Klotz v. . Angle

116 N.E. 24, 220 N.Y. 347, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 976
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 116 N.E. 24 (Klotz v. . Angle) 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
Klotz v. . Angle, 116 N.E. 24, 220 N.Y. 347, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 976 (N.Y. 1917).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 349

LYMAN E. KLOTZ, Appellant, v. WESLEY M. ANGLE et al., as Executors, etc., Respondents.
This action was brought by plaintiff as assignee of several persons, residents of the state of Missouri, to recover damages for fraud and deceit. The complaint alleges that defendant's testator in connection with one Fenn and others were promoters and organizers of the United States Independent Telephone Company; that Mr. Fenn was the agent of defendants' testator and as such published and circulated a prospectus which was false. It is unnecessary to analyze the prospectus as the same was fully considered in Downey v. Finucane (205 N.Y. 251).

The complaint contains four separate causes of action alleged to have arisen in favor of four individuals, namely, Drummond, Beer, Orthwein and Pittman, assignors of plaintiff, by reason of the falsity of statements contained in the prospectus, reliance by assignors upon the statements made, followed by subscriptions and payment for bonds by them in reliance thereon. The complaint was dismissed upon the trial as to the Drummond case with the consent of plaintiff.

Upon the trial, the justice presiding, for the purpose of expediting the trial of the case, suggested that the issue of the time and place of the contract first be disposed of before taking up the issue of false representations, which course was assented to by counsel. The suggestion as to the "time" of the contract had especial reference to the question of the Statute of Limitations pleaded by the defendants.

The trial justice held that the causes of action arose in the state of Missouri, and that the Statute of Limitations was a bar. The judgment entered upon the decision of the trial court was affirmed by the Appellate Division.

Mrs. Beer was a resident of the city of St. Louis, Missouri. The plaintiff was and is a resident of St. Louis, Missouri, and was employed as a bond salesman of the *Page 353 Mississippi Valley Trust Company at St. Louis in the year 1905.

The prospectus was published and circulated in Missouri. The trust company in St. Louis was the agent of Mr. Fenn, solicited subscriptions for bonds and received payments thereon. It was furnished with printed forms of subscription blanks to be filled in by subscribers, also with temporary receipt blanks and allotment letters printed and bound in book form. The temporary receipts and allotment letters were filled out and delivered to subscribers for bonds in Missouri by the trust company, and subsequently the bonds were delivered to subscribers in Missouri by the trust company and the latter received all moneys paid on account of the purchase of bonds. For its services it received a commission. By the terms of the prospectus subscriptions for bonds were to be made upon forms described as subscription letters which were printed, save as to blanks upon same where the subscriber was to indicate the amount paid upon the subscription, the date, signature, etc. Mrs. Beer signed one of the subscription letters under date of October 10th, 1905, at St. Louis. The letter was addressed to "Mississippi Valley Trust Co., representing Albert O. Fenn, Esq., Alliance Bank, Rochester, N Y" Therein she subscribed four thousand dollars to the proposed issue of bonds to be secured by a proposed indenture of mortgage "to be approved by you" and stock voting certificates to be issued under a voting agreement "to be approved by you." "For each one thousand dollars subscribed by me I am to receiveif, as and when received by you for delivery, one thousand dollars of said bonds and a stock trust certificate representing four hundred dollars par value of said stock." Accompanying the subscription was her check for one thousand dollars "to be applied by you" in part payment of the bonds and certificates "when allotted to me" and an agreement to pay the balance due "on my allotment" on or before October 31st, 1905. Then followed *Page 354 an agreement on her part to forfeit the amount paid by her on the subscription in the event of her failure to make final payment, and the agreement "It is understood you reserve the right toallot to me less than the amount subscribed, * * *."

About October 30th, 1905, an allotment letter addressed to Mrs. Beer, referred to her subscription to the proposed issue of bonds and the amount of same, acknowledged the receipt of one thousand dollars part payment for the bonds and stock allotted to her, notified her that the further sum of three thousand dollars would be due on or before October 31st, 1905, and that upon making such payment she would receive a temporary receipt for the bonds and stock allotted to her upon surrender of the allotment letter. Upon the printed form of the letter appeared the words "Albert O. Fenn by Alliance Bank, agent." The allotment letter delivered disclosed "Alliance Bank" erased by the name of "Mississippi Valley Trust Co." stamped over the same. Mrs. Beer upon receipt of the allotment letter on October 31st, 1905, paid to the Mississippi Valley Trust Company three thousand dollars the balance due on her subscription, surrendered her allotment letter and received a temporary receipt, which in substance certified that upon surrender of the certificate she was entitled to receive "if, as and when received by the undersigned for delivery four thousand dollars of the proposed bonds to be dated October 2d 1905," also voting trust certificate, representing certain shares of stock to be issued. The temporary receipt was a printed form and was signed "Mississipi Valley Trust Co., by W.G. Lackey, bond officer," in the same manner as the allotment letter.

The allotment letters and temporary receipts were filled out in St. Louis on October 30th and 31st, and there delivered to the subscribers including Mrs. Beer and other assignors of plaintiff by the trust company. Subsequently, as hereinafter referred to, the bonds were in *Page 355 possession of the trust company in St. Louis and by it delivered to Mrs. Beer as well as to other subscribers.

I conclude that the contract between Mrs. Beer and defendants' testator was entered into in the state of Missouri, and that the nature, validity and legal effect of the same is to be determined by the laws of that state.

When did a cause of action (if one existed) arise in favor of Mrs. Beer? The subscription letter of Mrs. Beer was simply a proposition to take a certain number of bonds proposed to be issued to be secured by a proposed mortgage. It was silent as to any obligation on the part of the telephone company to issue bonds or any undertaking by the promoters that bonds would be issued. In the event that bonds were issued the promoters did not contract to deliver the number of bonds subscribed for, but only such number as might be allotted to a subscriber. The prospectus recited that if no allotment were made, payments made by subscribers would be returned in full.

At the time the allotment was made and the subscribers notified of the same, the arrangement had not ripened into a contract, for as yet the telephone company had not executed the mortgage or issued bonds thereunder. The subscriber was merely to receive for each one thousand dollars subscribed, one thousand dollars of said bonds "if, as and when received by you for delivery." The only obligation assumed by Fenn or his associates was to deliver bonds to subscribers if received by them and when received by them. Upon the receipt of the bonds by Fenn, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.E. 24, 220 N.Y. 347, 1917 N.Y. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klotz-v-angle-ny-1917.