Nugent v. Cincinnati, Harrison & Indianapolis Straight Line Railroad

2 Disney (Ohio) 302
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJune 15, 1858
DocketNo. 4,617
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Disney (Ohio) 302 (Nugent v. Cincinnati, Harrison & Indianapolis Straight Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nugent v. Cincinnati, Harrison & Indianapolis Straight Line Railroad, 2 Disney (Ohio) 302 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Gholson, J.

No question has been raised in this case as to the regular organization of the company, or as to the propriety of its receiving subscriptions of stock in real estate. But in view of the facts appearing in evidence, and to prevent any misconception from their being passed over in silence, I think it not improper to say, that the 9th section of the general act, under which the company was organized, requires ten per cent, of the capital stock to be subscribed before an election of the directors, and the 5th section makes ten per cent, of that payable at the time of subscription. I do not find in the act any authority to receive subscriptions in real estate, before the full organization of the company, by a meeting of the stockholders, and an election of directors. If there has been any irregularity in this respect, its effect need not be considered, as it has not been pressed, and perhaps could not be by the plaintiff. It is referred to, that it may not appear to be sanctioned. In forming these corpora[304]*304tions, at least a fair and substantial compliance with the provisions of the statute should be observed.

The ground of relief relied on by the plaintiff is fraud. “ Strictly speaking ” it has been said, “ a corporation can not itself be guilty of fraud. But where a corporation is formed for the purpose of carrying on a trading or other speculation for profit, such as constructing a railway, these objects can only be accomplished through the agency of. individuals; and there can be no doubt that if the agents employed, conduct themselves fraudulently, so that if they had been acting for private employers, the persons for whom they were acting would have been affected by their fraud; the same principles must prevail where the principal under whom the agent acts is a corporation.” Ranger v. Great Western R. R. Co. 5 H. L. C. 86. The relief asked by the plaintiff can only be obtained by showing fraud — actual fraud. The agreement has been executed. The defendant has the title to the land and the plaintiff' the possession of the certificates of the stock. In such a case it is not enough to show that untrue statements were made to the injury of the party, that they were material, and were relied on, but such statements must appear to have been made fraudulently. 6 Cl. & Finn. 338; I. H. L. Cas. 605 — 633. The party making them must be shown by direct proof to have had a fraudulent purpose in contemplation, or at least to have known that the statements were untrue. In the latter ease it is not essential to see that there was' a motive for actual fraud. “ It is fraud in law if a party makes representations which he knows to be false and injury ensues, although the motive from which the representations proceeded may not have been bad; the person who makes such representations is reponsible for the consequences.” 7 Bingh. 101, Foster v. Charles. Fraud must concur with the false statement, but if the party at the time the statement is made knows it to be false, that is enough to constitute fraud, and if damage ensues, there is a right to relief. Polhill v. Walter, 3 B. & Adol. 114; Taylor v. Ashton, 11 Mees. & Welsh. 401-415; Collins v. [305]*305Evans, 48 E. C. L. 820-827. Indeed it is not necessary to show that a party knew a fact represented to be untrue, if he stated a fact which was untrue for a fraudulent purpose, at the same time not believing that fact to be true, in such a ease it would be both a legal and a moral fraud. 11 Mees. & Welsh. 415. A party has no right in his dealings with another to state a fact to be true, which he does not know to be true and which fact may influence the conduct of the other party. If such a fact be stated to obtain a benefit, at the expense of the other party and to his prejudice, and it appears there was no reasonable or probable ground for a belief in the existence of such fact, the inference is that there was no belief, and the statement .under such circumstances has the effect of, and may be properly treated as, a fraud.

Supposing these principles to be correct, before proceeding to apply them to the evidence in this case, it is proper to make another remark. There are, in most dealings, and particularly in those of a like character with that to be examined in the present case, two kinds of representations or statements. One in reference to matters in their nature promissory, or resting in opinion, judgment or expectation, and the other in reference to facts as having actually occurred, or as really existing. In the efforts which might be expected, and which historically are known to be often made, to bring into life such undertakings as that which was the object of the incorporation of the defendant, representations of the former kind formed a prominent part. And it would require strong and direct proof of a fraudulent purpose, on the one side, if not a degree of weakness amounting to incapacity on the other, to found a ground for relief against an executed agreement, upon any general representations as to the completion and success of a railroad enterprise. But while a state of excitement, or even delusion, in the public mind, on a particular branch of public industry or improvement, may excuse exaggerated statements in matters of opinion, belief and judgment, I can not admit that it forms any legal or [306]*306sufficient excuse for a departure from the truth as to facts, which are, or should be, a matter of knowledge.

I have no knowledge of, and do not admit that any state of circumstances have existed in this country, in the form of a railroad excitement, that did excuse, or could excuse, the statement of a matter as an existing fact, which at the time was known to be untrue, or which the party did not believe to be true. Parties have no right to become deluded as to matters of fact, and carry any such delusion into their dealings with their fellow-men. They must be taken to intend the necessary consequence of their acts, or admit the invalidity of the whole transaction, for want of proper- competency to act.

I come now to the questions of fact in this case, to the allegations of false and fraudulent representations, and the evidence by which they are sustained. I shall confine myself to two: one as to the amount of subscription which the company had obtained, and the other as to the fact that the road was under contract, with the exception of a small part. That such representations were made, and made in the strongest terms, is shown by the evidence of the plaintiff; that they were material, or calculated to induce action on his part, is clear from their nature, and by this I am to be governed,-rather than by the declaration of the plaintiff in his evidence to that effect. The evidence, I think, clearly shows that both representations, and particularly the former, were untrue, and I am bound to conclude, from their nature, that their falsity must have been known to the agent of the defendant, by whom they were made. This, according to the principles tó which I have referred, is fraud, actual fraud, such as would sustain an action for deceit, and sufficient to authorize the rescission of an executed agreement.

I have selected the two representations to which I have alluded, because, as to them, the evidence of the plaintiff is sustained and corroborated by the other evidence in the case. I am strongly impressed with the impropriety and danger of allowing parties to set aside solemn and executed agree[307]

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2 Disney (Ohio) 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-cincinnati-harrison-indianapolis-straight-line-railroad-ohsuperctcinci-1858.