58 N.J. Eq. 117 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
The complainant is a stockholder in the Strong Locomotive Company, an insolvent corporation, and the object of this bill, which is filed against the receiver, is to set aside the contract upon which he purchased his shares of stock from the company, to have the sale declared void and to have established against the receiver as a claim the amount which he paid to the company for the stock. The purchase of the stock is alleged to have been procured by false and fraudulent representations made to complainant by the president of the company, as representing the company in the sale.
The representation made by Darwin in reference to the issue of stock was, as complainant alleges, that no stock of the company had been sold for less than fifty cents on the dollar, being the price which the complainant paid. It now appears that the entire capital stock of the company ($1,200,000), with the exception of ten shares, had been issued for the purchase of the patents or in exchange for the stock of another company'which owned the patents, and was issued as full-paid and non-assessable. About $400,000 of this stock was returned to the company or conveyed to a trustee, to be sold to raise working capital for the company, at fifty cents on the dollar. It was so issued and sold, complainant’s purchase being of this treasury stock, and none of this stock appears to have been sold for less than fifty cents on the dollar, but complainant now says that he was not informed, at the time of his purchase, of this issue of stock for the patents or stock of the company owning the patents, and that by reason of this suppression the representation made to him as to the issue of stock was false and fraudulent. The recitals in complainant’s written subscription to the stock disclosed that the stock which he was to receive was part of an issue made to a trustee to raise working capital, and that for each $50 paid complainant was to receive one share of full-paid, non-assessable stock of the company of the par value of $100, and pursuant to this contract of subscription the certificate itself for five hundred shares of stock was issued to complainant upon payment of $2.5,000 and delivered to complainant about June, 1889. This certificate also was, on its face, declared to be “full-paid and non-assessable” and “issued for property purchased.” The written subscription and the form of this certificate and the information contained therein put complainant upon inquiry as to the issue of stock for property .purchased, and inasmuch as
Upon considering the entire evidence, I cannot avoid the conclusion that at least as early as June, 1890, complainant had information in relation to the financial condition of the company, and the issue of its stock sufficient to disclose to him the falsity of the representations alleged to have been made to him, or sufficient to put him on inquiry as to their falsity. Such information imposed on him the duty of acting promptly, if he intended to repudiate the purchase and to be relieved from the relation of a shareholder, and his acquiescence in the situation for nearly three years afterwards, and until the company had been declared insolvent, disentitles him to call upon the receiver to rescind- the purchase and refund the amount paid. The English cases uniformly deny to the stockholder the right to rescind the contract after insolvency has intervened, and while the American courts do not all adopt this hard and fast rule, all courts agree substantially in the view .that contracts for purchase of stock alleged to‘ have been procured by fraud, are contracts which are not absolutely void but are merely voidable at the option of the defrauded party, and that the purchaser must promptly assert his right to rescind, in order to be effectual against the receiver or assignee of an insolvent corporation. The cases in reference to the effect of delay in claiming a rescission are collected in 7 Thomp. Corp. ¶ 8440.
These cases establish that diligence in the discovery of the fraud and promptness in the repudiation of the purchase or sub