202 Pa. 642 | Pa. | 1902
Opinion by
We glean the following from the facts found by the court below: In the year 1898, one, S. N. Stetler, secured a number of leases for coal underlying lands situated on the west side of the city of Scranton, and entered into an agreement with certain parties, among whom were the plaintiff, H. B. Reynolds,
On June 5, two days following, Reynolds sent the following communication to the president of the coal company: “ To the President, People’s Coal Company: I hereby tender my resignation as secretary and director of the People’s Coal Co., the same to take effect forthwith. Yours truly, II. B. Reynolds.”
The learned court finds that the one fact about which the witnesses who testified substantially agreed was, that the assignment by Reynolds to Boland, on June 3, 1899, was made to circumvent the hostility of Stetler to Reynolds; but, from the following extracts from the testimony of the plaintiff and one of his witnesses, the purpose was not only to circumvent Stetler, but to deceive him:.“Q. Look at this paper — that was drawn up by you, was it not? (Paper shown witness.) A. Yes, sir. Q. And drawn up with the design of fooling Mr. Stetler, wasn’t it ? A. I suppose that is the sense of it.
Boland, to whom 310 shares of the capital stock of the company were issued, refused to assign to Reynolds the number of shares to which the latter claimed he was entitled, and this bill was filed to compel his specific performance of his agreement of June 3, 1899.
It is true, C. G. Boland and John A. Mears, who, with William P. Boland, co-operated with Stetler in the organization and operation of the company, are, with it, made parties to the bill, in which allegations are made of a conspiracy on the part of these individuals “ to cheat the plaintiff out of his interest in the stock of said company and its property; ” but the real relief sought is a decree against W. P. Boland, on his agreement of June 3, 1899, for his specific performance of it by assigning to the plaintiff the shares of the capital stock of the company to which he alleges he is entitled.
It is conceded by counsel for appellant that the facts as found by the court below, so far as they go, are correctly stated ; but it is contended that there are other facts of significance, as well as legal conclusions derived therefrom, which must be weighed in order to determine the attitude of the different parties and the nature of their actions relatively considered. We cannot, however, agree that any fact of significance or importance, voluminous as the testimony is, was overlooked by the learned judge in passing upon the single and simple question, whether plaintiff, on his own admissions, had come into a court of equity with clean hands. He dismissed the bill because the agreement of June 3, 1899, had been executed to deceive Stetler, and the plaintiff was, therefore, not entitled to consideration by a chancellor. This is the single question now before us, as is frankly stated by the appellant in his paper-book, and, in determining it, we shall consider only the facts found below, the other features of the case, to which our attention has been called at great length, being at this time of no importance.
Equity springs from conscience and is administered through it. He who would reach the conscience of a chancellor must come with his own void of offense, for “ He that hath committed iniquity shall not have equity: ” 1 Pomeroy’s Equity Jur. 434-
“ If a contract has been entered into through fraud or to accomplish any fraudulent purpose, a court of equity will not, at the suit of one of the fraudulent parties, a particeps doli, while the agreement is still executory, either compel its execution or decree its cancelation, nor, after it has been executed, set it aside, and thus restore the plaintiff to the interests which he has fraudulently transferred. Equity will leave such parties in exactly the same position in which they have placed themselves, refusing all affirmative aid to either, of the fraudulent participants. The only equitable remedies which they can obtain are purely defensive. Upon the same principle, whenever one party, in pursuance of a prior arrangement, has fraudulently obtained property for the benefit of another, equity will not aid the fraudulent beneficiary by compelling a conveyance or transfer to him; and, generally, where two or more have entered into a fraudulent scheme for the purpose of obtaining property in which all are to share, and the scheme has been carried out. so that all the results of the fraud are in the hands of one of the parties, a eohrt of equity will not interfere on behalf of the others to aid them in obtaining their share, but will leave the parties in the position where they have placed themselves: ” 1 Pomeroy, section 401. “ While a court of equity may act upon the conscience of a defendant and force him to do right and justice, it will never thus interfere on behalf of a plaintiff whose own conduct in connection with the same matter or-transaction had been unconscientious or unjust
It is not pretended that, in the agreement of June 3, 1899, Reynolds and Boland tried to take advantage of each other, or that either was attempting any fraud upon the other. Its sole purpose was the deception of Stetler, to enable Reynolds to accomplish through it what was apparently impossible without it. But this does not relieve it from its baseness, and in it there is no equity for the plaintiff. As early as April 4, 1899, he and W. P. Boland, by the express terms of the settlement of the action of ejectment which they had brought against Stetler, agreed to assign all the stock held by them in the People’s Coal Company to S. N. Stetler, or to any person or persons or company to whom he might direct the assignments to be made. At that time Stetler believed, as he had reason, that Reynolds was out of the enterprise, and he then went on with it, retaining the co-operation of W. P. Boland, who, in the distribution of the capital stock of the company, received 310 shares. His confidence in Boland was misplaced, for all the time the latter was in sympathy with Reynolds; and, on June 3, 1899, in violation of the good faith which he owed to Stetler, and which Reynolds knew he was violating, a contract was entered into, by the terms of which, if specifically enforced, Reynolds can thrust himself into 'business companionship with Stetler, and, by subterfuge and a trick, accomplish what would have been impossible in open and fair dealing. Though the People’s Coal Company would not have been organized and successfully managed if Reynolds had not agreed to withdraw from it by assigning whatever interest he had in it to Stetler, or to any one whom the latter might name, in violation of his agreement of April 4, he made another, by the terms of which he
Whatever rights at law Reynolds may have under the agreement of June 3, 1899, we do not pass upon. We simply decide that the relief which he craves in equity must be denied him. The question now is, not what Boland ought to pay him on the agreement of June 3, 1899, as an executed contract between them, but whether, as an executory one, its terms can be enforced specifically, with the effect of consummating the deception intended by it when entered into and of perpetrating by fraud the imposition upon Stetler. No other view could have been entertained by the court below than that the bill must be dismissed, and the decree dismissing it is now affirmed at appellant’s costs, without prejudice to any rights he may have at law.