Nicol v. Jacoby

103 So. 33, 157 La. 757, 1925 La. LEXIS 1963
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
DocketNo. 24791.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 103 So. 33 (Nicol v. Jacoby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicol v. Jacoby, 103 So. 33, 157 La. 757, 1925 La. LEXIS 1963 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit instituted by Mary B. Nicol and John A. Nicol for the purpose of annulling certain sales of real property and of certain machinéry and other property attached to the realty and forming part of it by destination, and of recovering, in the alternative, a certain promissory note.

Defendants, through curators ad hoc appointed to represent them, excepted to the suit on various grounds. These exceptions, or at least one of them, an exception of no cause of action, make it necessary to state the substance of the petition filed by plaintiffs. This we shall do in narrative form, and as if the facts alleged had been, in reality, established.

One • of the plaintiffs, Mary B. Nicol, ac-; quired the property in controversy from the Sugar Cane By-Products Company for a consideration of $43,500. It appears that John A. Nicol, in some manner, which is undisclosed, acquired an interest in the property, or, at least, was treated as a part owner thereof by his eoplaintiff.

Plaintiffs desired to sell the property, and executed a power of attorney to Joseph R. H. Jacoby, a resident of the state of Pennsylvania, authorizing him to sell the property ior them. In this power of attorney Jacoby was also authorized to sue for plaintiffs, to compromise suits, to submit matters to arbitration, to collect debts, and to do other things for them.

Following the execution of the power of attorney, Jacoby, for the purpose of securing from plaintiffs a deed in his favor to the property, represented to them that the Sanitary Products Corporation of America had offered -to purchase and would purchase from him the property in controversy for $60,000, of which $5,000 would be paid in cash, and the balance in 1,000 shares of class A stock in said corporation. Jacoby also represented to plaintiffs that the 1,000 shares of stock mentioned were worth fully $60,000, and would return dividends at once; that none of the stock was on the market; that the company had no stock for sale; that he would guarantee a bank loan on said 1,000 shares of stock; that all of the stock of said corporation of class B, was tied up in a 10-year trust, so that it could not be put on the market; that less'than 20,000 shares of class A stock of said company had been sold; and that the balance thereof was in the treasury. Jacoby further represented to plaintiffs for the iDurpose of procuring a deed to said property that the net profits earned by the Sanitary Products Corporation were $125,-000, for the year 1919, which was the year preceding the making of these representations ; and he also represented to them that the tangible assets of said company were in excess of $800,000.

The foregoing representations were fraudulent, so plaintiffs allege, but they believed them, and were induced by them to deed the property to Jacoby, not for the purpose of transferring.title to him in reality, but for the purpose of enabling him to sell the same to said corporation for their benefit and for the benefit of their associates, whose names are not disclosed.

*761 Accordingly, in May, 1920, plaintiffs, in order to enable Jacoby to make said sale, executed a deed apparently conveying the property to Mm for the consideration of $10, and for other valuable considerations not therein expressed. After Jacoby had fraudulently'procured a deed to the property, he conveyed the same to A. B. Letellier for the price and sum of $10,000, for the purpose, it is alleged, of placing the same beyond the reach of plaintiffs. A few days after this sale was made, Letellier resold the property to Jacoby for the same amount which he, Letellier, had paid for it. On the same day that Jacoby reacquired the property, he conveyed it to Samuel P. Bowers, a nonresident of this state, for $47,467, of which sum Bowers paid $20,467 cash, and delivered to Jacoby a promissory note, payable to him, for $27,000, the balance of the purchase price. In making this purchase, Bowers had no intention of purchasing for himself, but his intention was to purchase for the United Fibre & Products Corporation, a company domiciled in the state of Maryland, of which he was at the time and still is an officer and a member of its board of directors.

At the time Jacoby conveyed the property to Bowers, he was still the agent of plaintiffs, under the power of attorney heretofore mentioned, and on the same day on which he' sold the property in controversy to Bowers he acted under that power of attorney by compromising a suit pending against Mary B. Nicol, one of the plaintiffs herein.

After Jacoby had deeded the property to Bowers the latter sold it to the United Fibre & Products Corporation, which still seems to claim it as owner.

While in the deed from plaintiffs to Jacoby it is recited that the conveyance is made for $10 and other valuable considerations, yet it appears from the nineteenth article of the petition, in this suit, that plaintiffs received, in fact, as the consideration for said sale, . $5,000 in cash, the receipt of wMch is clearly and specifically admitted, and though the remainder of the allegation with respect to the consideration actually received is not so clear, yet we think that it appears from it that plaintiffs also received, as consideration for said sale, 1,000 shares of the stock of the Sanitary Products 'Corporation of America, which Jacoby represented that they would receive. However, it also appears that instead of this stock being worth at the time $60,000, which sum Jacoby represented its value to be, it was then and is now worth only $5,000, which together with the $5,000 cash received, makes the value of the total consideration received by plaintiffs less than one-fourth ,of the actual value of the property.

It also appears from the allegations of the petition, filed herein, that, when Jacoby, in order to obtain a deed to said property for the ostensible purpose of conveying the property to the Sanitary Products Corporation of America, made the representations heretofore stated, he made them with the knowledge and consent of Bowers and of the United Fibre & Products Corporation, and in collusion with them.

Omitting for the present the relief which plaintiffs allege that they are entitled to, they pray that curators ad hoc- be appointed to represent Jacoby, Bowers, and the United Fibre & Products Corporation, and after legal proceedings had, that Judgment be rendered against said defendants annulling the sale made by them to Jacoby, the one made by Jacoby to Bowers, and also the one made by Bowers to the United Fibre & Products Corporation, and that they, plaintiffs, be decreed to be the lawful owners of said property. They also pray, in the alternative, that, should the court not grant the foregoing relief, then, as Jacoby was their agent at the time he made the sale to Bowers, they be *763 decreed to be the owners of the promissory note for $27,000 given by Bowers to Jacoby in part consideration for that sale.

As we have bad occasipn to say in the Commencement of this opinion, defendants, through their curators ad hoc, filed various exceptions to plaintiffs’ demand. These exceptions consist of one to the jurisdiction of the trial court, both ratione person* and ratione materias; one of no right or cause of action, and one of want of tender, filed by all of the defendants through their curators ad hoc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 So. 33, 157 La. 757, 1925 La. LEXIS 1963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicol-v-jacoby-la-1925.