By this suit Charles A. Munroe seeks to recover possession of securities (shares of stock) which he lent to Joseph W. Harriman on June 14, 1932, to be used by the latter as he saw fit to secure personal loans. The lending of the securities was procured by fraud, which concededly gave ground for rescission of the transaction as against Harriman. The controversy is whether rescission is available - against the bank, to which Harriman pledged the securities is collateral for a loan. While the suit was pending, the bank was put into liquidation and a receiver was appointed. By supplemental complaint, the receiver was made a party defendant.
Harriman was president of the bank and dominated its other officers and employees. Upon obtaining Munroe’s securities he caused the bank to make a time loan of $380,000 to M. H. O. Company, Inc., one of his dummy corporations, and pledged as collateral therefor the Munroe securities plus some shares of Standard Oil stock. Later, $14,000 more was advanced on the same collateral. The proceeds of the original loan of $380,000 were used as follows: $150,000, taken from the bank at Harriman’s order in anticipation of the approval of the loan, was paid to National City Bank to pay off its loan to J. A. M. A. Corporation, another dummy corporation of Harriman; $200,000 took up an existing demand note of M. H. O. Company to the bank which had been secured by the Standard Oil shares; and $30,000 discharged an existing obligation of Harriman to the bank. None of the officers or employees of the bank who took part in the making of the loan, other than Harriman, were aware that the pledged securities had been procured-from Munroe by fraud. Formally, the .loan was approved by other officers acting as the loan committee of the bank. The District Court found as a fact that they were completely dominated by Harriman and habitually did whatever he requested.
At the outset it should be observed that Munroe did not deal with Harriman as an agent of the bank. Harriman’s request ' was that the securities be lent to him personally, and so they were. Nor was Harriman acting as the bank’s agent in borrowing them. Hence his fraudulent representations in procuring them cannot be attributed to the bank. Indeed, no contention is made that they can. The dispute is whether Harriman’s knowledge of his prior fraud upon Munroe, and of the latter’s resulting' equitable claim to recover possession of the borrowed stock, must as a matter of law be imputed to the bank, when it accepted the pledge of *495 the stock from Harriman’s dummy, M. H. O. Company.
Aside from the effect of Harriman’s “domination,” to be discussed hereafter, it is clear that the bank would not be charged with knowledge of Munroe’s claim. The principal is not affected by the knowledge of an agent as to matters involved in a transaction in which an agent deals with the principal or another agent of the principal as, or on account of, an adverse party. American Law Institute, Restatement, Agency, § 279. See Lilly v. Hamilton Bank,
The situation just discussed must be carefully distinguished, however, from one where the principal buys property from an agent as an adverse party. In such case the principal’s title may be traced through his own purchase or through the act' of another agent, and he will have the status of a bona fide purchaser for value. Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Capitol Electric Co.,
The loan committee consisted of Messrs. Austin, Turner, Burke, and Jordan, in addition to Harriman. Formally, they all approved the loan by initialling the page in the committee book upon which it was recorded, but actually the loan was put through upon Harriman’s instructions before it was ever brought to the attention of the committee members. Subsequently the executive committee and the board of directors confirmed the loan. With respect to loans to Harriman, or his personal corporations, the other officers and employees of the bank did without question whatever he requested, and the District Court found that they were completely dominated by him. This finding the appellants apparently do not question, nor could they do so successfully. They argue that despite such domination the law will not impute Harriman’s knowledge to the hank. The case of American Nat. Bank v. Miller,
It would prolong this opinion unduly to discuss all of the cases cited by opposing counsel. It may bp admitted that they cannot all be reconciled, but there is substantial authority in support of the “sole actor” doctrine. * For reasons already stated we think it is sound.
The appellants further contend that *497 Munroe did not disaffirm his contract with Harriman promptly on learning of the fraud and therefore lost the right to rescind it. The securities were loaned to Harriman on June 14, 1932. To assure their return Harriman deposited 1,000 shares of Harriman Bank stock which was then quoted at $600 per share. On July 7th Munroe noticed that the hank stock was being offered at about $200, and wrote Harriman that he must put up more security. About July 12th Harriman deposited with him 3,240 shares of J. A. M. A. Realty Corporation stock. Shortly thereafter Munroe discovered from the balance sheet of this corporation that its stock was worthless. He then engaged an attorney, Mr. Miller, who wrote Harriman on July 22d requesting additional collateral. On July 28th Mr. Miller saw Mr. Cooper, who had succeeded Harriman as president of the hank. He told him that the securities pledged with the bank on the M. H. O. loan were Munroe’s and that unless the bank would agree to make no further advances and no rehypothecation of them he would have to -commence appropriate legal proceedings. He did not, however, assert that Harriman had procured the securities by false representations. In fact, it does not definitely appear that Munroe or his attorney learned of the fraud until Mr. Miller examined a statement of Harriman’s financial condition on September 14th, although suspicious circumstances certainly came to their attention on July 29th and early in August. A demand that the securities be returned to Munroe was made upon Harriman and the bank on September 16th. It is urged by the appellants that this was not a demand for rescission but a demand for performance of the contract, by the terms of which Harriman agreed to return the borrowed securities on September 15th “and in default thereof” agreed to pay $225,000. Although the demand did not use the word rescission, we agree with the district judge that it fixed the right to rescind as of that date. It cannot properly be construed as a demand for performance of the contract, for Harriman’s duty under the contract, read literally, was to pay $225,000 since he had failed to return the securities on the 15th. If, however, the option still existed to return the securities instead of paying, it was to be exercised by Harriman not by Munroe. His demand that the bank return the securities was consistent only with rescission. The District Judge held it timely and we agree.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Consult Skud v. Tillinghast,
