71 Ga. 726 | Ga. | 1883
This was an action on the case for deceit, brought against Joseph Sibley, W. F. Herring,. Charles H. Phinizy, and several others; but none of them being served except the above named defendants, the suit Avas discontinued as to all except them. The declaration sets forth, in substance, that on the 11th of September,-1879, the defendants were directors of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, with the duty to manage its business, and
To this declaration the defendants demurred, upon the following grounds •
(1.) That “no such action can be maintained until the plaintiff has obtained a judgment establishing the validity of his debt against the corporation, and a return of nulla bona thereon.”
(2.) That it appears from plaintiff’s own showing that it is a stockholder of the corporation, and has no remedy at law against the directors without making the corporation a ¡i arty.
(3.) That no sufficient reason is alleged as to why the plaintiff, from the 11th day of September, 1879, upon which it received the scrip of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, was ignorant, until November, 1881, of the alleged character of the stock held by it,—-each defendant insisting that the particular acts upon which a liability is claimed to exist and rest upon this defendant should be set out, so that he can be put upon notice.
(4.) That “ it appears that plaintiff, having dealt with the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company as a corporation, are estopped from going behind the note received by them, it appearing that said note was received after the day the scrip issued to it, the scrip being dated September 11,1879.”
(5.) That “plaintiff’s aforesaid declaration shows that the matters complained of constitute, at most, damnumabsque injuria, for plaintiff’s aforesaid declaration avers that, at the time said debt became due, since and now, the said Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company was and is insolvent. Wherefore no loss could accrue to plaintiff by reason of the alleged spuriousness of the stock ; for the stock, the corporation being insolvent, would be equally worthless, whether spurious or genuine.”
(6.) That the 'plaintiff, by this action for deceit against the directors of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress
The court .sustained this demurrer upon each of the grounds therein taken, and gave judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit; and thereupon it excepted and bi’ought the case here, and assigns error, not only to the entire judgment sustaining the demurrer, but to the ruling upon each of the grounds thereof separately and distinctly, and this assignment makes the case for our determination.
In Wilde vs. Gibson, 1 H. L. Cas. 605, 633, Lord Camp.
A fraudulent or reckless representation of a fact as true, which the party may not know to be false, if intended to deceive, is equivalent to a knowledge of the falsehood,
The relation which the defendants bore to this corporation, being its stockholders and directors, and being directly benefited with their co-corporators by this transaction, prevents them from sheltering themselves under the provision of our Code, §2959, which requires representations to obtain credit for another to be in writing, in order to charge the party making them in an action of deceit.
The declaration in this case is skilfully and accurately framed, and contains every requirement of the law.
This suit, as we have seen, was not upon the note made by the corporation to the plaintiff, nor was it a consequence of the failure to realize in a suit upon that note, but was for the deceit practiced by the defendants in relation to the pledge of stock upon which the plaintiff’s money was obtained. It arises from conduct outside of the note itself, but which led to its acceptance; it is for the violation of a private duty, flowing from relations created by contract, and when this breach of duty is accompanied with damage,. a right of action is given. Code, §2954, and cases cited thereunder.
J udgment reversed.