173 Mo. App. 27 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
—This is a suit on a promissory note. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal. By his answer defendant admits the execution of the note, but pleads that it was obtained from him through misrepresentations of fact pertaining to the sale of certain shares of stock in a life insurance company for which the note was given. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, the court peremptorily directed a verdict for plaintiff as if the evidence wholly failed to support the fraudulent representations relied upon in the answer.
It appears plaintiff is vice president, of the Mid-Continent Life Insurance Company of Muskogee, Ok
It is averred in the answer that at the time of selling the stock to defendant and taking his note therefor, plaintiff falsely and fraudulently represented to him that the Mid-Continent Life Insurance Company was in a flourishing condition; that almost all of its capital stock had then been sold; and that said stock was then of the intrinsic value of $120 per share and that the demand for said stock had- become so great that it was increasing rapidly in value and that if defendant waited two or three months before purchasing it would then be worth $200 or $300 per share. It is averred, too, that defendant believed these representations and relied thereon and was thus induced to purchase the same and execute the note in suit.
Plaintiff introduced the note in evidence, and thereupon defendant assumed the burden and gave evidence tending to disprove some of the averments of his answer and tending to prove others. Prom defendant’s evidence alone, it appears beyond question that he knew the insurance company was not in
But it is said the court properly directed a verdict for plaintiff on the note because defendant failed to show the representation was false and that the evi
There is nothing in the evidence tending to show the value of the corporation’s stock, save the fact that its par value was fifty dollars per share, and a list of all of the property consisting of money in banks, bills receivable, office furniture, fixtures, etc., owned by the insurance company at the time. In the absence of better evidence as to the value of the stock of the company, the market value of all of its property may be considéred with a view to arriving at the proportional value of shares of its stock. [See Hewitt v. Steele, 118 Mo. 463, 474, 475, 24 S. W. 440.] It is shown by the report of the treasurer of the insurance company that the value of all of the property it owned at the time
Besides introducing the note to make a prima facie case, plaintiff put in no other evidence, and, notwithstanding the showing above made by defendant, the court instructed a verdict against him on the note. Obviously this was error, for the evidence tended to prove a false representation touching the value of the stock to be $120 per share and that it was not worth anywhere near that figure and it may he not more than one-half of it. Defendant was wholly inexperienced as to such matters. It appears he was a small country merchant and knew nothing in the world about the value of stock in a life insurance company. Plaintiff was vice president of the company, and the evidence tends to prove, one of its promoters. In these circumstances, it is clear enough that defendant had the right to rely upon the positive representations of the plaintiff made concerning the value of the stock, for it was & question about which he was presumably fully advised. [See Tinker v. Kier, 195 Mo. 183, 94 S. W. 501.]
In connection with the representation that the stock was of the actual and intrinsic value of $120 per share, the representation that it was increasing rapidly in value may he regarded as material, too, for it pertained to an existing fact. But so much of the representation relied upon to the effect that the stock would be worth $200 or $300 per share within two or fhrée months we regard as a mere expression of opin
For the reasons above given, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.