Gould v. Cayuga County National Bank

2 N.E. 16, 99 N.Y. 333, 54 Sickels 333, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 792
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 2 N.E. 16 (Gould v. Cayuga County National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Cayuga County National Bank, 2 N.E. 16, 99 N.Y. 333, 54 Sickels 333, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 792 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Upon the argument of this appeal the learned counsel for the appellants expressed a regret that he had been unable to impress upon the General Term the precise and accurate point which he desired to make. The suggestion warns us to study the argument now made attentively and not to miss its force and direction, and to endeavor to hold firmly for analysis and examination the distinction sought to be drawn, however it may seem to us somewhat subtle and narrow.

Assuming for the purposes of the discussion that a fraud existed, the argument upon both sides proceeds for a long distance upon parallel lines, and without divergence. The previous action between the parties was upon the contract by which the bank and Beardsley as its surety agreed to return to Gould his government bonds loaned temporarily to the corporation. Whether these bonds or their equivalents had been actually returned to Gould so as to have become his property on special deposit at the bank before the embezzlement of the cashier, and so which party had been robbed, was the precise fact in controversy. The defense was an agreement of compromise, and the reply that such agreement was void for fraud. We decided that the action was upon the original obligation, which was extinguished by the compromise agreement so long as the latter stood; that while it might have been rescinded on *337 the ground of fraud, it could not be so rescinded without a return of the $25,000, received upon it; and since that had not been tendered the compromise stood, and operated to extinguish the original obligation. But that one guilty of a fraud obtained complete immunity because time or circumstance had made impossible a restoration of the parties to their original condition seemed such a reproach to the law that we added a statement of the settled and undoubted rule that though one situated like the plaintiff may not be able to rescind he still has ample remedies: “ He may keep what he has received and sue to recover damages for the fraud; or he may commence an action in equity to rescind and for equitable relief, offering in his complaint to restore in case he is not entitled to retain what he has received.” (86 N. Y. 84.) . The language thus used accurately reproduced an early statement of the law, and a still earlier decision called out by the complaint of one unable to rescind that it was hard to lose all remedy (Leake’s Dig. of Law of Cont. 397; Clarke v. Dickson, E. B. & E. 148), and is abundantly supported by authority in our own State. (Whitney v. Allaire, 4 Den. 554; Van Epps v. Harrison, 5 Hill, 63, Kerr on Frauds, 330; Krumm v. Beach, 96 N. Y. 406.) But the correctness of the rule as thus laid down seems not to be challenged by the appellants, and needs no special defense. Their counsel grants that a substantive action for the fraud may be brought, but insists that when brought it can only be for a fraud in the subject-matter of the fraudulent contract and with damages confined to that; or, to state it negatively, that fraud in an extrinsic subject and damages which enforce and revive an extinguished obligation are not within the meaning or intent of the rule which permits an action for the deceit. And then it is further contended that the present action is not for a fraud in the subject-matter of the compromise agreement, but for the amount of the original contract obligation disguised as damages for a fraud. Beyond this statement of the point raised as we understand it, we may prudently repeat it in the careful language of the learned counsel’s brief. He says: What is it that the plaintiff contracted for in the compromise *338 agreement % It was $25,000, which he got. He received just what he contracted for. There is no question as to any fraud in reference to the consideration which he received for his release.” He does not seek by this action to have that consideration made equal to what it was represented to be, because there is no complaint but what it was thus equal. The fraud for which an action for damages will lie must be some fraud with reference to the subject-matter which the defrauded party has received by virtue of the fraudulent contract. Where there is no fraud with reference thereto there can be no action.” . Such is the language addressed to us, and such the argument. It takes the $25,000 received to be the subject-matter of the compromise agreement, and assumes that there was no fraud in that because it was all fully paid. Exactly at that point we take issue. The $25,000 was in one sense the subject-matter of the new agreement, but in the same sense the fraud sued for inhered in that identical subject-matter, and was, in the learned counsel’s own language, “ with reference thereto.” What was the $25,000, and how came it to be in the negotiation that defined amount, and neither less nor more ? Obviously it was the agreed value of a disputed right of action, but an agreed value won out of Gould by a false and fraudulent statement of the facts upon which such value depended. If no falsehood had been told him that value would have been greater in his judgment and so in his demand as a term of the compromise made; and that such value was fixed at $25,000, and no more was the direct product and result of the fraud. If we can see that the sum received as the then fair value of the disputed claim was not such value, and would not have been so received had the truth been told as it was known or believed, but instead a larger sum would have been required as the condition of a compromise, why is not the fraud in inducing the inadequate sum to be accepted a fraud in the subject-matter of the compromise agreement % That the $25,000 was but $25,000, and not another and a larger sum was the very fraud-point of the agreement; and so we reply to the propositions addressed to us that the fraud sued for does relate to the subject-matter of the com *339 promise ; that Gould did not “ receive just what he contracted for,” but contracting for the fair value of his disputed claim was induced by fraud to accept less than that fair value and so there is question as to fraud in the consideration which he received for his release; ” that he does “ seek by this action to have that consideration made equal” to what it would have been had no falsehood been told him; and there is complaint that it is not so equal.

And here we may turn to the other branch of the argument, that the- action is an attempt to recover under the mask of damages the extinguished balance of the original obligation. That is not the effort and such is not the true measure of damages. If it was, very much of the appellants’ argument would be difficult to answer. There having been no rescission of the compromise agreement, that must stand, and it discharges forever the original contract and extinguishes all right to any balance due upon it. In no form of action while the compromise stands can that balance be recovered. But because of that fact it does not follow that merely nominal damages resulted from the fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.E. 16, 99 N.Y. 333, 54 Sickels 333, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-cayuga-county-national-bank-ny-1885.