76 Vt. 385 | Vt. | 1904
This is a bill to impeach a decree of the probate court allowing the final account of the defendant as guardian of the orator, because of the alleged fraud of the defendant in procuring the orator’s approval of said account.
The bill is again demurred to, and it is objected that the allegation that said decree was made solely by reason of said approval and not otherwise is not well pleaded, as it contradicts the record set out in the bill, which shows that the defendant swore to the justness and truth of his account before the probate judge himself. But the rule as to the conclusiveness of the record of judicial proceedings does not apply when process is brought bearing directly upon them for the purpose of vacating and setting them aside for fraud. In such cases the record may be contradicted. Godfrey v. Downer, 47 Vt. 653.
It appears from the bill that on September 19, 1900, the probate court specifically decreed the property in question to the orator, then a minor, as legatee under his father’s will; that the property consisted of divers shares of the capital stock and the debenture bonds of various banks and trust companies in Iowa' and Missouri, and was received by the defendant soon after his appointment as guardian and immediately after the making of said decree, from the administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of said estate.
It is alleged in the bill, and urged in argument, that it was the duty of the defendant to< refuse to receive the stock and bonds from the administrator, and to demand cash in
It is further objected that the allegations of fraud are not sufficient. We take no- note of the allegations in paragraph 17 of the bill, for they are bad for generality. Those in paragraph 19 are, that the defendant, contriving and intending to deceive and defraud the orator of his rights in the premises, and with intent to prevent him from calling the defendant to account for his breach of trust as guardian, told the orator that he had used all due care and diligence in and about the orator’s estate; that as the investments had been made before the securities came into- his hands, he was under no duty to¡ change them, and that the losses occasioned by their depreciation were without his fault, and that he had fully performed all the duties -of his trust. The bill then goes on to allege that the orator fully believed and relied upon the truth o-f said representations, and believed that the defendant had disclosed to him all the facts necessary to1 inform, him. of the full extent of his rights and remedies in the premises, and believed that the defendant had committed n-o> breach of trust for which he could be called to account, .and so did not object to receiving his property in the form in which it was offered to him, and approved the defendant’s account.
It is contended that these declarations of the defendant were but expressions of his conclusions of law, and that such general statements of opinion are not fraudulent, especially as it is not alleged that the defendant did not honestly believe them to be true. But the allegation is that they were made with intent to deceive the orator, and that they did in fact deceive him, in respect of his rights; and this the demurrer admits. It is also; alleged, in effect, in the last amendment, that said statements were not true. But if these statements
It is objected that the bill is without equity, for although it alleges that the defendant might, by the exercise of proper diligence, have sold the securities for from, ten to thirty per cent, above their par value, yet it also alleges that they had no value nor quotation in the large stock markets of the United States, and that their salability in and around Montpelier, where the defendant lived, was due to the fact that certain unscrupulous and dishonest persons interested in the cor
This is a pretty thorough impeachment of the value of these securities, and shows that they were really worth little
Whether he could have safely sold the stock without disclosing what he is to’ be charged with knowing about it, we •do not decide. Some cases make a distinction between the ■sale of the capital stock of a going concern and the sale of commercial paper or other obligations for the payment of money, in respect of the duty of the seller to1 disclose his knowledge of the corporation’s or the maker’s insolvency. Rothmiller v. Stein, 143 N. Y. 581.
Demurrer overruled, bill adjudged sufficient, and cause-remanded.