(after stating the facts as above). Without setting out the evidence in detail, a careful examination thereof establishes the following facts:
The plaintiff and his associates were the owners in 1899 and for several years prior thereto of 10,421 acres of land abutting on a fresh water stream known as Taylor’s bayou in Jefferson county, Tex., a part of which had been cultivated by them in .previous years in raising rice. That early in 1899 B. D. Hurd of Des Moines, Iowa, and S. M. Scott of Kansas City, Mo., obtained an option from the owners to purchase these lands at a price of $13 per acre, but owing to the fact that in 1899 salt water impregnated the waters of Taylor’s bayou, which furnished the water for the cultivation of the rice fields and injured the rice crop, the option was permitted to lapse. Mr. Scott thereupon severed his connection with the deal and notified the defendant, whom he had sought to interest in the enterprise, of his withdrawal, stating, as his reason therefor, that the salt water had impregnated the waters in the bayou, the waters of which were necessary for the successful cultivation of rice on these lands.
Subsequently Mr. Hurd and Mr. A. H. McVey, who also resided in Des Moines, Iowa, obtained a new option at the same price of $13 per acre, but they failed to raise thd money required by the option and permitted it to lapse. Thereupon they secured a new option, whereby they were to pay $9.50 per acre in money and in addition thereto one-third of the profits, provided the cash payment and the profits would net the vendors $13 per acre. This option was finally taken up and a contract entered into between the parties whereby it was agreed that in consideration of $185,000 the owners would sell these lands and convey them by good and satisfactory warranty deed to such person, or persons as the parties who held the option should designate. The consideration was to be paid as follows: Fifteen thousand dollars in cash upon the delivery of the deeds of title to said lands; the remainder of said purchase price was to be divided into eight equal annual installments, and to be evidenced by as many notes as the parties of the first part may desire and designate; each note was to be made payable at the First National Bank of Beaumont, Tex., with 7 per cent, interest per annum payable annually, the notes to contain a clause providing for the payment by the makers thereof of an additional sum of 10 per cent, of the amount of the principal and interest of said notes as attorney’s fee if it became necessary to. institute suit for the collection of said notes or any sum remaining due thereon, but no suit was to be brought unless said notes or a part thereof shall have been in default 30 days, and if the default continues for 6 months, then all notes remaining unpaid shall *944become due at the option of the vendors. As security the vendors were to retain a vendor’s lien, which, under the laws of Texas, was equivalent to a mortgage. The defendant subscribed for $20,000 of the stock of the Jefferson County Rice Company at the solicitation of Hurd and McA^ey, but principally Hurd, upon condition that he, De Klotz, was to be one of the directors of the corporation. The plaintiff had nothing to do with the subscription, never solicited the defendant to make it, and made no representations to him whatever, De Klotz relying entirely upon Hurd, McVe)', and Mason.
In the 3'óar 1900 the defendant visited the lands and learned of the crop failure in 1899 by reason of the salt water, but it was then believed by all that this was caused by extraordinarily high water, and could be prevented by the out^ 'of a comparatively small sum of money, but in 1901, by reason of the construction of the Port Arthur Canal, which intersected Taylor.’s bayou, its waters became impregnated with salt water and made rice planting on these lands practically impossible thereafter.
• In view of the conclusions reached, it is unnecessary to determine the effect of the Iowa statute of limitations, as in our opinion there is no evidence whatever to justify a finding that Broussard either directly or indirectly made any false representations to De Klotz. It is neither charged in the counterclaim nor is there any substantial evidence justifying its submission to the jury that there was an3r conspiracy between the plaintiff and the other parties who had secured the option to perpetrate a fraud on the subscribers to the stock of the corporation which was to be formed by the vendees. All the evidence tends to show that the plaintiff and his associates would not sell the lands unless they would receive $13 per acre, and that the provision of the contract wherein the consideration to be paid was. placed at $185,000 was made at the request of the vendees; that the defendant in the entire transaction relied -on the purchasers of the option, who were his friends and associates in several business transactions.
Had the plaintiff been one of the promoters, or had he in an3r wise aided or assisted the other parties in inducing the defendant to make the subscription either by false representations or concealing from him the fact that they were to obtain.a secret advantage b}rpurchasing the lands at a less price than represented, he would no doubt be liable for the deceit if the action was not barred by limitation, for the law is well settled as stated in the headnote in Dickerman v. Northern Trust Co., 176 U. S. 181, 204, 20 Sup. Ct. 311, 319 (44 L. Ed. 423):
“Promoters of a corporation are 1)01111(1 to the exercise of good faith toward all the stockholders, to disclose all the facts relating to the property, and to select competent persons as directors who will act honestly in the interests of the shareholders, and are precluded froin taking a secret advantage of the other shareholders.”
Mr. Justice Brown, who delivered the opinion of the court in that case, said:
“A promoter is one who ‘brings together the persons who become interested in the enterprise, aids in procuring subscriptions, and sets in motion the *945machinery which leads to the formation of the corporation itself.’ Or, as defined by tlie_ English statute of 7 and 8 Viet. c. 110, § 3, ‘every person acting, by whatever name, in the forming and establishing of a company at any period prior to the company’ becoming fully incorporated. He is treated as standing in a confidential relation to the proposed company, and is bound to the exercise of the utmost good faith. * * * The promoter is the agent of the corporation, and subject to the disabilities of an ordinary agent, ilis acts are scrutinized carefully, and he is precluded from taking a secret advantage of the other stockholders. Accordingly it has been held that if persons start a company, and induce others to subscribe for shares, for the purpose of selling property to the company when organized, they must faithfully disclose all facts relating to the property which would influence those who form the company in deciding upon the judiciousness of the purchase. If the promoters are guilty of any misrepresentation of facts, or suppression of the truth in relation to the character and value of the property, or their personal interest in the proposed sale, the company will be entitled to set aside the transaction or recover compensation for any loss which it has suffered.”
The evidence fails to show that Broussard committed any act which influenced the defendant in making the subscription, nor was he guilty of any fraud. The court below committed no error in peremptorily instructing the jury that the. defendant was not entitled to recover on his counterclaim.
The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.