Berwick Hotel Co. v. Vaughn

150 A. 613, 300 Pa. 389, 71 A.L.R. 1340, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 408
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketAppeal, 102
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 150 A. 613 (Berwick Hotel Co. v. Vaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berwick Hotel Co. v. Vaughn, 150 A. 613, 300 Pa. 389, 71 A.L.R. 1340, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 408 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Feazee,

The Berwick Hotel Company, a corporation of this Commonwealth, sued in assumpsit to recover from defendant the sum of $5,370, with interest, alleged to be due and owing plaintiff as the unpaid balance on a subscription for sixty shares of the capital stock of plaintiff company, to be paid in ten installments, the first on January 1, 1924, and the last on July 1, 1924. The record discloses that a number of citizens of the Borough of Berwick, Columbia County, instituted in 1923, and successfully carried through, a campaign for capital stock subscriptions in a corporation to be organized to erect and operate a hotel in Berwick; to this end, an executive committee was formed to superintend the campaign and secure subscriptions. Through the solicitation of a member of this provisional committee, defendant signed, on December 19, 1923, the subscription herq in suit. On February 12, 1924, he paid by check $630, covering the first installment, subsequently refusing to make further payments. Suit was brought after the last installment became due and remained unpaid; defendant first filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s claim, which after *392 hearing the court below overruled and directed that an affidavit of defense be filed to the merits. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the amount sued for, with interest. Motions for a new trial and judgment n. o. v. were dismissed and judgment entered on the verdict. Defendant appealed.

In his affidavit of defense, defendant avers that “both the name and purpose of the corporation for which he subscribed were materially changed after said subscription was signed, without knowledge or consent of deponent,” and “that immediately upon learning that he had been deceived by false representations and change in name and purpose,” he “refused to pay for said subscription or to be bound by said contract, and that, prior to the fifth day of March, 1924, the date of the execution of the charter application, the defendant notified W. S. Johnson, who secured his subscription for stock, that his subscription was withdrawn.”

The trial judge in his charge carefully instructed the jury that if defendant clearly and positively gave notice to one or more of his fellow subscribers, before the date of filing the application for a charter, that he withdrew his subscription, he could not be held liable for the unpaid balance; this instruction was quite as favorable to defendant as he had a right to expect.

The admitted facts and circumstances in the case and those established by the evidence, clearly center the determination of this action in the controlling question presented to the jury: Did defendant legally withdraw his subscription and sever in good faith his connection with the proposed company before it came into legal corporate existence?

Appellant subscribed for sixty shares at the solicitation of Johnson, chairman of the provisional executive committee; and now contends his signature to the subscription agreement was obtained by false and fraudulent statements contained in the company’s prospectus. There is nothing in this paper, offered in evidence and *393 included in the record before us, to support this claim in the slightest. It makes no promises and is devoid of extravagant statements. It sets forth, in some detail, the probable total investment and “estimated operating expenses,” concluding with an estimated surplus of probable earnings over expenses. It contains no guarantee of profit and says nothing as to the purposes of the proposed organization, or as to the location of the proposed hotel. At the time appellant signed the subscription agreement he gave the prospectus careful attention. He testified: “Well, the Hockenberry prospectus paper was shown me and we went over that; Mr. Johnson, I believe, tried to show me where it was a very paying proposition.” Manifestly, defendant cannot complain about this matter. He examined the paper; Johnson, a prominent business man of the borough, was no stranger to him; he could have made further inquiries, had he so desired, as to the correctness of the estimates. We find no evidence that he signed the subscription upon any particular inducement; as the record discloses, the hotel, since its construction, has not been operated at a loss; the representations of Johnson were not misleading. To authorize the rescission of a subscription to stock, as having been induced by misrepresentations, it must be alleged and proved that there was a false statement of facts made with fraudulent intent, which was relied on (Bartol v. Walden & Whann Co., 92 Fed. 13) ; and, as a general rule, a statement to constitute a false and fraudulent representation must be a representation of fact, and not a mere expression of opinion, belief, or prediction: 2 Fletcher’s Cyc. of Corporations, page 1359.

As already stated, defendant made but one payment on his stock, which was not paid until overdue a month and twelve days. In the meantime, he entered more intimately into the promotion of the enterprise. Before making the above mentioned payment, he became a member of the provisional executive committee, at *394 tended various meetings, and participated personally in the work of promoting the proposed corporation. An examination of the record fails to sustain defendant’s contention that false and fraudulent statements were made for the purpose of inducing him to become a stockholder.

Defendant further alleges in his affidavit of defense as a reason for his refusal to pay for the stock for which he subscribed, that the original name of the intended company, “Hotel Berwick, Inc.,” which appeared on the subscription blank he signed, was changed to “Berwick Hotel Company,” without his knowledge or consent. We need make no further comment on this allegation than to say that the title of the company was in fact so changed at a meeting of the executive committee, held nearly two months before the filing of the charter application, as the minutes of the committee, admitted in evidence, show, the record being, “The name of Berwick Hotel Company was adopted”; and also that, as again proved by the minutes, appellant himself was in attendance at this meeting, as a member of the committee, and made no objection to the change.

Another allegation by which defendant seeks to justify his rescission of the stock agreement, is that the purpose of the corporation, as set forth in the application for a charter, instead of confining its operation to the Borough of Berwick, was so enlarged as to permit the company to engage in business elsewhere than in that borough, and he was thus deceived, because the purpose was, as he testified, “to erect a hotel in Berwick, according to my understanding.” We find nothing in the record to support the charge of deception. The record is destitute of evidence, oral or written, sufficient to prove appellant was induced to subscribe on the belief that the enterprise was to be a purely local one. It does not appear that he discussed with any one the scope of the proposed corporation, and neither the subscription blank nor the prospectus makes reference to such' *395 matter, nor does there appear to have been issued, during the campaign for subscriptions, even a tentative statement of the purposes of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
150 A. 613, 300 Pa. 389, 71 A.L.R. 1340, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berwick-hotel-co-v-vaughn-pa-1930.