221 A.D. 263 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
By two transactions, one upon January 1, 1920, and the other upon March 12, 1920, plaintiff purchased from the defendant A. B. Leach & Co., Inc., six of the “ First Lien, Seven Per cent, Serial Gold Bonds ” of the National Oil Company of New Jersey, paying therefor in cash and securities the sum of $5,800.
These purchases were made through negotiations with one Parker, a sales agent of the defendant, and were induced by representations and statements of Mr. Parker, together with those contained in a circular letter issued to the trade by the defendant corporation in the late fall of 1919, a copy of which was sent to plaintiff by Mr. Drake with a covering letter dated December 13, 1919. The circular, with its annexed documents, purported to contain a description of the issue of which the bonds were a part, together with a statement of the business and financial condition, recent and prospective, of the National Oil Company; a specification of its properties and, in general, of the worth of the company as well as that of the security and value of the bonds. Some two years later the National OL Company submitted to a receivership, which was followed by the foreclosure of the indenture collateral to the bonds; upon the sale under such foreclosure there was realized only a .fraction over $5.34 for each $1,000 bond. Plaintiff asks to recover for the loss thus sustained upon the theory that many of the statements contained in the circular letter and its
The defendants Arthur B. Leach and W. E. Fulcher were the president and vice-president respectively of the defendant A. B. Leach & Co., Inc., and, as its managing officers, were directly concerned with its affairs including the negotiations with the National Oil Company which led to the issuing and sale to the defendant corporation of the bonds in question as well as the issuing of the circular letter and the transactions which led to the purchase by plaintiff.
The record does not show that Mr. Fulcher has appeared or answered in the action, the issues tried being those raised by the second amended complaint and the joint answer of the corporate defendant and Mr. Leach. At the close of plaintiff's ease the learned trial justice dismissed all the charges of fraud except one and then granted a motion for nonsuit upon the ground that there was no evidence that plaintiff had been damaged by the alleged fraudulent statements and, particularly, had failed to establish any damages as of the date of the purchase of the securities in question. He also denied a motion by piar biff that the complaint be dismissed without prejudice and also declined to grant a new trial under the provisions of the 2d subdr. ision of rule 166 of the Buies of Civil Practice. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment of nonsuit, and from the refusal to incorporate in the minutes a statement that the nonsuit was not upon the merits but was without prejudice. Inasmuch as the trial court held that the evidence presented at least one question of fraud for determination by the jury and dismissed the action solely for lack of proof of damages, it is unnecessary to now consider the other allegations of fraud, notwithstanding our examination of "the record leads us to believe that there was sufficient evidence to warrant submission to the jury of additional matters claimed by the plaintiff to have been fraudulent. No question of the proper measure of damages to be applied in a case of this character was or is raised. Court and counsel seem to have agreed that the rule laid down in Reno v. Bull (226 N. Y. 546, 552) is to be followed, viz., the difference between the sum paid and the value of the stock which he received, with interest from the date of purchase. It is not, however, necessary that the plaintiff show his loss with precise exactitude. (Central Trust Co. v. West India Improvement Co., 144 App. Div. 560.)
The present difficulty appears to have arisen, not from any
The rule of intimsie value is now well grounded in our law and must be here applied. (Industrial & General Trust, Ltd., v. Tod, supra; Lewis v. Leach & Co., Inc., 199 N. Y. Supp. 32.)
In determining intrinsic value the entire surroundings are necessarily to be surveyed and the course of the properties for a reasonable time before and after taken into consideration. The court will take judicial notice that instances where securities arrive at practically par, or break therefrom to practically nothing within a day or so, are rare. Large and going concerns usually reach maturity by a slow growth and their downward progress is ordinarily equally gradual. This was the fact in the instant case. The record shows the history of the National Oil Company, its properties, development and results, the changes in its financial position , and prospects, as same from time to time developed, until it finally fell into the hands of a receiver and its property was sold in foreclosure for a comparatively small sum. Studying the picture as a whole no great difficulty should be encountered in an arrival at an approximate value of the bonds in question from January to March, 1920, and, as we view it, there was sufficient evidence from which a jury might have in its judgment determined that
A number of other exceptions are called to our attention, but in view of this conclusion only one of them need now be mentioned. A new trial must be had and it, therefore, seems best to point out that the foreclosure decree under which the property was sold, while not a final determination of the value of the bonds, either at the time of their purchase by plaintiff or later, was nevertheless competent evidence for the jury to consider on the question of their value as well as for the purpose for which it was admitted and that its exclusion from consideration on the question of damages was error. (Huntington v. Attrill, 118 N. Y. 365; Gill v. McNamee, 42 id. 44; Campbell v. Woodworth, 20 id. 499.)
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
All concur. Present — Hubbs, P. J., Clark, Crouch, Taylor and Sawyer, JJ.
Judgment reversed on the law and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.