Farmers' Bank v. Halsey, Stuart & Co.

21 F.2d 818, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
DocketNo. 3529
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 818 (Farmers' Bank v. Halsey, Stuart & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Bank v. Halsey, Stuart & Co., 21 F.2d 818, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771 (3d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This writ is directed to a judgment of nonsuit; the single error assigned is the. action of the trial court in entering it. A review of the trial on this specification of error, regrettably yet inevitably, calls for a statement of the pleadings and testimony at some length.

Speaking of the parties as they stand on the record, the plaintiff, Farmers’ Bank of MeSherrystown, is a Pennsylvania corporation engaged in banking business in the farming district near Gettysburg; the defendant, Halsey, Stuart & Co., is an Illinois corporation with offices in Philadelphia, New York, and elsewhere, operating as investment bankers in buying and selling securities. The plaintiff sued the defendant to recover the purchase price of five bonds of the Elder Steel Steamship Company of the par value of $1,000 each, which, it alleged in its statement of claim, it bought from the defendant on its representation that two ships, which composed the security for the bonds, “were fully insured against all marine perils, and that in addition the company’s earnings or profits were insured, and that the interest on said bonds would therefore always be paid, whereas such statements as to the insuring of the company’s earnings or profits were, in faet, untrue, and the defendants made the same with knowledge of the. falsity and untruth of such representations or statements, and fraudulently intended to deceive plaintiff thereby.” The plaintiff further averred default in interest payments, its rescission of the contract" and consequent damage.

At the trial the plaintiff amended its statement of claim by words which transformed the aetión from one in deceit based on fraud to one in assumpsit Jrnsed on the defendant’s knowledge, which it had or ought to have had, “that the company’s profits were not insured, but that the insurance covered only profits from contracts not performed because of the total loss of the ships by marine perils.” This amendment was required — or, at least, it was justified — by an entire lack of evidence that the defendant fraudulently intended to deceive the plaintiff by the representations its salesman made. Thus when the plaintiff rested, the suit was for the recovery of the purchase price of the bonds on a contract which it had rescinded because of the defendant’s misrepresentation however innocent, of a material matter by which the plaintiff, relying upon it, was induced to make the purchase. Pittsburg Life & Trust Co. v. Northern Central Life Ins. Co. (C. C. A.) 140 F. 888; American Knit Goods Mfg. Co. (C. C. A.) 173 F. 480; 3 Williston on Contracts, 2668.

The testimony is not in dispute. It should be noted that our discussion will be directed [819]*819to the testimony as it now stands on the record.

While adverted to by several witnesses, the precise representation in issue was stated in substantially the same words by Mr. Reigle, cashier of the plaintiff bank, and Mr. Paxson, bond salesman of the defendant company. The former testified that:

“On or about the 6th day of April, 1920, Mr. Edgar Paxson, who was then representing Halsey, Stuart & Company, bond brokers of Philadelphia or selling investment securities, came into our bank, and I took him into the directors’ room, the directors being in session at that time, and, after preliminary greetings, he said, ‘Gentlemen, I have something here to-day that I think is • the best thing I ever offered,’ and then he went on— he procured a circular that he had in his possession, and he went on and described this particular issue of bonds of what was called the Elder Steel Steamship Company, and he went on to explain the security back of these bonds, the amount of the issue or the amount that was loaned on each one of these two ships. There were two ships. One was a refrigerator ship and the other was just a general cargo ship. He also gave us the estimated earnings, which were then over fifty per cent, of the issue of bonds, and he said, ‘Now, these boats are insured against all marine perils of any conceivable nature, but the best part of it is this,’ he said, ‘in addition the profits of the company are insured.’ Then I said to him, ‘Pax, are you sure — ’ we call him Pax. That is all we say to him when he comes in. We call him Pax instead of Paxson. I said, ‘Pax, are you sure the profitis of this company are insured?’ meaning the Elder Steel Steamship Company. He said, ‘Yes, I am absolutely sure of it, but if you want me to do so, I will go back and I will verify this statement.’ I says, ‘You had better do that.’ After he went out there was very little said about it at that time, because we didn’t take any action until he came back the following week. He came back on the following Tuesday morning. The board was again in session, and I took him into the board room, and he said, ‘Well, gentlemen, I am here to say that my statement I made last week is correct, and the profits of this steamship company are insured.’ Then I remember that Mr. Hemler, who is sitting here at the table, and who was one of our directors and is one of our directors, said, ‘It looks to me as though we couldn’t lose one dollar on these bonds without the steamship company and the insurance company both would fail,’, and after Mr. Paxson had gone out we discussed this matter, and the con-census of opinion of all the directors there was about the same, that we couldn’t see any possible way in which we could lose a dollar if the profits of the Elder Steel Steamship Company were insured. We did not consider any other feature after that of that bond, because we thought that was sufficient, and on the strength of that we decided then and there that we would trade $5,000 Enid Gas & Electric Company’s bonds for $5,000 of the Elder Steel Steamship Company’s bonds.”

To these comments by the directors in respect to his representation of insured profits, Paxson, so far as the testimony shows, made no reply. The parties completed the transaction by making the trade.

Paxson’s testimony in respect to the representation was as follows:

“I said: ‘Now, gentlemen, like all other maritime equipment issues, this equipment is insured against every conceivable maritime risk, but the bond has one additional feature that other maritime equipments that have come before my notice do not have, and that feature is that the profits of the company are insured.’ At the end of that Mr. Reigle turned to me and he said: ‘Paxson, that’s a very remarkable statement and something very unusual,’ and I said, ‘Yes, Mr. Reigle, I agree with you that it is.’ Mr. Reigle asked me to have that.pieee of information verified. I told him that I would take it up with my office and have it verified and see him probably the following week. I took it up with my office and had it verified and came back the following week. * * * The Board was in session. I told them that that statement was absolutely correct, the profits of the company were insured.”

Paxson’s representation of the security behind the bonds, if untrue, was not his own mistake for (whatever its meaning) a jury might find that it reflected quite accurately the understanding of the defendant, his principal, as indicated by the following circumstances: Before putting out this issue of bonds for sale, the defendant, pursuant to a business custom, called together its bond salesmen and gave them information as to the character of the bonds and their security, and instructed them as to their sale. There were two such meetings; one in Philadelphia addressed by a vice president of the company and the other in New York addressed by two vice presidents. Paxson attended both meetings.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F.2d 818, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-v-halsey-stuart-co-ca3-1927.