16 N.Y.S. 403 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The defendant, in whose favor the action of the plaintiff was dismissed, is the receiver of the Electric Sugar Refining Company, a corporation formed under the laws of this state in the year 1884; and the defendants who were sued with him were the president and secretary of the corporation. The business for which the company was incorporated was the refining of sugar by a process claimed to have been invented or discovered by Henry C. Friend, and to which, upon his decease, it was claimed that his wife had succeeded. Shares of stock of the company were issued and exchanged for the process or invention represented to have been made, and 4,750 shares of such stock had become the"property of the defendants Robertson and Coterill prior to the 1st of December, 1888. What this process was did not become known, either to these officers or to any of the shareholders of the stock of the corporation, until early in the year 1889, when it was discovered to be an entire imposition, without any possible foundation to rest upon. The organization of the company and the issuing of the stock was what may be properly designated as a complete and unqualified fraud. But before this became known, and in December, 1888, it was proposed by the two defendants already named to make sale of 100 shares of the stock of the company to obtain money to be paid for the disclosure of the process represented to have been invented for the electrical refining of sugar, and a proposal was made by them, through an agent in Liverpool, to make the sale of such shares in the market of that city for the price of £60 English currency per share. He brought this proposal to the attention of persons residing in or near Liverpool, who were stockholders in the company, and they agreed to purchase the 100 shares offered for sale, which were to be divided among these individuals in certain proportions, by which each person agreed to take a specified number of the shares. Five of these individuals agreed to take in all 57 shares of the stock in this manner offered for sale; three of them each agreeing to take 10 shares, one of them 7, and the other 20, and also 10 additional shares, which never were paid for, and need no special consideration in the examination of this case. When the fraud was discovered, these persons severally elected to rescind the purchases which they had made of these shares of stock, and the two defendants from whom they were purchased were at once notified of that election, and the money which had then been paid for the shares was demanded, but its return was refused by these defendants; and after that these individuals assigned their claims and rights of action arising out of their purchase of these shares and the existence and discovery of this fraud to the plaintiff in this suit, and he brought it to set aside the purchases of the shares made by these individuals, and for the restoration to him, as their assignee, of the moneys which they had parted with in the fulfillment of their agreement to purchase the shares. Upon the trial the action was sustained against the two defendants, who were the president and treasurer of the corporation, but it was dismissed as to the receiver; and whether that dismissal of the action was justified under, the circumstances is the question presented by this appeal, which has been taken from the judgment record containing the decision and the exceptions to it, and the requests and refusals to find other matters than those contained in the decision.
It appears by the findings in the decision that the object intended to be secured by the sale of the 100 shares of stock in Liverpool was to raise the money required to be supplied to obtain a knowledge or disclosure of the secret or process which it was claimed had been invented for the refining of sugar by .electricity, and information of this purpose was disclosed to the persons who were applied to for the purchase of these shares. Each of the persons concerned in the offer, sale, and purchase of the shares had full faith ih the existence and genuineness of this alleged process, and no means had been afforded to either of them at that time for discovering that the representations concerning the process were false, and the process itself did not exist. To induce
That the representations and agreement made by these two defendants with the persons who purchased these shares created a trust for the disposition of the proceeds of their sales, or at least imposed upon these individuals a fiduciary obligation to fulfill their representations and agreement, seems to be reasonably the result of what is shown to have taken place, for without the assurance on their part that this money would be used and employed to obtain the process alleged to have been discovered for the refining of sugar by electricity, it is clear that these purchasers would not have parted with their money, or taken the title to these shares. And under this state of the case the defendants, who obtained the money in this manner, became obligated so to use it. What they represented and agreed to do were sufficient to create this obligation, for, as it was said in Day v. Roth, 18 N. Y. 448, “a written agreement is not necessary to create a trust in money or personal estate. Any declaration, however informal, evincing the intention with sufficient clearness, will have that effect. Such declarations stand on somewhat peculiar grounds. They are not to be regarded as admissions merely of some antecedent fact in relation to the subject, but are to be looked upon and received as constituting the very trust which they acknowledge. The doctrine of'equity is that by their own force they impress the fund with a peculiar character, and hence they are receivable on the same grounds as a precise and formal agreement. A person in the legal possession of money or property, acknowledging a trust, becomes from that time a trustee, if the acknowledgment is founded on a valuable or meritorious consideration.” Id.453. And the obligation which was incurred by these two defendants through their representations and agreement was founded upon a meritorious consideration, for without that there is not the least reason to suppose that this money would have been parted with by the persons who took these shares, and so speedily, upon the discovery of the fraud, endeavored to rescind their purchases, and secure a return of their money. It has been supposed, inasmuch as this money—the proceeds of the sales—was deposited in the bank by the treasurer of the corporation with other moneys standing there to its credit, that the power of following it was thereby extinguished. And upon an examination of the cases in Re West of England, etc., Bank, 11 Ch. Div. 772, that was considered to be the law, upon a review of the antecedent authorities, where no actual trust attached itself to the fund, but at most the obligation was one of a fiduciary character. But this decision, upon a further examination, was overruled in the case of Hallett's Estate, 13 Ch. Div. 696, and it was held in substance that there was no solid distinction, so far as the right to follow the fund should be in controversy, between the case of a technical trust and the existence of a fiduciary obligation; and that has been considered to be a true exposition of the law as it has been administered in this state, and also in the supreme court of the United States. Bank v. Peters, 123 N. Y. 272, 278, 279, 25 N. E. Rep. 319; Central Nat. Bank v. Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co., 104 U. S. 54, 67-69. And the correctness of this principle was fully held and enforced in Newton v. Porter, 69 N. Y. 133, 139, and in Ferris v. Van Vechten, 73 N. Y. 113, and Baker v. Bank, 100 N. Y. 31, 2 N. E. Rep. 452. That the money obtained from the sale of the 57 shares now in