Blakeslee v. Wallace

45 F.2d 347, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1930
Docket5505
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 45 F.2d 347 (Blakeslee v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blakeslee v. Wallace, 45 F.2d 347, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3633 (6th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

HICKENLOOPER, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff below, here appellee, brought her action at law and recovered a judgment against appellant for deceit, alleged to have been practiced upon her to induce the sale of certain common stock of the Kalamazoo Stove Company. The defendant was the vice president and general manager, a director, and one of the largest stockholders of the company, having accumulated his stock holdings through purchases from year to year at prices ranging from the par value of $10 per share in 1920 to the maximum of $35 per share in August, 1927. The plaintiff was the daughter of W. S. Dewing, president of the company, and had held 1,500 shares of the stock since the year 1921, when she received the same as a gift from her father.

In September, 1927, the investment banking firm of Keane, Higbie & Co. expressed a desire to purchase a substantial interest in the company. The stock then had a book value of slightly in excess of $40 per share, without placing any valuation whatever upon good will. Offers of $40 and $42.50 per share failed to interest any one, but in December, 1927, an offer was made to pay $46 per share for not less than 40 per cent., nor more than 60 per cent., of the total issue. This offer Blakeslee agreed to submit to the stockholders, and on December 10, 1927, went, with C. A. Dewing, treasurer of the company, to the home of W. S. Dewing for the purpose of discussing with him, his wife, and his daughter, the advisability of accepting the proposal. It was during this interview that the defendant is 'alleged to have made the false representations upon which the recovery was based.

The representations set forth in the declaration may be grouped into three general classes: (a) Those which are in the nature of representations of comparative fact, tinged, possibly, with opinion, viz.: (1) That the sales of furnaces for the preceding month had fallen to almost nothing and (2) that the affairs of the company were uncertain and hazardous; (b) representations of pure opinion, viz.: (3) that common stock is á poor investment for women; and (4) that the price offered was a “large” price; and (e) representations of future intention, viz.: (5) that the defendant intended to sell' half of his own stock, retaining the balance only because he intended to continue his affiliation with the company; and (6) that if the plaintiff did not sell (established by the proofs, if at all, to be that if the deal did not go through), defendant would resign and accept an offer of employment elsewhere. The declaration also contains a general allegation of failure “to make full, true and direct answers and disclosures in response to inquiries concerning the business and affairs of the corporation,” and with concealing “material *349 information,” but it is not specified wliat information was concealed or in what respect the defendant failed to make full disclosure. Fraudulent concealment was thus improperly pleaded, but we shall consider first the extent to which the general allegation might hero be relevant and the charge of the court thereon.

The plaintiff disclaims the existence of any fiduciary relationship creating a duty to make disclosure. The defendant had an avowed personal interest; so much so that he is said to have threatened to leave the company unless the purchase by the bankers could be consummated. Disclosure was made by him of obvious advantages to 'himself from a chango of slock control, such as, a market for the stock, by listing it on an exchange, a,n increase in salary, complete control of operations, and strong financial connections for the company. Under such circumstances, we are of the opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to protection only as against actual misrepresentation, either by false affirmative statement or by falsely colored half-truths. The position of the defendant as a stranger to plaintiff, when negotiating for a purchase of the stock of the company in which ho was an executive and she a stockholder (cf. Walsh v. Goulden, 130 Mich. 531, 90 N. W. 406), was emphasized and strengthened by the particular circumstances disclosed and known. In Cleaveland v. Richardson, 132 U. S. 318, 329, 10 S. Ct. 100, 103, 33 L. Ed. 384, the court summarizes and approves tlio opinion in Dambmann v. Schulting, 75 N. Y. 55, as follows: “Where there is no such relation of trust or confidence between the parties as imposes upon one an obligation to give full information to the other, the latter cannot proceed blindly, omitting all inquiry and examination, and then eonvplain that the other did not volunteer to give the information he had.”

It is the present complaint of the plaintiff that she was unadvised that the company had a surplus of more than a million and a half dollars, accounts receivable of in excess of a million dollars, cash and Liberty bonds of approximately half a million dollars, and earnings in excess of $500,000 (100 per cent, of the capital stock) per year. She contends that had she known those facts she Would.not have consented to sell her stock at approximately its book value. She did know, however, that the company had been paying dividends of 2'4 per cent, for the past two years, and that dividends had been iucx-eased eontinuously and substantially during the entire period she held her stock, indicating- an increasingly profitable, growing business, and she was told that there was no reason why the dividend policy should not continue. Had she desired details of! earnings, surplus, or quick assets, these could have been secured by her. The alleged statement of the defendant that the affairs of the company were uncertain and hazardous was sufficient to put her on inquiry, should she have desired to bo advised of the company’s exact financial condition. The means of knowledge were at hand. She could have gone to the offices and secured accurate information; yet she made no inquiry. Whether her neglect in this particular be attributed to indifference or credulity she should not now be heard to say that she has been deceived by fraudulent concealment. Cf. Slaughter’s Adm’r v. Gerson, 13 Wall. 379, 383, 20 L. Ed. 627; Andrus v. St. Louis Smelting Co., 130 U. S. 643, 647, 9 S. Ct. 645, 32 L. Ed. 1054.

A different situation is obviously presented whex-e an action in equity is begun by one party to a contract, seeking to annul or set it aside because of unjust enrichment and overreaching through the suppression of facts which the defendant, acting in good faith and fair dealing, was under obligation to disclose. Strong v. Repide, 213 U. S. 419, 29 S. Ct. 521, 53 L. Ed. 853; Griswold v. Hazard, 141 U. S. 260, 11 S. Ct. 972, 999, 35 L. Ed. 678. There one of the conditions precedent to relief is that the parties may be placed in statu quo. The defendant is not mulcted in damages beyond the sum to which ho has been so unjustly enriched. The same underlying principle of justice exists where the action is brought at law as between the parties 1o a contract and the relief sought is to recover that which the plaintiff has lost and the defendant has gained by reason of willful suppression of material facts, in all respects analogous to the relief procurable in equity. Stewart v. Wyoming Ranche Co., 128 U. S. 383, 9 S. Ct. 101, 32 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
45 F.2d 347, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blakeslee-v-wallace-ca6-1930.