BULLARD v. CITIZENS’ NAT. BANK.
No. 31626
Division B. Supreme Court of Mississippi
March 25, 1935
Suggestion of Error Overruled June 10, 1935
160 So. 280 | 162 So. 169
But the compress contends that, if it is not entitled to recover in tort for a conversion of the cotton, it is entitled to recover in contract, for the reason that Latimer‘s indorsement of the receipts was a warranty to it that he owned the cotton. The cross-bill does not proceed on that theory, but aside therefrom we have not been referred to any authority for so holding, and an examination of our “Warehouse Receipts” statute,
Our former judgment will be set aside, and the decree of the court below will be affirmed in toto.
So ordered.
Griffith, J., delivered the opinion of the court.
In the fall of 1929, appellant, a widow of little or no business experience, had on deposit in bank eight thousand dollars, the proceeds of insurance, which she desired to invest in six per cent. bonds. She enlisted the assistance of her family physician who, in turn, got in touch with the officer of appellee bank in charge of its bond department. The physician disclosed to the bank
The bank officer suggested, and placed before the physician bonds to be selected out of the issues hereinafter named; assured the physician that they were gilt-edged and as good as gold, and that their ultimate payment was guaranteed by surety companies of large resources, well known in the business world for their solvency and general dependability. The physician did not understand and called for an explanation as to what was meant by the statement that the ultimate payment of the bonds was guaranteed by surety companies, and it was explained to him by the bank officer that this meant that if there were any default in the payment of interest or principal, resort must first be had against the principal obligors in the bonds and against all their property, after the exhaustion of which any deficiency would be made good by the surety companies mentioned, in other words, that the bonds were ultimately good and absolutely safe because of the ultimate guaranty of their payment by the surety companies.
In a day or two thereafter, the physician and the bank officer went to the home of appellant where the statements above mentioned were repeated by the bank officer, and in the presence of appellant and appellant‘s daughter and the physician. And relying upon said statements and undertaking to make no investigation for herself, as to which, as the seller knew, she was not personally capable, appellant delivered to the bank officer her check for the eight thousand dollars with the understanding that he would select the bonds in such an order of arrangement that the interest coupons would mature at different times throughout a year, and in an aggregate amount of bonds closely approximating the sum
Upon the return of the officer to the bank, he made out and mailed to appellant five separate sales invoices, all dated November 15, 1929, this being the actual date of the transaction, one of which invoices was for three bonds of Central Securities Company for two thousand five hundred dollars; another for one bond of National Union Mortgage Company for five hundred dollars; another for two bonds National Union Mortgage Company for one thousand dollars; another for two bonds Lookout Mountain Hotel Company for two thousand dollars; and another for two bonds town of Decatur for two thousand dollars, all these being the par value. But when the accrued interest was calculated on those selling at par and this deducted from those selling at slightly less than par, the aggregate amount was eight thousand one hundred forty-nine dollars and seventy-six cents, which difference appellant afterwards paid. Later, and on January 16, 1930, appellant purchased from the bank another bond of Central Securities Company, par value five hundred dollars, and under the influence of the representations in respect thereto above mentioned.
During the year 1930 and within less than a year after the purchases aforesaid, it was learned by the bank, which information was transmitted by it to appellant, that the Lookout Mountain Hotel Company was in financial difficulty and that a committee representing its bondholders had been organized. The bank still owned some of these bonds, and it was suggested by the bank that appellant join with it in sending their bonds to this committee, which was done. Later during 1931, similar adverse news came in respect to the Central Securities Company, and upon a similar arrangement the Central Securities bonds owned by the bank and those owned by appellant were forwarded to a bondholders’ committee. Thereafter appellant inquired from time to time of the
While matters thus rested awaiting some definite information, appellant learned for the first time, during the month of July, 1932, that the Central Securities Company‘s bonds were not guaranteed by any surety company in any substantial manner whatsoever; and she thereupon employed an attorney to go to North Carolina, where this concern had its domicile, there to make a full investigation, which investigation revealed that the guaranty upon which she relied had never had, as to these Central Securities bonds, any existence in point of fact and that the only guaranty which had any existence was of a matter merely collateral to the bonds themselves, skillfully arranged so as to make it appear that the bonds were guaranteed, when in fact they were not; and that the Central Security Company‘s bonds were practically worthless, if not entirely so.
Within a reasonable time after the said investigation, appellant filed her bill for a rescission and for the recovery of the full amount paid by her so far as concerned the three thousand dollars in Central Securities Company‘s bonds and the two thousand dollars in the bonds of the Lookout Mountain Hotel Company. She did not include in this suit the one thousand five hundred dollars National Union Mortgage Company, nor the two thousand dollar town of Decatur bonds. But about nine months after the filing of her original bill, she filed a supplemental bill bringing in for the first time the bonds last mentioned.
The bank defended by a denial that the stated representations were made by its officer, and defended further by the contention that even if the alleged representations were made, they were assertions of opinion
As to the representation that the bonds were gilt-edged and as good as gold, we think the contention of the bank is well taken. There is authority that such an assertion is a statement of fact and not of opinion. Scribner v. Palmer, 81 Wash. 470, 142 P. 1166, and there are cases to the contrary, as, for instance, Gleason v. McPherson, 175 Cal. 594, 166 P. 332. Without attempting an analysis of the cases from other jurisdictions, we rest our conclusion upon the observation that, at most, such a statement involves an admixture of fact and opinion, wherein it cannot be determined what is of fact and what is of opinion, nor where fact has ended and opinion has begun.
But the statement made and relied upon that the ultimate payment of the bonds was guaranteed by surety companies is an assertion of fact, for it is a matter within the range of definite and positive knowledge; and, although the assertion may have been made in good faith believing it to be true, this is immaterial when the statement was actually untrue, the legal responsibility upon the seller in such case is precisely the same as had he made the representation of fact knowing at the time that it was untrue. Alexander v. Meek, 132 Miss. 298, 96 So. 101; Fay & Egan Co. v. Cohn & Bros., 158 Miss. 733, 740, 130 So. 290.
In ruling upon the differences in legal effect, such as above noted, between assertions of opinion and statements of fact, it is not to be understood that there is any necessity that the statement, in order to be a material misstatement of fact, shall have been in any particular form of words or expression. The true inquiry is what was the sense or impression conveyed to the purchaser, and whether the sense or impression relied upon was one (a) which in view of all the circumstances was a sense or impression admissible within the bounds of reason, and (b) which in view of all the circumstances ought, as
In such matters as this, it may yet be a long time before we shall in practical administration attain to the exalted ideal expressed in the ornate language of Mr. Justice STORY in Doggett v. Emerson, Fed. Cas. No. 3,960, 3 Story, 700, 733; but we can, in proper cases and upon sufficient proof, enforce the requirement as stated by our own court seventy-five years ago in Townsend v. Hurst, 37 Miss. 679, wherein the court said: “Good faith and justice require that parties making representations and holding out inducements intended to influence the action of those with whom they deal in matters of contract, and upon which they are expected to rely and do rely, shall be strictly held to make good such representations, and to fulfill the reasonable expectations thereby created. It is of the last importance that courts of equity should rigidly adhere to a rule so consonant with morality and common honesty.”
The bank next contends that appellant unduly delayed her offer to rescind and her suit for that purpose. When a purchaser has been defrauded in his purchase, he may elect to retain the property and sue for damages, in which case he has the entire period allowed by the statute of limitations in which to institute his action. But if he elect to rescind, and thereby to recover the entire amount paid for the property, the established rule justly requires reasonable promptitude on his part.
Applying the rule of reasonableness to the evidence in this case, we are of the opinion that appellant has not been cut off from her right of rescission as to the three thousand dollars of bonds in the Central Securities Company embraced in her original bill. We refrain from pursuing the various phases of the voluminous record which lead us to this conclusion, for to do so would unduly extend an already lengthy opinion. But, as to the two thousand dollars of Lookout Mountain Hotel Company bonds embraced in her original bill, she is not entitled to recover, because the evidence shows, without dispute, that the ultimate payment of that particular issue was in fact guaranteed by a reputable surety company, solvent and responsible at the time.
As hereinbefore stated, appellant did not bring into her original bill the bonds of the National Union Mortgage Company, nor those of the town of Decatur, and did not sue upon these two issues of bonds until about nine months after her original bill, when she did so by a supplemental bill. As to these, under the rule of reason above stated, she was too late. Her investigations made a short time before the filing of her original bill
It was upon the ground stated in the foregoing paragraph that the chancellor dismissed appellant‘s entire case. The chancellor held that the purchase of these bonds on November 15, 1929, was an indivisible contract, and that the retention by appellant of a part of the bonds embraced in that contract resulted, in legal effect, in an election to retain all of them.
The line of demarcation between divisible and indivisible contracts is often difficult to distinguish; but we find that one among the best of the tests upon that question is discernible in the discussion of it in
The purpose and effect of
Affirmed in part and in part reversed and remanded.
Ethridge, P. J., delivered the opinion of the court on suggestion of error.
An elaborate suggestion of error has been filed in this case, challenging many portions of the opinion heretofore rendered. We have carefully considered the suggestion of error, and adhere to our former holding. Certain issues were remanded to the court below for findings of fact and judgment thereon, the chancellor not having dealt with these facts in his decision in the case. It is suggested that we have made statements of fact in the opinion which might cause embarrassment to the chancellor in his finding, and it is further suggested that we should not have found facts.
The facts, as stated; were such as to show that, if believed to be true on remand, relief should be granted. Practically all the issues to be tried on the remand are in dispute, and the court below will understand that we were stating such facts in favor of the appellant which,
Our attention has also been called to the recent case of Awotin v. Atlas Exchange National Bank of Chicago, 55 S. Ct. 674, 79 L. Ed. 1393; and it is contended that this case absolves the bank from liability in the transaction herein involved. The Awotin Case dealt with a statute there involved as affecting the power of a bank to make contracts of the character there prohibited, and to incur any liability in dealing with such transactions by contract. It was not intended by the court, as we understand it, to hold that the statute prohibited the bank from being liable in actions of fraud and deceit, or in actions of tort, involving misrepresentations of facts in selling its securities, or disposing of such property which it had acquired for its own use, or as agent for others. It is inconceivable to us that the federal statutes should prohibit a person dealing with a bank, and who has been misled by false representations, from holding the bank liable for such false representations as would render other persons and corporations liable in actions for fraud or torts.
The suit here is for fraud and deceit, or fraudulent representations, by which a customer was led to make an investment on the faith of such representations. We do not believe the federal court will construe the statute to prohibit recovery in such cases.
Nothing herein said is intended to establish the truth of the complainant‘s bill, or to decide conflicts in testimony, which are matters solely for the chancellor, on the remand, to hear and determine, subject, of course, to the right of appeal.
The suggestion of error is overruled.
Overruled.
