Colton Improvement Co. v. Richter

26 Misc. 26, 55 N.Y.S. 486
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 26 (Colton Improvement Co. v. Richter) 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
Colton Improvement Co. v. Richter, 26 Misc. 26, 55 N.Y.S. 486 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.

On the 2d day of November, 1891, one Chauncey C. Bailey was the owner of the premises described in the complaint, consisting of twenty acres of farming land situate near Depew, in the county of Erie, and on that day he entered into a contract for the sale thereof to the defendant Richter for the sum of $16,000. The contract, which was not delivered on that day, called for the payment of $500 at the time of delivery, $1,500 within sixty days, when the deed was to be delivered, and it provided that $3,000 of the purchase price should be paid by assuming a mortgage fur that amount then on the premises, the balance to be secured by a purchase-money mortgage and a bond, which should provide for the payment of $100 on the first day of each month until the whole purchase price should be paid. Before making this contract, Eichter had planned to form a syndicate for the purpose of buying the premises for $28,000, and with the intention of making a profit for himself of $600 per acre, or $12,000. Eichter caused to be prepared a subscription agreement to be signed by such persons as he might be able to persuade to take shares in the syndicate. This agreement recited that the undersigned associated themselves for the purpose of buying the premises in question for the sum of $28,000, payable, $6,000 within thirty days, when a deed was to be given, and by giving a bond and mortgage for the [28]*28balance which should provide for the payment of $200 or more every month, and that the subscribers were to pay $300 for each share set opposite their respective names, as a first payment, and $10 per month thereafter until the receipts from the sales of lots would cover the monthly payments. Thereupon and before the delivery of the contract for the purchase of the land or the payment of any money to the owner, Richter, having first subscribed for one share of $1,400, proceeded to induce his friends and acquaintances and others whom he thought he could interest in the matter, to subscribe for shares. He succeeded in obtaining fifteen other subscribers, each for one share, in the. same amount. On the 6th day of November he made the first payment to the owner, largely of moneys obtained from such subscribers, and the contract was then delivered to Richter. To the majority of the subscribers Richter represented that the land was to be bought of Bailey for $1,400 an acre. He informed one of the subscribers that the land was costing $1,200 an acre. Some of the subscribers, from previous experience with land syndicates and from Richter’s agreement to relieve them of their first payments on the shares subscribed by them, supposed and believed that he was making a large profit by way of commissions from the owner. Richter, however, not only deliberately concealed from all the subscribers the fact that Bailey was selling the land for $16,000, or $800 an acre, but, by pledging the owner to secrecy as to the selling price, he prevented his associates from learning the truth. On the 16th of January, 1892, and largely from moneys received on subscriptions, Richter, paid Bailey, to apply on the purchase price, $1,150, and obtained an extension of sixty days for the payment of the balance. The subscribers for shares met on the 21st day of January, 1892, and, pursuant, to Richter’s plan, agreed to and did form the plaintiff corporation. Richter was designated in the certificate of incorporation as one of the directors, and six days later he was elected president. At a meeting of the stockholders on the 21th of January, the directors were, by resolution, authorized to consummate the transfer of the premises from Bailey to the company, and to execute and deliver the company’s bond and mortgage for the balance of the purchase price. On the day following, Bailey executed and acknowledged a warranty deed from himself to Richter, pursuant to the contract of the latter with him, and Richter executed a bond and mortgage to Bailey, pursuant to such contract. These papers were not delivered, however, until the month of January, 1893, on account of Bailey’s refusal to ac[29]*29cept an additional $8,000 mortgage from the company and assign the same to Bichter as part of his profits, Bichter having applied to Bailey from time to time to consent to that course. In the meantime, large sums of money were paid by the company directly to Bailey, who indorsed the same on his contract with Bichter. The testimony and the minutes of the company show that the directors were dissatisfied with this delay in obtaining the title. When Bichter found that Bailey would not be a party to his scheme to deceive his associates in business, he called a special meeting of the directors on the 27th day of January, 1893, and informed them that Bailey had decided to deed the land to him instead of to the company, and that it was desirable that he should resign the office of president so as not to sign the bond and mortgage, as president, to himself individually, and thereupon he did resign as president, but he continued to be a stockholder and director. He had concealed from the directors and stockholders these negotiations with Bailey for taking the $8,000 mortgage, and also the fact that the papers had been made out for about a year. The papers were then exchanged between Bailey and Bichter, and Bichter deeded the premises to the company subject to the $11,000 mortgage, and the company executed a bond and mortgage to him for $8,000, the balance of the purchase price, as the members supposed, he having informed the secretary, as a reason for desiring the bond and mortgage to run to himself, that he had advanced the money to Bailey. The company’s $8,000 bond and mortgage was executed on the 30th day of January, 1893, and on the 10th day of November, 1893, Bichter assigned the same to the defendant Knox, who is now the holder thereof. Knox was not called as a witness on the trial, nor was any evidence given as to the consideration for the assignment. The company continued to pay interest regularly on the bond and mortgage down to and including the payment falling due July 30, 1896, since which time it has made no payment on account of either principal or interest. At the time Bichter obtained the contract from Bailey there was considerable activity in the sale of lands in that vicinity, but after a year or so, there was less demand and the land boom commenced to collapse. As the market price of these lands continued to decline, the stockholders became more and more solicitous about their investment. Through a free exchange of opinions on the subject of the cost of the land and the prospect of selling the same, and inquiries of other land owners, some of the stockholders acquired information for the first time that the $8,000 bond and mortgage was taken by Bichter for [30]*30part of his profits. Upon further investigation, the directors determined to make no further payments on account of the bond and mortgage and this action was brought to have the same canceled and to require Richter to account for all profits that he made on account of the transaction.

Richter was the organizer and promoter of this corporation, and as such a fiduciary relation existed between him and the other incorporators. He held a position of trust and confidence. They had a right to believe, as the great majority of them evidently did believe, that they were becoming members of this syndicate on an equal footing with Richter. That not being the fact, the duty devolved upon him of informing them. The law does not permit him to maintain silence as to his personal interest in the transaction and to make a profit at the expense of his partners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 26, 55 N.Y.S. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colton-improvement-co-v-richter-nysupct-1899.