50 N.Y. 480 | NY | 1872
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *482 The order appealed from shows that the judgment entered upon the report of the referee was reversed, and new trial ordered for errors, both of law and fact, but does not specify any particular finding of fact by the referee as erroneous. The counsel for the appellant insists that, from this omission, this court has no power to review any of the findings of fact by the referee. That to authorize this, the order must specify such findings as are held erroneous; and the review by this court is confined to those thus specified. This position cannot be sustained. The Code (§ 348) gives an appeal from judgments, both upon the law and the fact, when the trial is by the court or a referee. Upon such an appeal, it is the duty of the court to examine the case and determine whether any error, either of law or fact, to the prejudice of the appellant has been committed; and if so, award the appropriate redress. In this examination the court may assume that the referee found such facts, in addition to those contained in the report, as the evidence would have warranted, and were requisite to sustain his legal conclusions. Section 272 of the Code, among other things, provides, that if the judgment be reversed by the General Term, and a new trial ordered, it shall not be deemed to have been reversed on questions of fact, unless so *485 stated in the judgment of reversal; and in that case, the question whether the judgment should have been reversed, either upon questions of fact or of law, shall be open to review in the Court of Appeals. It will be seen that the General Term is not required to specify the particular errors of fact; but simply to state, in the judgment of reversal, that it was based wholly or in part thereon, as was done in the present case. When this is done, it is the duty of this court to review both the facts and the law, in like manner as the General Term upon the appeal to it.
Although it was not expressly found by the referee that the defendants combined to defraud the plaintiff, by inducing him to purchase stock of the La Crosse and Milwaukie Railroad Company, which they knew to be worthless, I think his legal conclusions show that he did so find; and as his rulings upon the admissibility of the declarations of Alden, as evidence against Meigs Greenleaf, can be sustained only upon that assumption, I will first consider that question. The testimony shows that Meigs Greenleaf were brokers in the city of New York, and dealers, to a large extent, in the stock in question, purchasing and selling it on their own account and for their customers, and that they purchased from and sold more or less of it for Alden; but this has no tendency to show any combination between them in respect to their dealings with others in the stock.
The conversation had between the plaintiff and Alden at the Astor House, the evening preceding the day the former made the agreement with Meigs Greenleaf for the purchase of the stock, and the further fact that Alden called at the office of Meigs Greenleaf while the plaintiff was negotiating, may excite suspicion, but furnish no proof of any combination or conspiracy. Alden, in the conversation with the plaintiff, made no allusion to Greenleaf or Meigs as dealers in the stock or otherwise; and there was no proof that he had any expectation that the plaintiff would apply to them in particular to purchase the stock. The call of the plaintiff *486 upon Meigs Greenleaf was induced solely by the fact that they had been his brokers in previous stock transactions; and the call of Alden by the fact that they were his brokers. It does not appear that anything was said about the purchase of the stock while Alden was there, or that he knew that that was the business of the plaintiff there. The circumstance that Alden knew, in the evening of that day, that the plaintiff had made the contract, is entitled to no weight. It is not even proved that he learned it from Meigs Greenleaf; as it appears that the witness Zook had also the same information, which he got from the plaintiff's brother at the Astor House where Alden was also staying. Had it been proved that Meigs and Greenleaf told Alden of the purchase, it would not be evidence of any confederacy between them. It was further proved that Jerome, a broker, had, sometime before the purchase, applied to the board of brokers to have the stock of the company placed upon the list of stocks sold at the board, and that Greenleaf had been appointed upon a committee to examine and report upon the propriety of so doing. There was no proof as to what this committee did, or what they reported, or that Greenleaf did anything in that capacity. This furnished no evidence of any combination between Greenleaf, or his firm, and Alden to put the stock off fraudulently upon the plaintiff or the public generally. Had the latter been proved, the plaintiff could have maintained the action upon the ground that, where a conspiracy to defraud the public generally is entered into, the conspirators are liable to any individual injured thereby.
My conclusion is that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a finding of a conspiracy between the respondents to defraud the plaintiff or the public generally by inducing him or them to purchase the stock of the company in question. The referee, therefore, erred in the finding, and also in receiving the declarations and acts of Alden as evidence against Meigs Greenleaf. But it is claimed by the counsel for the appellant that, conceding this, they were not entitled to a reversal of the judgment; as their liability was established by other facts, in the *487 absence of any conspiracy with Alden. These facts are, first, a failure of consideration for the money paid by the plaintiff to them as the purchase-price of the stock; and, second, that they were guilty of fraud in making the sale, upon the discovery of which the plaintiff elected to rescind the contract; and did so, by a tender to them of the stock and demanding from them the purchase-money.
It is also insisted that it was proved that they were guilty of fraud in the sale, and that the damages sustained by the plaintiff thereby were equal to the amount of the recovery, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover such damages in the action. The counsel insist that the plaintiff could not recover damages for such fraud in this action, for the reason that the complaint does not set out any such cause of action, but is founded upon contract only. This objection does not appear to have been taken upon the trial before the referee, and, if it had, would not have been well founded. The complaint contains two causes of action. The first contains all the allegations necessary to entitle the plaintiff to recover of the defendants damages sustained from the fraud; and that such damages were at least equal to the money paid by him for the stock, together with further allegations showing a recision of the contract by him, concluding with a demand of judgment for the amount of such money. Under this the plaintiff, by proving the fraud and his damages, would have been entitled to recover, although entirely failing to prove a rescision of the contract. The first cause of action set out was, therefore, founded upon tort. The second was what, under the former ystem, would have been calledindebitatus assumpsit for money had and received by the defendants for the use of the plaintiff; a cause of action then and now upon contract. These causes of action could not be joined. (Code, § 167.) But the objection was apparent upon the face of the complaint, and no demurrer was interposed. The objection was therefore waived. (Code, § 148.) The inquiry, then, is whether any fraud, in making the sale, was shown to have *488
been practiced by Meigs Greenleaf. As to the former, it was not proved that he individually had any participation in negotiating the contract. But he was a partner with Greenleaf, and, as such, liable civilly for his frauds in the business of the partnership. The referee found, and the finding was sustained by the evidence, that Greenleaf, while negotiating the sale to the plaintiff, in answer to his question, told him that the governor had signed the bill giving the company a valuable grant of land, which would enable it to build its road; that the eastern division of the road was completed or nearly so, and was doing a large business; and the earnings of that division were large; and the stockholders of that division would receive large dividends from the earnings of the road; that the stock of the eastern division was full paid stock, and the holders of it would be entitled to dividends, and the stock had recently gone up in the market; that the plaintiff then told Greenleaf that if he bought he wanted stock of the eastern division, full paid stock. There was no proof that the governor had not signed the bill, nor but that it gave the company valuable land; nor but that the stock had risen in the market. The referee, as a legal conclusion, held that these statements were material, and were positive affirmations of the matters stated as upon his own knowledge; and having been relied and acted upon by the plaintiff, and being untrue in fact, entitled the plaintiff to recover of Meigs Greenleaf the amount of loss and damage sustained by reason thereof. I think this conclusion unwarranted by the facts found, and that the evidence would not authorize the finding of any additional facts sustaining it. The statements made were by a broker in New York to his customer in relation to the affairs of a corporation in Wisconsin, in the stock of which he was dealing. Under these circumstances Greenleaf, in what he said, could not well have been understood as speaking from his own personal knowledge as to the value of the land granted to the company, or what it would enable the company to do, or as to the amount of business done upon that part of the road completed, or the profits derived there *489
from. The statements were expressions of opinion and belief, founded upon information derived from others. So regarded, fraud was not established by merely proving their falsity. The plaintiff was required to show, in addition, that Greenleaf knew them to be false at the time he made them. (Marsh v. Falker,
From the opinion, delivered at the General Term, it appears that doubt was entertained by that court as to the propriety of affirming the judgment as to a part of the defendants, and reversing it as to others. The law not only authorizes this, but it is the duty of the court so to do if such a judgment is required by the facts established. (Code, §§ 12, 274; McIntosh
v. Ensign,
Where a party, with intent to cheat and defraud another, induces him, by fraudulent means, to purchase stock for value which he knows to be worthless he is liable for the damages sustained, whether the purchase is made from him or another. The elements of fraud and damage are united; and that this gives an action to the injured party is a maxim as old as the law. (Upton v. Vail, 6 Johns., 181; Medbury v. Watson, 6 Metcalf, 259.)
It is further insisted that the damages awarded to the plaintiff are greatly excessive, being the entire amount paid for the stock and interest, less the dividends received, for the reason that the stock could have been sold in the market at a trifling loss for some time after the purchase was made. This is not the measure of the plaintiff's damages. That is the difference in value of the stock as the condition of the company really was, *492
and as it was fraudulently represented to be by Alden. It is true that the price at which the stock readily sold in New York is strong evidence of its value, and would, in the absence of other proof, be controlling. But when the real pecuniary condition of the company is shown, from which it appears that the stock was worthless, the price at which it sold in New York or elsewhere is entitled to no weight upon the question of its value. The plaintiff, relying upon the statements of Alden, purchased the stock, and had a right to retain it, as he did, until he ascertained that the company was bankrupt at the time of the purchase; and when he had ascertained that it was worthless, he was under no obligation to Alden to mitigate his loss by cheating some ignorant purchaser himself. The question is, what was the stock really worth at the time of the purchase; and not what it would sell for by practicing the deceptive arts resorted to by the company and Alden to inflate the price. The referee was, therefore, right in finding that the stock was worthless at the time of the purchase. The plaintiff and Alden were both stockholders of the company. The books of the corporation were competent evidence between them to show the acts of the corporation. (2 Phil. Ev., Edw. ed., 295; Angel Ames on Corp., 3d ed., 607.) Sworn copies of the books were also competent. (Grey v. Hopkins, 7 Mod., 129; Matterom v. The EasternCounties Railway, 7 C.B., 58.) It is now insisted that the proof, that the books from which the copies were taken were the books of the corporation, was insufficient. But that objection was not taken upon the trial. It cannot now be made. (Day v.Roth,
The plaintiff having shown that he was entitled to recover against Alden, the order of General Term, reversing the judgment as to him, must be reversed, and the judgment entered on the report of the referee against him affirmed, with costs; and the order as to the other defendants affirmed, and judgment absolute rendered against plaintiff in their favor.
All concur, CHURCH, Ch. J., and ALLEN, J., not sitting.
Judgment accordingly. *493