Brite v. . Penny

72 S.E. 964, 157 N.C. 110, 1911 N.C. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 72 S.E. 964 (Brite v. . Penny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brite v. . Penny, 72 S.E. 964, 157 N.C. 110, 1911 N.C. LEXIS 15 (N.C. 1911).

Opinion

Bisown, J.

The assignments of error bring up for consideration practically three propositions:

1. The finding upon the fourth issue alone would not be sufficient to uphold the judgment.

The act of the General Assembly, Laws of 1889, ch. 389, Revisal, sec. 956, has been heretofore construed, and it is held that “The presence and undue. influence of the husband at the ceremony of privy examination would not vitiate a certificate in all respects regular, unless the grantee had notice of it, and the burden would be upon the plaintiffs to show such notice.” Davis v. Davis, 146 N. C., 163; Hall v. Castleberry, 101 N. C., 155.

*112 In tbis connection we will say that the concurring opinion of Clark, J., in Benedict v. Jones, 129 N. C., 474, is a clear presentation of the law and receives our indorsement. In it the learned judge points out strongly the great danger to the security of titles which would result if the reasoning of the Court on that case is carried to its logical conclusion, and well says: “It was, as is well known, to cure the effect of a decision of this Court that a privy examination did not have the effect of a fine and recovery (as had been understood by the profession) that chapter 389, Laws 1889, was passed.”

2. Is there any evidence of fraud? It is not for us to say that Penny acted fraudulently,, but whether there was evidence enough to justify his Honor in submitting that issue to the jury.

All the evidence was introduced by the plaintiffs and none by the defendants.

The evidence offered tends to prove that Moser was the owner of twenty shares of stock of the par value of $100 each in the High Point Planing Mill Company; that at the time of' the transaction that corporation was insolvent, and it is a legitimate inference that Penny knew it. This stock was placed in Penny’Pennys hands for sale by Moser, who was to receive only $800 of the proceeds and Penny was to receive the remainder. Penny or his corporation actually received $1,200 for their part. Penny approached feme plaintiff to sell her the stock and to give him a mortgage on her house and lot. She at first declined, and afterwards agreed to buy. She told Penny she knew nothing about the stock and relied on him. Penny assured her of its value, said the corporation owed but little and had an account due sufficient to pay. He told feme plaintiff that he owned stock in the planing mill' and her husband could be secretary and treasurer at $75 a month, with an increase as the business grew to $150 a month. The feme plaintiff further said: “Mr. Penny did not tell witness whose stock this was he was selling. He said Mr. Moser was dishonest and that the firm — the reason they were standing still then and wasn’t working, he said that they wanted to get Mr. Moser out; he was tricky and dishonest. Mr. Penny did not state that Mr. Moser was in the business further than that.”

*113 Q. You understood it was Mr. Moser’s stock you were buying? A. No, sir.
Q. Whose stock did you understand it was? A. I did not know whose stock it was. He said he had bought out twenty shares, and if witness would take $2,000 stock in it it would give witness and Mr. Penny the controlling interest.
Penny further told plaintiff he had bought Loughlin and Dodamead’s stock for himself, and further, that “we would make so much money, 20 per cent on the dollar from the start.” Plaintiff further testifies that: “Mr. Penny said, 'Don’t you appear to be overanxious about this; if you do, Mr. Moser will back out. I don’t think he wants to sell very badly, anyway.’ So he looked out of the window and saw Mr. Moser and Mr. Ingold approaching, and he said, 'There comes the boys now.’ And when they came in he reached his hand in his pocket and pulled out some stock and said, 'Well, Mr. Moser, I have bought out Mr. Dodamead since I saw you,’ and Mr. Moser says, 'You have?’ and he says, 'Yes,’ and Mr. Moser says, 'You have been hustling since I saw you last.’ ”
Q. What occurred then? A. On the 17th I said to Mr. Penny, “Is there any indebtedness on this stock?” He said, “Nothing to amount to anything; I have looked over the books and there is a little indebtedness, but there is an outstanding account that will overbalance all the indebtedness on the stock. I will see all that out; don’t you have any uneasiness whatever. I will see that is all right; we will be running here in two or three days.”

Penny did not offer himself as a witness and deny any of these charges. He did not show that he owned any stock in the planing mill, or that he had purchased Dodamead’s or Loughlin’s stock. The planing mill never commenced operations again and was very shortly forced into bankruptcy by its numerous creditors.

We will not recite further from the evidence in the record, and comment is unnecessary. That his Honor was justified in submitting the first- issue to the jury is manifest from a simple recital of the facts in evidence.

3. Is the Carolina Loan and Eealty Company, upon the facts in evidence, bound by Penny’s acts?

*114 Upon this phase of the case we were strongly impressed, by the forcible argument of counsel for defendant, but a close analysis of the evidence discloses that the principles of law so earnestly contended for by them do not apply.

We recognize the general doctrine held by all courts, that a corporation is not bound by the action or chargeable with the knowledge of its officers or agents in respect to a transaction in which such officer or agent is acting in his own behalf, and does not act in any official or representative capacity for the corporation. Bank v. Burgwyn, 110 N. C., 267; LeDuc v. Moore, 111 N. C., 516; Bank v. School Committee, 118 N. C., 383; Kennedy v. McKay, 14 Vroom (N. J.), 288; 39 A. R., 561. But that doctrine cannot be successfully invoked by the realty company under the facts of this case.

His Honor substantially charged the jury upon the third issue that if Penny acted for the corporation in this transaction the company would be bound by his conduct, and that the realty company is presumed to know what its agent knew.

This is elementary law and has been invoked repeatedly in the cases of insurance companies whose agents make false representations in selling insurance. Caldwell v. Insurance Co., 140 N. C., 100; Frazell v. Insurance Co., 153 N. C., 60.

What was the “transaction” in this case? It was the sale of the stock for Moser, and in order to carry out that main purpose, and realize a large profit, the loan of the money on mortgage by the realty company was incidentally necessary.

The plaintiff offers part of Penny’s examination taken before a commissioner and parts of his answer.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.E. 964, 157 N.C. 110, 1911 N.C. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brite-v-penny-nc-1911.