37 F. 167 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia | 1889
(after stating the facts as above.) Baum & Bro. and Baum & Co., two firms composed of the same individuals, are traders, in the meaning of the statute of this state quoted above. That they are insolvent it is conceded. The plaintiffs are creditors, whose demands, as the court is at present advised, are within the class provided for in the statute above quoted, (Code Ga. § 3149a,) giving, in certain cases, the equitable right to the extraordinary remedies applied for. This right of the creditor to put the debtor’s assets, when the latter is an insolvent trader, in the hands of a receiver, is peculiar to the law of this state. It has no existence in the general jurisprudence of equity which obtain in these courts. It is now settled, however, that the courts of the United States may administer an equitable right granted by the law of the state in suits of which, from other reasons, they have jurisdiction. It was urged in argument for the defendant that the creditors, without a judgment at law, have no right to apply in equity for the appointment of a receiver. That this is a general rule is undeniable, but there are exceptions to it, and one of these exceptions of apparently clear distinctness is where the law-making power has enacted in terms that the debt need only bo mature, with payment demanded and refused, as is the law in Georgia. It is true, also,—as held in this circuit, in Jaffrey v. Brown, 29 Fed. Rep. 477,—that a party not intending to pay, by inducing one to sell him goods on credit through the fraudulent concealment of his insolvency and of his intent not to pay for them, is guilty of a fraud, which entitles the vendor, if no innocent third party has acquired an interest, in them, to disaffirm the contract, and recover the goods. See, also, Crittenden v. Coleman, 70 Ga. 295; Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S. 633; note to Jaffrey v. Brown, 29 Fed. Rep. 485, and authorities cited. The remedy at law must be quite as complete as that in equity to defeat the power of equity to proceed. Id.
The demurrer filed to the bill, while not finally overruled, is not deemed sufficient, as the court is at present advised, to defeat the relief
It would seem superfluous to analyze the widely variant statements of the defendants, and it requires no elaborate inquiry to ascertain the law controlling the rights of the parties with such facts before the court. The statutes of the state are sufficiently explicit. Suppression of a fact material to he known, and which the party is under an obligation to communicate, constitutes fraud. The obligation to communicate may arise from the confidential relations of the parties, or the peculiar circumstances of the case. Code Ga. § 317o. Can it bo doubted that the fact that the defendants were under a written obligation to execute mortgages upon their entire stock and all their other property, was “'material to he known” by those giving them credit? Can it bo doubted that when the Baums undertook to give to Bradstreet’s, for the information of the business world, a statement of their assets, liabilities, and methods of borrowing money, that the obligation was upon them to communicate the truth? Will the most credulous believe for a moment that Fechheimer & Co. would have given them credit for $4,000; that Clailin & Co. would have given them credit for $11,000,—had they known the existence and the nature of their obligation to Comer? We think not. The statements of such mercantile agencies as Bradstreet’s are intended to influence the action of merchants and others who give credit. It is well understood that the mercantile community relies largely upon such statements, and the persons giving them are under the weightiest obligation, which will be enforced in foro comicientim, to speak the truth. If there has been deliberate suppression of a vital fact in a statement of this character, which does mislead, it is a fraud upon the person misled, which a court of equity will redress, if possible. Again, “misrepresentation of a material fact, made willfully to deceive, or recklessly without knowledge, and acted on by the opposite party, or, if made by mistake, and innocently, and acted on by the opposite party, constitutes legal fraud.” Code Ga. § 3174. Idee, also, section 2634.
Now, it appears from the evidence of Messrs. Patterson, Lindsay, and Cohen that N. B. Baum admitted in their presence and hearing that he was insolvent at the time the statement to Bradstreet was made, although he there asserted a net worth, above all liabilities and doubtful assets, of fully $30,000, but that he did not then know his insolvent condition. Conceding, therefore, that this statement was honest, it is none
This investigation has satisfied the court that this is a suit where it is manifestly the duty of the chancellor to make the orders prayed for. A receiver will be appointed, and an injunction granted. Comer & Co., who are now formally made parties defendant to the bill, will be required to make proof of their account, and if found just and true and a valid lien, as it now appears to be, it will be paid in full if the funds are sufficient. This is true of other debts of superior dignity, and the remainder of the fund in the hands of Comer & Co. and elsewhere within the reach of the court will be apportioned to the creditors. The court will appoint receivers of undoubted qualifications, who will at once take possession of