Fraser v. Home Telephone & Telegraph Co.

157 P. 692, 91 Wash. 253, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1049
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1916
DocketNo. 12734
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 157 P. 692 (Fraser v. Home Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fraser v. Home Telephone & Telegraph Co., 157 P. 692, 91 Wash. 253, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1049 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

Action to recover money claimed to have been paid for certain bonds and stock which were never delivered. [254]*254It is alleged that, about March 30, 1911, at the instance of the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company of Spokane, Thaddeus S. Lane and Joshua B. Langley, plaintiff subscribed for $2,000 of first mortgage bonds of the company with $1,000 of its capital stock as a bonus, paying at the time $500, balance to be paid within ten months at his convenience; that, on June 13, 1911, he paid $500 more; that i defendants Lane and Langley represented that they were act-j ing for the corporation and that the bonds and stock would I be delivered in proportion to the money paid; that defendants converted the money paid to their own use, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $1,200; that he has demanded from the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company the bonds and stock or the return of his money, both of which were refused. Defendant Langley was never served with summons and did not appear. The other two defendants answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint. The cause was tried to the court and a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, both defendants moved for a nonsuit, which was granted as to Lane but denied as to the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company. That company introduced evidence in defense. The jury returned a verdict against it for the sum of $1,211, and judgment was entered thereon. The defendant corporation moved for a new trial, ivhich was overruled. It appeals, urging error in the refusal to grant a nonsuit, that plaintiff’s case was not strengthened by defendant’s evidence, and that the evidence as a whole is insufficient to sustain the verdict.

Respondent’s evidence was permitted to take an extremely wide range in an endeavor to prove that Langley, through whom he subscribed for the purchase of the bonds and stock, was agent for appellant, Home Telephone & Telegraph Company, or at least that respondent, under the circumstances, had the right to so assume and that appellant is estopped to deny it. The circumstances relied upon by respondent are that one Taylor, with whom he was acquainted, told re[255]*255spondent that he was working for the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company selling its bonds and stock; that Taylor on two occasions took him through the telephone company’s building and showed him the plant; that on one of these occasions they chanced to meet Lane, the president of the telephone company, leaving the building, and Taylor introduced respondent as a prospective stockholder; that Lane said, “I hope you will join us,” or something to that effect; that Taylor also introduced respondent to Langley, who had an office in the telephone company’s building; that Langley showed him a prospectus describing the telephone plant, its business and prospects, and containing the names of its officers and some of their pictures, among them that of Lane, as its president, and one F. M. March, as its treasurer. This prospectus contained the statement that the securities of the company are in the form of stocks and bonds, the bonds in denominations of $100, $500 and $1,000, and that:

“The issue has been underwritten by J. B. Langley of Boston, Mass., who maintains an office at 167 South Howard street, in this city, where he deals exclusively in high grade public utility bonds of various kinds.”

On Langley’s window and letter heads appeared the legend, “J. B. Langley, Underwriter of high grade Public Utility Bonds.” Taylor, as a witness for plaintiff, testified that, during the time when he was working with Langley in the sale of these securities, Langley also sold other securities besides those of the telephone company. B.espondent testified that, when he agreed to take the bonds and stock, he signed some sort of paper called a subscription card. There is no evidence of its terms. Langley gave respondent a receipt for the $500 then paid, stating that it was,

“To be applied on his subscription of two thousand of the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company, five per cent first mortgage gold bonds, with ten shares, one thousand dollars, of said stock as a bonus. Balance of fifteen hundred to be paid by Mr. Fraser at his convenience within ten months.”

[256]*256This receipt was signed “Joshua B. Langley, Underwriter.” The receipt for the second payment was of the same character, except that it stated the bonus as $1,000 of Interstate Consolidated Telephone Company’s stock. Lane, who was called as a witness for respondent, testified in substance that, in 1909, the Interstate Consolidated Telephone Company, a Montana corporation, entered into a contract with the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company to complete its then partially constructed plant up to a capacity of four thousand telephones, in consideration of which the consolidated company was to receive, and did receive, $570,000 of the bonds of the home company, and the same amount of its stock from time to time as the work progressed; that he first met Langley in the fall of 1910, in Chicago; that he made a contract with Langley on behalf of the Interstate Consolidated Telephone Company, of which he was president, whereby Langley purchased from the consolidated company a certain number of the securities of the home company owned by the consolidated company, the agreement being that he was to take $10,000 worth each month for a certain period of time and pay for them; that it was to sell these securities; that Langley came to Spokane, and that he never sold any stock or bonds for the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company or had any connection with that company. This testimony is wholly uncontradicted. There is no evidence that Lane or any one else connected with the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company ever represented to the respondent that Langley was agent for, or in any manner represented that company in selling the stock and bonds. There is no evidence that Langley ever represented himself as an agent for that company. Upon this evidence, we are satisfied that a nonsuit should have been granted.

It is insisted that, because Langley, with the knowledge of the officers of the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company, represented himself as having underwritten its bonds, that company is estopped to deny that he acted as its agent in [257]*257selling the bonds. Unless an underwriter is, as a matter of law, an agent of the corporation whose bonds he underwrites, no matter with whom the underwriting contract is made, there is no evidence whatever in the record that Langley was in any sense an agent of the Home Telephone & Telegraph Company. There is nothing in the claim of estoppel, since respondent testified that, though he knew from the sign on Langley’s window and from Langley’s own statement to him that he held himself out as an underwriter, respondent himself did not know what that term meant, hence he could not have acted upon it as a representation that Langley was an agent for the home compan). The first element of an estoppel is thus wanting.

An underwriting contract, aside from its use in insurance, is defined as follows:

“Underwriting means an agreement, made before the shares are brought before the public, that in the event of the public not taking all the shares or the number mentioned in the agreement, the underwriter will take the shares which the public do not take.” 1 Cook, Corporations (7th ed.), p. 74, § 14.

The same definition applies to an underwriting of corporate bonds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P. 692, 91 Wash. 253, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraser-v-home-telephone-telegraph-co-wash-1916.