L. D. Garrett Co. v. Clark

Scott, J.

These are two of a series of actions which have been brought against the several former stockholders of *611the Traders’ Fire Ins. Co. to rescind the contract whereby the plaintiff purchased the stock of said stockholders, the ground for rescission being that the plaintiff was induced to enter into such contracts by false representations as to the financial condition of said company made by a committee of the ^directors of said company acting as agents of the defendant stockholders. The facts upon which the action rests have been repeatedly stated in judicial opinions written in other similar actions. 38 Misc. Rep. 483; 65 App. Div. 366. It is unnecessary to repeat them here, except in so far as it may be necessary to show that the present case presents a different state of facts from that which was presented in the only reported case to which my attention has been called in which the plaintiff failed to prevail. L. D. Garrett Co. v. McComb, 58 App. Div. 419. The objection that the plaintiff’s purchase of the stock was part of an alleged scheme to wind up the Traders’ company is not sustained by the facts, and seem to have been effectually disposed of by the Appellate Division. L. D. Garrett Co. v. Morton, 65 App. Div. 366. It may be that the plaintiff anticipated that the company would have to be wound up, but it is not illegal to discontinue the business of a corporation if it be done in the manner provided by law. Indeed, it might well be that under certain circumstances it would be absolutely dishonest to continue the business. Whatever may have been the plaintiff’s anticipation in the respect indicated there is absolutely nothing to show, or even to suggest, that any illegal discontinuance of the corporate business was ever contemplated. The evidence leaves no room for doubt that the plaintiff was led to purchase the defendants’ stock by the representations of the so-called executive committee as to the financial condition of the company, that it relied upon these representations and that they were false. It matters not that a majority, at least, of the members of the committee who made the representations were themselves deceived, and believed the representations which they made to be true. The potent facts are that the representations were material, were in fact false, and that plaintiff relied upon them. Talmadge v. Sanitary *612Security Co., 31 App. Div. 498-501. The case of this plaintiff against McComb, supra, was decided against the plaintiff upon the ground that the evidence failed to show that any relation of agency existed between the defendant in that action and the executive committee who negotiated the sale and made the representations. The court said at p. 421: There was not a particle of proof to show any relation of principal and agent between the committee who conducted the negotiations with the plaintiff and the defendant. So far as is disclosed by the record the defendant acted for himself in accepting the offer which was made by the plaintiff, and the case is entirely barren of proof that the defendant when he accepted such offer had any knowledge of any prior negotiations with the executive committee or other person inducing the plaintiff to make it.” The proof which was lacking in the McComb case, and the absence of which appears to have been determinative of that action, has been amply supplied in the present. It is shown that each of the defendants was fully apprised, before he sold his stock, that the sale had been negotiated by the executive committee, on behalf of the stockholders. In malting the sale they ratified and adopted the agency assumed, in their behalf, by the committee. It is doubtless true, as claimed by the defendants, that they did not authorize the executive committee to make false representations, did not know what representations were jnade, and had no personal knowledge of the actual condition of the company. This, however, does not justify them in equity or good morals in holding on to the proceeds of a contract which was, in fact, induced by the fraud of their agents. Knowing that the executive committee had assumed in their behalf to negotiate a sale of the stock they embraced the opportunity created by these negotiations. They cannot accept the benefits of the negotiations without assuming the obligations created by them. By reason of the false representations of their agents, and solely by reason of them, the defendants were enabled to sell, for a substantial price, stock which was, in reality, worth less than nothing. The plaintiff, upon discovery of the fraud, promptly repudiated the *613contract, and sought a rescission of the contract. To this it was entitled. There must be judgment against each defendant, as prayed in the complaint, with costs, and an extra allowance of five per cent, in each case.

Judgment against each defendant, with costs, and extra allowance of five per cent, in each case.