Bradley v. Poole

98 Mass. 169
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 98 Mass. 169 (Bradley v. Poole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Poole, 98 Mass. 169 (Mass. 1867).

Opinion

Chapman, J.

After the plaintiff’s testimony was put in, the defendant’s counsel requested the court to rule that, assuming that all the facts offered to be proved by the plaintiff were actually and fully proved, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and the case should be withdrawn from the jury and a verdict directed for the defendant. This motion was denied, and tin defendant excepts to the decision. But it is settled that it is a matter of discretion with the presiding judge whether he will grant or deny such a motion. Bassett v. Porter, 4 Cush. 487. McGregory v. Prescott, 5 Cush. 67. Wentworth v. Leonard, 4 Cush. 418. No exception therefore lies to his decision. The defendant then proceeded to offer evidence in the case; and, by the authority of the cases cited, this was a waiver of his motion.

After all the evidence was in, the defendant renewed his motion that the jury be instructed that there was no evidence of false and fraudulent'representations on the part of the defendant. The judge declined to make such a ruling, and the evidence was submitted to the jury. The ruling is to be sustained if there was any evidence sufficient in law to authorize the jury to find that there were materially false and fraudulent representations on the part of the defendant. But several points were argued before the jury, and the instructions given to them by the presiding judge not only included the point above stated, but embraced the general principles of law which are applicable to cases of this character. These instructions are excepted to.

The attention of the jury was directed not only to the representations made to the plaintiff at the time he purchased the stock, and the condition of the corporation at that time, but to the original character and object of the scheme.

The representations proved and relied upon were: “ They are going right to work upon it. It is all right.” It was properly left to the jury to interpret these statements. In connection with the circumstances of the case and the rest of the conversation between the parties, they would be authorized to interpret them as representations that the company had pecuniary means to engage in the business of mining upon their lands in [180]*180Colorado, and had made arrangements to do so immediately and that no legal obstacle existed to the prosecution of theit business or the transfer of stock upon their books.

The evidence tended to show that the actual condition of things was very different from this. The company was organized in February 1864, and the defendant was one of the projectors. The capital stock was fixed at five hundred thousand dollars, and the par value of the shares at five dollars, so that there would be a hundred thousand shares. It would be legally competent to the jury to find that this small value of the shares was intended rather as a lure to certain classes of purchasers of shares who might be easily imposed upon, than as indicating an intention to prosecute the business of mining. No money was paid by any of the associates to constitute this stock. All the property which the corporation had was certain mining lands in Colorado which were conveyed to them by Cofiin. They paid him no money for them. They fixed the price at a hundred and twenty thousand dollars and gave checks for that amount. But they had no money on deposit to pay these checks; and the jury might believe that it was a fictitious arrangement, for the checks were immediately given up, and Coffin accepted in their stead thirty thousand shares of the stock. His land being the. only capital possessed by the company, these shares were equivalent .to three tenths of it; subject however to a debt of ten thousand five hundred dollars due to the defendant for money which he had advanced. If they valued the shares at the price for which the defendant sold to the plaintiff, Coffin’s shares would be worth forty-five thousand dollars. If they were valued at par, they would be worth a hundred and fifty thousand dollars, so that the price of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars was merely nominal. The value of the land was then called four hundred thousand dollars, and twenty thousand shares were reserved to be sold in order to obtain the other one hundred thousand dollars. The jury might believe that they never expected to raise such a sum in such a way; and that a hundred and twenty thousand dollars was, to the knowledge of all of them, a grossly exaggerated estimate of the value of the land, and that the [181]*181projectors understood that the principal value of their stock consisted in the ingenious scheme which they had adopted for putting the shares in the market.

While they were in possession of no property except the land, and owed the defendant ten thousand five hundred dollars, the president, treasurer, and three directors, of whom the defendant was one, made a certificate under oath, and filed it with the treasurer of the Commonwealth on the 16th of March, 1864, in compliance with the requirements of Gen. Sts. c. 61, § 8, in which they made the following statement: “ The amount of capital stock is five hundred thousand dollars; the par value of the shares is five dollars per share; the amount paid in is four hundred thousand dollars.” The jury might believe that this statement as to the amount paid in was false and fraudulent, and was designed to defraud the public.

On the 6th day of September 1864, an injunction was served upon the company, restraining them from doing any more business because they had not paid a tax of three hundred dollars which had been assessed upon them by the Commonwealth; and this injunction has never been removed. The jury would be authorized to take this fact into consideration in estimating the value of their property, and deciding whether their scheme was bond fide or fraudulent. After this, the plaintiff purchased his stock, and it was transferred to him on November 29, 1864.

The jury might upon this evidence believe that the company was not all right, but that it could not legally proceed to do any business; that it was not going right to work, and had neither the means nor the intention to do so; that the original scheme was fraudulent, and, the property was estimated at a grossly fictitious value, and that the defendant and his associates had been guilty of false swearing in their official certificate for the purpose of promoting their scheme. All these matters were properly submitted to the jury with instructions sufficiently full and appropriate. It may be well to refer to some of the cases in which some of the principles stated by the learned judge have been discussed.

In Campbell v. Fleming, 1 Ad & El. 40, it was held that ona [182]*182who was induced to purchase stock in a mining company by fraudulent representations as to its value might repudiate the transaction if he would do so as soon as he was informed of the fraud.

In Duvergier v. Fellows, 5 Bing. 248, it was held that a contract made between two persons who were engaged in getting up an illegal and fraudulent enterprise, and made for the purpose of carrying on such enterprise, could not be enforced at law.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Mass. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-poole-mass-1867.