Medley v. Johnson

255 S.W. 532, 200 Ky. 689, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 30, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 255 S.W. 532 (Medley v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medley v. Johnson, 255 S.W. 532, 200 Ky. 689, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 177 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Sampson

Affirming.

On December 7th, 1918, appellant Medley purchased from Carter, agent of the W. P. Williams Oil Corporation, 900 shares of the capital stock of the corporation for the price of $1,575.00, and executed his note to Carter for that sum, due in ninety (90) days, with interest from date, at six per cent. Simultaneously the parties executed the following writing: »

“Owensboro, Ky., December 7, 1918.
“Ben P. Medley, having purchased from me this date 900 shares of the dividend-bearing capital stock of the W. P. Williams Oil Corporation, giving his note payable ninety days from date for $1,575.00, bearing 6% interest [690]*690from date until paid, I hereby agree to take this stock, or any part of it, off his hands for the amount of the note if for any reason he does not care to take same up at maturity.
“Chas. Y. Carter.”

When the note became due on March 7, 1919, it was renewed for another three months and the following contemporaneous agreement was entered into:

“Lexington, Ky., March 7,1919.
“Ben P. Medley, having purchased from me on December 7, 1918, 900 shares- of the capital stock of the W. P. Williams Oil Corporation, giving his note payable ninety days from December 7, 1918, for $1.575.00, bearing 6% from date until paid, in payment for said stock.
“Ben P. Medley, desiring to renew said note for ninety days, which is satisfactory to the undersigned, I hereby renew the original agreement made with him at the time of the purchase of the stock in the W. P.Williams Oil Corporation and -agree to take said stock off his hands for the amount of the note if for any reason he does not take same up at maturity.
“Chas. V. Carter.”

In January, 1920, the company was adjudged a bankrupt and appellee Johnson was appointed trustee. In June following he commenced this action against Medley. In his answer Medley charged that the note was obtained from him by and through the fraud and misrepresentation of the agent of the company, and that the stock belonged to the company and that Carter was only acting for it as its sales agent and had no other interest in the note, and that the note had been assigned by Carter to the company, which was the sole owner of same. A general demurrer was sustained to the answer with leave to amend. Upon the filing of an amendment a general demurrer was again interposed and sustained. Another amendment, by leave of court, was filed with like result, whereupon defendant declined to further plead and his answer and counterclaim were dismissed. Among other things he pleaded the collateral agreement giving him an option to rescind Ms contract and surrender his stock and have a cancellation of his note, it being averred that on May 29,1919, he exercised this option by notifying the corporation that he would surrender the stock and de[691]*691sired a cancellation of his note and averred that the corporation “not only acquiesced in defendant’s election not to pay same, but agreed that his said election not to take said stock and not to pay said note should be and they were in force and that said note should then be and it was void and of no binding force or obligation on this defendant, and that the said nine hundred (900) shares of stock hereinabove referred to should be and they were then the property of said corporation and not of this defendant, and that said note should be returned to this defendant, which, however, said corporation failed and neglected to do, and that said transaction was thus closed and completed more than four months and more than six months before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy against said W. P. Williams Oil Corporation.” It is also averred in the answer that at the time of the alleged cancellation of the contract appellant believed the corporation solvent and that it did not go into bankruptcy until the January following. The answer also avers that after the purchase of the stock appellant was paid dividends as follows: January 19, 1919, $18.00'; February 19, 1919, $18.00; March 19, 1919, $18.00; April 19, 1919, $18.00; June 19, 1919, $18.00, a total of $90.00; which said sum appellant tendered to the trustee with his answer; and he also tendered the stock certificate for 900 shares and asked a cancellation of his note in accordance with the alleged rescission of the contract and option agreement.

“A subscription to shares in a corporation,” says 10 Cyc., page 439, “which has been obtained by fraudulent representations may be annulled by the subscriber, if he rescinds promptly, and before the rights of creditors or shareholders subsequently joining have accrued.”

The same text, on page 441, says:

“The rule in America, shown_by numerous cases, many of which include various elements of estoppel, is that after the insolvency of a corporation, or 'after proceedings in bankruptcy with respect to it have supervened, no shareholder can withdraw from that relation and escape liability to creditors on the ground that his share subscription was the result of fraud practiced upon him. As in England, so in America, the fact that a shareholder was induced to take the shares by false representations will afford no defense to an action by creditors of the corporation to enforce his statutory liability. [692]*692Nor can a person who has been induced to become a shareholder in a corporation by fraudulent representations recover the amount paid by him on his subscription, after the corporation has become insolvent, until the claims of its creditors are satisfied.”

The question in this case is: Was appellant Medley guilty of laches and thereby deprived of his defense of fraud in the obtention of the note? In the case of Kentucky Mutual Investment Company v. Shaffer, 120 Ky. 227, a stock subscription case somewhat like the one at bar, we held that where there has been a failure to exercise cai~e to discover the fraud, and the rights of innocent parties will suffer by granting the belated relief, then he whose negligence has caused the loss should bear it; but where a subscriber for stock is in no fault, and is himself the innoceait victim of a fraud, which he did not, and could not discover before the perpetrator of the fraud failed, he is entitled to make any defense against the assignee or creditor which he could make against the assignor. Under the peculiar facts of that case it was said that he could not discover the fraud owing to the intricate and involved nature of the plan and processes of the investment company, and there having elapsed only a few months from the time of the purchase of the stock until the company failed, the subscriber was not guilty of- such laches as barred his right to relief from the fraud perpetrated upon him by the company and its salesman in inducing him to buy the stock. While the time which elapsed between the purchase of the stock and the insolvency of the company is not definitely stated in that case, it is made to appear as rather a brief period. In as much as the nature of the business of the investment company was abstruse, the time allowed a customer to investigate the representations of the salesman which -induced the purchase of the stock was greater than would have been necessary or allowable to discover fraud in a less involved transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 S.W. 532, 200 Ky. 689, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medley-v-johnson-kyctapp-1923.