310 Mass. 789 | Mass. | 1942
The plaintiff in this bill in equity seeks to rescind a transaction with the defendant Luce, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, and to have him account for property that he received from her in that transaction on the ground that she was fraudulently induced by him to enter into it. She prays, among other things, that the “document,” hereinafter referred to, signed by her on January 13, 1939, be decreed to be null and void. The evidence is reported, and the trial judge made a voluntary report of material facts. The defendant appealed from the final decree by which the note, hereinafter referred to, and the “contract or other arrangement between the parties arising from the letter of January 12, 1939 are declared void,” and other relief was given to the plaintiff. In the circumstances, it is for this court to review fact as well as law, but weight must be given to the judge’s findings, and one question to be decided is whether it can rightly be said that the findings made by the judge who saw the witnesses and heard them testify are plainly wrong. Boston v. San-
The report is as follows: “This is a bill in equity seeking the cancellation of a note given by the defendant to the plaintiff and an accounting between the parties, arising out of transactions hereinafter referred to. The plaintiff is a widow, her husband having died in 1933 and leaving her with considerable personal property consisting of securities, and from 1933 on the plaintiff did considerable business with brokers in the purchase and sales of securities. The defendant was formerly a customers’ man, so-called, for J. H. Goddard & Company, dealer and broker in investment securities, and by some way, which did not appear in evidence, the defendant knew of the plaintiff and called upon her in March of 1937, secured her confidence and was allowed by her to act as broker in various transactions relative to the securities then owned by the plaintiff. These ’ dealings and transactions went on until the latter part of 1938, when the defendant suggested to the plaintiff that he could deal more efficiently with the securities and could take advantage of a possible rise in the market value thereof if the same were placed in his name so that he could deal with them from time to time without conferring with the plaintiff. He first suggested that a corporation be formed to handle the business relative to the securities; this the plaintiff refused to do, but did finally agree to turn over to the defendant such securities as were then available having approximately a market value of $17,000. The defendant suggested that the arrangements should be reduced to writing, and to that end he consulted counsel who drafted a letter addressed to the plaintiff and signed by the defendant, a copy of which appears in the bill and bears a date of January 12, 1939. The original was sent to the plaintiff by mail and on the next day, January 13, 1939, she signed the postscript thereto setting forth that she
The “letter” or “document,” hereinbefore referred to, is as follows: “Boston, Massachusetts January 12, 1939 Mrs.
Subject to the defendant’s exception evidence was admitted as to the plaintiff’s understanding of the agreement. But in any event, the plaintiff’s understanding of whatever agreement was made is not material in the absence of a fiduciary relationship. Costello v. Hayes, 249 Mass. 349, 352. Darling-Singer Lumber Co. v. Commonwealth, 290 Mass. 488, 492.
The material findings are: (1) that at the time the “arrangement” was made, “as above set forth,” the defendant intended to use the proceeds of the securities for
1. We are of opinion that the finding of a fiduciary relationship is wrong. Apparently it does not take into account the testimony of the plaintiff, by which she is bound, that when the defendant first came to see her in 1937 she gave him a list of her securities, and that thereafter she received a “Memorandum” typed upon sheets headed with the name “J. H. Goddard & Co. Investment Securities,” brokers by whom she knew the defendant was employed. This memorandum appears to contain an analysis of her securities, together with suggested changes by way of sales and purchases. The plaintiff testified that after several conversations with the defendant she gave him some of her savings bank books and securities, and it appears that from time to time Goddard & Company bought and sold securities for her account. She testified that she knew she was dealing with Goddard & Company; that she knew it was their advice she was receiving; that she knew the defendant was employed by, and knew, or presumed, that he was receiving pay from Goddard & Company for the services he rendered in securing her account, and that “that was the relation that existed between . . . [them] down until about 1939”; that as to the analysis of her securities that she
In any event, the plaintiff’s relations with Goddard & Company finally came to an end, but not before she had opened two other accounts with brokers, with one of whom she had an account at the time of the trial. She went to see one of these brokers and talked things over with him. He suggested a few changes in her securities to which she was agreeable, and in every instance where securities were bought or sold by these two brokers, she personally gave the order. It is true that it could have been found that the defendant, when he took the securities to the broker for sale after the letter of January 12, 1939, was signed, was asked as to his capacity, and that he said he acted in a
In the fall of 1938 conversations began between the plaintiff and defendant relative to the latter having the plaintiff’s securities in his name. There were several conversations and the plaintiff “was just thinking it over.” Eventually she “decided he could look after it better than . . . [she], and said . . . [she] would let him have the money.” It is to be observed that in this she did not refer to letting the defendant have the securities. From the inception of these conversations down to the time when the letter was signed, there was nothing in them relating in any way to any transactions then in hand. On the contrary, they were with reference to some sort of any agreement that the defendant was suggesting. The defendant apparently had stepped out of his position as an employee of Goddard & Company, at least in so far as his relation with the plaintiff was concerned, and it is apparent that he was attempting to accomplish something for himself. It is true that during this period the plaintiff told him that she was not a business woman; that she trusted him to do the best he could for her and thought he was going to. She rejected his suggestion that a corporation be formed, although he told her it was all to benefit, to help, her. She gave the matter thought and eventually decided he “could look after it better than . . . [she]” and told him that she would let him have the “money.”
The judge found that the plaintiff was a woman of little or no “business experience notwithstanding the fact that for two or three years prior to her dealings with the defendant she had her brokers act for her in the purchase and sale of securities.” Just what is meant by the words “business experience” does not appear, but the evidence discloses
As was said in Comstock v. Livingston, 210 Mass. 581, at page 584: “Mere respect for the judgment of another otrust in his character is not enough to constitute ... a
The “letter” in question was signed by the plaintiff on January 13, 1939. The defendant testified that he purchased stocks upon a margin account with the money obtained from the sale of the securities that the plaintiff gave him, and it appears from the “bought” and “sold” statements of a brokerage firm that on January 24 and 30, 1939, the defendant bought shares of General Electric Company and Richfield Oil Corporation stock for which his account was charged $17,565, and that on April 6,1939, these shares of stock were sold and his account credited with $14,688.70. It is true that on January 13, 1939, the plaintiff gave the defendant seventy-five shares of General Electric Company stock. These shares, with others, were delivered by the defendant to a broker whose account with the plaintiff showed their receipt by him. The defendant testified that he sold these seventy-five shares and although it does not clearly appear from the record the parties have assumed that they were sold by the broker, and that the proceeds of the sale were included in one of the checks that the broker made payable to the plaintiff which she indorsed over to the defendant, and were also included in the amount of the note that the defendant gave the plaintiff. The defendant was asked about a loan of $1,500 that he said he made from the money derived from the sale of the stocks, and he testified that the loan was repaid. He was asked: “What became of that money?” He replied: “I don’t know what became of that; it was used in living expenses.” But he had already been asked how much of the money he had left and had testi-
2. It is true that an inference is permissible that a state of affairs, including a state of mind proved to exist, has existed for some time, Conroy v. Fall River Herald News Publishing Co. 306 Mass. 488, 493, and cases cited; see Flynn v. Growers Outlet, Inc. 307 Mass. 373, 377, and that the intent and disposition of a person can be ascertained only from his acts and declarations. Thayer v. Thayer, 101 Mass. 111, 113. We are of opinion that, in the case at bar, the evidence did not warrant an inference that the defendant, at the time the letter was signed, intended to use the proceeds of the securities for his own benefit or use, in the sense that such use was in violation of any agreement that he had made. It is to be observed in this connection that the trial judge did not find that at the time in question the defendant intended to use the money for living expenses. His findings go only to the extent that he intended to use the proceeds “for his own benefit ... to his own use.” If the transaction between the parties was a loan, as evidenced by the letter, variously referred to by the parties as the agreement or contract, the defendant had a right to use the proceeds derived from the sale of the securities that were turned over to him as anyone would have to use money that he had borrowed, in the absence of some agreement to the contrary, if there was no fraud that would render the transaction voidable. It well may be that, as matters have turned out, the defendant, in so far as the evidence discloses, by using the money for living expenses, has, for the
In the opinion of a majority of the court the decree cannot be supported by the findings of the trial judge. In the last analysis, however, it is the duty of this court to decide the case according to its judgment as to the facts, even though it is determined that the judge’s decision was plainly wrong. Berman v. Coakley, 257 Mass. 159, 162.
3. There is no suggestion in the judge’s findings that there was any fraud practised by the defendant at the precise time that the “letter” was signed by the plaintiff, and she makes no contention that there was. Over her signature she stated that she fully understood its terms and that she signed it without reliance on anything not expressed therein. The plaintiff’s bill states that “after the letter had been read to her by the defendant but without taking time to consider the matter or to consult others, [she] signed” it. In the circumstances, apart from the question whether there are actionable fraudulent representations, she is bound by what she signed. Nutt v. Aldrich, 267 Mass. 193, 195. Strong v. Boston Mutual Life Ins. Co. 283 Mass. 88, 90-91. Darling-Singer Lumber Co. v. Commonwealth, 290 Mass. 488, 492.
4. The plaintiff contends that the case at bar comes within the rule stated in Bates v. Southgate, 308 Mass. 170, where it was held that a provision in a contract attempting to protect a party against the consequences of his own fraud in inducing the contract is against public policy, is void, and that it is immaterial whether the fraud is antecedent to the contract or entered into its making. That case does not change in any particular the rules of law as to what constitutes the elements of actionable fraud and its consequences, nor is there anything said in it that limits or alters the effect of the paroi evidence rule (page 183). The test to be applied to determine whether the plaintiff
The plaintiff contends that the fraudulent misrepresentation was that the defendant told her that the proposed transaction involved a transfer of her securities to him as her representative to deal with them on the market, and that he represented that his intention was to buy and sell stocks to invest for the plaintiff when, in fact, he intended to use the proceeds of the securities for living expenses.
In the fall of 1938 when the defendant first spoke to the plaintiff about handling her securities personally, he said to her that it would be easier if he had the stocks in his hands; that he could buy and sell them without asking her; that it would be easier for her to depend on a sure amount instead of a lot one month and a little another month, “to have the same amount every month.” He suggested that a corporation be formed, but she “vetoed” this plan. The plaintiff testified that she told the defendant she wanted to arrange her affairs so that she would know what she could depend upon, and that they talked only of “this corporation, and this agreement that . . . [they] made, those two.” After several conversations in the fall of 1938, there was another one early in 1939. In answer to the question as to what the defendant said at that time, the plaintiff replied: “That was when I decided he could look after it better than I, and said I would let him have the money.” She also testified that the defendant was to have his “commission and whatever was right for him to have.” Something was said about drawing up an agreement, the defendant stating that he would have his lawyer do it so that both he and she would feel better about it, and she testified that she “agreed as to that.” In answer to a question on direct examination as to whether prior to the time when the “agreement” was signed the defendant had said anything to her about when the securities or money would be returned to her, she inquired of her counsel: “You mean the length of time it was supposed to run?”
After the conversation in 1939 about having an agreement drawn, the plaintiff was asked if she received a letter from the defendant in regard to the “agreement,” and she replied that she had; that it came by mail and that the defendant came to her house “right after the mail” and asked her if “it” had come. She told him that it had. In answer to a question whether she had some conversation with him, she replied: “Why, I just signed it, that was all.” She did not read it, but he read it to her and asked her to sign. When asked where they went after the defendant had read the agreement to her, she replied “Well, we had to get those securities for him.” They went to the bank where she got certain securities which she gave to him. Among them were some shares of telephone stock which she “rather objected to his changing”; she wanted to keep that stock, but he thought it was better not to. She put a copy of the letter that she had signed in her safe deposit box.
The defendant took the securities to an investment broker who sold them for the plaintiff’s account. The broker testified that the defendant asked that the checks for the proceeds be made payable to him, except in one instance. The checks, however, were made payable to the plaintiff, one of which bears the indorsement of the plaintiff and the defendant, and the other is indorsed by the plaintiff to the defendant.
The plaintiff testified that she knew that the buying and selling of securities in the market was more or less of a
When we refer to the letter that the plaintiff signed, it is true that the defendant stated his intention to use the money received from the plaintiff in return for his note in the purchase and sale of stock. But that is immediately followed by the statement that he is under no obligation to do so and that this "transaction” amounts to nothing more than a loan by her to him. When the letter was read to her, the first sentence of which begins "Before you con
Upon consideration of all the evidence, a majority of the court is of opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to relief. The decree must be reversed and her bill be dismissed.
Ordered accordingly.