Morrow v. Franklin

233 S.W. 224, 289 Mo. 549, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 23, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 224 (Morrow v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrow v. Franklin, 233 S.W. 224, 289 Mo. 549, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 36 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Action for damages based upon alleged fraud and deceit in the sale of certain shares of stock in the Bankers Trust Company by appellant to plaintiff. As originally brought the suit was against five directors of the said Bankers Trust Company, viz., John E. Franklin (the present sole appellant), Charles S. Marsh, Lester S. Parker, Joseph B. Graham and Stephen B. Hunter. Before trial the case was dismissed as to Hunter. Plaintiff had a verdict, in a trial before a jury, for $103,388.88. This verdict was signed by nine of the twelve jurors. Motions for new trial were filed, and the court sustained such motions as to defendants Marsh, Parker and Graham, but overruled them as to defendant Franklin. After the motions of Parker, Graham and Marsh were sustained, plaintiff dismissed as to these three defendants, so that judgment went against Franklin alone, who is now the sole defendant and appellant. We used the term motions for new trial, because there were (1) a joint motion for new trial, and (2) a separate motion for new trial by each of the four defendants. The vital parts of the petition are short, and we reproduce them:

“All of the said defendants were, during the-time hereinafter mentioned, large holders of the stock of said corporation, and some of them were also largely interested in a syndicate or joint partnership which owned or controlled a large amount of stock7in said corporation, and all of them were desirous of having the *559 market price of said stock maintained at a high level so that their ability to sell the same at a profit or to borrow money thereon might be maintained and increased.

“Plaintiff further says that for several years prior to April, 1913, the said defendants, as directors of the said Bankers Trust Company, had been accustomed to declare and pay to themselves and other stockholders enormous dividends upon its stock, which have not been earned and the payment of which really impaired its capital stock, in violation of the laws of the State of Missouri, for the fraudulent purpose of deceiving the public as to its earnings and in order to inflate the market value thereof; and had also .from time to time been accustomed to place or to cause or permit to be placed false and fictitious values upon the assets owned, and controlled by said corporation, and knowingly to cause or permit false and fictitious entries on its books of earnings or profits by said corporation, thereby giving to the said stock which they owned, and some of which they had for sale, a highly inflated and fictitious value, and thereby unlawfully paying to themselves large sums in unearned dividends thereon.

“Plaintiff further says that in February and June, 1913, these defendants, for the purpose of deceiving ■ people and to induce the purchase of stock owned by them at fictitious prices, fraudulently caused false statements of audits of the books of the Bankers Trust Company, showing its assets and liabilities, to be printed in pamplet and card form and circulated and distributed generally to the public in the City of St. Louis and elsewhere, which said pretended statements of the assets and liabilities of the said company were false at the time they were issued, in that they largely overstated the amount and value of its assets and understated the amount of its liabilities.

*560 “Plaintiff further says that prior to April, 1913, he was a resident of Whitehall, Illinois, and was engaged in business at that place; that the defendants herein at that time induced him to come to St. Louis by making a contract with him, by the terms of which he was to take charge of one of the departments of the Bankers Trust Company which handled the promotion of new corporations, and was to become vice-president of the said company, but not a director; but plaintiff says that the real purpose of these defendants in inducing him to come to St. Louis and become connected with the Bankers Trust Company, as aforesaid, was not to have charge of said department under said contract, or any other department, but it was to induce him to purchase from them, and from others, stock of the said Bankers Trust Company at highly inflated and fictitious prices.

'“Plaintiff further says that soon after his arrival in St. Louis these defendants, for the purpose of deceiving him and of inducing him to buy stock of the Bankers Trust Company from them and others at a highly inflated and fictitious price, stated and represented to him that if he wished to hold the office of vice-president he should own and hold a large amount of stock in the Bankers Trust Company, and falsely stated to him that the actual value of the stock, as shown by the books, was two hundred dollars per share, and that the company could be liquidated in twelve months and the sum of $200 a share paid to the stockholders; whereas, in truth and in fact, the said company was then insolvent, and its liabilities exceeded the value of all its assets. They also falsely stated to him that the dividends of twenty per cent per annum theretofore paid on said stock had all been earned and paid out of profits, and that said company was then earning much more than twenty per cent per annum on its stock, whereas, in truth and in fact, said dividends had been paid -in whole or in large part out of capital, and the capital of the said company had then been impaired and dissipated and lost through *561 the payment of said unearned dividends. They also falsely stated to him that a large part of the capital of the company was invested in the San Antonio, Uvalde & Gnlf Railroad, which had been bnilt by said Bankers Trust Company, and for the building of which there had been actually paid to the Bankers Trust Company cash bonus amounting to more than one million dollars which amount was a clear profit to said Bankers Trust Company, and that said railroad had been sold for January 1, 1914, delivery, at a clear profit to the company of $1,000,000, and that it was then upon dividend paying basis and was being operated at a profit; whereas, in truth and in fact, the Bankers Trust Company never received anv cash bonus of any kind, nor any other money or pronertv as a bonus for the building of said railroad, and said railroad was then being operated at a large loss, with no prospects of its becoming self-sustaining in the future, and had not then been sold at a profit of $1,000,000 or at all. They also falsély stated that the market value of the bank’s stock then owned by the Bankers Trust Company and the market value of the said railroad owned by it was largely in excess of the value at which they were carried on the books of the said company, whereas, in truth and in fact, the market value thereof was then a great deal less than the value at which they were so carried on the books of the Bankers Trust Company. The defendants also exhibited to the plaintiff the false printed statements of assets and liabilities hereinabove referred to in order to induce him to purchase said stock. Plaintiff says he had no knowledge respecting the said various false statements and representations so made to him by these defendants and the said Bankers Trust Company, except such as he derived from them, and that he trusted implicitly the said statements of these defendants, and in reliance thereon, at their urging, he purchased, in May, 1914, from J. E. Franklin, five-hundred shares of the stock of said corporation at the price of $195 per share, paying therefor

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 224, 289 Mo. 549, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-v-franklin-mo-1921.