46 W. Va. 669 | W. Va. | 1899
On the 26th d'ay of November, 1890, W. A. Engeman, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and John E. Taylor and James S. Taylor, of Hampshire County, W. Va., entered into a writ
On the 21st day of July, 1894, W. A. Engeman filed his bill in chancery in the circuit court of Grant County against the said John E. Taylor and James S. Taylor setting up and exhibiting the said contract and the further agreement to increase the stock, alleging that plaintiff had paid into said firm the sum of thirty-nine thousand-, one hundred and fifty-three dollars and fourteen cents on his share of the capital; that plaintiff, had been unable to ascertain definitely what amount had been paid in by the defendants, or either of them; that they claimed to have paid in together about thirty-four thous- and dollars, but, from facts and circumstances which had recently come to plaintiff’s knowledge, he believed and charged that they had paid in a much smaller amount than they claimed, and called upon defendants to prove and show clearly what amount of money they had each contributed to the capital of the firm. Plaintiff alleged that at the time he entered into the partnership he was totally unfamiliar with the tanning business; that during his continuance he resided in the state of New York, and was only at said tannery for short periods several times during the course of each year; that the entire management and control of the erection and construction of all the buildings, machinery, and plant of said tannery were intrusted by him to said defendants, John E. and James S.. Taylor, and that said defendants did erect and construct tannery buildings, and other buildings to be used in connection with said tannery, and procured the necessary machinery and appliances for operating said tannery, which said plant was located on land purchased by said firm; that all the buildings belonging to said firm were constructed under the direction anjd control of said defendants, who were thoroughly familiar with the costs and value of all said buildings; that after said buildings were erected the firm commenced to operate said tannery;
Defendant James S. Taylor filed his answer, admitting he was employed as bookkeeper and assistant to John E. Taylor at a salary of eight hundred dollars per year, a.nd averring: That at all times his actions were under the control and supervision of said John E. Taylor. That at all times all his transactions in bookkeeping and making purchases and sales for said firm were open to the inspection of all members of the firm, and were well known to all the members. That plaintiff at all times had the opportunity to investigate all the entries made by respondent as bookkeeper, and did from time to time until the 29th day of January, 1894, examine into and had full knowledge of all the entries on the books, and all purchases and all sales made by the respondent for the firm. That the business was started,'as alleged, with sixty thousand dollars capital, and af-terwards increased to eigthy thousand dollars, to be contributed and held as alleged, — one-half by plaintiff, and one-fourth by each of the defendants, — but there was no agreement as to any particular time when the capital should be paid in, and it was in fact contributed at-different times and in different amounts by each of the members, and the books show the amounts paid in, but respondent could not then tell just how the capital was contributed, as the books of the firm were in the possession of the plaintiff, and he would not allow respondent to have access to them. That, according to his recollection of such entries, the amount contributed by respondent and John E. Taylor was thirty-four thousand dollars; that said amount was contributed by them equally. Denied that they were jointly interested in said firm, but, on the contrary, they owned their interest separate and distinct from each other. That plaintiff lived in New York, as alleged, but respondent says that he was frequently present when the buildings, tannery, plant, and
John E. Taylor answered, denying any fraud or collusion between himself and James S. Taylor, or that he had any interest in the amount which James S. Taylor was to receive for his one-fourth interest in the business, averring that the inventory filed with plaintiff’s bill was made up by and with the assistance and agreement of all the parties, but chiefly by respondent and plaintiff, for the purpose of arriving at a just and correct valuation of the assets and liabilities of the firm, and, in making same, respondent and plaintiff were-acting together, and with a view of purchasing James S. Taylor’s interest and continuing the business under the new firm, and James S. Taylor was acting for himself, and, when completed, respondent and plaintiff thought the inventory just and fair, and were willing to pay the amount as shown by same to James S. Taylor, but he refused to accept it, and demanded twenty thousand dollars for his interest, and finally agreed to take seventeen thousand, five hundred dollars, which was paid him, as alleged in the bill, after deducting one hundred and eighty-two dollars and thirty-nine cents; that the firm was dissolved at the instance and solicitation of plaintiff, who had become dissatisfied with James S. Taylor as a member of the firm, and wanted him out, and requested respondent to see
Depositions were taken by the parties and filed in the cause, covering nine hundred and forty-eight pages of the printed record, and on the 25th day of 'October, 1897, the cause came on to be heard “on the plaintiff’s bill of complaint, and Exhibits A, B, and C, therewith filed; the answer of J. S. Taylor, and Exhibit Y, thereto attached, hereto filed, and general replication thereto; the answer of J. E. Taylor, and Exhibit XX, hereto attached, heretofore filed, and general replications thereto; the depositions of W. A. Engeman, and Exhibits LLL, MMM, PPP, OOO, SSS, Z, U, V, W, X, Y, AB, K, NNN, LA, Nos. 1 to 12, inclusive, and Exhibit marked ‘W. A. Engeman’s Deposition, January 3, 1894,’ taken on behalf of the plaintiff, and filed in this cause; the depositions of E. Haupt, Clarence Cookus, M. S. Henkle, Thomas Cover, and E. T. Keller, with Exhibits A, B, C, D, E, F, C, and I; and the depositions of William J. Newhouse, J. William Kuykendall, with Exhibit A, and the depositions of James Barger, J. W. Cum, Sol Shobe, Jacob B. Davis, Charles Barger, and T. M. Jackson, with Exhibits A, B, and C, and also Exhibits Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4, with rebuttal testimony; and the depositions of F. A. Cod-love, Henry B. Drayton, J. T. Hopple, James Kellar, J. E. Funkhouser, and Charles Deputy, — all of which depositions were taken at sundry times, and filed and read in this
The defendant John S. Taylor contends that there is no error in said decrees whereby plaintiff is prejudiced and is entitled to have same reversed, but, on the contrary, insists that he (Taylor) is prejudiced by said decree of the 25th of October, 1897, and that the circuit court, when it refused to cancel, rescind, and set aside the >§ale of- January 29, 1894, should have dismissed plaintiff’s bill, and assigns the following cross errors: “First. Because the evidence clearly shows that the plaintiff, W. A. Engeman, had a full and complete knowledge of the values of the
• Appellant entered into a business with appellees in which he had no experience or practical knowledge. The contract of co-partnership provided that John E. Taylor should be superintendent and manager of the business of the firm (the tannery business), that he should receive the sum of one thousand dollars per year for his services, and that lie should devote his whole time and attention to the superintendence and management of the business, and that the other members of the firm, W. A. Engeman and James S. Taylor, should not be required to devote their time and attention to the business. The contract further provided that there should be kept at all times during the co-partnership perfect, just, and true books of accounts, for which purpose a competent bookkeeper should be employed, and it further provided that there should be a settlement of the affairs of the concern on the 1st day of July, 1891, and on the 1st day of January and the 1st day of July in each year thereafter, at which times the profits of the firm should be ascertained, and divided among the partners according to their interests (i. e. one-half to Engeman and one-fourth to each of the Taylors), or, by agreement, such profits should be invested in the business. The defendant James S. Taylor was soon employed as bookkeeper and assistant manager. No settlements being made as provided in the contract of co-partnership, and the appel
It is insisted by appellee that, in making the purchase of his interest in the firm, the appellant and J. E. Taylor were acting for themselves, while he was acting for himself, and the parties were “dealing at arm’s length”; that the purchasers were striving to buy at as low a rate as possible, while the seller was trying to get the best price he could, and their relations were as those of strangers to each other, because appellant wanted appellee out of the firm. They were partners. Appellee and his brother, J. E. Taylor, had been the active, working partners, in complete control of the business, — a business in which appellant, the third partner, had absolutely no experience, no knowledge, resident in a distant city, giving no attention to the business; and, because of the experience of the other members of the firm, it was provided in the contract that he should not be required to give it attention; and when it came to ascertaining the assets of the firm, to know what the value of the interest of the several partners was, the appellant was without knowledge and without experience, and could have but little idea of the values and condition of the assets, and necessarily had to rely upon the judgment of his skilled and experienced partners; and nothing could be more natural, because of their peculiar relations, than that he would expect a fair valuation of all the assets,- — ■ especially of those of which, because of inexperience, he was unable to make an intelligent estimate. His partner in the new firm purchasing was a brother of the old partner, whose interest they were purchasing. So that, while he felt sure his new partner would not attempt to over
Henry E. Drayton, a witness, and member of the firm of Massey & Jannev, merchants of Philadelphia, agents of Engeman & Taylors for selling their leather, states that the leather received from the tannery after January 27. 1894, was poor; that it was made from an inferior class of hides, and was poorly prepared for the market; that about three-fifths of the leather received after January 27, 1894, was poor or damaged leather, and the remaining two-fifths was of poor quality, of a low grade of No. 1 and 2 leather; of nine thousand, nine hundred and seventy-nine backs received after January 27, and inspected, four thousand, eighty-five were graded as good, five thousand,eight hundred and ninety-four were graded as damaged; one hundred and fifty-five buts graded as good, eleven as damaged, fourteen sides rough slaughter leather good, six damaged. The report of the sales shows these backs to have ,sold for prices ranging principally from eighteen to twenty-one cents, some for twenty-two, and a few- for twenty-three, cents.
C. C. Cookus, witness, was employed at the tannery from April, 1893, to September, 1894. Knew of damaged hides
M. S. Henkle testified that he was at the tannery on the 27th and 29th of January, 1894; that J. S. Taylor, J. E. Taylor, and W. A. Engeman were taking an inventory of the property for the purpose of Summer (J. S. Taylor) selling to John Ed and W. A. Engeman; that during the inventory he heard J. S. Taylor tell Mr. Engeman, on a good many occasions, they were putting in the buildings at cost and below cost, and that there was a lot of stuff in the tan-yard they could not see, and also at the leach house, and
E. Haupt, a tanner of large experience, was employed at the tannery on the 8th of February, 1894. Testifies that the hides and leather in the tannery at the time he was employed were not first class. In the first place, they were not good hides: secondly, they were damaged a good deal, and they could not make first-class leather out of damaged hides. When asked in what way the hides in process of tanning and the leather were damaged, said they were cheap hides; they could be damaged in the hide before they got them, and then they could be damaged in the soaks (water), and could be damaged in the bait, but could not be damaged well in the grain after put in the liquor. These hides were grain-broken, — some of them the grain came off. The grain does not come off at all in tanning. It comes off in the beam shop. The grain could be black in tanning, so that it could not be first class leather for the market.
A large lot of hides, known as the “Dayton hides” or -, etc., hides, which one of the witnesses (Cookus) says J. E. Taylor said were a little off, but he bought them because he thought they were cheap, and which J. S. Taylor said were d-d dear as a gift, were laid down in the tan in the summer of 1893, and should have been drawn and finished and placed upon the market in the late fall of that year, while it appears the hides laid down in May, June and July, 1893, were not drawn until February, March, and April, 1894, the greater part of them in April, from nine to ten months for tanning, while it is shown that hides laid down in October, 1893, were drawn in February and March, 1894, being four or five months in tanning. J. E. Taylor testifies that (at the time of taking the inventory). “We had on hand at that time an unusual amount of strong liquor, from the fact that near about all the leather in the yard was tanned, and had been relayed in extra strong liquors.” Now, here was leather that had been
It is insisted by appellee that appellant had the same information and was in possession of the same facts as the other parties, and was on the same footing in making the deal for the interest of the partner J. S. Taylor in the
It is insisted by appellees that appellant ratified the sale after he knew of the oyervaluations in the inventory,
J. S. Taylor states that about April 18, 1894, he and Engeman were in a stage coach together, and Engeman told him that the leather would lose about twelve thous- and dollars, and they talked about how business was, and everything, but Engeman did not ask him to make any of it up; that he told Engeman that he was very sorry that it would not bring the amount that he and J. E. Taylor had listed it at. This conversation Engeman denies, and says, “If J. S. Taylor had remarked that he was sorry the leather had not brought the amount that J. E. Taylor and. 1 had listed it at, it. certainly would have made a very strong impression on my mind,” and says he did not know at that time of any overvaluation. W. C. Smith says he was in the stage, with them, and heard Engeman, in the course of conversation with witness or some one else in the stage, refer to overvaluations. Does not remember the amount, but it was several thousand dollars. Whatever fears Enge-man may have had about the leather falling short, they were allayed by his partner, J. E. Taylor, who wrote him February 12, 1894, that: “You will find that we are not hurt by the inventory of the stock. What backs are com
Appellees claim that there .should be no rescission, because the status quo cannot be restored. In Brown v. Norman, 65 Miss. 369, 4 South. 293, Norman, in October, 1885, induced by false and fraudulent misrepresentations of Brown and Mangum, two members of the firm, to buy Brown’s interest in the partnership, which was insolvent, giving in exchange therefor his farm and the personal property thereon, made a deed conveying the property, and paid the ¡residue in cash, and assumed in addition thereto liability for the existing debts of the firm. In March, 1886, Man-gum, at the instance of the creditors of the old firm, filed his bill for the dissolution of the firm and administration of the assets, on the ground of the insolvency of said old firm. On his petition a receiver was appointed. In August, more than five months after the appointment of the receiver, Norman filed his bill to rescind the sale and recover back his land. Belief was granted him, and Brown appealed. In rendering the opinion affirming the decree, the court says: “It will be noticed that the objections to the relief asked resolve themselves into two classes: (1) That there can be no recission because the status quo cannot be restored; and (2) that the conduct of the complainant after he knew or should have known of the fraud is, in law, a ratification of the contract. In decisions in actions at law arising from attempted rescissions of contracts for the sale or exchange of personal property, the language of the court is almost uniform in declaring that the defrauded party, in order to maintain his suit, must have restored or tendered in restoration whatever was received by him under
But in equity the complainant does not necessarily rescind and sue; he may sue for rescission. He is required to restore the consideration, not, however, as a condition of acquiring the right to sue, but because of the equitable maxim that he who seeks equity must do equity. Mr. Pom-eroy thus states the rule: “In administering these remedies, pecuniary as well as equitable, the fundamental theory upon which equity acts is that of restoration, — of restoring the defrauded party primarily, and the fraudulent party as a necessary incident, to the positions they occupied before the fraud was committed. Assuming that the transaction ought not to have taken place, the court proceeds as though it ha'd not taken place, and returns the parties to that situation. Even in such cases the court applies the Maxim, 'He who seeks equity must do equity,’
Let us now refer to cases in which the specific question has been raised, and passed on by courts of equity. In Barker v. Walters, 8 Beav. 92, and Jarvis v. Berridge, 8 Ch. App. 351, demurrers had been interposed to bills seeking rescission, on the ground that no offer was made to restore the status quo. It was held that it was unnecessary to do so, since the court on final hearing could require the complainant to do equity. In the latter case Lord Shelburne said: “Upon principle there appears to be no good reason why a plaintiff in equity, suing upon equitable grounds, should be required on the face of his bill to' submit to those terms which the court, after hearing, may think it right to impose a,s the price of any relief to which he may be entitled.” In Myrick v. Jacks, 33 Ark. 425, the court said: “It is no objection that complainant cannot put Jacks entirely in statu quo on rescission. The change in condition of the property was brought about by persuasion to accomplish a transaction in which Jacks was a party, and before the fraud was discovered, and- by the action of complainant in a matter she did not understand. When courts cannot place parties wholly in statu quo, they are not thereby precluded from granting relief against fraud. They may proceed to do so as nearly as possible, and make compensation.” See, also, Gailing v. Newell, 9 Ind. 574; Crosland, v. Hall, 33 N. J. Eq. 111. Upon principle and authority, we think it immaterial that the status qu,o cannot be literally restored.
Nor do we think the record discloses ratification by inaction. The complainant owed .the defendant no duty to
The principles of the cross assignments of error have been considered in the treatment of the question arising in the case, and, if my view of the evidence and circumstances of the case, is correct, the said assignments are not sustained. The circuit court did not pass upon the evidence touching the valuation of the buildings and bark, and does not intimate how the court regarded the evidence relating to the items of leather and liquors as to which it ascertained there were overvaluations, but that there were overvaluations in those items, especially that of the leather, to an unconscionable extent, and concealment of the true condi
Reversed.