127 Mo. App. 718 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is a suit by plaintiff against the defendant for damages for an alleged fraud. The admitted facts are as follows: The defendant who resided in Kansas City, Missouri, caused to be published an advertisement soliciting persons with capital to take interest in a certain dry goods corporation
The plaintiff paid to the defendant $1,500, and received in exchange from the defendant forty-five shares of $100 each in said corporation. The plaintiff remained in charge of the said department of the business until some time in the early part of July in that year, when on account of some altercation he had with a customer he was discharged by the defendant. The forty-five shares of stock issued to the plaintiff was not additional stock of the corporation but a part of the original stock which was owned by the defendant. There was no such additional stock issued by said corporation. The forty-five shares of stock issued to the plaintiff showed upon their face that it was a part of the original stock. Plaintiff upon receipt of this stock did not examine them but put them in a drawer, in defendant’s establishment, to which he had access.
The plaintiff’s evidence tends to show, that oh
We do not understand, that defendant contends, that the plaintiff failed to introduce such evidence, but that his contention is that it disclosed such a state of facts as debarred his right to recover, viz., that according to plaintiff’s own testimony when he came to Kansas City after having received defendant’s advertisement, he was afforded every opportunity to examine said stock of goods on hand and did examine them to his own satisfaction; that he was a merchant of experience capable of informing himself of the quality and the value of the goods on hand; that the shares' of stock issued to him showed upon their face that they were not issued for any increase of the capital stock of the corporation but a part of its original stock; that the plaintiff had the opportunity of inspecting them after they were issued to him; that the said advertisement did not purport that any new stock had been issued and only
The cause was submitted to the jury which returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered from which defendant appealed.
The evidence conclusively establishes that the representation made by the defendant in reference to the proposed issue of increased stock of the said corporation and quality and value of the goods was false and no doubt Avas an inducement to the plaintiff to purchase said stock. Rut it is contended by defendant, that there can be no recovery for said false representation because the plaintiff had within easy reach everything necessary to enlighten him concerning said corporation’s stock and the quality of and value of the goods.
It is said in Davis v. Insurance Co., 81 Mo. App. 261: “Neither law nor equity will afford relief on the ground of false representation where the subject matter is equally knoAvn to both parties, if both parties have equal means of information, and in regard to which one of the other is negligent.” And such is the general rule declared and recognized by all the appel
It is clear from these authorities that plaintiff, nothing else having been shown would not be entitled to recover as to false representation made by defendant as to character of stock, the said corporation would issue or had issued to him, for he had every opportunity of informing himself as to those matters and he negligently failed to use such opportunity. But notAvithstanding he had every opportunity of examining the stock of goods on hand, as to their value, the evidence tends to show that in the main he was not qualified after seeing the goods to determine their quality and value aud that he relied upon the defendant in respect to that matter. This was a matter of much importance as a consideration for the amount of money invested by plaintiff "in the business. The evidence tends to sIioav that the plaintiff was induced thereby to invest his money in a failing business, that had been represented to him by defendant as prosperous and which after - Avards went into bankruptcy. We are of the opinion that the plaintiff had a right to rely upon representation of the defendant as to the condition of the business of the corporation, and the fact that he remained in the corporation the length of time stated before he withdrew from the business would not, standing alone, preclude his right of recovery unless it was shown that he had received such information during such time as would advise him of the true situation of affairs. And the fact that he was discharged by the corporation does not prove conclusively in view of the other facts and circumstances mentioned that his withdrawal is to be attributed to such discharge. Starting out with the assumption Avhich the evidence disclosed beyond doubt, that the defendant set a trap Avhen he made said adver
The defendant contends that the court committed error in the admission of evidence of a prospectus of the said dry goods company, in which was set forth that the capital stock of the company was $60,000, which the company proposed to increase to $100,000, to meet the demand of its increased business and a statement therein that $40,000 additional stock would be issued, etc. The objection to this evidence is that there is no reference to the prospectus in the plaintiff’s petition. But we conceive that such a reference was not necessary. The object of its introduction was to show that fraud had been committed by the defendant. It is not required that pleading should state the evidence upon which the party relies but only the facts. The plaintiff alleged in his petition that the defendant had been guilty of fraud in representing that the business of the said corporation was in a flourishing condition.
The defendant assigns as error the action of the court in permitting plaintiff to interrogate the defendant as to the amount of the liabilities of said corporation as being irrelevant and not within the issues of the case. We think this was admissible as it tended to show condition of solvency or insolvency of said corporation.
Other objections made to admission of testimony we. think were without merit. We will not encumber the record with reference to them, except that wherein the defendant claims that the court admitted evidence relating to an offer of a compromise between plaintiff and defendant. The record discloses that all such evidence was upon objection of defendant excluded by the court and we find none that was received that related to a compromise or an offer to compromise.
We have examined the plaintiff’s instructions and we find they are not subject to the objection urged by the defendant that they do not contain a full and complete statement of the law pertaining to the action. On the contrary in our opinion they fully cover the question in issue between the parties.
The jury after being sent out returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,500. The court refused to receive this verdict because the jury was instructed that if they found for plaintiff the verdict should be for $4,500. The court ordered the jury to return to their room and further consider the case, after which they returned to the court a verdict for $4,500. The defendant in support of his contention that this was error cites Haydel v. Hurck, 5 Mo. App. 267; Ranney v. Bader, 48 Mo. 539. Neither of these cases nor the case of the State of Missouri ex rel. v. Knight sustain the defendant’s theory. In the case of Ranney v. Bader, the verdict of the jury was, “We the jury, find for the plaintiff,