175 A.D. 643 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The action is in fraud to recover from the defendant damages suffered by the plaintiff in purchasing certain stock of a corpo
In 1907 the Erkins Company was incorporated with a capi- • tal stock of $75,000. Eorty-five thousand dollars of stock was issued and divided equally between these two defendants. In 1908 the defendants pooled their stock and made an agreement whereby each gave to the other an option upon his stock at $66.66 per share for the purposes of sale, with the understanding that any sale should be of a like amount of stock of both defendants, so that after such sale both should still have an equal amount of stock. The defendant McNaught made no sales of stock. The defendant Clarke, however, made various sales at $115 per share, accounting to McNaught at the rate of $66.66 for one-half of the stock sold. In making sales it was represented that McNaught was in feeble health and wanted to get out of the business for that reason. It is claimed by the plaintiff that this was a mere pretense for the purpose of effecting a sale. These sales were made down until November, 1909, when the pooling agreement was dissolved, and McNaught refused to sell any more of his personal stock. Meantime he and Clarke had absorbed the whole issue of stock, to wit, to the ■ amount of $75,000, either in payment for services or for cash advanced. In December, 1909, Clarke effected a sale to this plaintiff of thirty-five shares of the treasury stock, the capital stock having been increased to $83,000. This sale was claimed to have been induced through misrepresentations fraudulently made by Clarke, for which the defendant McNaught is claimed to be responsible through a general conspiracy to use the corporation for the purpose of fraudulently selling its stock and making a profit therefrom.
Under the general agreement by which the stock of the defendants was to be pooled and sold by either party for their joint account, each defendant became the agent of the other, and responsible for the fraud of the other in selling the same, and the defendant McNaught could not escape liability by any form of contract wherein an option, so called, was given by one
We are of the opinion, however, that the plaintiff has not proven such a. fraudulent scheme. The business of the corporation was making benches, vases, fountains, founts, pedestals and statuary work for garden and house decoration. The proof is that the cost of manufacture of the stock was only about twenty per cent of the selling price. In 1908, which was a bad year, the company sold from $60,000 to $10,000 of merchandise, and made a profit of about $12,000 thereupon. This was repeated in 1909. Two expert accountants who examined the books and business of the corporation on behalf of intending purchasers reported the business of the corporation in excellent condition. It is not claimed that any facts were concealed from these accountants or any misrepresentations made to them. Of course, the balance sheet of a corporation depends largely upon the inventory of merchandise on hand, but any inventory made of this class of stock would necessarily be elastic, and would suffer a large shrinkage upon a forced sale. During 1908 and 1909 and in the spring of 1910, the company expended between $25,000 and $30,000 in fixing up a leasehold property upon Madison avenue. This of itself would absorb the
Plaintiff’s stock was purchased in December, 1909. In January, 1910, it was discovered that more money was necessary, and in June of that year the company went into bankruptcy. This apparently was the result partly of the large amount put into the Madison avenue building and partly of the large amounts paid to the stockholding employees. It does not appear that the moneys put in the Madison avenue building was an unwise investment, as not only was the corporation put in a position to compete with the Tiffany Studios and other competitors, but parts of the building not used by the corporation were thereafter profitably rented to other tenants. The fact, however, that the treasury stock of the corporation was purchased by fraudulent representations of Clarke is far from proof of a fraudulent conspiracy between McNaught and Clarke by which the treasury stock of the corporation was to be unloaded for their benefit. The defendant McNaught, although apparently confused as to details of the stock transactions between him and Clarke as to individual stock, gave evidence which strongly negatived the existence of any preconceived fraud in the sale of this stock. While this evidence is that of an interested party there is no witness who contradicts him, and he is strongly corroborated by the .witness Woods,
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed on law and fact and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event. The finding that the purchase by plaintiff was induced by any fraud of McNaught is reversed as against the evidence.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Page, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.