Perry v. Sharpe

8 F. 15, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 810
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 8 F. 15 (Perry v. Sharpe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Sharpe, 8 F. 15, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 810 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Matthews, Justice.

On November 27, 1880, the plaintiffs filed in the court of common pleas for Fairfield county, Ohio, a petition in a civil action, under the Code of Civil Procedure in that state, for the recovery of money only.

It alleged, in substance, that the plaintiffs are citizens of the state of Massachusetts, and partners in trade; that the defendants are citizens of Ohio; that on October 20, 1879, the defendants applied to the plaintiffs to grant a lino of credit to the defendant Pierce, who was without moans or responsibility, but familiar with the dry goods business, to sell him dry goods such as he might desire, to establish and conduct a retail dry goods store at Lancaster, in Fairfield county, Ohio; that, as an inducement thereto, the defendants represented and stated that the defendant Sharpe owned a large and magnificent farm of 720 acres of land three and a half miles from Hartford City, in Blackford county, Indiana; that the same was in a high state of cultivation, and one of the best farms in the county; that the defendant Sharpe had, within the few years that he had owned it, expended §9,000 in permanent improvements on it; that it was worth §25,000 and upwards, and would be fine security for §15,000, and the defendant Sharpe proposed to plaintiffs that he would convey said farm to the defendant Pierce in fee and allow him to execute to plaintiffs a mortgage thereon for §15,000 as security for a line of credit to that amount with plaintiffs, stating that he had not sold and would not sell said farm to Pierce at any price, but would loan it to him as a basis of credit to help him into business, and that he (said Sharpe) would never claim anything from said Pierce in respect to said farm as long as he (said Pierce) desired to hold it; that thereupon the plaintiffs, relying upon said statements and representations of the defendants, and believing them to be true, agreed to extend to defendant Pierce the line of credit aforesaid upon said land being conveyed to him as aforesaid, and upon his mortgaging the same to-the plaintiffs, and the same was accordingly done on the same day, October 20, 1879, and the plaintiffs thereupon, in pursuance of said scheme, sold and delivered to said Pierce goods at the dates and of the value therein stated, viz.: from October 27, 1879, to November 3, 1880, amounting in all to §30,902.50, on account of which they acknowledge to have received payments from Pierce for which he is entitled to credit amounting to §12,449.47, leaving an unpaid balance of §20,455.03, for which Pierce is indebted to them; that the representations and statements so made by the defendants were false' [18]*18and fraudulent when made, and well known by each of them to he so false and fraudulent, and that they were made with intent to deceive and cheat the plaintiffs out of the value of all goods which they might sell the defendant Pierce, less the net value of the farm aforesaid; that, in truth and fact, said farm was then chiefly a marsh, little better than a frog pond, being for a large part of the year under water; that there was very little of it under cultivation, and very little of it capable of cultivation, and that it is one of the poorest farms in the county; that it lies six miles by road from Hartford City; that said Sharpe had not in fact spent over $1,500 in improvements on it, and that principally in constructing a ditch, which is wholly inadequate and almost useless in draining said farm; that it was then worth, and is not now and never was worth more than $7,000, and is not good security for more than $5,000, all which the defendants then well knew, but concealed from the plaintiffs and falsely represented as aforesaid; that in fact Sharpe had, on October 1,1879, already made a fictitious sale of said farm to Pierce for $25,000, for which Pierce had agreed to give Sharpe his judgment notes, payable within one year, at 8 per cent, interest, whenever Sharpe should ask for them, all which was fraudulently concealed from the plaintiff; that as soon as said Pierce had executed to the plaintiffs his mortgage for $15,000, on October 20, 1879, he also immediately executed and delivered to Sharpe five judgment notes for $5,000 each, due respectively in three, six, seven, eight, and nine months, with 8 per cent, interest, as he had previously agreed, all which was fraudulently concealed from plaintiffs and not known to them until said Sharpe, on November 15, 1880, caused five judgments to be entered upon said notes by confession in the superior court of Montgomery county, and executions aggregating about $27,000 to be levied upon the stock of goods of Pierce at Lancaster, Ohio; that said stock is not in value exceeding the amount of said executions, and the chief portions thereof consist of goods bought by said Pierce of the plaintiffs under the false representations aforesaid; that as soon as they learned of the fraud aforesaid, viz., on November 24, 1880, they notified the defendant Pierce that the contract of sale and credit in respect to said goods was rescinded, tendered to him the note and mortgage on said farm for cancellation, and offered to cancel and discharge the same, and demanded the return of said goods so sold, or payment for the same, which was refused. Wherefore, they demand damages for said deceit in the sum of $20,455.03, with interest, and for all other proper relief.

This petition was duly verified by the oath of one of the plaintiffs, [19]*19who also filed his affidavit for an order of attachment, setting out in substance the allegations of the petition, and stating that “the said defendants fraudulently and criminally contracted the debt, and fraudulently and criminally incurred the obligation, for which the said action has been brought;” and also that “the said defendants are about to dispose of the property of the said defendant George W. Pierce, with the intent to defraud the creditors of him, the said George W. Pierce;” and also “that the said George W. Pierce has disposed of a part of his property with intent to defraud his creditors.”

Writs of summons were issued, — one against Pierce, directed to the sheriff of Fairfield county; the other against Sharpe, to the sheriff of Montgomery county, — and both wore returned served.

Orders of attachment were also issued, — one against each defendant. That against Sharpe was issued to the sheriff of Montgomery county; was levied by him upon personal property of Sharpe, valued at §20,503.(33, which was released to him on the execution and delivery of a forthcoming bond." The order of attachment against Pierce was directed to the sheriff of Fairfield county, and was by him levied upon goods and personal property of Pierce, which were already in his hands, under executions levied thereon upon the judgments entered against him by confession in, the superior court of Montgomery county, in favor of his co-defendant, Sharpe.

On December 14, 1880, the plaintiffs filed their petition for a removal of said cause to this court, and tendered a bond, conditioned as required by law, which petition was granted, and the cause removed and certified into this court accordingly.

, On November 27, 1880, the same day on which the civil action at law was begun, as above recited, the plaintiffs filed in the same court of common pleas for Fairfield county, Ohio, a petition against the same defendants in a suit praying for an injunction and equitable relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. 15, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-sharpe-uscirct-1881.