(orally).
The complainant in this case, Charles C. Keen, files his bill against the defendant, the Maple Shade Land and Improvement Company, and the individual directors of that company, at the time of its dissolution, praying that they may be dealt with as trustees, and may be decreed to pay to him the amount expended by him on account of the consideration of a contract for the sale of a lot of land, which, he says, he entered into with the Maple- Shade company, with interest on the amount of his payments.
The circumstances under which the complainant claims he is entitled to this relief, as stated in his bill, are that the Maple Shade companj, in July, 1896, pretended and represented itself to be the owner of lot Ko. 154 in a plan of lots at Maple Shade,
•The answering defendants deny any fraud whereby the complainant was induced to make any purchase, and say that the company never sold, or agreed to sell, the lot to him; that he never paid any money on account of it, but that they state in their knswer that ■ one Dumaris, without authority from the company, and pretending to act as its agent, undertook to sell the lot as agent, but without its authority or -consent and approval, and delivered to the complainant a contract by filling in the blank form, one of the agreements of the company, which was signed by the president and secretary; that, at the time, of the making of the agreement, the lot was not the property of the company, but it belonged to White, a fact well known to Dumaris. They admit that the company was dissolved as set forth in the bill, and that, at the time of the dissolution, it was possessed of considerable assets. They also set up that the bill
The facts as they have been presented, and as I find them, are that the company was the owner of a plot of ground at Maple Shade, which had been divided into lots, and that, before Dumaris was authorized to malee any sales for the company, some of the lots had been conveyed to the individual owners, one of which was lot 164, which had already been, in fact, conveyed to White.
I am satisfied that there is no element of fraud in the case. Such fraud as is alleged in the bill of complaint necessarily involves an intent to cheat, because the charge is that the company, pretending to own the lot, contracted to sell it to Keen, when it had theretofore sold it'to White. The company, as such, never in any way acted in the sale of this lot to Keen, or in contracting to sell it to Keen, unless it acted through Mr. Dumaris. The proofs show that Dumaris was its agent,’to be sure, but they also show that Dumaris was its agent to sell its lots, and that, at the time he got authority to sell the company’s lots, he was instructed that the company had previously sold some of its lots, and among them this lot No. 154, which it had conveyed to Mr. White. The testimony fails to show that either the company or Mr. Dumaris had any intent to cheat Mr. Keen. The proofs do not lean that way. Mr. Dumaris, who had been authorized by Mr. White also to sell his lots, including No. 154, made a mistake. He supposed, when he arranged with Mr. Keen to sell him lot 154, that it belonged to the company, but it was a mistake .which was peculiar to himself, in which the company did not participate. Payments were afterwards made and forwarded to the company, and several receipts were given which are expressed to acknowledge, payments to' the company on account of lot Ho. 154. But it has been shown that these receipts were given without any knowledge that lot 154 was one of those lots which had theretofore been conveyed to Mr. White. These receipts were the result of a mistake which Mr. Vanderslice and the other officers of the company have fully
The whole case shows that Mr. Dumaris plainly made a mistake in inserting lot 154 in the contract as an undertaking by the company to convey the lot to Keen. In doing this he was outside of the authority given him by the company. The only phase of the question presented which tends to support any claim by the complainant is the contention that the company is called upon to answer for the mistake that Dumaris made, because he claimed to be acting in and about the conduct of this company’s business. Mr. Keen is plainly not at fault. But he has not, in his bill of complaint, put his case upon any allegation of mistaken agreement. The charge in the bill is that the company made the contract as part of a fraudulent contrivance to cheat Mr. Keen, by pretending to own the lot and agreeing to convey 'to him, and taking his money therefor, when the lot, in fact, belonged to somebody else. The weight of the evidence wholly refutes this charge.
It is not a ease for restoration of purchase-money, because of fraudulent contract, for the reason that the company neither authorized the contract nor committed any fraud. Nor did it either receive the purchase-money or insist upon performance of the contract. The case made by the bill fails.
If there be any claim by the complainant against the Maple Shade company it must be one purely for damages for an unauthorized misrepresentation by its agent. No such case is alleged in the bill, and all the elements which might go to support it appear only in the proofs. It would be an injustice to the defendant to consider a case so entirely outside of the allegations of the bill. Such a case is also open to the fatal objection that the remedy must be sought in the.law courts. Krueger v. Armitage, 13 Dick. Ch. Rep. 357, approved by the
The only case •which can be considered is that presented by the bill of complaint. This the complainant has failed to sustain by his proofs. The bill must be dismissed, with costs.