Lane v. Fenn

65 Misc. 336, 120 N.Y.S. 237
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 Misc. 336 (Lane v. Fenn) 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
Lane v. Fenn, 65 Misc. 336, 120 N.Y.S. 237 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Sutherland, J.

This is an action for damages for alleged false representations contained in a prospectus offering for sale the bonds and - stock of the United States Independent Telephone Company, whereby plaintiff was induced to invest $4,000 in such securities, which turned out to be almost worthless. The jury were instructed that, if they found that no one of the defendants wás guilty of any fraud in connection with the preparation or publication of the prospectus, then a verdict in favor of all the defendants must he rendered; but, if they found that some of the defendants were guilty of fraud in connection therewith, those defendants so guilty were liable to the plaintiff, if he was deceived thereby; and that the liability of the other defendants who were not guilty of any fraudulent purpose [339]*339and had no knowledge of any false statement in the prospectus, depended upon whether there was between them and the defendants actually guilty of fraud the relation of principal and agent in the business, in the course of which the prospectus was issued; and that, if such relation was found to exist, the innocent principals were responsible in this action for the damage to the plaintiff caused by the deceit of their agent practiced in the course of his employment ; and, if such relation of agency did not exist, then the defendants who were guiltless of any wrongful act were to be exonerated from liability.

The jury evidently agreed that none of the five defendants in whose favor the verdict was rendered was guilty of any personal wrongdoing. In that finding I heartily concur. The jury left undetermined the question whether the remaining four defendants were guilty of fraud; and the verdict exonerating the five defendants, Sibley, Watson, Holden, Eastman and Strong, can only be explained upon the theory that the jury found that, whether the prospectus was false or not, and irrespective of the guilt of any of the other defendants of such fraud, there was no relation of agency existing between these five defendants and the others, or any of them, in the transaction in the course of which the prospectus was issued. This court is now asked, upon the whole evidence, to set aside the verdict as to the five defendants on the ground that the verdict is contrary to and against the weight of evidence; and a new trial is also asked because certain rulings made by the court during the trial, to which the plaintiff duly excepted, are claimed by the plaintiff to be erroneous.

The questions of law raised by the exceptions will first be discussed. Upon the trial, the court took from the jury as a ground of action the representation made in the prospectus that the Hew York Independent Telephone Company, the majority of the stock of which was owned by the United States Independent Telephone Company and was placed under the mortgage given to secure the bonds that were advertised for sale, owned a franchise in the city of Hew York, acquired under the advice of eminent counsel, [340]*340under which it was represented to he the purpose of the Few York Company to begin, as soon as practicable and in the near future, the construction of an independent telephone system in that city. It was shown at the trial that this franchise was purchased of the Mercantile Electric Company of Few York city, a corporation which had acquired it in 1894, by a syndicate comprising the promoters of the Few York Independent Telephone Company, the syndicate paying the Mercantile Electric Company $250,-000 therefor. The syndicate then included some of the defendants,- the other defendants joined the syndicate later. The franchise had been granted by the board of electrical control, a department of the city of Few York, whose powers and jurisdiction were conferred by chapter 116 of the Laws of 1881. The sufficiency of this franchise for the building and operation of a telephone system, within the area of the city of Few York as it existed when the franchise was granted, was affirmed by eminent counsel to whom the question of its sufficiency was referred by the syndicate purchasing the franchise. It was proven beyond question, in my opinion, that the men concerned in the purchase of the franchise and its sale to the Few York Independent Telephone Company had done all that business prudence or good faith required in investigating the validity of the franchise. It turned out, however, that, when the Few York Independent Telephone Company undertook to lay additional wires in the conduits (which had been occupied by the Mercantile Electric Company for the very limited purpose of operating a burglar alarm system), in order to begin actual work as a telephone company, permission to use the subway ducts was refused; and, in a judicial proceeding instituted on the relation of the Few York Independent Telephone Company to enforce the rights which its officials supposed they possessed, the application for a mandamus was refused; and the denial of the application for a mandamus was affirmed by the Appellate Division of the First Department (133 App. Div. 639), on the ground that the power to grant franchises was vested in the common council, without the authority of which body the sup[341]*341posed franchise was ineffectual. A further appeal was taken by the relator, which is now pending in the Court of Appeals.

The prospectus contained an unqualified assertion of the ownership by the Hew York Independent Telephone Company of a franchise (without naming the municipal department granting the same), which undoubtedly was intended to be understood as meaning a franchise granted by the municipal body possessing requisite jurisdiction, and sufficient to permit the construction and operation of a general telephone system in the city of Hew York; and, because ownership of such a franchise was so unqualifiedly asserted, it is now claimed (as it was upon the trial) that the defendants responsible for the issuing of the prospectus are chargeable with fraud for asserting knowledge of a fact which they did not know to be a fact. But it appeared clear that the defendants had proceeded with great care in the investigation of the validity of the franchise, had been advised as to its validity by counsel upon whom they had every right to rely, and that, although they were mistaken, bad faith in that assertion of ownership could not be reasonably inferred from the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time. And it was held that the remedy for the misrepresentation of the fact of ownership was not to be found in an action for fraud (Bell v. James, 128 App. Div. 241), but in a rescission of the subscription contract, the return to the vendors of the bonds and stock purchased, and an action to recover the money from the parties to whom it was paid, on the ground that the parties had been mistaken as to the consideration supposed by them to underlie the subscription contract, the existence of an intent to deceive not being requisite to the maintenance of such an action. This ruling seems to me to be proper. Tryon v. Lyon, 133 App. Div. 798; Redell v. Wilder, 65 Vt. 406.

The second ground of frau'd which the court declined to submit to the jury concerned the alleged over-capitalization of the United States Independent Telephone Cc&ipany, based upon its issue of bonds to the amount of $1,278,000, and capital stock to the amount of $38,597,500 in exchange [342]*342for $39,000,000 of the total capitalization, of $50,000,000 of the Hew York Independent Telephone Company, said $39,000,000 of stock (with $2,000,000 more) having been issued in exchange for the syndicate rights in the Hew York franchise above mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Misc. 336, 120 N.Y.S. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-fenn-nysupct-1909.