Hubbell v. Alden

4 Lans. 214
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Lans. 214 (Hubbell v. Alden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hubbell v. Alden, 4 Lans. 214 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1870).

Opinion

By the Court

Hogeboom, J.

This action was commenced in 1860 to recover from the defendants, jointly, the amount which the plaintiff had paid to the defendants Meigs and Greenleaf, in December, 1856, for 200 shares of the stock of the La Crosse and Milwaukie Railroad Company, then purchased by him from Meigs and Greenleaf.

The claim to recover this amount was founded upon alleged false and fraudulent representations to the plaintiff, by Meigs and Greenleaf, and by the defendant Alden, with whom the complaint alleges that Meigs and Greenleaf were acting in concert and confederacy, to the effect that the stock was valuable, the road in good condition, the business prosperous, and the prospects for the future flattering; but the action was not to recover damages for the fraud, but to recover back the purchase-money, either on account of an alleged failure of consideration in consequence of the subsequent worthlessness of the stock, or on account of an attempted rescission of the contract on account of the fraud; and Alden was made a party defendant upon the ground of his combining and confederating, as alleged, with the other defendants, and himself making similar and additional false representations, which induced the purchase.

Prior to the commencement of the action, a tender of the stock purchased, or of an equal number of shares of the stock, was made to Meigs and Greenleaf, and a demand made upon them to restore the purchase-money, with interest; and it is upon the rescission of the contract thus made, or attempted to [217]*217bo made, on account of the fraud of the defendants, that the alleged cause of action is founded. No tender or demand was made to or of Alden.

There seems to be no sufficient reason for uniting the defendants Meigs and Greenleaf with the defendant Alden as co-defendants in the action. For, although the charges of concert and collusion between them are abundant in tlie complaint, there does not appear to me to be any sufficient proof that they were combining together, or acting in concert; and the referee has not found the fact. The defendants Meigs and Greenleaf were partners in business and stock brokers in the city of New York, with whom the plaintiff’s negotiations for the purchase of the stock were made, and the purchase thereof effected. The defendant Alden was in no wise connected with them in business, or, so far as the proof shows, as 1 think, in this particular transaction. He was a stranger to the plaintiff, at least until a day or two before the purchase of the stock, when, happening to overhear some conversation between the plaintiff and a friend in the Astor House in New York in regard to the stock of this company and its character and condition, he became a casual participant in the conversation, and made some statements in reference to the subject of such conversation. To this conversation Meigs and Greenleaf were neither of them parties, and of it, so far as we know, they had no knowledge. And so, in regard to the conversation and negotiations had between the plaintiff and Meigs and Green-leaf, Alden was not present at it, nor a party to it, nor in any way, so far as we know, cognizant of it. No previous communication or intercourse between the defendants, having any presumptive or probable reference to this subject, is shown, and no subsequent connection, I think, is established, with any degree of probability, at least not with that reasonable certainty, either- of positive or circumstantial evidence, which justifies their being joined as co-defendants or made jointly responsible for the alleged fraud. It is true that Alden came into the office of Meigs and Greenleaf the next day after the interview at the Astor House, while the plaintiff was there [218]*218and negotiating or conversing with one of the firm in reference to this stock, and Alden had, at that time, a moment’s conversation with the broker Greenleaf; but there is no proof that it had any reference to this subject, and that it had not is expressly testified, both by Alden and Greenleaf.- And it further appears that on the same day when these 200 shares of stoik were transferred by Meigs and Greenleaf to the plaintiff, Alden also transferred a similar number of shares of stock to Meigs and Greenleaf, but no necessary or probable connection seems to have existed between these two transactions, and they are of too common occurrence in the multiplied transactions of even a single day, in a prominent broker’s office in the city of New York, to afford just ground of suspicion.

These are the only circumstances of moment on which the presumption of confederacy between the defendants is claimed to rest; and they seem to me of too slight and unsubstantial a character to justify the allegations of the complaint, or the conclusions of the referee, in that particular.

These -circumstances, with some others, are stated in the report of the referee, tending to show dealings between Alden and Meigs and Greenleaf; but the referee has not anywhere found as a fact that they were acting in complicity or collusion with each other, nor, so far as I have discovered, any distinct fact or facts on which he bases, or could with propriety base, his last conclusion of law, to wit, “ that the plaintiff is entitled to recover jointly, as well as severally, against all the defendants, upon and for the cause of action stated in the complaint.”

His first finding of law is, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover against Alden, as and for the loss and damage sustained by reason of his false and fraudulent representations, the full sum paid by the plaintiff for the stock, with interest, after deducting dividends. The action is not brought to recover such damages, leaving the stock on defendants’ hands, but to recover the purchase-money, as upon a rescission of the contract.

[219]*219If ifc were brought simply for damages, the requisite facts upon which to found a right to recover, at least for the full amount, are lacking, I think, both in the report of the referee and the proof in the case, to wit, that the stock was worthless at or for a reasonable time after the making and consummation of the contract of purchase, and that the discovery of the alleged fraud and the repudiation of the contract were made in the exercise of reasonable diligence. So far as I have been able to discover, there is a dearth of evidence of any marked depreciation in the price of the stock for a very considerable time after the consummation of the contract, and, indeed, till the general crash of 1857; at least, we have not been referred, in the points or argument of counsel, to the evidence showing the depreciation or otherwise of the stock; an omission which had seemed to me quite remarkable, in view of the ground upon which the referee seems to have based the plaintiff’s right to recover against Alden, and in part against Meigs and Greenleaf, to wit, as against the former, damages produced by the fraud, and, as against the latter’, a failure of consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Lans. 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbell-v-alden-nysupct-1870.