Champney v. Braun

34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 363, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533
CourtLorain Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 363 (Champney v. Braun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champney v. Braun, 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 363, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

NIMAN, J.

In the original action, the plaintiff, Leonora A. Braun, recovered a verdict against the defendants, Arthur R. Champney, Harry R. Edwards, Louis Schneurer and J. W. Roof, on which judgment was duly entered after the overruling of the defendants’ motion for a new trial.

By this proceeding the plaintiffs in error seek a reversal of the judgment rendered against them in the court below.

The plaintiff’s cause of action was for the recovery of damages for alleged false and fraudulent representations made by A. R. Champney, one of the defendants, claimed to have been acting not only for himself, but for the other defendants, whereby the plaintiff was induced to subscribe for $1,000 of the capital stock of a proposed corporation, the Liquid Force Co., and to pay for the same the full face value, upon the subsequent organization of the corporation.

The organization of the Liquid Force Co. seems to have had its inception at a meeting held in June, 1908, in the city of Cleveland, at which the four plaintiffs in error and W. L. Hills, who had been manager of the Moxie Co., of New York, were present. The plaintiffs in error were the owners of all the stock of the A. R. Champney Co., located at Elyria, Ohio. This company was manufacturing and selling, as one of the lines of its business, a soft drink called “liquid force.” At the meeting referred to there was some conversation between those present about organizing a new corporation to take over the business of the making of liquid force, and apparently some understanding [365]*365was reached looking to the organization of such a corporation. The testimony of the various witnesses, who were questioned about the conversation that took place, was not very specific, but it is clear that some arrangement was made providing for the character of the organization of the proposed corporation and the terms of the transfer of the rights of the A. R. Champney Co. in liquid force to the proposed corporation, because subsequent to this meeting a subscription contract was prepared embodying a prospectus of the new corporation, and specifying the terms on which it was to acquire from the A. R. Champney Co. the rights of that company in liquid force. Various persons, including the defendant in error, signed this subscription contract.

On July 14, 1908, the plaintiffs in error and a daughter of one of them, met at Elyria and signed articles of incorporation of the Liquid Force Co. which were, filed in the office of the secretary of state on September 21, 1908.

The false and fraudulent representations claimed to have been made to the plaintiff below by the defendant, A. R. Champney, on which were based her right to recover were:

That the liquid force department of the A. R. Champney Co. had, for a year previous to the time plaintiff subscribed for the stock, paid a dividend of 33% ; that for the year previous to the time of her signing the subscription list, the A. R. Champney Co. had done between $25,000 and $30,000 worth of business in liquid force alone; that the business of liquid force had been fully advertised and needed no further advertising, but sold on its merits; that the secret formula and good will and trade mark of the liquid force business were worth $150,000.

At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony in the court below the defendants made a motion to arrest the testimony and instruct a verdict for the defendants. It is contended here that this motion should have been granted, and the contention requires a determination of the question whether any evidence was introducd by the plaintiff tending to sustain her right to recovery.

Liability of those who engage in the promotion of a corporation, for fraudulent representations, is stated in Thompson, Corporations, 2d Ed., Sec. 727, in the following language:

[366]*366“ It is made very clear by the authorities that promoters are liable for their frauds in obtaining subscriptions to the capital stock of the proposed corporations. It matters not what form the fraud assumed, if it was sufficient to influence the subscriber. The fraud of promoters in securing subscriptions may consist in representations as to the value of the property and as to the method of organization of the proposed corporation. ’ ’

The representations complained of by the plaintiff in error in her petition in the court below are of such a character as to furnish the foundation for a recovery, provided they were false, and the party making them knew them to be false, or made them recklessly, without knowledge of their truth or falsity, and provided, further, plaintiff relied upon such statements and was damaged thereby.

As to the defendant, A. R. Champney, there can be no question raised as to the evidence having been sufficient to have required a submission of the case to the jury.

It is not claimed that the other three defendants below, themselves, made any of the representations relied upon by the plaintiff to sustain a recovery, and the question remains to be determined whether these three defendants can be held for the representations made by the defendant, A. R. Champney.

The petition charged a conspiracy between the four defendants; but the charge of conspiracy was abandoned and, in the charge of the court, the jury were told that if they should find from the evidence, by a preponderance thereof, that all the defendants were the promoters of the Liquid Force Co. and that Champney as one of the promoters thereof, before the organization thereof and in furtherance of the promotion, organization and financing of the corporation, made false and fraudulent representations to the plaintiff for the purpose of inducing her to subscribe to the capital stock, knowing the same to be false, or recklessly making them, without any knowledge as to their truthfulness, and plaintiff, relying on such representations, was induced to and did subscribe for such stock and paid one thousand dollars therefor, which has become wholly lost to her, and she would not have so subscribed or paid her money for the stock but for such representations, then their verdict should be for the plaintiff against all of the defendants.

[367]*367In Hornblower v. Crandall, 7 Mo. App., 220 (affirmed 78 Mo. 581), the liability of those who engage in the joint enterprise of organizing a corporation on account of the false representations of one of those engaging in the joint enterprise, was considered and it was there held, quoting from the syllabus:

“Where several persons engage in business jointly, and, to facilitate such business, use a corporate name and issue stock, and in the promotion of the scheme, false representations are made by those holding themselves out as promoters and managers of the business as to material facts of inducement and as to matters peculiarly within the knowledge of all the associates or their agents, all those engaged in the promotion of the business as associates of those making false representations are liable to those who, relying upon such representations, purchased stock to their hurt.
“That one of the associates, thus connected, is ignorant of the details of the business, will not avail him where he had the means of knowing, but trusted to his associates, and where he, with the others, received the benefit of the wrongdoing.”

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Related

Downey v. . Finucane
98 N.E. 391 (New York Court of Appeals, 1912)
Hornblower v. Crandall
78 Mo. 581 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)
Hornblower v. Crandall
7 Mo. App. 220 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 363, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champney-v-braun-ohcirctlorain-1912.