National Exchange Bank v. Sibley

71 Ga. 726
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 71 Ga. 726 (National Exchange Bank v. Sibley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Exchange Bank v. Sibley, 71 Ga. 726 (Ga. 1883).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

This was an action on the case for deceit, brought against Joseph Sibley, W. F. Herring,. Charles H. Phinizy, and several others; but none of them being served except the above named defendants, the suit Avas discontinued as to all except them. The declaration sets forth, in substance, that on the 11th of September,-1879, the defendants were directors of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, with the duty to manage its business, and [728]*728to authorize the issue of genuine, paid up and legal stock therein, to borrow money therefor, and deposit the genuine stock thereof as collateral security. That on said day defendants desired to borrow $2,500 from plaintiff, and offered to deposit scrip for 100 shares of genuine, legal and fully paid up stock of said Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, of the par value of $100 per share^ as collateral—representing said collateral to be genuine, legal, and fully paid up, of the par valu© of $100, though knowing it to be spurious and unlawful, and that plaintiff believed it to be genuine; plaintiff loaned said sum on the faith of the said collateral, and defendants issued scrip for 100 shares. That said note was renewed at various times, and at each renewal the scrip was left with plaintiff as collateral. That the debt became due August 18,1881, and defendants again renewed the same, depositing the scrip as to which the said representation had been made. Induced by said representations and defendants’ acts and deeds, and laboring under the delusion that the stock was genuine, legal and paid up, and as represented to be by defendants, the plaintiff renewed the loan and took the collateral. That, as a fact, the scrip represented unlawful, unauthorized, illegal and spurious stock, attempted to be created by defendants in excess of the lawful capital of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, on which nothing had been paid in, all of which was known to defendants, but of which plaintiff was ignorant until November, 1881. That in the premises, defendants falsely, fraudulently, deceitfully and recklessly deceived and injured plaintiff, concealing the facts aforesaid and the spuriousness and worthlessness of the scrip, though knowing that plaintiff thought the collateral 'was ample security and representing genuine stock. That neither the company nor either of the defendants have paid any part of said debt, though due, since November, 1881. That at the time the debt became due, since and now, the Augusta [729]*729and Port Royal Compress Company was and is insolvent, and has wholly failed to pay said debt.

To this declaration the defendants demurred, upon the following grounds •

(1.) That “no such action can be maintained until the plaintiff has obtained a judgment establishing the validity of his debt against the corporation, and a return of nulla bona thereon.”

(2.) That it appears from plaintiff’s own showing that it is a stockholder of the corporation, and has no remedy at law against the directors without making the corporation a ¡i arty.

(3.) That no sufficient reason is alleged as to why the plaintiff, from the 11th day of September, 1879, upon which it received the scrip of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, was ignorant, until November, 1881, of the alleged character of the stock held by it,—-each defendant insisting that the particular acts upon which a liability is claimed to exist and rest upon this defendant should be set out, so that he can be put upon notice.

(4.) That “ it appears that plaintiff, having dealt with the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company as a corporation, are estopped from going behind the note received by them, it appearing that said note was received after the day the scrip issued to it, the scrip being dated September 11,1879.”

(5.) That “plaintiff’s aforesaid declaration shows that the matters complained of constitute, at most, damnumabsque injuria, for plaintiff’s aforesaid declaration avers that, at the time said debt became due, since and now, the said Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company was and is insolvent. Wherefore no loss could accrue to plaintiff by reason of the alleged spuriousness of the stock ; for the stock, the corporation being insolvent, would be equally worthless, whether spurious or genuine.”

(6.) That the 'plaintiff, by this action for deceit against the directors of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress [730]*730Company, for the issue of spurious and unlawful stock of the corporation in excess of the amount authorized by its charter, for the purpose of hypothecating the same as collateral security for money borrowed, was denying the corporate éxistence of the Augusta and Port Royal Compress Company, and that plaintiff was estopped from going behind the note received by it (the plaintiff).

The court .sustained this demurrer upon each of the grounds therein taken, and gave judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit; and thereupon it excepted and bi’ought the case here, and assigns error, not only to the entire judgment sustaining the demurrer, but to the ruling upon each of the grounds thereof separately and distinctly, and this assignment makes the case for our determination.

1. It is our opinion that not one of these grounds of demurrer is well taken. - This results, as we th'inK, from an entire misconception of the nature and purpose of the plaintiff’s action. The liability sought to be enforced is not secondary and collateral, dependent upon that of the corporation of which defendants are and were directors, but is original and primary against them as individuals, and grows out of their personal wrong. In this suit, there is no attempt to hold the corporation liable. The entire object of the suit is to redress the wrong alleged to have been committed by the defendants upon the plaintiff, in inducing it to part with its money upon a security known to them to be worthless, and which they represented as valuable and good. “ It is settled law,” said Parke, B., in Thorn vs. Bigland, 8 Exch., 731, “that independently of duty, no action will lie for a misrepresentation, unless the party making it knows it to be untrue, and makes it with a fraudulent intention to induce another to act on the faith of it, and to alter his position to his damage. This appears from the cases of Collins vs. Evans, 5 Q. B., 820 (48 E. C. L. R.), and Ormrod vs. Huth, 14 M. & W., 651, which have perfectly settled the law on that point.”

In Wilde vs. Gibson, 1 H. L. Cas. 605, 633, Lord Camp. [731]*731bell declared, “If by ‘ fraud ’ is meant an intention to injure the party to whom the representation’ is made, or to benefit the party who makes the representation, there may be an action of deceit without fraud; but there must be falsehood; there must be an assertion of that which the party making it knows to be untrue; the scienter must either be expressly alleged or there must be an allegation that is tantamount to the scienter of the fraudulent representation, and this allegation must be proved at the trial and he adds, “ If that falsehood is stated without any view of benefiting the person who states the falsehood, or of injuring the person to whom the falsehood is stated, in one sense of the word you may say it is not fraudulent, but it is a breach of moral obligation, it is telling a lie, and if a lie is told whereby a third person is prejudiced,

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ga. 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-exchange-bank-v-sibley-ga-1883.