275 Pa. 34 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Plaintiff, John H. Long, brought an action of deceit against defendant, Levi F. McAllister, who filed an affidavit of defense, in the nature of a demurrer, to the statement of claim; on consideration of these papers, the court below entered judgment for defendant, holding, as a matter of law, that on the cause pleaded plaintiff could not recover; this appeal followed.
The statement of claim avers that plaintiff and defendant were stockholders in an oil company, which was financially embarrassed; sometime prior to January 16, 1919, the latter told the former an arrangement had been made whereby one Hetrick was to bid for the assets of the corporation in question at a public sale about to be held, and defendant, with three others, naming them, “had mutually agreed to associate themselves with said Hetrick ......in the formation of a new corporation, in which each of said five persons was to be equally interested, for the purpose of taking over the assets of [the old company], and said parties had further mutually agreed that, if the property were purchased by said Hetrick, each of them would pay the sum of $2,000 in cash into the treasury of the new corporation, for the purpose of [meeting] whatever sum might be bid by Hetrick, and
The foregoing enumeration of alleged facts is followed by averments that “said statements were then and there false, the defendant knew they were false and made them with the intent that plaintiff should act upon them and with the intent to deceive and defraud plaintiff”; that plaintiff, believing them to be true, relied upon them and paid his $2,000 for the use of the corporation; that no one of the persons mentioned by defendant, except Fleming, ever agreed to pay $2,000 into the treasury of the new corporation or made such payments; finally, that a certificate for twenty shares of stock of the new corporation, at a par value of $2,000, was issued to plaintiff, the total stock outstanding being 140 shares of a par value of $14,000.
The above allegations are sufficient to support an action of deceit, for they aver misrepresentations inten
A question remains, however, as to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s averments of loss. The statement ends with allegations that the assets of the new corporation were less than they would have been if the representations of defendant1 had been true, that the corporation had no ready money to begin business with, and that plaintiff had been “induced to pay for said stock more than the actual value thereof at the time of purchasing,” thereby suffering a loss of $2,000. He also claimed additional damages, “in the nature of interest” on his $2,000, from March 8,1919, when he made payment thereof, and $500 as exemplary damages.
Plaintiff’s averments of loss are faulty; whether, in an action like the present, the measure of damages be viewed as the difference between the value of what plaintiff received and the value it would have possessed had the facts been as represented by defendant (Rock v. Cauffiel, 271 Pa. 560, 565), or whether it be the difference between what plaintiff was induced to pay by the fraudulent statements and the value of what he received (Browning v. Rodman, 268 Pa. 575, 579; Curtis v. Buzard, 254 Pa. 61, 64; High v. Berret, 148 Pa. 261, 264; see also Williams v. Beltz, 7 Boyce (Delaware) 360, 363, 107 Atl. 298, 299, decided on Pennsylvania law), the statement of claim omits to aver any óf such values. ■
As to the claim for exemplary damages, while ordinarily these are not recoverable in cases of this character (Erie City Iron Works v. Barber & Co., 102 Pa. 156, 164; Cole v. High, 173 Pa. 590, 601), unless circumstances of extreme aggravation appear (Schusler v. Clark, 50 Pa. Superior, Ct. 459, 465; Mowes v. Robbins, 68 Ind. App.
The judgment is reversed with a procedendo.