266 Mass. 573 | Mass. | 1929
The issue in this suit is whether the contract for the purchase of shares of stock in a business corporation should be rescinded for alleged false representations made by the defendants. A master was appointed, exceptions to his report were overruled, the report was confirmed, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill, from which the plaintiff appealed.
The defendant McKenney was for many years a dealer in electrical and gas fixtures' in Boston doing business under the name McKenney & Waterbury Co., Inc. The plaintiff had been employed by a concern dealing in electrical supplies and the defendant Paine, who is referred to as a nominal defendant, had been an employee of McKenney for many years. On February 17, 1921, the parties entered into a written agreement under seal by which McKenney was to cause a corporation to be formed and to turn over to it all the assets and good will of the business of the McKenney & Waterbury Co., Inc. in consideration of the issue to him of all the preferred stock of the corporation and all but four shares of the common stock. Paine and Vye therein agreed
The master found that at a conference some weeks before the execution of the agreement, McKenney told the plaintiff and Paine that the plaintiff was to put in $25,000 and Paine an equal amount in some way; that each was to pay Mc-Kenney that amount or its equivalent. At a later interview before the execution of the contract, McKenney told the plaintiff that he and Paine were to stand on an equal footing and that Paine had agreed to make an initial payment of $25,000, but the master found that McKenney never told Vye in terms that Paine had paid $25,000 in cash or that he was to make this payment in cash. Before the execution of the contract McKenney and Paine had not agreed that Paine should make his. first payment in cash and there was no evidence that they had agreed before that time as to the manner in which Paine’s first payment should be made. Soon after the contract was executed, Vye paid McKenney as his part of the initial payment the sum of $25,000 in the form of a treasurer’s check. Paine took care of his part of this payment by giving McKenney an unsecured note for $10,000 with interest and by being credited with $15,000 as a gift from McKenney. A receipt in the following form was signed by McKenney and given to Vye: .“I hereby acknowledge receipt from Alfred J. Paine and Murwyn W. Vye of the first payment of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) called
The plaintiff believed when he signed the contract that its terms accurately stated the understanding of the parties as to the first payment to be made. He also believed that McKenney would receive $50,000 in cash or its equivalent, of which sum Vye and Paine were each to pay one half. The master found in substance that the predominating motives and reasons which caused Vye to enter into the contract were the expectation that the business would be profitable so that ultimately the stock would be paid for from the earnings, but" that Vye was appreciably influenced to enter into the contract because he believed that Paine had agreed with McKenney before its execution to pay $25,000 on account of the first payment; that he was also "of the opinion, if it is material, that Vye would have entered into the contract of February 17, 1921, even if he had anticipated or been told of a future $10,000 note from Paine and a waiver by Mc-Kenney as to $15,000 in favor of Paine.” He found there was nothing in the evidence to warrant a belief that Mc-Kenney would have made with Vye, for his first payment, an arrangement similar to that made with Paine, and there is no finding that McKenney intended to deceive the plaintiff. The findings in the form of a statement of opinion by the master we construe to be findings of fact.
Whatever significance may be given to the finding that Vye was appreciably influenced to enter into the contract because of his belief as to Paine’s agreement with McKenney, it could not in law amount to a fraudulent inducement thereto
According to the terms of the contract the plaintiff and Paine obligated themselves to make a first payment of $50,000 on account of the purchase price. The agreement did not further state how the payment was to be made. The plaintiff had paid his half of the first instalment and Paine had in legal effect contributed the other half by causing a credit against the purchase price of a sum equal to that paid by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff’s interest in the corporation and his rights under the contract were the same as they would have been if Paine had paid $25,000 in cash. The net result was a reduction of $50,000 in the indebtedness, and the balance due was just what the plaintiff understood it would be after the first payment had been made. It is immaterial so far as the plaintiff’s rights are concerned whether McKenney received the whole of the first payment in cash or whether he had agreed with Paine in advance as to the manner in which his payment should be made. The parties stood on an equal footing in the sense that each had caused the total indebtedness to be reduced by $25,000. A promise or representation that a payment of a fixed sum will be made does not necessarily mean that the obligee will require a payment in cash. Amos v. Bennett, 125 Mass. 120, 123. See National Wholesale Grocery Co. Inc. v. Mann, 251 Mass. 238,250. The findings of fact were made upon evidence not reported and it does not appear that the material findings were necessarily inconsistent with each other or clearly wrong. McNamara v. Consolidated Hotels Corp. 243 Mass. 22, 24.
Interlocutory and final decrees affirmed with costs.