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Garrison v. Technic Elec. Works

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 29, 1897
53 N.J. Eq. 708 (Ch. Div. 1897)

Opinion

06-29-1897

GARRISON v. TECHNIC ELECTRICAL WORKS et al.

E. R. Walker and G. D. W. Vroom. for demurrants. J. H. Carpenter and Herbert Armitage Drake, for complainant.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Bill by Prank Lynwood Garrison against the Technic Electrical Works and others. Heard on demurrer. Overruled.

This bill is filed by Frank Lynwood Garrison, complainant, against George M. Sinclair, John J. Zimmele, and the Technic Electrical Works, defendants. The complainant states: That the Technic Electrical Works was duly incorporated under the laws of New Jersey on July 14, 1893. That the object of the incorporation was the manufacture and repair of electrical and other machinery. The company commenced business in the month of September, 1895. In February, 1895, the defendant Sinclair had been secretary and treasurer of the company for a month, and the defendant Zimmele was at the same time a stockholder and president and manager of the corporation. Sinclair requested the complainant to purchase of him 50 shares of the stock at $40 per share, and 20 shares of the treasury stock of the corporation; and it was represented to the complainant by Sinclair and Zimmele, principally the former, that the company was in a solvent condition, but that its collectible assets were in excess of its liabilities, counting the capital stock issued as part of the liabilities. They exhibited to the complainant a balance sheet of the condition of the company, which they stated was true, and that the receipts from sales of its manufactured commodity were in excess of its expenditures; that it was then doing a profitable business, and, with a small additional capital, and attention such as the complainant could give, it would make money and become prosperous; and that, if the complainant would purchase the stock, he should be elected an officer of the company, and receive a salary of $25 per week for his services as such officer. Relying on these statements, the complainant agreed to purchase 50 shares of the capital stock of the company belonging to Sinclair for $2,000, and 20 shares of the treasury stock of the company for $1,000, cash, to be at once paid to the treasurer of the company,— the $2,000 to be paid to Sinclair to be one-half cash and one-half by duebill of the complainant. On March 2, 1896, Sinclair and Zimmele gave the complainant a memorandum of the agreement, which, however, contained no mention of the office and salaries to be bestowed as above stated, and by the memorandum of agreement Sinclair and Zimmele pledged their word that their assets and liabilities of the corporation, as stated in trial balance sheet of February 1, 1890, submitted to the complainant at that time, and their statement as to the solvency, credit, and condition of the corporation, were true, as the memorandum, a copy of which is annexed to the bill, will show. On March 5, 1896, the complainant paid Sinclair, under the agreement, $1,000 in cash, and gave him a duebill for $1,000, and on the same day he paid into the treasury of the company $1,000. The complainant received, by transfer from Sinclair, 50 shares of stock, and from the company 20 shares of stock, and from Zimmele 20 additional shares of stock, making in all 90 shares, and was thereupon elected president of the company in place of Zimmele, and placed in the management of its affairs and business, and given power to control the disbursements of the company by regulation that all the checks of the treasurer should be countersigned by the complainant as president. Zimmele was made secretary and treasurer of the corporation in the place and stead of Sinclair. There are 137 shares of the stock of the company held by other persons than the complainant, the principal part of which were held by Sinclair and Zimmele, although the complainant is the largest individual holder of the stock, and Sinclair is the next largest holder. The company does not own any real estate. Its manufactory and works are rented in the city of Philadelphia. The employment of Zimmele was to obtain orders for goods to be manufactured by the company. When the complainant took charge he found the plant of the company, including the orders on hand, engaged in the work of making up The complainant cut off unnecessary expenses, and reduced the force of employes, so that there should be no more than sufficient to fill profitable orders, in which course Zimmele and Sinclair acquiesced. The complainant states that shortly after be took charge he ascertained that the balance sheet of February 1, 1896, was inaccurate in several particulars: Bills payable to the amount of over $400 were admitted by Sinclair to have been omitted from that item on the balance sheet. The inventory of the plant and tools stated as assets had been made up over a year prior to that time, and no allowance had been made for depreciation. The item, accounts receivable, had been represented to the complainant to be collectible to the extent of two-thirds, but the complainant found that less than one-half was collectible. The balance sheet was in every respect incorrect and misleading. About the end of March the complainant was paid three weeks' salary at the rate of $25 per week, and the complainant ascertained that, notwithstanding the additional capital which had come into the treasury, yet, by reason of Sinclair taking stock for a part of the account which he held against the company, the company was in financial difficulties.

The complainant then made a thorough examination of the financial condition of the company, and ascertained that its assets then were, and for over two years prior thereto had been, insufficient to pay its debts and continue its business; that its expenditures for the previous five months had been in excess of its receipts, without any corresponding increase in the assets; that its business for the previous five months had been unprofitable; that the company had been for over two months, and at the time of the statement made to the complainant was, insolvent, and unable to pay its liabilities without suspending its business. The complainant charges that the mistake in fact made by him in the condition of the company, which led him to invest his $1,000 in the company, was entirely due to the misstatements, misrepresentations, and concealment of the condition of the company, made by Sinclair and Zimmele; that it arose from no want of care or omission of legal duty on the part of the complainant. The complainant refused to pay the duebill of $1,000, which fell due on the 1st of April, 1896, and proposed to Zimmele that the company should go into liquidation, to which Zimmele at first acceded; and when the complainant made an application to the circuit court of the United States in the district of New Jersey for a decree of insolvency and the appointment of a receiver, the complainant having failed in the said application, abandoned his suit, and dismissed the bill, Sinclair brought suit against the complainant ou the duebill for $1,000 in the Philadelphia common pleas, to which suit the complainant filed an affidavit of defense and put in a counterclaim against Sinclair for the $1,000 which he had already paid. Since the futile proceedings in insolvency, the control of the business has been interfered with, and the complainant ousted therefrom, and combination of the safe has been changed to prevent his access thereto, and by-laws adopted containing provisions for a vice president, and giving him power to countersign the treasurer's checks, which power theretofore was held exclusively by the president. Pending the application of insolvency in the United States court, the company's business was practically suspended, and not carried on in a way to be substantially effective, owing to the financial condition of the company. Since that time the business has been carried on by borrowing large sums of money, increasing its liabilities, without adding to its assets, and Zimmele and Sinclair are carrying on the business at a heavy loss, consuming the assets of the company, and in fraud of the complainant, making his stock daily less valuable. The complainant further charges that the company is doing business at a loss, consuming its assets and increasing its liabilities in the regular course of business, and that, if it did pay its liabilities, there would not be over $1,000 of assets left to be divided among its stockholders, holding capital stock to the amount of $11,350, less the stock held by complainant; and the complainant states, if the company is allowed to proceed with its business, these remaining assets will be consumed, and nothing left for its stockholders. He further states that, since he knew of the insolvency of the company, he took measures to rescind his contract by which he paid $1,000 into the treasury of the company, and is now ready to return to the treasurer of the company and to return to Zimmele the stock that he received from them when he paid $1,000 to the company. The bill prays answer without oath, and that the defendant may be decreed to pay to the complainant the $1,000 paid by the complainant to the company, with interest, upon the complainant delivering up to the company and to Zimmele the 40 shares of stock received by him from them, and that, on failure, a receiver may be appointed to take the assets of the company and sell or dispose of the same for so much as it may be necessary to pay the complainant his said sum of $1,000 and interest, or, if it be more equitable, that the receiver may first pay all other debts of the company than the capital stock and the claim of the complainant, his said sum of $1,000, with interest, provided they be sufficient, and, if they be insufficient therefor, that the balance of the $1,000 be paid by Sinclair and Zimmele, or one of them, and that an injunction be issued to the company, and Sinclair and Zimmele restrained from further carrying on the business of the company, and disposing of or meddling with the same, etc.

To this bill the defendants, the Technic Electrical Works, Sinclair, and Zimmele, demur by joint and several demurrer. They state as the causes of their demurrer (1) that the bill does not contain any statement that the defendant the Technic Electrical Works has become insolvent, or suspended its business for want of funds to carry on the same, so as to entitle the complainant to a receiver and injunction as prayed for in the bill; (2) that the statement in the bill contained as to the alleged misrepresentations made by Sinclair and Zimmele as to the financial condition of the company and its prospects do not show a case to entitle the complainant to any discovery or relief; (3) that, even if the representations alleged to have been made were false and fraudulent, they were beyond the scope of the power of the defendants Sinclair and Zimmele as officers of the company, and cannot bind it; (4) that if the conduct of the business set out in the bill was the cause of loss, yet that such management and conduct was nothing more than a mistake in judgment on the part of the officers of the company, and does not show a case which entitled the complainant to relief; (5) that the complainant has uot by his bill stated a case which entitled him to either discovery or relief.

E. R. Walker and G. D. W. Vroom. for demurrants.

J. H. Carpenter and Herbert Armitage Drake, for complainant.

GREY, V. C. (after stating the facts). The first ground of demurrer is that the bill doesnot contain any statement that the defendant corporation has become insolvent, or suspended business for want of funds, etc., so as to entitle the complainant to a receiver and injunction, etc. On the argument it was assumed that the bill as framed is a proceeding seeking to have the defendant company declared insolvent and this court to appoint a receiver to wind up its affairs. Bills for such a purpose must undoubtedly set out facts which indicate that the financial condition of the company is such that it is, because thereof, compelled to suspend its business. Stopping of its works is not necessarily a suspension "of its ordinary business for want of funds to carry on the same." There are many occasions when the stoppage of production is not only advisable, but necessary, and without insolvency. Nor does carrying on business at a loss, or borrowing money, necessarily indicate a condition of insolvency. That the company is able to do these things, and still proceed with its business, is rather an indication that its financial credit is good. The bill under consideration, while alleging the company to be insolvent, as a part of the complainant's case to show that its financial standing was misrepresented to him, and with some surplusage stating subsequent details of its business, does not attack the defendant company in order to declare its insolvency, appoint a receiver, and wind up its affairs. No decree that the company is insolvent is prayed for. What the complainant asks is a decree for the return of his money, and a receivership for the purpose of applying the assets of the company to the payment which he seeks,— not a preliminary decree of insolvency and a receivership for the purpose of administration, but a receivership as a final mode of relief to procure the payment of his own claim. The prayer for injunction to restrain the further conduct of the business of the company, contained in the bill, is evidently also sought as an ultimate remedy in aid of any decree the complainant may obtain for the payment of his claim. Inasmuch as the bill is not one for the administration of the defendant company's assets because of its insolvency, I think the first ground of demurrer, which criticises it for the lack of the fullness of statement required in such a bill, cannot be sustained.

The second ground of demurrer is that the misrepresentation, etc., charged in the bill as to the financial condition of the company and its prospects, do not show a case to entitle the complainant to discovery or relief. In examining this objection, misrepresentations, so far as they relate to matters of opinion and judgment as to the happening of future events,— as that the company, "with a small addition of capital, and attention such as the complainant could give, would make money and become prosperous,"— cannot be regarded, as it is well settled that such statements, even if false, do not constitute a fraud, if there be no relation of trust or confidence between the parties. Wise v. Fuller, 29 N.J.Eq. 257; Conlan v. Roemer, 52 N.J.Law, 53, 18 Atl. 858. Allegations of such statements afford no ground for relief, and are not to be regarded as well pleaded, nor can they be taken as admitted to be true by the demurrer. But representations made by an owner or his agent to an intending purchaser, at the time of the bargain, descriptive of the existing condition of the subject-matter of the proposed sale, as to its kind, quality, or quantity, stand on a different basis, aud, if falsely made, to mislead the buyer, they may be the basis for a recovery. A statement that income from a property is greater than it is, is a fraud, for which an action will be supported. Wise v. Fuller, supra; Crosland v. Hall, 33 N. J. Eq. Ill. So, also, a statement that a property rented for more than in fact it did rent for was held to avoid a contract of sale. Dimmock v. Hallett, 2 Ch. App. 28. The allegations of this character, which the defendants admit by their demurrer, are that Sinclair requested the complainant to purchase shares of stock from him individually, and also from the company defendant; that Sinclair and Zimmele, during the negotiations for the sale of this stock, exhibited to him a balance sheet, which they said was true, and stated that the collective assets were in excess of the company's liabilities, taking capital stock to be a liability; that the receipts from sales of its products were in excess of its expenditures; that it was then doing a profitable business. They gave to the complainant a written memorandum, pledging their word that the assets and liabilities of the corporation stated in the trial balance sheet of February 1, 1896, submitted to the complainant, and all their verbal statements as to the solvency, credit, and condition of the corporation, were correct and true. Sinclair was at this time the secretary and treasurer of the company, and Zimmele was its president. They were, therefore, so related to the company that they knew its financial condition. Relying on the truth of these statements, made by these men whom he knew to be officers of the company, the complainant agreed to purchase 50 shares from Sinclair and 20 from the company, and paid $1,000 in cash to Sinclair, and gave his note for the balance, on which Sinclair transferred to him the 50 shares; and the complainant also paid $1,000 to the company for its 20 shares, and accepted the issue of them from the treasury of the company. It is these 20 shares, received directly from the company, which the complainant now offers to return, and the payment for which he seeks to have refunded to him. Upon the sale of the stock to the complainant being concluded, he was elected president of the company, and then discovered that the balance sheet was not true; that $100 of bills payable had been omitted; that the inventory of plant and tools was made more than ayear before, and that no allowance had been made for depreciation; that the item, bills collectible, represented to be collectible to amount of two-thirds value, was in fact less than one-half of it collectible; that for over two years prior thereto the assets of the company had been insufficient to pay its debts and continue its business; that its expenditures for the previous five months had been in excess of its receipts, and its business for the same time had been unprofitable; and that the company had been insolvent for over two months, and unable to pay its liabilities without suspending its business. These allegations show that the actual condition of the company varies, in substantial particulars, and in matters of existing fact then within the knowledge of the defendants, from the representations alleged to have been made by them which induced the complainant to make the purchase of the company's stock. If true,— and on this issue they must be taken to be true,— they show that Sinclair and Zimmele, the executive officers of the defendant company, and its largest stockholders, being interested to have additional capital put into the company, and knowing its true financial condition, while they were conducting the company's business in obtaining purchasers of its stock, made false statements indicating a much more favorable financial situation of the company to be the fact than then actually existed, for the purpose of inducing, and thereby actually induced, the complainant to purchase the 20 shares of the treasury stock. In such cases courts of equity afford relief by canceling the contract, and thus relieving the party injured from its obligation if it be executory, or compelling a restoration of the property obtained by fraud if it be executed. 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. 872 et seq. I think the second ground of demurrer cannot be sustained.

The third ground of demurrer is that the misrepresentations of Sinclair and Zimmele were beyond the scope of their power as officers of the company, and cannot bind it. The complainant's allegations in this respect charge that Sinclair, who was the secretary and treasurer, and Zimmele, who was the president, of the defendant company, by false and fraudulent representations induced him to purchase from the company 20 shares of its stock; that the company issued this stock to him, and received his money, under this contract, into which he was thus induced to enter; that he now finds the statements made to him to have been false, and the value of the stock by reason thereof to have been worthless, or nearly so, and he therefore tenders a return of the stock, and asks a decree that the company refund the money. He does not seek to make the company respond in damages for the unauthorized false statements of its affairs, but only to restore the money which the company has received by fraud. The insistment of the demurrants amounts to this: That the company may recognize and ratify the acts of its officers whereby it obtained the complainant's money, but that it has no responsibility for the fraudulent misrepresentations which they made to secure it, because it did not expressly authorize the false statements to be made. This contention has had support in England in a number of cases arising on subscriptions to stock, and in Ayre's Case, 25 Beav. 513, it was declared that misrepresentations by the manager and secretary of a company, by which subscriptions to its stock were obtained, were not chargeable against the company, to relieve from the subscription because not authorized by the company,— the master of the rolls holding that "any false statement made by an agent of a company, not sanctioned by the company, would not bind it." The necessary effect of such a declaration is that a corporation may retain the beneficial results of a fraud perpetrated by its officers in the conduct of its business, unless the fraudulent acts are expressly authorized. In the house of lords, however, the responsibility of a corporation for the fraudulent contrivance of its agents was put upon broader ground. Lord Cranworth declared that the objects of a corporation can only be accomplished through the agency of individuals, and that there could be no doubt that if the agents employed act fraudulently, so that, if they had been acting for private employers, the person for whom they were acting would have been affected by their fraud, the same principles must prevail where the principal under whom the agent acts is a corporation. Ranger v. Railroad Co., 5 H. L. Cas. 85. As to the validity of contracts of subscription for stock of a corporation obtained by misrepresentations made by its officers, though there has been considerable conflict in the English cases, the true doctrine on this point is declared to be that, where the person who has been deceived institutes a suit to rescind the contract to purchase shares, the misrepresentations are imputable to the company, and the purchaser cannot be held to his contract. Bank v. Addie, L. R. 1 H. L. Sc. 145; Oakes v. Turquand, L. R. 2 H. L. 325. It is unquestioned law that a corporation must respond for the acts of its agents in the conduct of its business which are injurious to others, though they may be wholly unauthorized by the corporation,— indeed, forbidden by it,— as in the cases of railroad train operatives, who, while driving trains, injure passengers or travelers of highways, in breach of the company's rules, and the many negligence cases which arise in the conduct of the business of railway, steamboat, ferry, and other corporations. These acts are done, perhaps, by day laborers, and are not beneficial to the company, nor in any way ratified or approved by it. The company answers for these wrongdoings, because it has put the wrongdoers in its place to do its business, and it must respond for the wrong so done to other persons in the course of itsbusiness. I can see no reason why the corporation should not respond, at least to the extent of restoration, in cases where the officers and agents of the company perpetrate a fraud in the conduct of its business, and thereby induce the making of a contract which the company accepts and executes, and of which it retains the benefit. The American cases on the liability of corporations for the frauds of their agents committed while in the conduct of their business assert a jurisdiction quite as extensive for the correction of such wrongs. If the corporation has clothed the agent with the power to act in its behalf, and receives and accepts the benefits resulting from his agency, then the parties injured by the fraud may resort for redress to the principal. But it is no answer to say the corporations could not authorize an agent to perpetrate a fraud, because, if this were so, no corporation could be held liable for any acts of its authorized agents, however great the injury to others. Fogg v. Griffin, 2 Allen, 6. This liability of the company is stated to attach, not on the ground of express authority given by the corporation to its agent to make the statement, but because the corporation cannot act save through its agents, and as to the particular matter the agent stands in the place of the principal, and whatever he does or says about that matter is the act or saying of the principal. Sharp v. Mayor, etc., 40 Barb. 250. The execution by the corporation of the resulting contract, and the retention of its benefits after knowledge of the fraud, are not only a ratification of the contract itself, but also an adoption of the statements of the company's agents whereby the contract was obtained. It is unconscionable that the corporation principal should be permitted to keep the results of a fraud by merely denying the authority of its agents to perpetrate it. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 193a. In the case in hand, whatever may have been the lack of authority of the president, secretary, and treasurer of the defendant company to make the misrepresentations which led to the sale, or even to bargain for or issue its stocks, the fact is admitted that the company, on the bargain made by these officers (who probably comprise all the executive officers), accepted the payment and issued the stock. The company thereby ratified their action and conduct. When the company took the benefits of the fraud, it took with those benefits the responsibility for the fraud which procured them, at least to the extent of an obligation of restoration to the party defrauded. It is no answer to say it did not know of nor authorize the fraudulent statements. It knows them now, and, by retaining the money with knowledge, it ratifies their acts, and the statements by which the money was obtained. If it disavows the fraud, it has not done full equity until it restores to the injured party the benefits which it received by reason of the fraud. It can not, in a court of equity, in a case where the superior rights of the creditors of the company do not intervene, retain the profit resulting from a fraud done in its behalf, and refuse restoration, upon an allegation of its ignorance of the fraudulent acts or the lack of authority of its officers who acted for it in the conduct of its business in perpetrating the fraud. In this state, in just such a case, the rule is stated in the broadest terms. If such contracts are induced by fraud, they create no obligation, and the injured party has a right to have them abrogated. Vreeland v. Stone Co., 29 N.J.Eq. 189. In the latter case, the fraud by which the subscription was obtained consisted of a false representation made by a single director, in the presence of other directors, at a directors' meeting, but upon which no corporate action whatever was taken. The complainant was held to be entitled to have his contract of subscription abrogated, and a decree for the return of his money, not only against the company, but also against all the directors who were present; and the court of errors (29 N.J.Eq. 651) unanimously approved the decree. The third ground of demurrer cannot be sustained.

The fourth ground of demurrer is that, even if the conduct of the business set out in the bill was the cause of loss and financial embarrassment to the company, yet that such conduct was only a mistake in judgment on the part of the defendants as officers of the company, and is no ground for the relief prayed for. This ground of demurrer seems to-be based upon the supposition that the complainant seeks to charge the defendants because they mismanaged the company's affairs, and thereby caused him a loss. I have already shown that the bill, though not free from surplusage, sufficiently indicates that the ground of complaint is that the defendants, by false statements, made to him, to the effect that the company's financial condition was of a certain favorable character, in details named, induced the complainant to take the company's stock, and he now asks that this contract be abrogated, and that the definite sum of money he paid for the stock be restored to him. The complainant does not ask any remedy against the defendants Sinclair and Zimmele because of their mismanagement of the general business of the company, though the bill does set out some acts of the defendants which were alleged to have been to the disadvantage of the company. These allegations are surplusage, and do not affect the substantial relief sought by the bill. As no relief is sought because of this conduct, it is of no significance whether it arose from mistakes in judgment or gross negligence or willful fraud. The defendants have all demurred generally to the whole bill. The demurrer must be effective as against the bill in all its parts, or it must be overruled. The bill, taking its well-pleaded allegations to betrue, exhibits a ease where the complainant was induced by false representations to purchase shares of stock, which he tenders himself to be ready to return, and prays that the defendants who made the false representations, or received and accepted the benefit of them, may be decreed to refund the money. That the complainant also asks relief by specific methods not applicable in the same suit for the enforcement of such decrees will not deprive him of his rightful remedy. There is in the bill an exhibition of a right to equitable relief, and a prayer for a decree accordingly, and a general demurrer will not be sustained because relief may not be given in one or more special modes which are suggested in the prayer of the bill. In such cases a general demurrer is too broad, and must be overruled. Banta v. Moore. 15 N.J.Eq. 97; Durling v. Hammar, 20 N.J.Eq. 228. I will advise that the demurrer be overruled, with costs.


Summaries of

Garrison v. Technic Elec. Works

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 29, 1897
53 N.J. Eq. 708 (Ch. Div. 1897)
Case details for

Garrison v. Technic Elec. Works

Case Details

Full title:GARRISON v. TECHNIC ELECTRICAL WORKS et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Jun 29, 1897

Citations

53 N.J. Eq. 708 (Ch. Div. 1897)
53 N.J. Eq. 708

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