Johnson v. Sheridan Lumber Co.

93 P. 470 | Or. | 1908

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is contended by defendant’s counsel that the court erred in admitting in evidence the original answer filed in this cause, and in holding that an averment in that pleading afforded competent proof of the defendant’s execution of the promissory note described in the complaint, and in refusing to instruct the jury as requested. To render the legal principles thus insisted upon intelligible, it becomes necessary to advert to the bill of exceptions, which contains all the evidence given at the trial, and shows that the plaintiff offered in evidence the books of the corporation, which contained the minutes of its proceedings as they consecutively occurred. An inspection of the record discloses that at a meeting of the board of directors held August 12, 1905, a resolution was adopted, authorizing the making of the note sued on in payment of certain stock of the defendant corporation, and also shows the consummation of a logging contract on behalf of the company with the plaintiff. It appears, however, that the meeting was special, at which only three of the five directors of the corporation were present, and the books do not indicate that any notice of such assembly was given to the absent officers. The parties having stipulated that the records of the corporation a Ter August 12, 1905, do not contain any reference to the note in question, the court sustained an objection to the admission of books in evidence, on the ground that they failed to show any authority on the part of the president and secretary of the corporation to make the note. An amended answer in this cause having been filed, the note sued on, and the original answer, which was verified by the secretary of the corporation, were received in evidence over the defendant’s objection and exception.

*39E. M. Yeaton, a stockholder of the corporation, appearing as its witness, after answering a few preliminary questions, was directed as follows: “Now you may state whether or not you and Mr. Brace and Mr. Johnson (the plaintiff herein) and Mr. Stevenson had any conversation or arrangement between yourselves for the purchase of a sawmill and timber land.” An objection to such inquiry having been interposed on the ground that the amended answer failed to state 'acts sufficient to constitute a defense, the defendant’s counsel thereupon offered to prove by the witness the substance of the agreement thus alleged as new matter, and to show that during all the negotiations Johnson and Stevenson represented that the purchase price of the mill and lands was $21,000; that the directors of the corporation, being ignorant of the facts, relied upon such representations, in pursuance of which they adopted a resolution accepting a deed of the property in full payment of the subscriptions for stock; that Schreier sold his stock to the plaintiff, who, by reason of the declarations that he held his own stock and that which he had so purchased, received a certificate for eighty-four shares o'; the par value of $8,400, which he thereafter sold to the corporation; that the directors did not know that he had not paid any sum on account of his subscription or for the stock; that two of the directors were absent from the state on August 12, 1905, and two other directors — there being five in all — undertook to authorize the execution of the note in question. The defendant’s counsel offered to prove by T. H. March, the person from whom the mill and timber land were secured, that $16,000 was the entire consideration therefor, but that, when a conveyance of the property was made, the plaintiff gave to him a check for $5,000, which the’witness indorsed and returned. The court having sustained an objection to the offers so made, refused to permit the testimony to be given, and. allowed an exception. *40The defendant having rested, the court directed a verdict to be returned for the plaintiff for the amount of the note and attorney’s fees as agreed upon, and refused to instruct the jury, as requested, to consider the entire answer offered in evidence, and to determine therefrom whether or not the execution of the note was ever authorized by the defendant, and exceptions from such rulings were saved.

1. A consideration of the errors assigned necessitates an examination of the averments of new matter in the answrer. As a preliminary matter, however, attention will be called to the rules of law applicable to the defense evidently intended to be interposed. Any person who agrees with others to organize a private corporation, in pursuance of which contract he purchases property for the company to be turned over to it, when legally created, sustains toward such artificial being, a fiduciary relation which precludes him from deriving any secret advantage from the transaction: 23 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 234; 7 Cur. Law, 871.

2. If a promoter of a private corporation deceives its members as to the actual price which he paid for property and transferred to the company, or if, by collusion with the vendor, he retains or secures credit for a part of the alleged purchase price, he must account for the excess in a suit in equity, instituted for that purpose, or the company may maintain an action at law against him for the sum withheld, or for which he secured evidence of indebtedness, as money had and received to its use: Thompson, Corp.’ § 457. Fraud invalidates all contracts in a suit or action thereon between the original parties, and as a corollary from this legal principle, the deceit of a payee of a promissory note, destroys the efficacy of the negotiable instrument into the consideration of which the imposition enters: 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. (2 ed.), § 193. In discussing this question Mr. Justice Thacher, in Brewer v. Harris, 2 Smedes & M. 84 (41 Am. Dec. 587), says:

*41“It has been repeatedly decided that courts of law have concurrent jurisdiction with courts of equity upon questions of fraud. Fraud saps the foundation of every contract in which it exists, and, where it evinces that a plaintiff is not entitled to recover. anything because of its existence, is properly cognizable by a court of law. It has also frequently been decided that a failure of consideration, as well partial as total, may be introduced legitimately in evidence in an action at law upon a promissory note, because such defense may diminish the multiplicity and circuity of actions, which it is the policy of the law to discourage.”

So, too, in Ferrall v. Bradford, 2 Fla. 508 (50 Am. Dec. 293), Mr. Justice Hawkins, commenting upon this rule, says:

“It is an admitted principle that a court of law has a concurrent jurisdiction with a court of chancery in cases of fraud. The principles as to fraud may be often more correctly applied in a court of equity than in courts of law. Chancery can compel discovery of facts which a court of law cannot. Fraud may frequently be presumed in equity by the chancellor, while at law it is the province of the jury to find the facts and determine their character, under the instruction of the court.”

To the same effect see: Fleming v. Slocum, 18 Johns. (N. Y.) 403 (9 Am. Dec. 224); Lamborn v. Watson, 6 Har. & J. (Md.) 252 (14 Am. Dec. 275); Jamison v. Beaubien, 3 Scam. (Ill.) 113 (36 Am. Dec. 534).

3. Fraud being thus available as a defense in an action at law, the averments of new matter in the amended answer will be investigated. It is not alleged in such pleading that, when dealing with the plaintiff, the defendant -had no knowledge that the mill and timber lands which it is stated he asserted cost $21,000 was purchased for $16,000, or that his profit was undisclosed. The amended answer was not challenged by a motion or a demurrer, in the absence of which that pleading should be construed liberally and its sufficiency determined by an affirmative answer to the inquiry: Would the facts *42thus defectively stated uphold a verdict if rendered thereon? The verdict in the case at bar is not based on the answer, it is true, but that pleading, when its adequacy is unassailed, is to be governed by the test that, while a general verdict will not supply a material averment, going to the gist of the action or defense, it will aid and may cure a defective informal statement: Houghton v. Beck, 9 Or. 325; Booth v. Moody, 30 Or. 222 (46 Pac. 884); Savage v. Savage, 36 Or. 268 (59 Pac. 461).

4. It will be remembered that the amended answer avers, in effect, that the plaintiff fraudulently represented that the mill and timber lands had been purchased for $21,000, and that the defendant’s agents, relying upon such statement, adopted a resolution that, in consideration of the transfer of the property to the corporation, the stock subscribed by the promoters should be declared fully paid. In State v. Miller, 47 Or. 562, 570 (85 Pac. 81: 6 L. R. A. [N. S.] 365), it is said:

“Reliance by a person upon the representations of another implies a belief in the accuracy of the declarations that inspired the confidence reposed. In the absence of faith in the truth of the statements thus made, a dependence thereon is an impossibility.”

It is therefore fairly to be inferred from the averment that the defendant relied upon the plaintiff’s fraudulent representations that it had no knowledge of the secret profit which it is claimed he made by the transaction, and, this being so, the facts thus defectively stated would, in our opinion, uphold a verdict, if one had been rendered thereon.

5. The offer of the defendant’s counsel to prove by the witnesses produced at the trial that his client had no knowledge of the plaintiff’s alleged fraud, or of the secret profit which it is asserted he made in dealing with the property, should have been accepted, in rejecting which an error was committed. An amended answer having *43been filed by leave of the court, the original answer was thereby withdrawn; but, notwithstanding such pleading was thus eliminated, it was nevertheless admissible in evidence as a declaration against interest: Sayre v. Mohney, 35 Or. 141 (56 Pac. 526).

6. If the rejected answer, when received in evidence, is to be treated as a pleading, the court properly construed the averments, for it has been held that when an answer denies the execution of a writing, and in a separate defense alleges that the instrument was made for a specific purpose, the defenses are so inconsistent that both cannot stand, and as the affirmative allegation' is the latest expression of the pleader’s intention, it will prevail, and the execution of the instrument is thereby admitted: Veasey v. Humphreys, 27 Or. 515 (41 Pac. 8); Maxwell v. Bolles, 28 Or. 1 (41 Pac. 661); Baines v. Coos Bay Nav. Co. 41 Or. 135 (68 Pac. 397).

7. Admissions in a pleading that have been superseded by filing other formal allegations of a cause of action or defense, are treated as extrajudicial, by which the pleader is not concluded: 16 Cyc. 1049. Judge Elliott in his work on Evidence (Section 236) sanctions the admission in evidence of an adversary’s pleading that has been superseded; but in' discussing the effect of avowals against interest contained therein, very pertinently observes:

“Suppose, however, that there are several distinct issues raised by different counts or paragraphs of a pleading. In such a case, can the statements in one of them be used as admissions upon the other issues ? Upon this question there seem to be few authorities, and in the few' cases in which the question has arisen the courts have not been of one mind. There is much reason in support of the view that, where the law authorizes a pai*ty to plead in this way, as, for instance, where it authorizes him to set up independent and even inconsistent defenses in different paragraphs of answer, the statements in a particular paragraph are made for the purpose of presenting the issue to which they relate, and no other, and *44to permit them to be used against the pleader on another issue would deprive him of his denials, or at least make it dangerous for him to do what the law authorizes him to do. He may, for instance, plead by way of denial in one paragraph, and by way of confession and avoidance in another, and it would seem unjust to permit his unavoidable and, in a sense, conditional, admissions in the latter paragraph to be taken as admissions upon the issue raised by the denial. This seems to be the view taken by most of the courts by which the question has been expressly decided.”

8. We believe reason supports the rule that, when a pleading that has been withdrawn or superseded is offered in evidence, the admissions contained therein should be construed in connection with the qualifying statements, if any, and that it is for the jury, and not for the court, to determine from an inspection of the entire pleading the intent of the party who interposed it. As supporting this view, see Jones, Ev. §296; Granite Gold Mining Co. v. Maginness, 118 Cal. 131 (50 Pac. 269); Mott v. Consumers’ Ice Co. 73 N. Y. 543; Gildersleeve v. Landon, 73 N. Y. 609.

An observance of the rules thus announced would have required the court, under proper instructions, to submit to the jury the amended answer, and also to have given the charge requested, in failing to do which errors were committed necessitating a reversal of the judgment and the granting of a new trial, which are ordered.

Reversed.

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