29 N.J. Eq. 188 | New York Court of Chancery | 1878
This suit is brought against the New Jersey Stone Company and six natural persons. These six defendants, with the complainant, constitute all the proprietaries of the corporate defendant. Its object is to set aside the complainant’s contract to take one hundred shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and also to recover the amount he has paid under it, on the ground that he was induced to enter into it by willful misrepresentation.
Contracts to take stock in a corporation stand upon the same footing as all other conventional obligations. If induced by fraud, they create no obligation, and the injured party has a right to have them abrogated.
The rule is universal, whatever fraud creates justice will destroy. Eor the general rule no authorities are necessary, but the following cases are cited to give instances of its application to the class of contracts under consideration: Central R. R. Co. of Venezuela v. Kisch, L. R. (2 H. L.) 99; Smith’s Case, L. R. (2 Ch. Ap.) 604; Kent v. Land and Brickmaking Co., L. R. (4 Eq. Cas.) 588; Ross v. Estates Investment Co., L. R. (8 Eq. Cas.) 122, S. C. on appeal, L. R. (3 Ch. Ap.) 682; Smith v. Reese River Co., L. R. (2 Eq. Cas.) 264. The subjection of contracts of this kind to the rule above stated is thus plainly expressed by Lord Romilly, in the case first mentioned: “ Contracts of this description between an individual and a company, so far as misrepresentation or suppression of the truth is concerned, are to be treated like the contracts between any two individuals. If one man makes a false statement which misleads another, the way in which that is to be treated affords the example for the way in which a contract is to be treated where a company makes a false statement which misleads an indi
Though the bill in this case proceeds upon the assumption that the complainant has entered into a valid contract, it appears no contract in writing was signed or made. The charter evidently intended the subscriptions to the stock should be made by writing only. The second section authorizes the incorporators to open books of subscription for capital stock (P. L. 1872, p. 749). Under a charter containing such a provision it has been held the contract must be in writing, and that a contract could not be established by parol evidence if a written contract had not been made. Pittsburgh and Connelsville R. R. Co. v. Clarke, 5 Casey 146; Pittsburgh and S. R. R. Co. v. Gazzam, 8 Casey 340. But under the case made here it must be assumed the contract is in legal form, and valid, unless infected with fraud.
The charter was approved March 22d, 1872, and an organization effected on' the 9th day of May following. The eor
No lease was executed until February 20th, 1873. Shortly prior to this date, the complainant had obtained information which caused him to believe that he had been defrauded, and to express dissatisfaction. On the 20th day of February, 1873, a lease was made by a person who was not the owner of the demised lands, to the person of whom the purchase of the lease was authorized, and, by an instrument bearing date on the same day, he sublet the demised premises to the corporation. The lease to the defendant granted a term of nine years and three months, and reserved a rent of $1,500, payable at the end of the term, and that to the corporation granted the same term, and reserved a rent of $35,000, payable also at the end of the term. The corporation acquired no right whatever, by a written instrument, to the possession of the demised premises, until February 20th, 1873; up to that date the person from whom it
Three of the defendants distinctly admit that one of their number, speaking in the presence of the others, and without the slightest dissent being manifested by any of the defendants, openly represented to the complainant, just before the adoption of the resolution giving him permission to subscribe, that the corporation had purchased the lease for $35,000, and paid for it. This was pure fiction. Not a penny had been paid for it, and it was not intended that anything ever should be paid. It would be quite difficult, if not impossible, to invent a representation more thoroughly false in all its parts. It did not possess even the gloss of truth. No lease had been executed at this time, and I think there is strong reason to doubt even the existence of an available written contract for a lease. One of the defendants swears the fee of the lands to be demised was not worth over $2 an acre, and his estimate receives strong corroboration fi'om the description given of them by other witnesses. No sensible man, in the prosecution of an honest enterprise, would agree to pay as rent, for a comparatively short time, three times the sum required to purchase the fee of the lands demised. The insincerity of the opposition to the complainant’s subscription is painfully obvious; no one can doubt it was a mere fraudulent stratagem, artfully used, to stimulate his cupidity and stifle his caution. Two of the defendants pretended to be opposed to his application, but neither hinted that, if he was successful, his stock would cost him double what the other stockholders had paid for theirs, nor did they call his attention to the startling fact that they and the other defendants had realized on the sale of the lease the enormous profit of $33,500. One of them
But it is contended the six defendants are not personally liable, and that a decree can only go against the corporate defendant. Such relief would, in this case, be manifestly inadequate. It would leave the fraud-doers simply convicted of fraud, but untouched by the legal consequences of their own acts. In Ross v. Estates Investment Co., L. R. (3 Eq. Cas.) 122, and in Kent v. Land and Brickmaking Co., L. R. (4 Eq. Cas.) 588, a decree was made against all the defendants for the sum fraudulently obtained. These cases, in my opinion, declare the correct rule. All who get gain by fraud must bear the legal consequences of the wrong they do. "When a fraud is committed in the name, and under cover of a corporation, by persons having the right to speak for it, for their personal gain and benefit, they are bound to answer personally for their wrongful acts. Their tongues uttered the false words and their purses should pay the damages. In this case the defendants constituted the whole proprietorship of the corporation, and they merely employed the corporate name the more effectually to accomplish their purposes against the complainant.
The complainant is entitled to a decree abrogating his contract, and requiring the defendants to refund to him the sum paid under it, with interest, together with his taxed costs I will advise accordingly.