Gross, Kelly & Co. v. Bibo

19 N.M. 495
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1914
DocketNo. 1631
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 19 N.M. 495 (Gross, Kelly & Co. v. Bibo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross, Kelly & Co. v. Bibo, 19 N.M. 495 (N.M. 1914).

Opinion

OPINION.

ROBERTS, C. J.

There are three principal and controlling questions presented for determination in this case, which may be stated as follows:

(1) Does a secret preference given to one of the creditors signing a composition agreement in order to induce him to assent to the same, render the composition agreement, as to the innocent creditors who sign the same, void, or only voidable ?

(2) It is essential that the minds of the payor and payee of a promissory note meet and agree upon the consideration for which the same is given ?

(3) Is a naked agreement by one party, not to engage in business in competition with another party, in contravention of public policy?

1 While there is a conflict of evidence in this case upon the question as to whether the preference given by the Bibos to the McIntosh Hardware Company was with the knowledge and assent of the appellant, in considering the case we must assume that it was without such knowledge and assent, because the court could not properly have directed a verdict for appellees, in view of such conflict, if their rights were affected by such preference. There was no question but that Gross-Kelly & Company had no knowledge of the alleged secret preference at the time they procured the execution of the notes by the Bibos, as such fact, if full credit be given to the evidence of their representative, was unknown until it developed upon the trial of this case, some two or three years after the execution of the notes. If the secret preference rendered the composition agreement void, Simon Bibo owed Gross-Kelly & Company the money represented by the notes at the time of their execution, and the only question then for determination would be, as to whether this debt, so owing, was the consideration upon which the minds of the contracting parties met and agreed. On the other hand, if such secret preference rendered the composition agreement voidable only, at the election of the innocent ’creditor or creditors, the composition agreement would be valid and effective until the creditor unequivocally and openly demanded a rescission, or gave notice of his election not to abide b3r' the composition agreement. Hence, if appellant had no knowledge of the fraud at the time'the notes were executed, and had not elected to rescind because of such fraud, Simon Bibo would not owe it the balance of the debt, the compromise and release of which had been secured by the fraud, for, as stated by Mr. Bispham (Bispham's Principles of Equity, 4th Ed. Sec. 472.) :

“A transaction which is capable of being rescinded on the ground of fraud, is to be treated as good until rescinded, and not as bad until confirmed;' or, in other words, that a contract which may be set aside at the option of the injured party, is to be considered as being in effective operation until that party takes measures to enforce his right to rescind: This was well put by Mr. Mellish, in his argument in Oakes vs. Turquand before the House of Lords, in the following query: ‘when you sa3r that an agreement is voidable and not void, and when the complainant endeavors to insist upon his right to treat it as void, is the agreement to be taken as valid until rescinded, or, when rescinded, to be taken to have been void from the first? And this query was answered by the tribunal to which it was addressed to the effect that the agreement was to be taken as subsisting until rescinded; but with this important qualification, that it was not to be considered as rescinded only as of the date of the decree of the court setting the transaction aside, but as of the date of the unequivocal and open declaration of the injured parly that he demands a rescission, followed, upon a refusal, by a prompt application to the courts.” Oakes vs. Turquand, L. R. 2 H. L. Cas. 325; and see also 9 Cyc. 431.

Accepting the above, as a correct statement of the law, the importance of determining whether the secret preference rendered the composition agreement void, or only voidable, will be apparent.

2 An investigation of the text books and reported cases discussing the question, as to the effect of a secret preference given to a creditor to induce him to sign a eomposi- • tion agreement, on the rights of innocent creditors who sign the same, will disclose that the words “void” and , “voidable” are used interchangeably, and without apparent distinction as to meaning. The two words, however, in so far as the- rights of the parties to this case are concerned, have a widely different meaning. In many cases it is perhaps true that a distinction between the meaning of the words would be of no consequence. For example, in the present case, if Gross-Kelly & Co. had discovered the fraud prior to the execution of the notes, and had elected not to be bound by the composition agreement, such agreement would have been void as to them at the time the notes were executed, for by their election they would have made it void from the time of such election. For this reason perhaps the word “void” is often used when in fact “voidable” would be tbe technically correct expression. The following quotation from the case of Van Shaack vs. Robbins, 26 Iowa 201, is illustrative of the fact that tbe word “void” is not always used to convey the idea that a contract is null and incapable of ratification.

“The word ‘void’ has, with lexicographers, a well-defined meaning: ‘of no legal force or effect whatsoever; null and incapable of confirmation or ratification.’ Webster’s Die. ‘But it is sometimes and not unfrequently, used in enactments by the legislature, in opinions by •courts, in contracts by parties and in arguments by counsel, in the sense of voidable; that is capable of being avoided or confirmed.’ Ib. The word ‘void’ when used in any of these instruments, will therefore be construed in the one sense or the other, as shall best effectuate the intent in its use, which will be determined from the whole of the language of tbe instrument and the manifest purpose it was framed to accomplish. * * *

• These cases abundantly show that the word void does not always mean null and incapable of confirmation; but its true meaning is always to be determined from all the language used and the intent thereby manifested. Where fhe word is used to secure a right to or confer a benefit on tlie public, it will, as a rule, be held to mean null and incapable of confirmation. But if used respecting the rights of individuals capable of protecting themselves, it will often be held to mean voidable only.”

From an investigation of many of the reported cases, we find that where a court means “relatively void” as distinguished from “absolutely void”, the word “void” is used as often, if not more so, than the word “voidable”, to indicate that meaning, as it is seldom necessary to distinguish the meaning of the words, where the act has been avoided by the innocent party who has the right to avoid it. In the case of Terrell vs. Anchauer, 14 Ohio St. 85, we find the following:

“And the use of the word ‘void5 in a loose and uncertain sense is no novelty either in legislation or the language of jurists.”

Then the Ohio case quotes Allis v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 N.M. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-kelly-co-v-bibo-nm-1914.