Carpenter v. Danforth

52 Barb. 581, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 113
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 52 Barb. 581 (Carpenter v. Danforth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Danforth, 52 Barb. 581, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 113 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1868).

Opinion

Sutherland, J.

The defendant Danforth bought of the plaintiff,- as administrator, in December, 1862, one hundred and thirty-six shares of the stock of “ The National Bank Note Company,” a New "York corporation, for $60 a share, the par value being $50 a share. When Dan-forth bought the stock he was one of the trustees or directors of the corporation, and had been from its organization in 1859.

The purpose of this action is, to have the sale of the stock declared void, and the plaintiff restored to the rights and interests which he would have had, had the sale not been made, upon the ground of fraud and undue influence.

There is a preliminary question of law, of great, perhaps I should say, of controlling importance. The counsel for the plaintiff insists, and has submitted an elaborate and . very able brief to show, that from the relation between Danforth as a trustee, or director, and the plaintiff as a share or stockholder, undue influence on the one side, and a corresponding trust and confidence on the other side, is to be presumed; so that, applying to this case a well known principle of equity applicable to dealings and contracts of parties, between whom there was a trust or [583]*583confidential relation, the result would he that the sale or transaction must be declared void, unless the proofs show, independent of the question of actual or positive fraud, not only that Danforth paid a full and fair price for the stock,' but also that he disclosed to the plaintiff every fact or circumstance known to him, Danforth, and not known to the plaintiff, material on the question of the value of the stock. Indeed, some of the authorities referred to by the counsel, state the duty of disclosure arising from the trust or confidential relation so broadly that, holding the principle in equity applicable to this case, and following these authorities, the sale in question would have to be declared void, irrespective of any question of fraud in fact, or of fraudulent intent, and irrespective of any question as to the fairness or fullness of the price paid; unless the proofs show that Danforth disclosed to the plaintiff, not only all the facts known to him, Danforth, but all that he might with reasonable diligence have known, which were material on the question of the value of the stock. (See Howell v. Ramson, 11 Paige, 541, and the case in 6 Vesey, there referred to.)

There is, certainly, no doubt, if the principle of equity referred to is applicable to this case, that the plaintiff started in it, with the presumption in his favor, that the sale was fraudulent and void, and that the onus was on the defendant Danforth, to show that he took no advantage of the confidential relation, or of knowledge acquired thereby; that the sale or transaction was fair in all respects ; that he paid a fair and adequate price for the stock; and that he disclosed to the plaintiff all the material facts within his, Danforth’s, knowledge, not known to the plaintiff, bearing on the question of the value of the stock. (See 1 White and Tudor’s Lead. Cas. in Eq. 3d Am. ed. 229; American Note, 1 Story’s Eq. §§ 307-324.)

The question is, does the principle of equity referred to, apply to this case ?

[584]*584There was certainly a trust relation between the plaintiff as the holder of, or as the person having the legal title to, the shares of stock, and the defendant Danforth, as a trustee or director. A corporation aggregate can only act by agents. Its trustees or directors are its agents for managing its affairs. They are such agents, viewing the corporation either in the abstract, as an immaterial thing, of legislative creation, with a name and certain powers and rights given by law, or as composed of its corporators, or shareholders, having the right to share pro rata in its dividends. There is, therefore, a certain trust relation-/ ' between the shareholders and the directors of a eorportion; but the trust put in the directors usually extends,- and I must assume that in this case it extended only to the management of the general affairs of the corporation, with a view to dividends of profits; and, therefore, that the trust relation between the plaintiff and the defendant Danforth, extended no farther!) The title to the property of a corporation is in neither the directors nor shareholders. It is in the corporation as an abstract, immaterial thing of legal creation. jJThe directors are not trustees for the sale of the stool? of the corporation. They have no power, as directors, to sell stock; they have no power to sell any • stock but their own. j^The defendant Danforth, was not al trustee for the sale of the plaintiff 's stockT^ The plaintiff'’s 1 stock was not the subject of trust between them, nor had the trust relation between them any connection with the plaintiff-’s stock, except so far as the good or bad management of the general affairs of a corporation by its directors, indirectly affects the value of its stock.

In Knight v. Majoribanks, (2 Mac. & G. 10,) it was held, “that the circumstance, that two parties stand towards each other in the relation of trustee and cestui que trust, does not affect any dealings between them, unconnected with the subject of the trust.” I think it will be found, in most of the cases referred to by the counsel, that it [585]*585appeared, or that it was assumed, that the trust, or trust relation, extended to the subject of the dealing, or contract in question. (^Attorneys and solicitors are officers of the courts, and perhaps for this reason, courts of equity have scrutinized most closely the dealings between attorney and client, but my examination of the cases does not enable me to say, that it has ever been held that an attorney, whose business relations with his client are and have been limited to the collection of a single note, cannot buy a horse of his client, without subjecting the transaction and himself to the rule or principle of equity referred toT^ In Aberdeen Railway Co. v. Blakie, (1 McQueen’s House of Lords Cases, 461, 471,) it was merely held that a director of the company could not buy certain articles, (iron chairs for the cars,) of himself, or of a firm of which he was a member, for the company. The cases 1 Hdward’s Oh. and in 3 and 5 Paige, referred to by the counsel, so far as they have any bearing on the question we are considering, merely show that the directors of a-corporation are liable to the stockholders for misconduct, or gross or fraudulent mismanagement of its affairs, or for a fraudulent breach of trust.

The counsel does not say, and he could not say, that the strict or technical relation of trustee and cestui que trust exists between the director and shareholder, for the legal title to the corpoi’ate property is not in the directoz’s; but he insists, that the trust relation which does exist between them, as to the management of the affairs of the coz’poration, compels the directoz’, on a purchase of stock, to disclose all the facts within his knowledge, material on the question of value, not known to the seller—that this disclosure is a duty arising from the trust relation, independent of the question of positive or actual fraud; in other words, that the trust or trust relation, for or as to the management, subjects the director to the rale or principle of equity which has been so often referred to.

[586]

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Bluebook (online)
52 Barb. 581, 1868 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-danforth-nysupct-1868.