Nutt v. Wheeler

20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 86
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 86 (Nutt v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nutt v. Wheeler, 20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 86 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

WINCH, J.

It appears from the record of this case that defendant in error, who was plaintiff below, was a school teacher who also speculated in stocks dealt in on the stock market in Cleveland, Ohio, and that in September, 1902, through a broker in said city, she bought on the open market thirty-five shares of the capital stock of the Springfield & Xenia Traction Company, for which she paid $28 per share. Her instructions to her broker were contained in the following letter to him:

‘ ‘ Garrettsville, Ohio, September 16, 1902.
“Mr. Carl S. Russell,
“Dear Sir:
“I beg leave to acknowledge your favor of the fifteenth. Accept my thanks for the execution of the Western railway commission upon such favorable terms. I also desire to thank you for taking such very good care of my interests in the C. D. & T. deal., I wish you would expend the proceeds from the sale of that stock in the purchase of some good traction stock which your best judgment leads you. to believe will be a rapid riser. How is that new Springfield & Xenia road financed ? I [87]*87lave faith in any road under the Mandelbaum and Pomeroy syndicate, nr in the ultimate success of a company financed by the Everett-Moore ■combination. I am out of the city, so cannot talk over the investment with you, but I assure you my previous transactions lead me to trust implicitly in your business sagacity.
“Yours truly,
“Mustnie A. Wheeler.”

This stock did not prove a “rapid riser,” but turned out to be a “rapid faller,” the company defaulting in the payment of interest on its bonds, a receiver being appointed and a suit being brought in behalf of its creditors in the common pleas court of Clark county, against Miss 'Wheeler and other stockholders of the company, to enforce their stockholder’s statutory liability.

Thereupon Miss Wheeler brought an action in deceit against Nutt, he being president of the company at the time her 'Stock was transferred to her, and having as such signed the certificate for thirty-five shares issued to her, which on its face he certified to be “ fully paid and nonassessable. ’ ’

In her petition she sets forth what she claims to be the transaction whereby $500,000 of the stock of the company was originally issued to said Nutt, and his associates, without any consideration whatsoever; that Nutt signed her certificate as president of the company, knowing at the time he signed it that the company had never been paid for it; that at the time of the disposal of the stock of the company, it was insolvent and that Nutt knew of its insolvency.

The petition further alleges that certificates so issued found their way into the market, where Miss Wheeler, relying upon the statement upon their face, that the stock was fully paid and nonassessable, bought thirty-five shares for which she paid $980; that she believed said statement to be true and later discovered that it was untrue and that her stock was worthless. ' •

The prayer of the petition is, that she recover from Nutt the money she paid another for her stock, plus the amount which she alleges as her contingent liability in said suit pending in Clark county.

The conceded facts regarding the deal whereby the $500,000 of stock of the company was originally issued, as ^hown by the record, are as follows:

One Martin and associates having acquired franchises for a traction company in the cities of Springfield and Xenia and made some progress towards acquiring a right of way for a suburban road between said cities,- and being unable themselves to finance the proposition, applied to Nutt to help them out. He agreed with them to organize a. company with [88]*88$500,000 stock, cause it to issue $400,000 of bonds and deliver to Martin and associates $140,000 of said stock and $40,000 of bonds, and sell the balance of the bonds, $360,000, using the proceeds thereof in completing' and equipping the proposed road. Martin and associates were to deliver to Nutt or the company so to be organized by him, all their franchises, and property, and also agreed to furnish a complete private right of way between Xenia and Springfield along lines satisfactory to the purchasers.

This agreement was carried out, but Nutt, in turning the property over to the company, which later became known as the Springfield and Xenia Traction Company, induced it to issue to him therefor $500,000 of stock and $40,000 in bonds. He delivered to Martin and associates $140,000 of this stock and $40,000 of bonds, as he agreed, though this, is questioned by one of Martin’s associates who thinks only $30,000 in stock and $30,000 in bonds was so delivered. Whether Martin dealt, fairly with his associates, however, is immaterial.

The $360,000 of stock remaining in Nutt’s hands by this transaction, he gave as a bonus to the subsequent purchasers of the $360,000 of bonds-sold for construction purposes, each purchaser of a $1,000 bond thus-receiving ten shares of stock.

It is a part of this bonus stock which subsequently found its way upon the market in Cleveland, and was bought by Miss Wheeler, not. from Nutt, but from some third person.

Upon the fact that Nutt paid Martin .some $360,000 less for the property than he sold it to the company for, and the opinion of one expert, A. B. Dupont, that at the time it was probably not worth more-than $100,000, the point was attempted to be made by the plaintiff below, that the stock issued by the company was never paid for. This expert, however, admitted that if the franchises “were in the hands of somebody who had the power and would build the railroad, .he could probably unload the railroad at a great deal more than its physical cost.”

On the other hand, five experts for the defendant, all well known traction men, testified that the franchises transferred to the company were worth from $500,000 to '$750,000.

The trial court submitted the cause to the jury,- limiting the plaintiff’s right to recover to the amount she had paid for her stock,' with interest, and the jury brought in a verdict for her in that amount.

In this court several errors in the record are complained of, but the most important ones, in our view of the case, are, that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and that the motion of defendant at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, to direct a verdict for the defendant, should have been granted.

[89]*89If Mr. Nutt made any misrepresentation to Miss Wbeeler, it was made either by the express language ,on the face of the stock certificate which she bought, or it was implied from the existence in the market of stock certificates signed by Mr. Nutt, or placed in the market directly or indirectly by him.

As the record discloses that Miss Wheeler never saw a stock certificate of the Springfield and Xenia Traction Company until after she had bought her thirty-five shares and had her own certificate issued to her, there was no express representation to her, and as her testimony shows that she had no thought as to the difference between “certificates of stock” and “stock” itself, but was looking for a “rapid riser” as a speculation, there was no implied representation arising from the presence of certificates of stock in the market.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio C.C. Dec. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutt-v-wheeler-ohcirctcuyahoga-1907.