56 Ind. App. 190 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1914
The Automobile Insurance Company of America was incorporated under the laws of this State, with an authorized capital stock of 100,000 shares, each of the par value of $10. During the process of organization a large amount of stock was sold to divers persons throughout the United States by means of gross misrepresentations, and more than $100,000 had been dissipated through agents’ commissions, 37£ per cent having been allowed agents securing all stock subscriptions, whether such subscriptions were paid by cash or by note. Before the organization of the company was completed and before permission had been granted to write any business and before the certificates of stock had been issued, there was an effort made on the part of some of the officers and directors of the company to transfer all of the assets of the company to the Federal Union Surety Company.
The appellants in this case each subscribed $10,000 to the stock of the company, paid $5,000 in cash and issued their separate notes for the remaining $5,000. On October 18, 1910, about sis months after these notes had been executed by appellants they served notices of a rescission of
The court’s final decree which embodies all the material elements of the receiver’s report is as follows: “And the court being advised, finds that the petitions of ¥m. B. Joyce & Company, and Joyce & Company to the final report of the receiver herein, should not be granted as prayed for in said petition or said exceptions to the final report of the receiver sustained. * * '* that the evidence adduced by said interveners and each of them does not sustain said petition and exceptions and the court finds
It is the contention of appellants that since they ascertained on October 18, 1910, some time before the appointment of the receiver, that they had been defrauded and at that time they formally rescinded their subscription contracts and demanded a return of their notes and cash, that they then became creditors of the company and as to their notes, the court should have adjudicated them null and void and should have ordered the receiver to pay each of them the amount of $5,000 and interest, that being the amount of cash payment made by each at the time their stock was subscribed for.
It is admitted in the briefs of both appellants and appellee that all parties executing the subscription contracts and notes had been defrauded by the agents and officers of the company. It is also apparent that the corporation had never been completed, had never issued any stock and had never written any insurance business, and therefore it never was a going concern, so that it necessarily follows that all the moneys which came into the possession of the receiver for distribution consisted solely of the money which had been paid in by the subscribers on their stock subscriptions and this suit was brought so that these funds might be equitably distributed among those who had paid it in.
3. The question then arises, Do the appellants occupy a more advantageous position in a court of equity by reason of the fact that they had not paid their notes prior to their rescission, over the defrauded parties who had paid their subscriptions, in full, had discovered the fraud at a later date, and likewise acted promptly in rescinding their contracts? If this were a suit to enforce
Therefore, upon the whole case, equity requires that appellants’ notes and those of other subscribers received by the pompany in the same manner be not considered in the distribution of the assets of the corporation and that such notes be returned to them as canceled. As to the cash payments, in view of the holding that all parties acted promptly and rescinded their contracts upon the discovery of the fraud, appellants have acquired no superior rights to those of all the other promoting contributors. Therefore, from the cash fund created by the contributors, appellants should be paid such a proportion of the cash fund in the hands of the receiver as the amount of cash paid in by them bears to the total amount of cash paid in by all the
Note. — Reported in 105 N. E. 59. As to misrepresentation by corporation for which, subscriber to stock may rescind, see 136 Am. St. 748. As to the rescission of subscriptions to stock for fraud and misrepresentation, see 33 L. R. A. 721. See, also, under (1, 2, 3) 10 Cyc. 437.