106 N.E. 127 | NY | 1914
The plaintiffs bought of the defendant wagons and parts of wagons, and also employed him to make repairs. Their dealings continued for nearly four years. In that period, the plaintiffs paid for repairs $39,626.66, and for new wagons or fittings $6,027.48, a total of $45,654.14. During all that time, two men, in the plaintiffs' service, were charged with the duty of inspecting purchases and repairs, and payment was not made till they had furnished their certificate of approval. It is charged in the complaint that they received from the defendant a bonus or commission of ten per cent. of the bills which they approved. It is charged that the payment was made to them "with intent to influence their action in relation to the business of the plaintiffs." When these wrongs came to the plaintiffs' knowledge, they could no longer restore to the defendant the benefits received from him. The work could not be restored: it had been incorporated into the wagons which had since then been worn out or destroyed. The wagons and parts of wagons could not be restored: they also were worn out and useless. The plaintiffs say that in this predicament every dollar paid by them to the defendant during the years of their dealings must be repaid without deduction or condition. They ask that all the transactions be set aside; that the contracts under which the payments were *356 made, be declared to be void; and that the defendant be required to repay all moneys which he has received, with interest from the dates of payment.
This action is not the first in which the plaintiffs have sought redress from the defendant for the wrongs stated in their complaint. Its form, however, has been varied. In an earlier action, in the first department, they sued the defendant at law for money had and received. They then alleged that he had not only bribed their servants, but had also overcharged them, and that the payments were in excess of the fair value of the defendant's wares and services. The Appellate Division for the first department overruled a demurrer to that complaint, but held that the plaintiffs' right of action was limited to the recovery of any difference between the value which they had received and the money which they had paid. (Hearn v. Schuchman,
The plaintiffs then discontinued that action, and began the present one in another department. They left out of this complaint the averment that there was a discrepancy between the value and the price. They stated, on the contrary, that since the work was under the exclusive supervision of their dishonest agents, they had no means of determining whether there was such a discrepancy or not. They also recast their prayer for relief by demanding a decree of rescission; and the semblance of an action in equity rather than one at law has thus been given to their pleading. We speak of its form in that regard as a semblance, for we think it is nothing more. The plaintiffs seem to have tried to make out a right of action in equity; but whatever rights they have, we think are purely legal. They do not need at this time the aid of equity. There is nothing at this time for equity to undo. There is no trust to be impressed; no accounting to be decreed; no fiduciary relation to be declared; no instrument to be surrendered. Equity will not entertain an action to declare the rescission of an executed transaction *357
unless a decree announcing the rescission is essential to the suitor's protection. This necessity may arise from the fact that the transaction, if left apparently outstanding, would affect the title to real estate. It may arise where the defrauded party has been induced to become a stockholder in a corporation, so that there is need, not merely to recover what was paid for the shares, but also to sever relations with other stockholders and creditors. (Bosley v. Nat. Machine Co.,
The present action, like the earlier one, is, therefore, in *358
reality, for money had and received. That is always the legal remedy available where a defrauded purchaser, waiving the tort, elects to rescind and to reclaim his payments. (Rothschild v.Mack,
The plaintiffs argue that the defendant was guilty of the crime denounced by section 439 of the Penal Law, and that he if were now suing for the price, the court would refuse to help him. (Sirkin v. Fourteenth Street Store,
The plaintiffs invoke the authority of a line of cases in which it has been held that a victim of a fraud, who is unable, because of changed circumstances, to make restoration to the wrongdoer of benefits received, may still, under certain conditions, recover what he has paid. (Masson v. Bovet, 1 Denio, 69; Hammond v.Pennock,
We think, therefore, that the plaintiffs, admitting, as they do, that they have received property and services of value, which they have wholly consumed, must show, in order to reclaim the money, that its retention by the defendant is against good conscience, and that they do not show this in the absence of an allegation of some disparity between the value and the price.
The order should be affirmed, with costs, and the question certified answered in the negative.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE, HOGAN and MILLER, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.