Lyon v. James

97 A.D. 385, 90 N.Y.S. 28
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 A.D. 385 (Lyon v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. James, 97 A.D. 385, 90 N.Y.S. 28 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Hirsohberg, P. J.:

. The action is brought and has been tried as one in equity. It i® based upon allegations charging the defendants as directors of the Anglo-American Savings , and Loam Association, a corporation organized under chapter 122 of the Laws of 1851 and amendatory acts, with intentional fraud and deceit in the management of the company, practiced upon the plaintiff with the intent of defrauding her by inducing her, and succeeding in Inducing her, to become and to [387]*387remain a stockholder in the company to her financial injury. The relief sought is indemnity to the plaintiff by way of restitution to her former position, the demand for judgment being that the defendants shall be required to make good their fraud by repaying jto her the money invested by her with interest, irrespective of the value of her stock or of the actual damages sustained by her. By the judgment appealed from the relief sought is granted as against the defendant Gilbert, but denied as against the others, and her appeal is taken only from so much of the judgment as dismisses the complaint as against such others, while the defendant Gilbert appeals from the judgment as an entirety. By the terms of the decision and the judgment the plaintiff is required on receiving payment from the defendant Gilbert to assign her stock to him.

The main allegations of fraud relate to an undoubtedly insolvent condition of the company connected with, if not occasioned by, unlawful transactions in the management and investment of its funds, and the main allegations of deceit and misrepresentation relate to the preparation, authorization, publication and circulation of statements and pamphlets purporting to state the financial, condition of the company, issued and distributed in the name, and under the sanction, of the defendants,. and stating such condition falsely and in a manner calculated to deceive investors and stockholders. The defendant Gilbert was the active manager of the concern and conceived and carried out its plans, and the learned trial court upon consideration of very voluminous testimony found in substance that he alone was guilty of the actual and intentional fraud which is the gravamen of the action.

In the short form of decision permitted at the time of the trial the court found as follows: “ That none of the defendants (other than the defendant Gilbert) made any fraudulent representation which' induced the plaintiff to purchase or retain any stock in the association, and none of the said defendants (other than the said defendant Gilbert) published or circulated, or authorized the publication, circulation or distribution of any pamphlets of the association, containing any fraudulent representations, or were guilty of any deceit in issuing any literature of the association. And I find that the defendant Gilbert did knowingly cause to be issued false literature upon which the plaintiff relied, and that under the adjudi[388]*388cation in the suit of Squiers v. Thompson and others, reported in 73 App. Div. Reports, 552, plaintiff is entitled to restitution.” Upon this finding, as I have said, judgment for restitution was ordered as against the defendant Gilbert only.

The finding of fact upon which the judgment is based should not be reversed. Assuming even that a contrary finding as to the defendants other than Gilbert might possibly have been sustained, it would have been necessarily limited to a recklessness of conduct which might amount to fraud in law, but "could not have included actual, knowing and intentional fraud. It cannot be said that the evidence preponderates in favor of even such a limited finding. The defendants referred to are men of high standing in their community, and while of course their good reputation was the very thing which would serve to make their names valuable as instruments for a fraudulent purpose in the use of a designing person, it cannot be doubted that if they had either knowledge or suspicion at any time during the course of the transactions in question of the devious practices referred to, or of the real financial condition of the company, they would have instantly prevented a continuance of the practices and have wound up the concern, subject to whatever individual loss might, legally be visited upon them. I find no claim, in the appellants’ briefs sustained by proof adduced upon the trial tending to indicate the possession of such knowledge or suspicion. That they should and would have had it in the proper discharge of their duties may be conceded, as also that they exhibited negligence and indifference to' the obligations of the trust reposed in them, and an unusual degree of confidence in the individual to whom the active management had been intrusted; but it cannot be said that they were at any time conscious of wrongdoing or that they ever intended by anything which they did or omitted to do to cheat or defraud the plaintiff or any one else. The real situation is well summed up in the language of the opinion delivered at the Special Term as follows: A most impressive lesson may be drawn by investors from the facts of this case of the utter futility of depending upon a directorate of a corporation composed of gentlemen of high position in the social, political or financial world, who are otherwise fully engaged with business of more personal importance to themselves. This corporation was wrecked under [389]*389the nose of these estimable gentlemen, who unsuspectingly and negligently relied almost entirely upon the fidelity and truthfulness of an official charged with the actual management of the affairs of the corporation.”

It is equally unquestionable that by neglect of the duties devolving upon them, and by the misconduct of inattention and indifference to the requirements of their place, the defendants, other than Gilbert, became liable for whatever statutory penalty may exist for such dereliction, and also became liable to the plaintiff for whatever losses she may have sustained by reason of the fraud perpetrated upon her under color of their names. The law will compel them to make good to her whatever she may have lost by her investment. But when she asks to have more than that done, when she seeks to compel the defendants to take her place as a stockholder in the company, to assume her holdings and to return to her, not her actual damages, but her entire investment, then the law requires that she should establish that she was the intentional and not merely the incidental victim of the defendants’ delinquency. In other words, actual and intentional fraud must be shown to sustain such a cause of action and justify such relief.

In Oberlander v. Spiess (45 N. Y. 175) the Court of Appeals held that in order to maintain an action for fraud and deceit, based upon false representations, the representations must not only be false in fact, but the party making them must believe or have reason to believe them to be false. In Wakeman v. Dalley (51 N. Y.

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90 N.Y.S. 1094 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.D. 385, 90 N.Y.S. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-james-nyappdiv-1904.