Church v. Swetland

243 F. 289, 156 C.C.A. 69, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2111
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1917
DocketNo. 260
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 243 F. 289 (Church v. Swetland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church v. Swetland, 243 F. 289, 156 C.C.A. 69, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2111 (2d Cir. 1917).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The complainant heretofore filed a bill against the same defendants in the same court, which bill related to the same transactions of which complaint is made in the present suit. We dismissed the bill, after a consideration of its merits in a lengthy opinion, which concludes as follows :

“The complainant is wrong in supposing that he is entitled to bring one suit in equity and .loin all the defendants upon the theory that his separate claims arise from the same transaction, the failure of the bankrupt corporation. His claims do not arise from one transaction, as he asserts, hut from a number of separate transactions, and they are not so connected with the failure of the bankrupt as to create ‘a common right,’ or a community of interest, within the meaning of the rule.” 233 Fed. 891, 899, 147 C. C. A. 565, 573.

The present bill differs from the former not only in the fact that certain persons who were defendants in that suit are not made defend[292]*292'atits in this one, but that this bill makes specific allegations of fraud, whereas the first bill contained no charges of fraud against any of the parties. While all the transactions complained of in the present bill were included in the former one, certain transactions included in that are omitted from this. The bill covers 48 printed pages instead of 34 pages, which in the former suit sufficed to state the wrongs for which complainant sought relief.

It is observed, too, that this is the fourth complaint against the respondents in regard to the transactions herein involved. All the previous complaints were dismissed by the court on motion because they failed to state a cause of action either at law or in equity. For the same reason and on motion the court below has dismissed the present bill, except as against Ellis, the cause of action as to him being remanded to the law side, as before stated.

[1, 2] The present bill was not filed until November, 1916. It was then for the first time that complainant sought to avoid on the ground of fraud transactions which took place in February, 1912. No excuse is offered for this delay. It is not alleged that complainant did not know of the fraud at the time he filed the former bills, although if he then knew of the fraud he should have alleged it. If he did not then know of it, but has discovered it since, he should have so stated. For it is a principle of equity that a party loses his right to rescind on the ground of fraud by not availing himself of it within a reasonable time after he discovers it. In Grymes v. Sanders, 93 U. S. 55, 62, 23 L. Ed. 798, the Supreme Court declared that:

“Where a party desires to rescind upon the ground of mistake or fraud, he must, upon the discovery of the facts, at once announce his purpose, and adhere to it. If he be silent, * * * he will be held to have waived the objection, and will be conclusively bound by the contract, as if the mistake or fraud had not occurred. He is not permitted to play fast and loose. Delay and vacillation are fatal to the right which had before subsisted.”

In McLean v. Clapp, 141 U. S. 429, 12 Sup. Ct. 29, 35 L. Ed. 804, these words are quoted approvingly by the court, and it was said that, if the plaintiff in that case- had tire right to repudiate on the ground of-fraud'a settlement by which certain notes were surrendered, “it was his duty to do so as soon as advised of all the circumstances justifying such repudiation; and he also must have repudiated it in toto.”

[3] While this case might be disposed of upon the ground that the complainant by his delay had waived his right to complain of fraud, if fraud in fact existed, and especially in view of the fact that in his previous suits attacking the transactions involved herein his failure to suggest that any of the transactions were in any degree affected with fraud might be deemed a waiver, still we are inclined not to dispose of the case upon a technicality, but to consider it -upon its merits.

1. The bill asks that $200,000 of first mortgage bonds which complainant loanéd to be used as collateral be delivered up to him by Swetland. If the said bonds have been in any way canceled or discharged or their lien value interfered with or destroyed by and through any act of Swetland’s, the bill asks that in such case the complainant may be adjudged to have a just, equitable, and valid first lien against the leasehold property mortgaged to secure their payment. And the bill [293]*293avers that complainant is ready and willing to do and perform all acts and things and to pay such moneys as to the court shall seem just and equitable as a condition of the return of the bonds.

2. The bill asks the court to set aside certain contracts which are alleged to be. illegal, unlawful, and fraudulent. The basis of the allegation does not grow out of the subject-matter of the contracts, and the illegality, if it exists, must be found in the facts alleged as to the manner in which the contracts were obtained.

3. Certain conduct of Swetland’s is alleged which it is claimed amounts to a direct breach of trust. It grows out of the disregard of certain representations, promises, and agreements he is said to have made to and with the complainant. The court is asked, therefore, to declare Swetland a trustee and to require him to account as such.

4. The bill also asks that certain claims which complainant possessed against the estate in the hands of Sheppard as trustee in bankruptcy, and which had been released, may be re-established in complainant’s favor.

Certain other relief is sought to which it is not necessary to refer specifically at this time.

It is alleged that the contract of February 14, 1912, by which the Wyckoff Company gave its note for $150,000 to defendant Swetland in return for $105,473.68 advanced by him to it when it was in financial embarrassment, was “an illegal, unlawful, and fraudulent agreement.” It was to secure the payment of this note that $150,000 of the bonds now sought to be recovered were pledged. This makes it necessary to consider how Swetlaxuj obtained the note and the collateral.

It appears from the bill that some time in January, 1912, defendant Swetland and one E. S. Partridge, vice president of the Wyckoff company, requested complainant, in their capacity as directors, to allow the company to have the use of $150,000 of first mortgage bonds which complainant was holding as collateral for a debt owing to him by Clarence F. Wyckoff. This they requested him to do for tire purpose of saving the Wyckoff Company from insolvency.

The bill states that they requested him to loan the bonds to the corporation “for the purpose of being used by said corporation as collateral security for the repayment of a loan to said company of about one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), wherever said loan might be secured, and stated and represented to complainant that the said bonds would be forthwith returned to your complainant whenever said loan was repaid.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F. 289, 156 C.C.A. 69, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-swetland-ca2-1917.