Carolet Corp. v. Garfield

157 N.E.2d 876, 339 Mass. 75, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 768
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 17, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 157 N.E.2d 876 (Carolet Corp. v. Garfield) 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
Carolet Corp. v. Garfield, 157 N.E.2d 876, 339 Mass. 75, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 768 (Mass. 1959).

Opinion

Spalding, J.

This suit is on the equity side of the court solely because it seeks to reach and apply shares of corporate stock owned by two of the defendants. In essence, however, the suit is an action at law to recover for breach of a warranty given in connection with the sale of stock of Whitman Plastics, Inc.

A master, to whom the case was referred and whose report, as supplemented, was confirmed by an interlocutory decree, found the following facts: On January 13, 1949, the plaintiff, then known as William Whitman Company, Inc., purchased from the defendant Samuel Garfield six hundred shares of the common stock of Whitman Plastics, Inc. (hereinafter called the corporation), a Massachusetts corporation formerly known as Garco Products, Inc. On the same day the plaintiff also purchased debentures of the corporation in the amount of $250,000. Prior to this date the defendants Samuel Garfield, Henry Garfield and Bernard Garfield (hereinafter referred to as the Garfields) had furnished the plaintiff a detailed statement of the financial condition of the corporation as of October 31, 1948. At the time of the purchase the Garfields delivered to the plaintiff a letter signed by each of them. Included in this letter, which set forth the terms of the sale, was the following: “. . . each of the undersigned warrants and represents to you ... 3. That the balance sheet as of October 31, 1948, and the profit and loss statement for the year ended the same date, copies of which are attached hereto, are true and complete and fairly represent the financial condition of the . . . [corporation] as of such date, including all liabilities contingent or otherwise and the results of the operations of the . . . [corporation] for the period indicated, except that said financial statements do not include the bill of Joseph S. Kaufman for legal services in the amount of $6,500 and the bill of Myron Friedman for accounting services in the amount of $5,000. 4. That there has been no material adverse *77 change in the condition of the . . . [corporation] as set forth in said balance sheet as of October 31, 1948.”

The master found that the aggregate of the liabilities of the corporation reflected in the statement of financial condition furnished to the plaintiff did not include debts due from the corporation to Irving Zamcheck and to Sam Baril, salaries due to William Davis and to Gourtland C. Woodall, taxes owed by the corporation in respect to its income during the years 1944 and 1945 to the United States and to the Commonwealth, and a sum owed to the United States for documentary stamps. An account receivable listed as worth $10,363.80 proved after litigation to be worth only $2,423.48. The extent to which the financial statement failed to reflect the true condition of the corporation amounted in the aggregate to $87,233.71. The corporation also incurred reasonable expenses in the amount of $5,031.97 in contesting some of the undisclosed liabilities.

A final decree was entered adjudging that the Garfields owed the plaintiff the sum of $92,265.68 and interest in the amount of $24,328.14, or a total of $116,593.82. Samuel Garfield, hereinafter called the defendant, appealed. The defendants Bernard and Henry Garfield not having appealed, the plaintiff moved in the Superior Court that execution issue against them. This motion was denied and the plaintiff brings the question of the correctness of this ruling here by a bill of exceptions.

The defendant’s appeal is founded upon the contention that the master’s report does not contain findings of fact sufficient to establish his liability. In support of this contention, he argues that the plaintiff’s case is really one of tort for deceit. Hence, to recover, the plaintiff was required to prove that the representations were false and were made with knowledge of their falsity, or that they were made recklessly. The findings of the master, it is said, establish neither of these propositions. The defendant urges that the representations in the letter on which the plaintiff relies were no more than representations of the financial condition of the corporation as of January 13, 1949, to the best of his *78 knowledge and belief. In other words they did no more than state that all the liabilities of the corporation of which he had any knowledge were included. They were merely expressions of opinion as to the financial condition as of then. The possibility that future events might affect the situation did not render him liable, for the matters represented were not susceptible of actual knowledge. Thus, it is argued, the defendant would not be liable for intentional deceit nor could he be held under the rule laid down in the case of Chatham Furnace Co. v. Moffatt, 147 Mass. 403, which imposes liability for a false though innocent representation of a material fact susceptible of knowledge which was made of the party’s own knowledge and was stated as a fact and not as matter of opinion.

The defendant’s contention is without merit. His theory of the case totally ignores the fact that the gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint is not conscious misrepresentation of the value of the stock, but breach of the warranty that the statement of financial condition was “. . . true and complete and fairly representas] the financial condition of the ¡^corporation] . . . including all liabilities contingent or otherwise . . .” (with stated exceptions). This express warranty conferred contractual rights upon the plaintiff in addition to its status as a representation which could serve as a basis for an action of tort. It is true that the origins of the action on a warranty lie exclusively in tort for deceit. Ames, History of Assumpsit, 2 Harv. L. Rev. 1, 8. Williston, Sales (Rev. ed.) §§ 195, 196. But at least since the decision in Stuart v. Wilkins, 1 Doug. K. B. 18, rendered in 1778, the remedy of assumpsit was allowed for the breach of a warranty. See Norton v. Doherty, 3 Gray, 372, 373. In more recent times the general course of decision has been to treat express warranties as contracts of indemnity rather than as representations, unless a recovery in tort for deceit is specifically sought. “Usually a warranty is thought of and often is a contract or an express promise.” Turner v. Central Hardware Co. 353 Mo. 1182, 1189. And the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, per L. Hand, J., has *79 stated: “A warranty is a term of the [sales] contract, and must be based upon mutual understanding.” Compagnia Italiana Trasporto Olii Minerali v. Sun Oil Co. 43 F. 2d 683, 685. See Miller v. Germain Seed & Plant Co. 193 Cal. 62; Roberts Distrib. Co. v. Kaye-Halbert Corp. 126 Cal. App. 2d 664; Steiner v. Jarrett, 130 Cal. App. 2d 869, 874; Fairbank Canning Co. v. Metzger, 118 N. Y. 260, 265; Note, 29 Ind. L. J. 173; 77 C. J. S., Sales, §§ 301, 302, 304; 46 Am. Jur., Sales, §§ 299, 313; Williston, Contracts (Rev. ed.) §§ 673, 970 et seq., 1505; Williston, Sales (Rev. ed.) § 197; Williston, Representation and Warranty in Sales, 27 Harv. L. Rev. 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 N.E.2d 876, 339 Mass. 75, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolet-corp-v-garfield-mass-1959.