74 Wash. 175 | Wash. | 1913
— The American Life & Accident Insurance Company is an Oregon corporation, licensed to do business in this state. The controversy arose out of certain alleged fraudu
The court found, that the title to the 40-acre tract was in the defendants Gibbon; that they were innocent purchasers; that the title to the 160-acre tract was in the defendant Frampton & Howie, Inc., a corporation; that it took title through the defendant Cornish, its stockholder and manager, with notice of the infirmity of his title; that Cornish had induced the plaintiffs to convey the land and purchase stock contracts in the insurance company by falsely representing that the stock was dividend-paying when it was not, that it had a value of $175 per share when its market value did not exceed its face value, i. e. $100 per share, and that the insurance company would redeem the stock at any time at $175 per share, the price the plaintiffs agreed to pay. The decree required Frampton & Howie, Inc., to reconvey the 160-acre tract to the plaintiffs; directed the plaintiffs to surrender their several stock contracts to the insurance company, and required it to surrender the plaintiffs’ notes which represented the price they had agreed to pay for the stock in excess of the value of the land. The judgment further provides that the plaintiffs recover from the defendant, the insurance company, the sum of $1,874.76, the value of their equity in the 40-acre tract which they had conveyed to the defendants Gibbon, whom the court found to have been innocent purchasers.
In respect to the sale of the 40-acre tract, the defendant Cornish represented to the plaintiffs, both orally and in writing, that he had received from Gibbon $1,800 in cash, which he had paid to the insurance company to apply on their stock
In the oral argument, the appellant stated, in substance, that it would be content to be subrogated to the rights of Frampton & Howie, Inc., in the Gibbon notes. The plaintiffs, the only other parties who have appeared here, stated that they had no objection to such subrogation. We therefore limit our investigation to this question. As we have seen, the court found that the plaintiffs were defrauded of their land by means of false representations and fraudulent manipulations of the defendant Cornish while acting as the agent of the appellant in selling its stock, and that Frampton & Howie, Inc., had notice of the infirmity in the title of Cornish to the 160-acre tract, and generally of his fraudulent manipulations and transactions with the plaintiffs. The record furnishes indubitable evidence of these facts. Nor is Frampton & Howie, Inc., ■a holder in due course of the Gibbon notes. The court in the course of its opinion observed that the stock manipulation between Cornish and Frampton & Howie, Inc., was “simply
Remanded, with instructions to modify the decree as indicated ; costs to be taxed against Frampton & Howie, Inc.
Chadwick, Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.