43 A. 637 | N.H. | 1898
This action is based on the theory that the title to the goods in question never passed from the plaintiffs to Crapo because of his fraud in effecting the alleged contract of sale. To establish the fraud, the plaintiffs rely upon Crapo's false representation in the letter of August 16 and his suppression of facts concerning his financial condition. The question here is not whether fraud may be properly inferred from these circumstances, as a matter of fact, but whether there is anything in them which constitutes fraud as a matter of law.
1. The only false representation contained in the letter was this: "I can safely promise you that our dealings, if you wish to continue them, will be more satisfactory than last season." He had not paid the plaintiffs promptly for the goods purchased of them the preceding season, and the representation related to *449
that matter. It would generally be understood as a promise to be more prompt in his future payments. The word "safely" was apparently used to express inferentially his opinion that his financial ability and prospects justified him in making the promise. His further statement that he was to have additional capital, and that he expected to profit by his past experience, seems to strengthen this view. The finding that the statement was unreasonable and untrue tends to show that it was regarded at the trial term as the expression of an opinion or expectation. If so regarded, it might be unreasonable and, as it was not fulfilled, in a sense untrue. If this view of the character of the statement is correct, it did not constitute fraud although it was not true. Lyon v. Briggs,
2. Obtaining goods, under color of a purchase, by a dishonest concealment of an intent not to pay for them, is a fraud in law. Stewart v. Emerson,
Many of these authorities hold that the purchaser's insolvency, although known to him and unknown to the vendor, is not *450 equivalent to an intent not to pay, as an element of fraud; and no authority in conflict with this proposition has been cited or found. But the plaintiffs say that if, in addition to insolvency and knowledge of it, the purchaser has no reasonable expectation of paying, and conceals this and the other facts from the vendor, who cannot learn of them by an exercise of ordinary care, he is guilty of fraud.
In Powell v. Bradlee, 9 G. J. 220, one of the cases relied on to support this allegation, three distinct propositions were submitted to the jury, in substance, as follows: (1) If they found that the purchasers of the flour in suit (of which the defendants were consignees) were insolvent when they made the purchase, were aware of the fact, had no expectation of paying for the flour, concealed these facts from the vendors (the plaintiffs), applied for the benefit of the insolvency laws soon after obtaining the flour, and failed to pay for it, and that the vendors by the exercise of ordinary prudence could not have learned of such insolvency and want of expectation, the contract of sale was fraudulent and void; (2) if they found that, from and after the delivery of the flour, the vendors relied upon the individual responsibility of the purchasers for payment, the title passed, notwithstanding the purchasers were insolvent and knew it, unless the jury also found that the purchasers knew they were not and would not be able to pay for the flour, and neither intended nor expected to do so; and (3) if they found that, at the time of the purchase and delivery of the flour, the purchasers intended to pay for it, the title passed, notwithstanding they were then "as greatly insolvent as they proved afterwards to be, and knew that fact," i.e., to the extent of being able to pay only twenty per cent of their indebtedness. The court held that the first and third of these instructions were correct, and that the second was incorrect. The reason given for the latter holding was that the jury could not well find that the purchasers knew they would not be able to pay, and it was sufficient for them to find, "in that respect, that they knew themselves to be insolvent and had no reasonable expectation of paying for the goods purchased." The holdings seem to be inconsistent, the one with the other. By the third instruction, the contract of sale would not be voidable for fraud if the purchasers intended to pay for the flour when they entered into the contract, even if they were so deeply insolvent that they could pay only a small percentage of their indebtedness. The fact here held out as the controlling one is the intent to pay; the expectation of the purchaser, whether reasonable or unreasonable, does not enter into the question. It is difficult to understand why the intent was not equally important in the second instruction. In Diggs v. Denny,
Talcott v. Henderson,
Seligman v. Kalkman,
According to Stewart v. Emerson, supra, and the other cases cited, the intent not to pay for the goods obtained is the fundamental fact in the fraud. This intent and the concealment of it together constitute the fraud. Judge Doe, designating the buyer as A and the seller as B, says (p. 320): "The fraudulent design of which B complains is the intent of A to get goods without payment and by fraudulent concealment. . . . The fraudulent design is not merely negative, — not to pay at a future time; it is also affirmative, — to obtain the goods and the credit by the concealment of the material fact of the intention not to pay."
In Watson v. Silsby,
In the case under consideration, although it was unreasonable for Crapo to expect he could continue business and pay for the goods received from the plaintiffs, there is evidence having some tendency to show that he intended to pay for them, and it found that he did not have a specific intention not to do so. He continued his business more than two months and a half after receiving the goods, and nearly a month and a half after the payment became due. In the end, he did not go out of business voluntarily, but was forced out by insolvency proceedings begun by his creditors. It does not appear that he concealed or in any way incumbered his stock in trade, nor that he misappropriated any of the money arising from the business. It may be that he intended to pay the plaintiffs from the receipts of the business, but was induced by the activity and persistence of other creditors to use the receipts in paying them. It is matter of common knowledge that the plans of insolvent purchasers are sometimes overruled in this way. That there is evidence having the, opposite tendency and perhaps more weighty, furnishes no answer to this suggestion, but simply shows that the question is one of fact and not of law.
It is difficult to define fraud except in a very general way. It is variable, depending upon the circumstances of the case. Those who make use of it adopt ways that have the appearance of good faith. Great skill is often shown in the attempt to make that which is false and corrupt appear true and honest. Hard and fast rules of law would be a hindrance to the discovery of fraud. Whether a transaction is fraudulent is generally question of fact. Of course, the circumstances attending the transaction must be weighed in the light of legal principles; but if, upon such consideration, it is found that a person has fraudulently misled another to his injury and without his fault, fraud is found. The rule making the intent the principal element of fraud in cases like the one under consideration, goes as far the way of definition as justice requires. To introduce into it the element of the reasonableness of the purchaser's expectation as to payment would narrow it and tend to defeat the ends of justice. It would attach to the contract of sale a contingency that the law has not heretofore recognized. Many, purchasers of goods are insolvent in a legal sense, but it has not been generally understood that their title to the goods depended upon the reasonableness of their expectation of paying for them. If such *453 were the rule, attachment and insolvency laws would be largely superseded by the efforts of vendors to reclaim the goods sold, when the purchaser failed to pay or became insolvent. Vendors do not need such a rule for their protection. They are fully protected by the rule as it now stands, — making the fraud depend upon the intent and leaving the reasonableness of the purchaser's expectation in respect to payment to be considered by the jury in connection with all other circumstances bearing upon the good faith of the sale.
3. The fraud by which Crapo about December 20, induced the plaintiffs not to reclaim a portion of their goods did not affect the contract of sale. If the title to the goods passed to Crapo when they were delivered to him, it could not be defeated by his subsequent fraud. The defendant, as assignee of Crapo, is not estopped by Crapo's fraud to deny that the title to the goods was then transferred to the plaintiffs. As they declined to receive them, there is no basis for such an estoppel.
Case discharged.
PARSONS, J., did not sit: the others concurred.