Miller v. Thompson

157 N.W. 677, 34 N.D. 63, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 1
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 N.W. 677 (Miller v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Thompson, 157 N.W. 677, 34 N.D. 63, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 1 (N.D. 1916).

Opinions

Burice, J.

The decision in this case rests upon a careful analysis of the facts. These are complicated, but not largely in dispute. The Anderson Mercantile Company was a corporation operating a general store at the village of Penn, North Dakota. Defendant is a banker of Devils Lake. The three plaintiffs lived near Penn. L. H. Miller, the father, had been in business in Grand Harbor for about fifteen years, but had later located upon a farm 4 miles from Penn, and he and one [67]*67of his sons, Alfred, engaged in the hardware business at Penn thereafter. The father testifies that he understood bookkeeping in his own way, and had kept the books when he was in business. One of the sons, Alfred, also a plaintiff, had been in partnership with his father in the hardware business about a year at the time the transactions involved in this suit took place. The other son, George, had worked in the mercantile business about eight years at Grand Harbor. The defendant, or his bank, had acquired fifty shares of the capital stock of the Anderson Mercantile Company as collateral to a loan made to a former manager of the company. The fifty shares were a majority of the whole stock, which consisted of eighty-eight or eighty-nine shares. A sale was finally effected of those fifty shares of stock to the three plaintiffs by the defendant, October 6, 1910. As this suit is an attempt to rescind said contract of sale, it becomes important to study said negotiations. We cannot set out all of the testimony, of course, and it is hard to set out extracts without appearing to do an injustice to one of the parties. We are therefore obliged to give somewhat our version of the conversations, supplemented by quotations from the testimony. Alfred Miller testified that Thompson came to him and offered him the stock and showed him an invoice of the goods belonging to the Mercantile Company and a list showing its debts. He testifies that defendant told him the shares were worth 65 cents on the dollar. Upon cross-examination he states that the negotiations had extended over quite a period of time, and that he and his father and brother had consulted about the proposition on one or more occasions. That he had been in the store frequently, and knew something at least about the business. He says that defendant stated as follows: “He said the liabilities had been reduced from $9,500 to $6,500. . . .” and: “He says ‘you aren’t taking any chances whatever as we are responsible.’ ” The other brother, George, testifies to the same conversation.

Upon cross-examination he stated:

Q. Mr. Thompson did tell you, did he not, that there might have been accounts outstanding that he had not gotten, but if there were he would be responsible for it ? . .' . That if there was anything over $6,500 indebtedness that he would be responsible for it?,

A. Well, I do not know as he said it that way.

[68]*68Q. Well, that was the substance of what he said, was it not?

A. To a certain extent.

Q. Didn’t Mr. Thompson tell you right there that night (at a later date) that he stood ready to make good for any accounts that figured up, on the 5th of October, 1910, to over $6,500 ?

A. I do not remember.
Q. He has told you that several times, has he not?
A. Well, to a certain extent he has.

Q. He has told you every time you talked to him about this indebtedness, has he not ?

A. Yes, but he has never told us he would make it all good.

And then on redirect examination he states, being examined by his “ own attorney:

Q. And when was it that he stated he would make good everything ? Every item over $6,500 on indebtedness?

A. Well, that was the understanding all the time, that he was supposed to make good.

Q. Was it after or before this stock was sold ?

A. As I take it, it was before and after. . . . The only time I remember of distinctly is before.

Q. And what did he say then ?

A. Well, he said that anything that came up afterwards that they would make good. . . . He says that we were absolutely taking no chances at that time.

Q. And that they would make good?
A. Yes, sir.

The father also testifies to this conversation, and in substance said • the same as the boys:

Q. He (Thompson) also told you in that conversation that there might be some other bills out that he did not know about, — he said that, did he not ? ' ' '

A. I do not remember that, no.
Q. You would not swear he did not say that, would you ?
A. No, I would not say he did not, but I don’t remember it.

[69]*69Q. And he told you this was a safe deal, that if there was more than $6,500 debts he would make good, did he not? That he would pay it?

A. Yes, sir, he said that. He said, “We are good for it if there is anything wrong about it.” . . .

Q. The fact is, it is not, that when he was talking about this $6,500, he told you there might be other bills that he had not got hold of ?

A. I do not remember him mentioning that.

Q. And he told you he was financially good in that; if there was anything wrong with this statement he would make it good ?

A. I think he mentioned that he would make it good. ■

Mr. Thompson, defendant, offered no testimony at the trial. We will, therefore, for the purposes of this opinion, assume that the testimony of the plaintiffs is true regarding this feature of the case. No cash was paid for the stock, but two notes of $1,500 each were signed by the three plaintiffs and given to defendant. The actual shares of stock, however, were not delivered, it being defendant’s theory that they were held as collateral to the notes, and plaintiffs claiming that when those shares were demanded defendant stated that he could not find them upon the moment, and put off their delivery from time to time upon this excuse.

At all events, plaintiffs entered into possession of the store and ran the same until the last part of January, 1912, when it went into the hands of a receiver. In the meantime a dispute had arisen as to the amount of the debts of the mercantile company. A careful examination of the testimony convinces us that this dispute occurred within a month after the sale, and continued at intervals during a period of nearly a year. Further we do not believe there was satisfactory evidence offered showing that the $6,500 limit was much exceeded. The two boys worked continuously in the store, and the father came in frequently to inquire about the business. It is the contention of plaintiffs that the books of the mercantile company nowhere showed the indebtedness of the concern, and that for this reason they did not immediately learn of the false representation made to them regarding the debts. Here again an examination of the testimony convinces us that as early as November 1, 1910, a month and a day after the sale, plaintiffs were in [70]*70, possession of a complete list of the indebtedness of the mercantile company.

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Related

Miller v. Stenseth
167 N.W. 753 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 N.W. 677, 34 N.D. 63, 1916 N.D. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-thompson-nd-1916.