3 P.2d 557 | Cal. | 1931
This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action to recover damages suffered by the plaintiff on account of an alleged fraudulent sale to her by the defendants of corporate stock of the defendant corporation.
[1] It is not disputed that the stock certificates delivered to the plaintiff in exchange for $5,000 cash found to have been paid by her were issued by the corporation and delivered to the plaintiff by the defendant Elmer Dwiggins, acting as president of said corporation, prior to the issuance of a permit therefor by the corporation commissioner, as required by section 12 of the Corporate Securities Act, and that such a transaction is void under the terms of said section. (Stats. 1917, pp. 673, 679.) The purchase price of the stock was paid by the plaintiff about September 13, 1924. This action was brought on September 7, 1927, against the Harbor Realty Development Corporation, which issued the stock, and against Elmer Dwiggins, and other defendants individually, and Dwiggins Company, a copartnership. The basis of the action was the alleged fraud of the defendants in inducing the plaintiff to enter into the illegal sale of the stock certificates, and the plaintiff sought as damages the sum of $5,000 paid as the purchase price thereof.
As grounds of appeal the defendants contend that the findings bearing upon the issues of fraud are not supported by the record and that the court erred in rejecting the defendants' *48
offer of testimony the purpose of which was to show, under the doctrine of the case of Domenigoni v. Imperial Live Stock etc.Co.,
[2] None of the testimony in the record nor any of the evidence offered by the defendants has the effect to take this case out of the general rule stated in Tatterson v. Kehrlein,
[3] The evidence on the issue of fraudulent representation was sharply in conflict. This conflict the trial court resolved in favor of the plaintiff, and we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the finding that the plaintiff was induced to part with the sum paid by her through the fraudulent *49
representations of the corporation and of the defendant, Elmer Dwiggins, its president, namely, that the plaintiff would receive therefor valid shares of stock when and only when the corporation had succeeded in obtaining a permit to issue the same, is not supported by sufficient evidence. Elmer Dwiggins testified that he knew the corporation had not obtained the permit when he signed as president and delivered the stock certificates to the plaintiff. The record warrants the conclusion that the plaintiff did not have knowledge of the facts and that she was not fully apprised of her right to relief until September, 1927, and it is not to be supposed that she would willingly have accepted invalid certificates for the sum paid by her. Without any consideration moving to her, the plaintiff was induced to and did pay her money on what in law was a false representation upon which she relied; and her damage follows as a matter of course. (Boss v. SilentDrama Syndicate,
Other contentions made by the defendants have been considered but are not of sufficient merit to require discussion.
The judgment is reversed as to the defendants, Laurence W. Dwiggins, Raymond Dwiggins, and Dwiggins Company, a copartnership. As to the defendants Harbor Realty and Development Corporation and Elmer Dwiggins, the judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Langdon, J., Preston, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred. *50