Munson v. Fishburn

190 P. 808, 183 Cal. 206, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 395
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 4909.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 190 P. 808 (Munson v. Fishburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munson v. Fishburn, 190 P. 808, 183 Cal. 206, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 395 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

*209 LAWLOR, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment on demurrer entered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff. The action was brought by the plaintiff for the rescission of a contract by which he subscribed to a syndicate to be formed by the defendants to acquire certain land, or for damages if rescission should be found to be inequitable.

It is alleged in the complaint that the defendants, J. E. Fishburn, president of the National Bank of California ; R. I. Rogers, vice-president of said bank; R. A. Rowan & Company, a corporation, and W. H. Joyce, were the owners of options to buy a certain tract of two thousand eight hundred acres of land in Los Angeles County; that a syndicate was formed for the purchase of said land; that for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff to subscribe for shares in the syndicate and thereby become a copurchaser of the- land with the ' defendants and other subscribers, “defendants and each of them represented to plaintiff that the defendants R. A. Rowan & Company and W. H. Joyce were the owners of the options to purchase the land”; that the price to the subscribers to the syndicate was $850 pér acre, payable as follows: Nine hundred and twenty thousand dollars in cash on December 9, 1912, and the balance in two installments of equal amount in five and ten years, respectively, from the date of the exercise of the said options; that the said price was about $87.50 per acre in excess of the price to the said option owners, who were to receive and retain the difference for their options and services; that Fishburn and Rogers had subscribed to said syndicate and would pay on an equal basis with the other subscribers the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, respectively, into the said subscription fund of nine hundred and twenty thousand dollars. “That, relying upon said representations that . . . Fishburn and Rogers had each subscribed the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars to said syndicate agreement on an equal basis with plaintiff and would pay in the amount of their said subscriptions, . . . plaintiff on or about the tenth day of November, 1912, signed said syndicate agreement and subscribed thereto the sum of five thousand dollars,” and thereafter paid said sum to defendants Rowan & Company and Joyce. “That had it been disclosed to plaintiff that . . . Fishburn and *210 Rogers . . . had an interest in said options or in said profits, plaintiff would not have subscribed to said syndicate agreement or paid in the amount of his said subscription or any part thereof, or at all become a party to said syndicate agreement.” That these representations were false in this: “That it was understood and agreed by and between defendants . . . that the amounts of said subscriptions . . . made by . . . Rogers and Fishburn, respectively, when paid in by them should be returned to them, respectively, as their shares of the profit of eighty-seven and fifty one-hundredths dollars per acre mentioned in said syndicate agreement as being received and retained by . . . R. A. Rowan & Company and Joyce”; that Fishburn and Rogers were the owners of a one-tenth interest, respectively, in the options represented to the plaintiff as being owned exclusively by the disclosed option owners, Rowan & Company and Joyce. That at the time plaintiff signed the syndicate agreement the names of Fishburn and Rogers appeared as subscribers thereto with their subscriptions in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars each, and that they concealed from and failed to disclose to plaintiff that there was an agreement between them to the effect that the subscriptions of the undisclosed option owners should be returned to them as their share of said profits.

It is further alleged that on December 3, 1912, the amount of the subscription fund having been paid in ahead of time, the purchase of the land was made and a corporation, known as the “Laguna Land and Water Company,” organized; that this corporation was capitalized at two million dollars and stock was issued and divided into two million shares of the par value of one dollar each; that nine hundred and twenty thousand shares of this stock were issued to the option owners, Rowan & Company and Joyce, in consideration of the transfer of the land to the corporation; that these nine hundred and twenty thousand shares were distributed to the subscribers to the syndicate at the rate of one share for each dollar subscribed; that on the same day twenty-five thousand shares were issued to each of the defendants Fishburn and Rogers, although they did not pay their subscriptions until January 24, 1913; that on the last-mentioned date they made a pretended payment to Rowan & Company and Joyce of the *211 amount of their subscriptions, and that at the same time, and pursuant to the agreement that the amount of their subscriptions, when paid, should be returned to them as their share of the profits, they received back from Rowan & Company and Joyce the identical amount paid in by them.

The complaint then alleges that the plaintiff first discovered the fraud on June 1, 1915, but was not aware, until some time in November, 1915, of his right to rescind. On November 29, 1915, plaintiff notified the defendants that he rescinded the agreement, tendered back the stock which had been issued to him, demanded his money, and, being refused, brought this suit.

The demurrer was to the second amended complaint as amended, on the following general grounds:

“1. That the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
“2. That the same is uncertain in the following respects, and each of them:
“a. It cannot be ascertained how the payment of twenty-five thousand dollars made by J. E. Fishburn was a pretended or fictitious payment.
“b. It cannot be ascertained how the payment of twenty-five thousand dollars made by R. I. Rogers was a pretended or fictitious payment.”

The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend, and judgment was entered in favor of the defendants with costs.

[1] 1. It is well settled that associates in a common enterprise, under whatever guise, have a duty to each other to make full disclosure of any preference or profit not common to all of the associates. In Lomita Land & Water Co. v. Robinson, 154 Cal. 36, [18 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1106, 97 Pac. 10], the defendant had secured an option on a certain tract of land for the sum of twenty-seven thousand five hundred dollars. He told one Whitlock that if he would find him a purchaser who would pay thirty-three thousand dollars for the property he (defendant) would pay Whitlock three thousand dollars. Whitlock organized a corporation to make the purchase and himself subscribed to the fund being raised to make the payment, but he did not disclose to his associates or cosubscribers that he was *212 to get a profit. The court said: “When he did this he assumed as to his associates, under a well-established rule of law, a relation analogous to that which exists between partners, and was precluded from making any secret profit out of the contemplated purchase at their expense.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 808, 183 Cal. 206, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munson-v-fishburn-cal-1920.