Co. v. Hopatcong & Musconetcong, 127 id. 206; Hotchkin v. Third National Bank, Id. 329; Harrisburg Pipe Bending Co. v. Welsh, 26 App. Div. 515.)
It is well settled that fraud may be predicated upon false and fraudulent statements made by a person, firm or corporation to a commercial agency for the purpose of obtaining a favorable standing with such agency, to be reported to its subscribers, and a subscriber to such agency, who relies upon such statements and standing reported to it by the agency, and sells goods on credit, which are not paid for, may maintain an action in fraud, though no fraudulent . statements were made directly by the debtor to such subscriber. (Tindle v. Burkett, 171 N. Y. 520, and the cases therein referred to.)
Some question is raised as to whether upon the evidence here it could be said that the plaintiff relied upon the false statements of Greenway reported to it by the agency in making the sale; whether those statements were an inducing cause of giving the ninety days’ credit. Mr. Fingar, manager of plaintiff’s New York office, who was its credit man, made the sale, that is, he received the offer and on behalf of the plaintiff directed its acceptance and the delivery of the hops. Before doing so he applied to the agency for a report upon the brewing company and . secured the report in question. The plaintiff never had any previous business transaction with the brewing company and knew nothing about its condition or standing. Mr. Fingar testified before the referee that he relied absolutely upon that report; that there was a balance by the trial balance of assets over liabilities of $41,000, and there had been paid during the year
It will be remembered that nothing whatever was contained in' the report showing any judgments existed against the brewing company. The liabilities were not stated to include judgments, but were stated to be bills payable and a small bond and mortgage. An effort was made on the trial to show that Green way told the agency’s representative about the judgments, but no such evidence, was secured. Mr. Smith, the agency’s representative, testified nothing was said about a deficiency judgment, but only a foreclosure judgment upon which the real estate was sold. It does not appear that the agency at the time the representations were made to it in 1892 had any knowledge of the judgments as then existing. 'Mr. Smith said he supposed his agency knew of the recovery of the judgments in 1896 from the clerk’s office reports to them, but he was assured by Greenway in 1892 that the only liabilities then existing were bills payable, and a small bond and mortgage, and that the bills payable covered Mi’. Gleason’s claims which were secured by the title to the real estate vested in him. He said he knew judgments had been obtained, but did not know they remained then unsatisfied, and he understood from the talk with Green way that the new arrangement when the real property was sold and title vested in Gleason in 1890 superseded the old arrangements, and the land Was thereafter the security for Gleason and the bank’s claims. It cannot be .said,, therefore, that the agency in 1892, when Green way made the statement in question, knew of the existence of unsatisfied judgments against the brewing company, and it is not, therefore, necessary to consider what legal consequences would result if it had such knowledge; whether its knowledge would be imputable to the plaintiff, and whether upon the evidence of Mr. Fmgar, in that event there would be a failure to show reliance upon the report from the agency sufficient to maintain the action.
We conclude that fraud was established in this case and the find? ing of the referee that there ivas no such fraud was contrary to the evidence, and that plaintiff’s right to recover was beyond question.
All concurred; Hiscock, J., in result only.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event, upon questions of law and of fact.