Adams v. Soule

33 Vt. 538
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 33 Vt. 538 (Adams v. Soule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Soule, 33 Vt. 538 (Vt. 1860).

Opinion

Barrett, J.

The bill in this case sets forth and charges that the orator was induced, by the fraud of Soule, to purchase in a lease-hold interest and fixtures which Soule had in certain bowling-alley property in Burlington, belonging to the orator, as landlord, and therefor to execute to Soule his two negotiable promissory notes for seven hundred and fifty dollars each, one payable to said Soule on demand, the other six months from the date, which was the 12th day of October, 1848 ; the latter of which notes is claimed to be owned and held by Putnam bona fide and for valuable consideration ; that the former of said notes had been put in suit in the name of said Soule ; and that Putnam was trying to sell, and was threatening to collect the latter of said notes when it should become due and payable ; and charging that Putnam was the confederate of Soule, and was not the owner of said note, and did not pay anything for it, but falsely pretended to be such owner to enable Soule to effectuate his fraud upon the orator.

Soule in his answer denies the alleged fraud, and insists that the transaction consummated by the giving of said notes was honest and bona ñde on his part.

Putnam in his answer sets forth and insists that he bought said note while current, in good faith, and paid Soule therefor seven hundred dollars ; viz: three hundred dollars in money, and four hundred dollars, by his own negotiable note, payable to said Soule on demand; which he paid from time to time before the note bought by him fell due; and he denies all knowledge of the fraud charged at the time of said purchase.

The answers were traversed, and proofs were duly taken and [540]*540filed, and the cause was heard in the court of chancery, and passed by appeal to the supreme court; and by this court was remanded, with directions that certain issues of fact should be tried by a jury in Chittenden county court. This was done in conformity with the mandate, and the case was reported back to the court of chancery, with the proceeding and verdict of the jury. The jury found a verdict upon all the issues submitted, except a portion 'of the third, as to which they were unable to agree. The court of chancery received the report, and, (no proceeding being taken to have a new trial by jury) proceeded to dispose of the case by a decree, from which an appeal was taken, and so it is now before us for decision.

Upon a preliminary question, made in this court and fully argued, it has already been decided, that, upon the return of the proceedings and verdict in the court of law into the court of chancery, the latter court might, in its discretion, order a new trial in the court of law, or proceed and determine the case without further aid from a jury; and as no motion had been interposed for a re-trial by jury, that the ease was properly before the court of chancery to be determined; and of course properly in this court upon appeal.

In view of the manner in which the case now comes before this court, we see no occasion to exercise the prerogative which is claimed for the court of chancery, viz: to disregard and override the verdict of the jury on those issues on which they were able to, and did agree. For upon the first main question, viz: whether the notes were obtained of the orator by the fraud of Soule, we have no difficulty, upon the proofs, in connection with the findings of the jury, in arriving at a result.

On the first issue the jury found that Soule did not, on or about the 9th day of October, 1848, knowingly and falsely represent to the orator the earnings of said bowling-alley, for the first six months after it went into operation, at a much greater sum more than the earnings really were.

On the second issue, the jury find that the orator was not induced to enter into the contract referred to in this issue, chiefly by said Soule’s representations of the amount of the earnings of the bowling-alley for the first six months after it went into [541]*541operation, nor induced thereby to pay said Soule therefor a sum greatly disproportionate to the true value thereof.

On the thvrd issue, the jury find that the complainant did pay said Soule a price for said bowling-alley and fixtures greatly above the value thereof,, and was induced to do so chiefly by the overtures of said Randall, named in said bill, to purchase of the orator the whole property, at a price above its true value, and above what said Randall considered it worth. Whether Soule was confederated with Randall in this transaction, the jury did not agree about, it being a part of said third issue submitted for them to find.

Th& first issue was inquiring as to the existence of an alleged instrumentality in the perpetration of the alleged fraud, in the fact that Soule represented the earnings of the bowling-alley at a much greater sum than they really were. The second issue seems to be predicated upon the first, and designed to have substantial importance only in case the first issue should be found for the orator. That failing, it followed as matter of course, that, to a modified extent, the second would fail also; and hence it was drawn and the verdict found in the measured language, viz: that the orator was not aheifly induced to enter into said contract by Soule’s representations of the amount of the earnings, etc., nor induced thereby to pay Soule therefor a sum greatly disproportionate to the value thereof. But neither of these findings precludes the idea, that Soule did, knowingly and falsely, represent the earnings to be somewhat more, in distinction from “ a much greater sum more,” than they really were; nor that the orator, in part, in distinction from chiefly, was induced by said representations of Soule of the amount of earnings, to enter into said contract, and to pay for said property a sum greatly disproportionate to the true value thereof.

In this view of the findings of the jury upon the first two issues, in connection with their finding upon the third; viz: that the orator did in fact pay Soule for said property a price greatly above the value thereof, and Was induced to do so chiefly by the overtures of Randall to purchase of the orator the whole property, at a price above its true value, and above what Randall considered it worth, the question whether Soule was confederated [542]*542with. Randall in this transaction, assumes its true significance and importance in the case. For, if it should be found that Randall was falsely, and with fraudulent intent, making such overtures to the orator, and they had the effect to cause him to trade with Soule, giving him a price greatly above the true value of tl\e property, then of course, if Soule was confederated with Randall in his making of such overtures, he was participant in the fraud, and must stand subject to the consequences of it.

It therefore devolves on us to ascertain what facts are proved by the evidence. It can only be of service to state results, without presenting an analysis, and prosecuting a discussion of the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Vt. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-soule-vt-1860.