89 Va. 455 | Va. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
To this bill the defendants demurred, and the demurrer was
The circumstances and all the details of the fraud and false and fraudulent misrepresentations are set forth with great minuteness and distinctness in the bill—the false statements as to the locality of the property, and its eligibility, several times multiplying the true amount of the value and cost of the property, and false statements as to the amount of capital put in by the promoters, together with a false statement that there were no preferences in favor of the promoters—and making out a case of fraud and deceit so gross that the counsel for the appellees, in the argument in this court, admitted that, if they were true, the appellees should be arraigned in a criminal court upon them. It is not deemed necessary, however, in considering the single question involved here, “whether the plaintiffs can bring this suit jointly,” to recite the charges of fraud herein. We are to consider the single question decided by the circuit court upon the demurrer for misjoinder of plaintiffs, which is, these charges, distinctly stated, being true, so far as were pleaded, then whether the plaintiffs can jointly maintain their suit.
The jurisdiction of a court of equity to rescind contracts fraudulently procured is undisputed. The appellants insist that one object to be attained by proceedings in chancery is to prevent a multiplicity of suits, and hence several persons who have a common interest, arising out of the same transaction, although their interest, strictly speaking, is not joint, may unite in one suit, and may even be compelled to do so by the defendant (citing Bart. Ch. Pr., p. 253); that it is a favorite object of equity to prevent a multiplicity of suits (Sand, Ed. 13); and that there is an exception allowmd,
On the other hand, the appellees say that the demurrer was properly sustained to the bill by the circuit court, on the ground that each one of the four plaintiifs had a separate and distinct claim against the defendants, and hence could not unite in one bill, and, such being the case, they could not, a, fortiori, maintain a creditors’ bill; and that the suit could not be properly defended by the defendants without filing a separate answer in each case', which would require probably 200 answers; and that, the doctrine of the equitable jurisdiction of courts of' equity to prevent a multiplicity of suits has no application to such a case as this, and that in this case the court is obliged to go back to the execution by each individual of his distinct and separate contract with the company, investigate the cir
In considering the single question in dispute as to this appeal, stated above, we will observe that is a general rule of law that if a person is induced tb enter into a contract by false representations, fraudulently made by the other contracting party or his agent, the contract is voidable at the option of the innocent party. This rule applies with full force, both to contracts of membership and to contracts to purchase, or to take shares in a corporation at a future time. It may be stated, as a general rule, that, if a subscription for shares was obtained by fraudulent representations, it may be annulled by the subscriber at any time before other equities have intervened. Lord Romilly said, (Central Railway Co. v. Kirsch, L. R. 2 H. L. 89,) in considering the right of a person to be relieved of shares which he had taken upon the faith of a fraudulent prospectus issued by the company : “ Contracts of this description, between an individual and a company, so far as misrepresentation or suppression of the truth is concerned, are to be treated like contracts between any two individuals. If one man makes a false statement, which misleads another, the way in which that is to be treated affords the example for the way in which a contract is to be treated when a company makes a false statement which misleads an individual.” 1 Mor., Priv. Corp., sec. 95. A promoter is a person who brings about the incorporation and organization of a corporation. He brings together the persons who become interested in the enterprise, aids in procuring subscriptions, and sets in motion the machinery which leads to the formation itself. Every person, acting by whatever name in the forming and estab
In the case of Brinkerhoff v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 151, Chancellor Kent said, upon this question of the misjoinder of plaintiffs : “ There is no sound reason for requiring the judgment creditors to separate in their suits, when they have one common object in view, which, in fact, governs the whole case. There is no particular matter in litigation peculiar to each plaintiff; and, if they be required to sue separately, it may be pertinently asked, oui bono f Their rights are already established, and the subject in dispute may be-said to be joint, as between the plaintiffs on the one hand and the defendants on the other, charged with a combination to delay, hinder, and defraud their creditors. If each judgment creditor was to be obliged to file his separate bill, it would be bringing the same question of fraud into repeated discussion, which would exhaust the fund, and be productive of all the mischief and
Mr. Justice Story, in his work on Equity Pleading, (section 279,) speaking of the objection to a bill for multifariousness upon the misjoinder of plaintiffs, says that the principle applies to an improper joinder of plaintiffs, who claim no common interests, but assert distinct and several claims against one and the same defendant. If several distinct holders of scrip or shares in a loan shoxild sue on behalf of themselves
Another exception to the general doctrine respecting multifariousness and misjoinder, which has already been alluded to, is when the parties (either the plaintiffs or defendants) have one common interest touching the matter of the bill, although they claim under distinct titles and have independent interests. Mr. Pomeroy, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, has examined this subject with great ability, and maintains the jurisdiction on behalf of persons having a common interest in the subject of the suit, and in cases where there is a community of interest in the question at issue, and perhaps in the kind of relief sought, only. Pom. Eq. Jur., § 269. If the claims are distinct, and grow out of different transactions, it has been denied that the plaintiffs may unite—join as plaintiffs—against a common defendant because their claims are similar, as we have seen, as in Jones v. Garcia del Rio, supra, where each had a demand at law, and each a several demand in equity. Where the fraudulent acts complained of are different and unconnected, the joinder is not allowed, because they are distinct and separate, although similar, as where, agents procure subscriptions by fraudulent representations at different times and under varying circumstances, although similar in their general scope, because the defense is different and the acts are different and distinct, and the proofs are necessarily different, each dependent upon its own circumstances. But in a case like the one made by this bill, where the parties allege in the bill that the fraudulent acts are exactly the same, and perpetrated by the same means, and the injury identical as to all, except only in the amount of the'injury—as where the same false statements are dis
The bill in this case is most skillfully drawn, evidently in the light of the authorities, and is in accordance with principles -well established in the law, and not defective, nor liable to demurrer. The case stated therein is one calling loudly for relief in equity, and the plaintiffs are properly joined. Whether the proofs can be adduced to sustain its charges is a question we do not now propose to decide; but the decree of the circuit court, sustaining the demurrer, is, we think, erroneous, and for that reason the same will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the said circuit court, there to be considered upon the merits and for final decree therein, as that may appear right upon the hearing.
Decree reversed.