Gage v. Fisher

31 L.R.A. 557, 65 N.W. 809, 5 N.D. 297, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 43
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 31 L.R.A. 557 (Gage v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gage v. Fisher, 31 L.R.A. 557, 65 N.W. 809, 5 N.D. 297, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 43 (N.D. 1895).

Opinion

Corliss, J.

We have reached the conclusion in this case that we must decide against the defendant and respondent, on his own theory. Taking the view of the facts which is most favorable to him, we are yet compelled to hold that he has neither any defense to the note sued on, nor any valid counterclaim against the plain[298]*298tiff for money paid by him to plaintiff in part payment of such note. We will state our reasons for this conclusion as briefly as the complicated nature of the case will permit.

The action is on a promissory note for $3,000 given by defendant to plaintiff. The consideration for the note was the sale by plaintiff to defendant of 10 shares of the stock of the First National Bank of Bismarck, N. D. The date of this transaction was December 19, 1893. The capital stock of the bank was $100,000, divided into 1,000 shares of $100 each. For some time prior to 'i888, plaintiff and defendant had both been directors of this bank, and defendant had been president thereof. In 1888 plaintiff was dropped from the directory, and in 1889 the defendant also ceased to be a director. The control of the bank was then in the hands of a number of stockholders, who acted in unison, and who were more or less hostile to defendant and plaintiff. Among these stockholders were George H. Fairchild, H. R. Porter, and Daniel Eisenberg. This group of stockholders will be designated in the course of this opinion as the “Fairchild interest.” The defendant, for the purpose of securing control of the bank, began purchasing its stock, and in the summer af 1892 he found himself the owner of 489 shares of such stock, and in the possession of a proxy to vote 16 shares more, owned by a Mrs. Shaw. Had this condition of affairs remained unchanged until the next annual stockholders’ meeting, in January, 1893, the defendant would have been master of the situation, and would have secured full control of the bank, electing his own board of directors, and, through them, such officers of the corporation as he might see fit to elect. While this condition existed, the defendant claims that he was induced to part with his control over the Shaw stock at the suggestion of plaintiff, and under his promise to allow him (the defendant) to control, or in other words to direct, the voting of this stock at the next annual stockholders’ meeting, in January, 1893. Relying on this promise of the plaintiff to defendant, who, unquestionably, could have voted the Shaw stock at such meeting, had he so desired, defendant notified Mrs. Shaw that she [299]*299could sell this stock to the Fairchild interest. The plaintiff, the defendant, and Mrs. Shaw were all hostile to the Fairchild interest; and the motive which prompted defendant in releasing his control over the Shaw stock, and in suggesting to Mrs. Shaw that she sell it to the enemy, was apparently a desire to induce the Fairchild interest to assume the heaviest possible burden, without at the same time giving them control of the majority of the stock. Defendant, having purchased 2 more shares, was now the owner of 491 shares; and, when plaintiff promised him control of his 10 shares, defendant felt sure of a majority, and therefore permitted the control of the Shaw stock to pass from him. Plaintiff now held the balance of power. The Fairchild interest began to bid for his stock. Finding that plaintiff, despite his promise to allow defendant to control his stock at the meeting, intended to sell to the enemy unless he (the defendant) purchased it for the sum of $5,000, he finally yielded to this demand, and the contract of sale was entered into on this basis. It is not claimed, however, that plaintiff, from the start, intended to inveigle by his promises the defendant into a position where he could take advantage of the necessities of his situation to extort from him an exorbitant price for the stock. Fraud is not claimed, except as as it is urged that plaintiff’s subsequent conduct was fraudulent in contemplation of law. Two thousand dollars of the purchase price was paid at the time of the sale, and the note' in suit, for $3,000, was given for the balance of the consideration. Subsequently the defendant paid $1,000 on this note, and thereafter this suit was brought to recover the remaining $2,000 due thereon, with interest. The defendant interposed as a counterclaim a claim to recover back the $3,000 so paid; having, as he insists, rescinded the contract, and offered to restore to plaintiff the 10 shares of stock delivered under it. The trial court rendered judgment in his favor, both on the plaintiffs’s claim against him, and on his claim against the plaintiff; directing that the note be canceled, and that defendant recover from plaintiff the consideration paid, namely, $3,000. It is true that the plaintiff [300]*300claims and he so testified that the agreement between him and the defendant was that he would give defendant the preference in purchasing the stock, in case he offered as much for it as the Fairchild interest; and, if this be the case, he was acting strictly under the contract, in demanding the sum of $5,000 for his stock from the defendant. In that event, both law and good morals would approve the course. But the trial court found that the contract was as we have stated, and we will assume, for the purpose of this decision, that this finding is correct. The defendant certainly cannot, and he does not, claim that he proved a case more favorable to himself than the findings, nor does he pretend that he can ever establish a stronger case on another trial. ■

Taking these findings as the basis of our decision, we are very clear that the court erred in deciding the case in favor of the defendant. The court erred in its conclusions of law that the facts found established a defense to the note, and also a valid counterclaim for the $3,000 paid on account of the purchase price. We regard the contract for the sale of the 10 shares of stock for $5,000 as entirely legal, and we do not consider that the defendant is in position legally to claim that, because an unconscionable price was extorted from him on account of the necessities of the situation, he has any right, after having, with full knowledge of the facts, submitted to the demand, to rescind the contract he deliberately made. ■ If it is true (but we express no opinion on this question of fact) that the plaintiff, after having induced the defendant to part with the control of the corporation, by letting the Shaw stock slip from him on promise to substitute his (plaintiff’s) stock for the Shaw stock, and to allow defendant to use the plaintiff’s stock as he (the defendant) could have used the Shaw stock at the next annual meeting, his subsequent conduct in repudiating his agreement was an act of gross perfidy, and the using of his power, under such circumstances, to coerce the defendant into paying an exhorbitant price for this stock, which was worth in the general market not over $500, was base and dishonorable in the extreme. But the decision of this case turns [301]*301on a larger question, — the question of public policy. There is no pretense that plaintiff was guilty of any fraud in the sale of the stock. The parties both dealt at arm’s length. There was no concealment of any fact. There was no misrepre'ntation.

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Bluebook (online)
31 L.R.A. 557, 65 N.W. 809, 5 N.D. 297, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gage-v-fisher-nd-1895.