6 Mo. App. 338 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs are assignees, by virtue of a voluntary assignment under the statute, of the West St. Louis Savings Bank, a corporation created according to the laws of this State. The petition alleges that on February 12, 1876, the bank, being insolvent, made the assignment; that the defendant was a director of the bank; and that in December, 1875, with intent to cheat and defraud the bank, he wrongfully obtained from it $1,500 of its moneys by a sale to the bank of fifteen shares of its capital stock, to the damage of the bank of $500, etc. . In similar language another fraudulent sale is charged, by which the defendant, with intent to cheat, etc., obtained $500. There was a general
It is first contended that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on the ground that by the assignment no right passed to the assignees to annul this fraudulent sale ; that the present claim was not among the assets, and was not a “ credit or effect ” within the statute ; that the assignees do not represent the creditors, and cannot object in their behalf. But cases like Hurlbut v. Carter, 21 Barb. 223, and Estabrook v. Messersmith, 18 Wis. 545, are not here in point. No corporate franchise is here involved ; and this is not an instance of property transferred in fraud of creditors, and a transfer good except as to them. This action, if made out, is that the transfer was bad inter jpartes, and lies in favor of the bank’s representatives. It is true that the plaintiffs’ second instruction, quoted below, was asked on a different theory ; but the question is now as to how the action can be properly maintained.
Whether the right passed by the assignment is another question. This depends, not on the form of the action, but on the nature of the right. We must not confuse the form with the right, the process with the result. If the right is essentially one of property, as distinguished, for example, from a personal tort, the fact that case or trover may lie to secure the right does not prove that it is not assignable under the statute. Suppose that the claim was that the appellant, instead of fraudulently obtaining money of the bank, had by means of a fraudulent purchase obtaiued goods or specific securities. Trover would lie, the sale being disaffirmed, for the conversion ; but it would not then be contended that the securities were not securities of the bank. So in the present case, independently of the mere form of action, the right, being essentially a property right
It is next insisted that the demurrer should have been sustained as there was no proof that the assignees had rejected these sales or tendered to the appellant the stock-certificates ; that this was a prerequisite to any right of action. The general rule is well settled that where a party seeks to rescind a contract he must do so unequivocally and in a reasonable time, and must be able to put the other party in substantially the same position that he was when the contract was made. The rescinding party must offer to return what he has received under the contract, unless it appears that the property is absolutely of no value. This rule is too well established to need the citation of authorities, and is strictly adhered to, as the right of rescission is an exceptional right, and might, without a careful observance of this rule, be most injuriously exercised. The question is here as to the application of the rule. If it applies, the demurrer should undoubtedly have been sustained. But it is possible for the respondent to escape on the ground that he does not seek a rescission. If the action is not here any fonn of action that implies repudiation of the contract, —as, for instance, trover or replevin for articles parted with, or assumpsit to recover back the money, as such, which was paid, — and if the petition does not allege any steps taken towards a rescission, how can it be urged that a rescission is claimed? Upon an examination of the authorities cited in Cook v. Gilman, 34 N. H. 560, which fully sustain the rule there laid down, it will appear that they are in point only on the theory that the respondents here demand a rescission. But if this suit is grounded upon the fraudulent acts, and seeks merely to recover damages for loss so suffered by the bank, no rescission is necessary. Where a vendee repudiates the contract on the ground of fraud, he should place
It follows from what has been said that the judgment must be reversed. The case was not put to the jury upon the theory of an action for deceit. The first instruction
1. “If, from the evidence, the jury believe that any of the stock mentioned in the petition was sold to the bank under any agreement or understanding between defendant and any employee of the bank, and that said stock was at the time worthless, the jury will find for the plaintiff for the amount paid by the bank therefor, and interest thereon.”
2. “If the jury believe from the evidence that the stock mentioned in the petition, or any of it, was in fact sold to. the West St. Louis Savings-Bank by the defendant, and was then worthless, then the sale was in fraud of the creditors of the bank, and the jury should find for the plaintiff the amount paid by the bank therefor, and interest thereon.”
The position that the bank was insolvent, urged by way of excuse for not rescinding the contract, is of no force. The appellant was entitled to know that a rescission of the contract was claimed, and here the petition gives no warning to that effect. The appellant cannot, without opportunity to join issue or adduce evidence, be deprived of a defence ; nor can the respondents, by the ambiguity of their petition, obtain advantages of which an adherence to the Practice Act would have deprived them. If the action is based upon a rescission of the contract on the ground of fraud or that a purchase of its own stock was ultra vires of the bank, the petition should have shown this. As it was,
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded.