Bowe v. Provident Loan Corp.

208 P. 22, 120 Wash. 574, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 962
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1922
DocketNo. 16962
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 208 P. 22 (Bowe v. Provident Loan Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowe v. Provident Loan Corp., 208 P. 22, 120 Wash. 574, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 962 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Main, J.

The plaintiff, claiming that he had been defrauded in a transaction whereby he purchased stock in the defendant corporation, brought this action for [575]*575rescission. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment of dismissal. From this judgment, the plaintiff appeals.

The facts may be summarized as follows: The respondent, the Provident Loan Corporation, was organized about the year 1913, for the purpose of loaning money on chattel security. From the time of its organization until March, 1919, one H. T. Irvine was president thereof. Irvine was also president of H. T. Irvine & Company, a corporation doing a stock brokerage business in the city of Spokane and vicinity. The two companies occupied the same offices and had substantially the same officers. One S. W. Hoag was designated as manager of the Provident Loan Corporation. In the latter part of the year 1917, the respondent owed money to one of the banks in the city of Spokane and desired to raise money to liquidate the indebtedness. A meeting of the directors was held and a resolution was passed which authorized the sale of the treasury stock of the company, which should net the company nine dollars per share, the par value of the stock being ten dollars. Thereafter, and on or about March 4, 1918, Irvine and one Paul Kent sold to the appellant five hundred shares of this stock for $12.50 per share, in payment for which the appellant gave his note for $2,850, with interest, and turned over to Irvine and Kent twenty shares of stock in the Car Refrigerator Equipment Company, also known in the record as the A. B. C. stock. This stock was figured at a value of $170 per share. After the transaction, the note was discounted at a bank, but it does not appear in the record what became of the A. B. C. stock. The stock which the appellant purchased in the Provident Loan Corporation was issued and delivered to him by the company, and the books of the company show that [576]*576it received therefor nine dollars per share; the difference between the nine dollars per share and the $12.50 which the appellant paid for it going, apparently, to Irvine and Kent, who made the sale. In the summer of 1920, the appellant, after inquiry, learned, as he claims, that in the transaction fraudulent representations had been made to him. In October following he brought this action.

The first question is whether fraud had been practiced upon the appellant. At the time of the sale, the evidence shows that it was represented to him that the stock had a value of $12.50 per share; that the company was paying dividends of twelve per cent and was engaged in loaning money to automobile dealers and purchasers, from which loans it made a large profit. The evidence shows clearly and convincingly that the stock was not worth $12.50 per share at the time, or at any other time, and that it had not been paying dividends of twelve per cent. These were material representations, relied upon by the appellant, and he was misled thereby to his injury. It does not require the citation of authority to show that such representations were fraudulent. The respondent, however, contends that the stock at the time had a value of $10.25, and that therefore there was no misrepresentation in that respect. This contention is based upon the evidence of an accountant who audited the books and testified that the paper value of the stock was that sum. This evidence is based upon the assumption that organization and promoting expenses in the sum of $45,110 were an asset of the corporation." This large item was neither cash, accounts receivable, notes receivable, nor physical property. Obviously, in determining the value of the stock, that item could not be included as an asset of the company for the purpose of swelling the paper value of the stock. . '

[577]*577The principal question in the case is whether the respondent corporation is chargeable with the fraud committed by its president, H. T. Irvine. In this connection the respondent relies upon an exception to the general rule that the principal is responsible for. the fraud of the agent performing the business of the principal, to the effect that, where an officer of a corporation acts for himself and adversely to the corporation, the presumption cannot be indulged that he would inform his principal of the act done, and that, therefore, the principal would not be chargeable with his fraudulent acts. The question then is whether the respondent is within the exception relied upon. In December, 1917, as shown by the minutes of the respondent corporation, the following resolution was passed:

“ ‘Mr. Irvine then brought to the attention of the board the advisability of offering the balance of our treasury stock for sale to net the company $9.00 on either common or preferred sales. The money so obtained to be applied towards liquidating our indebtedness at the Fidelity National Bank.’
“ ‘ On motion of Mr. Hickman, seconded by Mr. Cullen, it was permitted to sell our treasury stock at this price until such time as the privilege was revoked by action of board of directors ’. ’ ’

As already stated, Irvine, at the time, was president of the respondent corporation, and also of the allied company. He had charge principally of the matter of selling stock. Hoag’s duties were with reference to other matters. By this resolution there was direct authority from the company to sell the treasury stock so as to net nine dollars per share. The resolution recites that “it” was permitted to sell treasury stock at the price mentioned. There is controversy here over whether “it” refers to Irvine or to H. T. Irvine & Company. It cannot be doubted that, by this resolu[578]*578tion, either Irvine or H. T. Irvine & Company was constituted the agent of the respondent corporation for the sale of stock, and that, in pursuance of this authority, the stock purchased by the appellant was acquired. It is not necessary to determine whether “it” should be read “he” and thereby refer to Irvine, or whether it should be read as written and construed to refer to H. T. Irvine & Company. In either event, the respondent was responsible for the misrepresentations. If Irvine, in making the sale, was acting individually as the agent, the company would be chargeable with his fraudulent conduct. The case does not come within the line of authorities cited by respondent holding that, where an officer of a corporation acts for himself and adversely to the corporation, the latter is not charged with his fraudulent conduct. In this case, while Irvine and Kent made a profit on the sale of the stock, the company received therefor exactly what its resolution specified it should receive. In making the sale upon such terms, Irvine was not acting solely for himself and adversely to the corporation. If the resolution appointed H. T. Irvine & Company the agent for the sale of the stock, a like result follows, that company being a corporation but only acting through its officers, and if Irvine, in making the sale, was acting as the agent of H. T. Irvine & Company, it is difficult to see why the respondent company would not be chargeable with his misrepresentations. Even if he were a sub-agent the respondent company still would be liable. In Nelson v. Title Trust Co., 52 Wash. 258, 100 Pac. 730, upon the question of liability of a principal for the conduct of a sub-agent who had committed a fraud, it was said:

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 22, 120 Wash. 574, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowe-v-provident-loan-corp-wash-1922.