Bartholomew v. Walsh

157 N.W. 575, 191 Mich. 252, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 664
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1916
DocketDocket No. 5
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 157 N.W. 575 (Bartholomew v. Walsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartholomew v. Walsh, 157 N.W. 575, 191 Mich. 252, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 664 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Kuhn, J.

The defendant and appellant- Walsh was sued, jointly with the defendant Williams, by the plaintiff for damages resulting from the sale of worthless stock, the purchase of which, it is claimed, was induced by false representations. It is charged in the declaration that the defendant Williams made the representations as the agent of Walsh, who knew of their falsity and received the proceeds of the sales. The jury found the defendant Walsh guilty, and the defendant Williams not guilty.

It is the.claim of the plaintiff, and he presents evidence tending to prove, that Williams made numerous representations as to facts concerning the organization, backing, and condition of two corporations which Walsh had promoted; and it does not seem to be disputed that if these representations were made, as claimed, they were untrue. The defendant Williams, on the other hand, denies that he made any of them, and asserts that he did' not know the facts concerning the inner workings of the companies, did not know about the matters concerning which he is charged to have made fraudulent representations, and, further, that he did not tell the plaintiff anything except what he was told by the officers of the corporations and what was contained in the prospectuses or literature which he handed and explained to the plaintiff.

The defendant and appellant Walsh seeks a review of the judgment entered on several grounds, which may be summarized as follows:

[255]*255(1) There was no competent evidence to show that the defendant Williams was acting as the agent of Walsh, in making these sales.
(2) The court erred in admitting certain evidence in the support of the plaintiff’s claim.
(3) The verdict was clearly contradictory, and should not be allowed to stand, because, if Walsh was guilty as charged, the defendant Williams also was guilty.

With reference to the question of agency, it was the defendants’ theory that Williams was the agent of the United Bankers’ Corporation and its successor, the Continental Bankers’ Corporation, the two corporations which were organized by Walsh. As evidence of this, there was introduced a written contract of agency signed by Williams and Anger, who was the stock sales manager of the United Bankers’ Corporation, which contract constituted Williams the agent of the corporation to sell stock. There were business cards of Williams introduced, introducing him as agent or special representative of the corporation. Also, it was shown that subscriptions were taken in the name of the corporation.

On the other hand, the plaintiff showed in support of his theory that Williams was the agent of Walsh, that according to the testimony of Williams he was employed by Walsh, that Walsh had charge of the stock selling and induced Williams to sign the contract, and that he received his instructions from Walsh and reported to him. The principal evidence in support of the plaintiff’s claim that Williams was acting as the agent of Walsh was a ledger showing accounts or items of stock sales in the United Bankers’ Corporation, including the sale of stock to the plaintiff, which were mixed up with the personal items of Walsh. There was also introduced a copy of a copy of the official minutes of the corporation, showing that at a meeting of the United Bankers’ Corporation on January 3, [256]*2561911, all the stock of the corporation, save 400 shares issued to Frederick W. Park, who was a director and legal counsel for the corporation, and Director Car-hart, was set off to Walsh in exchange for 6,500 shares in the Metropolitan State Bank of Detroit. The admissibility of this evidence we will discuss later, but, if true, the sale to the plaintiff must have been out of the stock set off to Walsh. It was therefore a legitimate inference, which the jury might draw from this testimony, that Williams was selling stock in the United Bankers’ Corporation which belonged to Walsh, and was therefore working for Walsh, and not for the corporation. There was also testimony to show that, after the plaintiff’s subscription had been taken, the United Bankers’ Corporation drew its draft on the plaintiff in favor of S. Francis Walsh & Co., and it was indorsed by Walsh for Walsh & Co., and finally cashed by the Metropolitan State Bank. , *

We are of the .opinion that in view of the financial manipulations which Walsh carried on with these two corporations and the Metropolitan State Bank, and the inevitable conclusion that Walsh was the real actor in all these financial and stock selling transactions, there was sufficient evidence, circumstantial though it was, to warrant the jury in finding that Williams was substantially acting as the agent for Walsh, though ostensibly the agent of the corporations.

The propriety of admitting the exhibit above referred to, which tended to show that at the meeting of January 3, 1911, all the stock in the United Bankers’ Corporation save 400 shares was set off to Walsh, was questioned by a proper assignment of error, on the groupd that it was not the best evidence of what occurred at that meeting because the official minute book of the corporation was in court.' This official minute book contained between pages 2 and 3 a typewritten manuscript showing the proceedings at the first meet[257]*257ings of the stockholders and directors of the United Bankers’ Corporation. It appears therefrom that the stockholders authorized the issuance of $2,996,000 of stock by the corporation, to buy $650,000 of the stock of the Metropolitan State Bank, and the board of directors authorized a committee, of which the defendant Walsh was a member, to investigate and accept the offer from the owner of the bank stock, and issue in exchange stock of the corporation in the above amount. The owner of the bank stock appears to be L. R. Walsh, the wife of the defendant Walsh; but there is no contention but that she held the stock simply for convenience in her name, and that it was really the property of Walsh.

On pages 5 and 6 of the minute book is the record of the minutes of a meeting of the board of directors at which “the committee reports the inadvisability of purchasing this stock from L. R. Walsh and paying therefor $2,996,000 in stock of this company.” Pages 7 to 14 of'the minute book contain by-laws of the corporation, and pages 15 to the end contain minutes of other meetings from April 4th on.

Exhibit 1 to the deposition of Mr. Park was a copy of a copy which Park had had made of all the minutes Of the stockholders’ and directors’ meetings that appear in the corporation books. The office of the corporation was in the suite occupied by Mr. Park in New York City. Park’s testimony showed that the first copy was compared twice with the original minutes, and was produced at the taking of the deposition. According to this exhibit, it was made to appear that at the meeting of January 8, 1911, the committee reported not the inadvisability, but the advisability, of the purchase of the bank stock and paying therefor $2,996,000; and that the secretary was ordered to take such action; and, further, that “the stock being deliv[258]*258ered to the secretary, it was moved and supported that $2,996,000 of the capital stock of this corporation be issued to the order of L. R. Walsh.”

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Bluebook (online)
157 N.W. 575, 191 Mich. 252, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartholomew-v-walsh-mich-1916.