146 N.Y.S. 86 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This is an action at law for damages for deceit similar to Ball v. Gerard (160 App. Div. 619), argued at the same time and decided herewith.
The facts differ in this, that the plaintiff alleges that on November 30, 1906, in sole and implicit reliance upon the statements contained in said prospectus, he subscribed to 5,000 shares of the capital stock of the Barnes King Development Company, agreeing to pay therefor at the rate of $4 per share, and paid therefor $20,000, as follows: $5,000 on the 21st day of December, 1906; $5,000 on February 6,1907; $10,000 on March 11, 1907; and $248.50 on May 9, 1907. That continuing to rely solely upon the statements contained in said prospectus and believing the same to be true he was thereby induced to and did on or about October 1, 1907, purchase 2,500 further shares of said stock in the open market, paying therefor the sum of $2,781.25, and thereafter, on or about July 8, 1909, temporary certificates therefor were issued to this plaintiff who is now the owner and holder thereof.
Two separate transactions are here set up in one count. For the reasons stated in the opinion in the Ball case we think that the Statute of Limitations has run against the cause of action based upon the subscription, the action having been commenced on the 16th of January, 1913, but so far as the cause of action based upon the purchase in the open market on October 1, 1907, it is equally clear that the statute has not run. Therefore, as the causes of action are not separately stated and numbered, and as no demurrer has been interposed upon the ground of
As to that the complaint alleges that the defendants and other persons entered into a wrongful and fraudulent con. spiracy to acquire control of certain property and mining claims and acting through or by means of a corporation then formed or about to be formed to dispose of said property or claims and the stock of such corporation to the investing public, including this plaintiff, at prices greatly in excess of its real or extrinsic value, and by means of false and fraudulent prospectuses, statements, representations and other false and fraudulent means and devices. And in pursuance of said conspiracy the defendants thereafter committed and performed the following acts set forth in articles thereof numbered “Third,” “Fourth,” “Fifth,” “Sixth” and “Seventh.”
The complaint alleges that the defendants fraudulently caused to be prepared, published, delivered and generally distributed a prospectus, of which a copy was annexed, and fraudulently caused to be delivered to plaintiff a copy of said prospectus for the purpose of inducing the investing public in general and all persons into whose hands such prospectus should come, including the plaintiff, in reliance upon the statements contained therein, to invest in the shares of stock of the said the Barnes King Development Company in the manner thereinafter described, and to persuade said public and this plaintiff that the shares of said company would prove a safe and highly remunerative investment, and therein and thereby fraudulently stated and represented among other things and matters as follows: [Setting forth the alleged fraudulent statement of facts.] Then follows the allegation of the subscription to the stock and sole and implicit reliance on the representations set forth and the purchase in the market continuing to rely solely upon said statements and allegations of falsity, scienter and damage.
The claim is made that no cause of action is made out for the purchase in the open market. I am of the opinion that a
If the declaration and payment of a false dividend, upon the faith of which the purchaser bought stock in the open market, was sufficient to support an action for deceit against the directors who knowingly declared the false dividend, it clearly follows that the allegations in the complaint at bar are sufficient
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.