83 N.Y.S. 15 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1903
Under the authority of Marvin v. Brooks, 94 N. Y. 71, and allied cases, this suit is well brought in equity. On the merits I find the plaintiff's story reasonable and worthy of credence, while I have not been impressed with the likelihood of the defendants’ version. I have reviewed the testimony with great care with the result that the view I took of the facts on the trial, when I saw and heard the witnesses before me, finds corroboration in many details.
The plaintiff was the financial backer of the Carbon Steel Company of New Jersey and this fact was generally known; the defendant was its executive head but so far from being possessed or known to be possessed of large means, there are various items of evidence to the contrary. The plaintiff’s private firm being threatened with financial embarrassment in the generally depressed and tightened conditions of 1893 requested the defendant to seek the intervention of a capitalist at Pittsburg, one James Hemphill, who was interested in several concerns supplying the Carbon Steel Company with material and whose business
I find myself unable to accept this story of the defendant. I deem it necessary to refer merely to some of the many facts which show its improbability. The relations between' the plaintiff and the defendant were such that the plaintiff was necessarily
Again, it does not appear that after the transfer by the plaintiff to thé defendant, the latter ever did get a single party or parties to advance money or that a single new avenue of credit
There remains to be considered the question whether the plaintiff’s remedy is barred by the Statute of Limitations. The plaintiff sues to recover a judgment on the ground of fraud to procure the return of certain shares of stock, their transfer on the books of the company and an account for dividends and for such of the stock as cannot be returned. The fraud was committed in the month of July, 1893. The action was begun on January 5, 1900. The plaintiff claims that he did not actually discover the fraud until the spring of 1898, when Robinson, who had been told by Raymond, informed him of it. The plaintiff is entitled to credence. But the question under the authorities is not so much one of actual discovery as it is whether any facts came to plaintiff’s knowledge which fairly put him on inquiry as to the commission of the fraud which should have awakened suspicion, and which made it his duty further to investigate. Higgins v. Crouse, 147 N. Y. 411, 417. • Knowledge is imputed to a party which he ought to have had and would have had if he had done his duty and we are required to say “ for the purpose of the Statute of Limitations that there was in law a discovery of the facts which constitute the fraud.” Ibid. Was there in law such a discovery? This case falls under subdivision 5 of section 382 of the Code, barring in six years “ an action to procure a judg
The fraud having been perpetrated in July, 1893, the six-year period began to run from the date that the plaintiff discovered or should have discovered the fraud. As the action was begun on January 5, 1900, we are concerned here only with the question whether the plaintiff was put on his inquiry between July, 1893, and January 5, 1894, the beginning of the six-years’ period terminating on January 5, 1900, the date of the service of the summons. The defendant claims that the plaintiff should have had knowledge and was put on his inquiry, and, therefore, had actual knowledge in law, by the following facts. At the time of the fraudulent representations the plaintiff was treasurer of the corporation, having access to its books, that he continued treasurer for a period of three or four years and a director until just prior to the commencement of the action, that he was acquainted with Mr. James Hemphill and his son, that the latter frequently came to New York and that the plaintiff could thus have learned from Newton Hemphill whether or not James Hemphill had received the surrendered stock; that the plaintiff was present at the various annual meetings of the Carbon Steel Company of West Virginia, organized in 1894, the successor corporation of the Carbon Steel Company of New Jersey; that he was frequently in the chair; that the list of stockholders was read and that the plaintiff must have or should have known that the name of James Hemphill was not on the list. The defendant also claims that the plaintiff as treasurer signed the stock certificates of the West Virginia corporation which were substituted for those of the New Jersey corporation; this, however, the plaintiff denies, and as the means of proof were available to the defendant, I reject this item of evidence. It is necessary then to consider how. far the items' stated, or any of them, should have awakened suspicion on the part of the plaintiff and put upon him the duty of inquiry. -1 may say here, as bearing on the merits of the case, as well as the particular phase now under discussion, that the defendant had much corroborative evidence available to him in the books and records of the corporation which he omitted to produce.
The fact that the plaintiff was an officer of the several corporations and had access to the books advised him of nothing.
There is thus neither here nor elsewhere in the record any positive proof that the list, which was “usually read off,” was in fact read at the meeting in 1893. Inasmuch- as the Statute of Limitations is an affirmative defense, the burden was on the defendant to show that the list was read off in 1893; that the plaintiff heard it and that having heard it, the omission of the name of James Hemphill to whom he thought his stock had been transferred should have been to him so striking as forthwith to arouse his suspicion and put him on his inquiry. Secondly, the name of Hemphill was read off at this meeting, not the name of James Hemphill but that of the son, Newton Hemphill. The latter was both a stockholder and director. And it certainly is not unreasonable to assume, in view of the fact that the plaintiff had no further interest in this stock and believing that it was gone forever, and in view of the fact that the argument as to what the plaintiff must or should have known reduces itself solely to the inference to be drawn from the failure to hear the name of James Hemphill read off, that his hearing the name of a Hemp-hill was quite sufficient to let unborn’ suspicion remain unborn. I am, therefore, of the opinion that no- facts came to the plaintiff’s knowledge which fairly put him on his inquiry prior to January 5, 1894.
I have treated the question of the Statute of Limitations regardless of any question of laches for I am of the opinion that this being an action for fraud under section 382, subdivision 5, no question of laches, in the strict sence of that term, is involved.
I am of the opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against the defendant Eaymond. Ho case has been made out against the defendant’s wife and as to her the complaint should be dismissed without costs.
Judgment accordingly.