Reinertson v. Consolidated Chemical Products Co.

216 N.W. 68, 205 Iowa 417
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 216 N.W. 68 (Reinertson v. Consolidated Chemical Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reinertson v. Consolidated Chemical Products Co., 216 N.W. 68, 205 Iowa 417 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

MORLING, J.-

-I. This action belongs to a series of similar cases which includes Reinertsom v. Struthers, 201 Iowa 1186; Pullan v. Struthers, 201 Iowa 1179; Pullan v. Struthers, 201 Iowa 709. Those three cases, however, were for the recovery of damages for fraud in the sale of stock of the Bankers Loan & Investment Coin-pany only. The present action is for damages for fraud in the sale of stock of the Consolidated Chemical Products Company only.. Defendants' main reliance is on the proposition that plaintiffs have heretofore sued and recovered on the same cause of action, and that the action now before us is, in effect, one to recover additional damages, and to sustain it *419 .would be to permit plaintiffs to split their cause of action. Defendants ground their contention on the fact that the parties made a written agreement, dated September 22, 1919, whereby the Consolidated Chemical Products Company acknowledged receipt from Anton Reinertson of a farm mortgage for $35,000, and agreed to deliver to him, within six days, 100 shares of Bankers Loan & Investment Company stock, 19,000 shares of Consolidated Chemical Products Company stock, and Reinert-son’s two promissory notes for $4,000 and $1,100, which he had given for balances owed on two prior purchases of Chemical Company stock. The agreement provided for adjustment of interest, and that Reinertson should assign to the Western Life Insurance Company and guarantee the $35,000 mortgage. The agreement stated that it was “to complete contract between the two parties hereto signed. ’ ’ The agreement is signed by Anton Reinertson and Consolidated Chemical Products Company, by A. D. Struthers, president. Following the signatures are two memoranda, the first acknowledging receipt of the mortgage, and agreeing to deliver to Reinertson, within five days, 120 shares of Bankers Loan & Investment Company stock and $16,666 of the Consolidated Chemical Company. A later one acknowledges receipt of stock. These memoranda are signed by Anton Reinertson, A. D. Struthers, and James H. Jamison, the last date being October 11, 1919.

That a plaintiff may ordinarily maintain but a single action upon the same cause, and that the cause of action is merged in a judgment recovered upon it, is familiar law. It is • sometimes difficult to determine whether the actions are upon the same or different causes. 1 Corpus Juris 1116. But there is no splitting and no merger unless the cause of action (not necessarily the form of the remedy, however) is the same. The action which the defendants say was upon the same cause as that now under review was that brought to this court and reported in Reinertson v. Struthers, 201 Iowa 1186. In that and in this the plaintiffs, while originally seeking to recover as on rescission for fraud, were held entitled not to recover as on rescission, but were held entitled to recover damages for fraud. The court did not have before it, therefore, in the former case, and does not have before it now, any question of plaintiffs’ right to recover the specific property (or its value) procured from them on a contract- re- *420 seinded for fraud. In each instance the case ultimately submitted was solely one for damages suffered from fraud.

The elements of a cause of action for fraud, though they may be stated in more condensed form (Smith v. Packard & Co., 152 Iowa 1, 5), are: (1) representation, (2) falsity, (3) materiality, (4) scienter, (5) intent to deceive, (6) reliance, (7) resulting injury and damage. 26 Corpus Juris 1062. The question is whether the elements which make up the cause of action, and which must be pleaded and proved, in order to entitle plaintiffs to recover, are the same'in the two eases.

In the first place, the fraud set up in the Bankers Loan Company case was there alleged to have been perpetrated by A. D. Struthers, S. F. Ellis, James H. Jamison, John C. Kudej, and the Bankers Loan & Investment Company, who were the defendants, and against whom judgment was rendered. The fraud counted on in this case is alleged to have been perpetrated by the Consolidated Chemical Products Company, James H. Jami-son, S. F. Ellis, and A. D. Struthers (originally, also, Smouse). The fraudulent representations alleged to have been made by the defendants in the Bankers Loan Company case were (in substance) that the Bankers Loan Company was conceived in fraud; that the defendants in that case originated a scheme to obtain funds through it, and, having conspired together to organize it, represented to plaintiffs that the Bankers Loan Company was a going concern, that an investment in it could not be a loss, but would be profitable, that it was financially able, and managed by capable and experienced men, that it had purchased a certain property (not one spoken of in the present case.) at a profit, that the individual defendants therein were officers and directors, of the Bankers Company, etc. All of the representations and wrongful conduct set up in that ease related to the Bankers Loan & Investment Company, its property, stock, and affairs. It was there alleged that the defendants for the Bankers Loan Company purchased worthless notes of the Consolidated Chemical Products Company, but no representation or fraud in the organization or concerning the assets, stock, or affairs of the Consolidated Chemical Products Company as a basis of action was set up. In the case now before us, the fraud and representations alleged are that Struthers, Jamison, Ellis, and Smouse conspired to form the Consolidated Chemical Products Company *421 for tlie purpose of. fraud, and that, in furtherance of the conspiracy, defendants individually, and through the aid of one another, represented that Ellis, Jamison, Struthers, and Smouse were officers of the Chemical Company, and represented that the company was organized for the purpose of manufacturing certain compounds, was making great profits, that its stock was ■worth more than par, that it was actually selling its products, etc.,' — all relating to the organization, assets, affairs, and stock of the Consolidated Chemical Products Company, of which Ellis, Jamison, Struthers, and Smouse are alleged to be officers. The organization, assets, business, or stock of the Bankers Company are not brought into the plaintiffs’ petition, further than that it is alleged that, as part of the scheme to defraud, the Western Life Insurance Company conspired to aid by making loans through the Bankers Loan Company, and that the Western Life did so aid. The allegations of falsity, materiality, scienter, and reliance, of course, relate in the Bankers Loan case to the representations there made, and in this case to those alleged here to have been made.

The injury pleaded in the Bankers Loan case was plaintiffs’ consequent inducement to purchase 128 shares of worthless stock of the Bankers Loan & Investment Company for $15,000. The injury alleged in the ease here is inducement to purchase, at three different times, worthless stock in the Consolidated Chemical Products Company, and to pay therefor $25,666.

The evidence, of course, conformed in each case to the allegations. The fraud proved was the fraud alleged in the case on trial, and not the fraud alleged in the other case.

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216 N.W. 68, 205 Iowa 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reinertson-v-consolidated-chemical-products-co-iowa-1927.