57 F. 685 | 7th Cir. | 1893
Lead Opinion
(after stating the facts.) It is contended by counsel for the appellant that the court below erred in dismissing the bill against the appellees for the reason that the evidence clearly shows that the New England Shoe Company and Charles C. Davis, its president, obtained large quantities of goods from the appellant and numerous other parties hv means of false and fraudulent representations, without any intention of paying for the goods so obtained, and that the appellees had actual or constructive notice of the fraudulent acts and intent of the Kew England Shoe Company and of its president. The charges made_ against the appellees Gore, Heimerdinger, and Prouty by the bill of complaint, and the proofs in their support, have no immediate connection with those made against the appellee Peabody.
It is suggested, rather than argued, by counsel for Gore, Heimerdinger, and Prouty, that the bill of complaint is not broad enough, even if the evidence justified it, to warrant a decree against them compelling them to account for the proceeds of the goods belonging to the New England Shoe Company which are traced into their possession. The suggestion would have deserved careful consideration if the question had been called to the attention of the court below. If the objection had been presented below, the trial court could, and in furtherance of justice, should, have permitted the bill to be amended to conform to the case made by the proofs upon such terms as were just and equitable. Neale v. Neale, 9 Wall. 1; The Tremolo Patent, 28 Wall. 518; McArtee v. Engart, 13 111. 242. Under the circumstances the bill ought to be treated as amended here, so far as needful, to enable the court to decide the case on its merits. The practice of presenting in the first instance in this court some alleged defect or insufficiency in the bill of complaint or answer which would have been properly amendable in the court below is not to be commended.
There is no serious controversy touching the false and fraudulent representations of Davis, as the manager and president of the New England Shoe Company, in obtaining goods»from the appellant and numerous other parties, nor in regard to his intention not to pay for them, nor that the corporation was insolvent. The systematic frauds of the one and the insolvency of the other are established by the most abundant and convincing-evidence. Indeed, they were not controverted by counsel for appellees, who made no attempt to deny or palliate the criminal conduct of Davis, who, upon the collapse of the New England Shoe Company, fled to Canada, presumably to avoid criminal prosecution. The purchaser who by fraud purchases goods has no protection in law against the party defrauded. The seller, on discovering the fraud, may affirm the sale and sue for the price, or he may disaffirm it, and reclaim the goods, or he may proceed criminally. Donaldson v. Farwell, 93 U. S. 631; Parrish v. Thurston, 87 Ind. 437; Gray v. St. John, 35 Ill. 239; Bowen v. Schuler, 41 Ill. 193; Hanchett v. Kimbark, 118 Ill. 121, 7 N. E. Rep. 491; Sargent v. Sturm, 23 Cal. 359; Titcomb v. Wood, 38 Me. 563; Hill v. Freeman, 3 Cush. 259; Nichols v. Michael, 23 N. Y. 266. A person obtaining goods by fraudulent pretenses is guilty of a tortious taking, and no demand for possession is necessary to enable the person defrauded to maintain replevin for them, unless they have passed to a third person, holding them bona fide for a valuable consideration, without notice. Bussing v. Rice, 2 Cush. 48; Thurston v. Blanchard, 22 Pick. 18; Butters v. Haughwout, 42 Ill. 18; Bruner v. Dyball, Id. 34;
The Xew England Shoe Company, and Davis, its president, according to the undisputed evidence, obtained possession tortiously and wrongfully of the goods which subsequently came into the possession of the appellees. Unless the goods came into their possession bona fide, for a valuable consideration, without notice, their possession was wrongful, and they must return the goods, or account for their reasonable value. The appellees assert that they were bona, fide purchasers for value, without notice, and that, consequently, they acquired an unimpeachable title to the goods. It: is not enough that the appellees (were purchasers for value. They must also be innocent purchasers. Trie law raises this presumption in their favor, and casts the burden on the appellant to show that the appellees were guilty of participation in the fraudulent acts of Davis. The law justly imposes on every person the duty of (Exercising- ordinary care and prudence in his business transactions. It imputes to him notice or knowledge of every fact which an ordinarily cautious and prudent man, in the same situation, would naturally have observed. He may not, except at; his peril, purposely or negligently omit to give heed to what is audible and visible bv the exercise of ordinary care. He must not fail i.o make such inquiries as an ordinarily cautious and prudent man, under the same circumstances, would have made. It follows that the appellees will be affected by the fraudulent, acts and intent of Davis, if they had knowledge of them, or of the existence of such facts and circumstances as were naturally and justly calculated to awaken suspicion in the mind of an honest; man of ordinary care and prudence, and lead him to inquiry. The law is well stated by Chancellor Zabriskie:
“Any salo in which the object of the debtor that prompts and determines him to make it is to hinder, delay, or in any way put off his creditors, is void if made to any one having- knowledge of his intent; and this knowledge need not he by actual positive information or notice, but will be inferred from the knowledge, by the purchaser, of facts and circumstances sufficient to raise such suspicions as to put him on hiquiry.”
Atwood v. Impson, 20 N. J. Eq. 156; Clements v. Moore, 6 Wall. 299; Bardes v. Gibson, 17 Fed. Rep. 293; The Holladay Case, 27 Fed. Rep. 830; Ringer v. Jacobs, 11 Fed. Rep. 559; Walker v. Collins, 4 U. S. App. 406, 1 C. C. A. 642, 50 Fed. Rep. 737.
Gore, Heimerdinger, and Proufcy had long been intimately associated together, all occupying and doing business iu the same rooms, and with and through each, other. All their business was carried on through the hooks of George P. Gore & Co. They were well acquainted with O. O. Davis, who had been employed as a salesman and solicitor of consignments in the auction house of
When the complainant learned that a few shoes, which it had sold to the New England Shoe Company, had been sold by it through Gore & Oo.’s auction house to a shoe dealer in Indianapolis for less than their cost, it created such suspicion of fraud that an attorney was sent from Boston to Chicago to investigate the matter. This single fact was sufficient to create suspicion in the minds of the eastern creditors of Davis, and to cause inquiry. The numerous facts calculated to excite suspicion known to the appellees were disregarded on the pretense of Davis that , he had failed to secure the storeroom which he claimed to have - arranged for or engaged. When the facts and circumstances are such as to put a reasonably prudent and cautious man on inquiry, that obligation is not satisfied by an inquiry addressed to the chief actor in the suspected fraud, who has every motive for' concealing ihe truth, when better and
(tore intermeddled with these goods by selling them for Davis as an .auctioneer, under such circumstances as to charge him with notice that they had been obtained by fraud, and the question remains whether such agent and auctioneer, who has sold goods and accounted for the proceeds to the guilty principal in the fraud, can be compelled to account to the parties defrauded for the goods or their value. That such auctioneer can be compelled to account to the extent of the commissions received and retained by him is settled by authority, arid is not open to debate. Can he be compelled to account to the parties defrauded for the proceeds of the goods after* he has accounted to the party from whom he received them? On principle, he ought to be held to account. Having sold the goods, and put them beyond the reach of the parties aggrieved, with notice of the fraud, he occupies no better situation than his bailor. He is chargeable on the principle that he knowingly aided and assisted the fraudulent vendee in depriving the vendor of the opportunity to reclaim Ms property. He thereby becomes a partieeps criminis with the fraudulent vendee, and is liable for the value of the goods equally with Mm.
It is firmly settled that if an agent delivers to his principal money or property after demand and notice that they belong to another, he will be compelled to account therefor to the true owner. Payment after* demand and notice is wrongful. Garland v. Bank, 9 Mass. 408; Jefts v. York, 10 Cush. 892, 12 Cush. 196. Having knowledge that the goods had been obtained by fraud, it became the duty of Gore not to meddle with them, or, having received them, to retain them or their proceeds for the benefit of tlie trae owners. Equity regards the fraudulent vendee as holding the goods in trust for the party defrauded. It has been held, where an agent aids a trustee in making or procuring the conversion or uu
Peabody invokes for his protection the claim that he received the warehouse receipts covering from $35,000 to $40,000 worth of goods in good faith to secure a loan of $20,000 made by Mm to the New England Shoe Company. The evidence shows that Peabody was a man of large and varied business experience. At different times in his life he had been eng’aged in dealings in bucket shops, in buying boots and shoes, in purchasing jewelry from failing concerns and at bankrupt sales, while at and for some time before the trans
The evidence makes a casé which fully satisfies us that the proceeds arising from the sale of the goods pledged by Davis must, so far as necessary, be applied to the payment of the appellant’s claims. It is urged that the exigencies of business in great commercial centers justify less inquiry into the title and ownership of personal property offered for pledge or sale than would be exacted elsewhere. If good faith and honest dealings are to be maintained, if business is not to degenerate into robbery, the courts must with unflinching hand strip the mask of hypocrisy from the face of fraud, whether practiced in city or hamlet. The transactions of great commercial centers furnish abundant facilities for the practice of fraud, and courts ought to scrutinize them with a jealous solicitude to defeat the wrong, and to vindicate the right.
The bill fails to allege that the plaintiff had prosecuted its claim to judgment, and had issued an execution thereon, and had the same returned nulla bona. For this reason the bill of complaint is insufficient within the doctrine of Scott v. Neely, 140 U. S. 106, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 712, and Gates v. Allen, 149 U. S. 451, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 883, 977.
It is therefore adjudgéd that the decree herein be reversed, but at the costs of the appellant, and that the cause be remanded to the, court below, with leave to the complainant to amend its bill of complaint within 30 days after the judgment herein shall be certified to tire court below; and, if the complainant shall fail to amend its bill of complaint within the time herein allowed, the same shall be dismissed without prejudice.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) I am unable to concur in the conclusions reached by a majority of the court in this case. I think the evidence hardly more than sufficient to raise a suspicion of fraud as against the appellees, without proving its existence, and that the decree of the circuit court should be affirmed.