43 Mo. 527 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
Early in the year 1866 various citizens of St. Louis associated themselves together in corporate form, under the name of the “St. Louis Museum, Opera, and Fine-Art Gallery Company,” for the purpose of erecting and operating a Museum and Theater on the plan of similar institutions in Chicago, Boston, and New York. The company was organized and a board of directors and other officers appointed. Stock was subscribed to a considerable amount — one of the witnesses, Lamb, the president of the company, placing it as high as $105,000.
The Museum building was erected in the course of the season, and so far completed and equipped that it was opened for the business contemplated in the month of October, and for a period the institution enjoyed an encouraging and very satisfactory measure of patronage. It promised success. In the meanwhile the collections of calls upon the stock failed to keep pace with the company’s expenditures, considerable sums being advanced by the directors to meet maturing bills. Only about $60,000 appears to have been realized from the whole stock subscribed. The original estimates contemplated an expenditure of less than $100,000, while the actual cost of the building and its various furnishings reached the sum of $125,000 or more. Thus, while the company’s cash resources from stock subscription shrank on the one hand, its investments increased on the other, producing
This, substantially, was the condition of the company in December, 1866,. when the plaintiff and defendant met and entered into the transactions which form the subject of this suit. They made two contracts : by the first, the plaintiff, on the 19th of December, conveyed to the defendant three vacant lots of ground in North St. Louis, in exchange for fifty-three shares of the Museum stock; by the second, on the 22d of that month, 'he made a further conveyance of two other lots in the same general location for ten additional shares of the stock and forty acres of wild land. By this suit the plaintiff seeks to secure a judicial re-exchange of the property, and for that purpose asks the court, by its decree, to rescind the contracts of sale and annul his conveyances to the defendant. This is asked on the ground that the contracts and conveyances were obtained by the defendant through false and fraudulent representations and suppressions on his part in regard to the financial standing, condition, and prospects of the Museum company and the value of its stock.
The answer traverses every material allegation of the petition, and the case turns wholly upon the sufficiency of the proofs to establish the facts alleged in disparagement of the honesty and fairness on the part of the defendant of the transactions in question. The representations complained of as untrue, and as having mislead the plaintiff, relate to the defendant’s statements respecting his (the defendant’s) motives, intentions, and opinions, as well as his statements of fact touching the financial condition and business prospects of the Museum. These latter, however, are the main and controlling subjects of inquiry. They embrace the amount of Museum stock subscribed; the payments therefor, whether at par or otherwise; the amount actually paid in thereon; the actual total cost of the Museum property; the indebtedness of the company in December, 1866; the mode proposed for meeting that indebtedness, and the market value of the Museum stock at that time, or rather, more specifically, the price paid for it by Mr. Franciscus, and the defendant’s representations in relation thereto.
These parties met, and, after some days of negotiations, which furnished adequate opportunities of inquiry and investigation, concluded the bargain which resulted in the exchanges of property already mentioned. The transaction was not one where fraud is to be presumed, nor will it be inferred from circumstances which point to no certain and definite results, although of a suspicious character. Where mere circumstances are relied on, they must be such as to raise strong presumptions of the actual existence of the fraud imputed. This is considered to belong to that class of cases where, as Judge Story says, the court will not rescind the contract of the parties “without the clearest proof of the fraudulent misrepresentations, and that they were made under such circumstances as show that the contract was founded upon them.” (1 Sto. Eq. Jur. § 199 ; 38 Mo. 55.) Nor will courts of equity aid parties who neglect the use of their own judgment and discretion in their business transactions. It is not sufficient that Hitchcock’s representations should have been inaccurate and misleading, or even willfully false. The plaintiff must have rested the transaction upon the faith of them. Now, these parties were strangers until these negotiations were initiated, and they were concluded in the course of a few days. It is a little remarkable that Mr. Ryan should have consummated the arrangement with the defendant, and conveyed away his property, relying upon nothing but the interested statements and representations of one respecting whom he knew so little, and especially when other means of information were so open and accessible to him. There is an antecedent improbability that he would act so inconsiderately.
It further appears that Mr. Bryan’s attention had been drawn to the Museum previously, and by other parties; that he had heard its play representations and audiences spoken of favorably — which
That the plaintiff based his transactions with the defendant upon the assumption that $125,000 had been invested in the Museum property, and that all of this sum had been paid off except $45,000, does not very satisfactorily appear. He seems rather to have reduced the value of the stock from the visible property which it represented, the apparent success of the general enterprise, and the character of the body of stockholders and of the
It is not deemed needful to pursue tbe subject further. This review embraces what is regarded as tbe most material parts of tbe testimony and tbe controlling points of tbe case. As already stated, we are not able to take such a view of the testimony as would justify a reversal of tbe judgment of tbe Circuit Court, and it is accordingly affirmed.