Ritzwoller v. Lurie

176 A.D. 100, 162 N.Y.S. 475, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9007
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 A.D. 100 (Ritzwoller v. Lurie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritzwoller v. Lurie, 176 A.D. 100, 162 N.Y.S. 475, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9007 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Page, J.:

The action is brought by a stockholder of the defendant corporation to obtain a rescission of his subscription to the stock of the corporation and a return of the money paid by him to the corporation for such stock and also to rescind an agreement for services entered into by the plaintiff with said corporation on the ground that the said agreement and subscription were induced by false and fraudulent representations. Plaintiff has joined as defendant Gustav Lurie, the promoter and officer of the defendant corporation, who is alleged to have made the representations relied upon.

The complaint alleges by way of inducement that plaintiff, prior to the incorporation of the defendant corporation, had been in the employ of a copartnership called Gus Lurie & Company as a salesman, under an arrangement whereby he received eight per cent commission upon all of his sales; that in the latter part of 1906 his employer, Gustav Lurie, represented to him that he intended to form a corporation to take over the assets and business of said copartnership, which corporation would have a fully paid capital of $200,000, and that if plaintiff was able to pay for it he would be allowed to subscribe for $10,000 of the said capital, and that plaintiff should then agree to take from the corporation a salary of $50 per week; “ that the business of said partnership had been very profitable, [102]*102the profits being as high as $65,000 per year, and had never gone below $35,000 in its poorest year,” and that plaintiff’s dividends and salary would be greater than the sum he was earning by commissions.

It is then alleged “ that plaintiff raised said $10,000 in cash and paid the same to said partnership in the month of December, 1906, in advance of the formation of said corporation ” and “ for the purpose of taking said $10,000 of the stock thereof.” The defendant incorporated the company in February, 1907. Its officers and directors were elected and its treasurer reported in the presence of the plaintiff and defendant Gustav Lurie ” that he had received in cash from the following subscribers the following sums of money for their subscriptions, viz., Louis Black, $16,000; Harry Goldstein, $10,000; Hart T. Pincus, as trustee, $15,000; Carl D. Ritzwoller, the plaintiff, $10,000; Joseph Schloss, $10,000; Leicester T. Bernstein, $10,000; Henry R. Tyroler, $1,000; Charles A. Klein, $1,000. It is then alleged that plaintiff thereupon, pursuant to said arrangement, made an agreement with the corporation to work for it as salesman at a salary of $50 per week, and continued to work pursuant thereto during the years 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910.

The complaint further alleges that plaintiff was induced to sign a certificate stating that $200,000 had been paid into the treasury of the corporation, $75,000 in the said cash payments and $125,000 in property; that plaintiff had no personal knowledge as to the payment of any of said amounts' except the $10,000 which he had paid.

The complaint then alleges that the subscription and agreement for services were made by plaintiff solely through the inducements and representations of Gustav Lurie and the corporation through him as its agent; that the statements that said corporation “was to be formed by him with a paid-up capital of Two hundred thousand dollars ” were false, and plaintiff relied thereon to his damage; that it was known to said Lurie that the $200,000 was not to be paid into said corporation “ and could not be paid in, and that some of said salesmen other than plaintiff and certain of said other persons were not financially able to pay for any substantial amount of stock, and said Gustav Lurie knew that the earnings of said corporation [103]*103with a substantial portion of its capital fictitious, could not be so large as it was represented by said Gustav Lurie to plaintiff that they would be.”

As to the falsity of the statements it is then alleged that one Loveman owed the partnership $11,000, which indebtedness was put in the form of a promissory note and turned into the corporation “as a partnership asset to make up the amount of $125,000; that said note was turned over to said corporation and is still held by it, never having been fully paid.” That plaintiff was informed that the net assets of the partnership turned Over to the corporation were of the full value of $125,000 and did not know that the said note was included therein. It is then alleged that several of the subscribers named above did not pay cash in full for their stock as stated in the certificate. Then follow certain allegations showing that defendant Lurie was in control of the corporation, though plaintiff was a director thereof, and said Lurie concealed its financial condition from the plaintiff until 1915, when he announced at a director’s meeting that he desired to dissolve the corporation and it was resolved that an accountant examine and report upon the books of the corporation, after which plaintiff investigated and learned the facts, whereupon he elected to rescind his subscription, duly tendered his stock and offered to repay to defendant corporation any dividends he had received thereupon, and demanded the cancellation of his certificate of stock, and a return of his $10,000 with interest, and elects to rescind his agreement whereby he worked at a salary of $50 per week and demands that defendant account to him for sales aggregating $350,000 made during the years 1907 to 1910 upon a basis of eight per cent commission less the amount of salary paid to him during said period.

The demand for relief in addition to the above asks that plaintiff’s name be expunged from the certificate of payment of the capital stock and from the list of defendant’s stockholders and for an accounting.

It will be noted that the only statements of defendant Lurie upon which plaintiff has alleged that he relied in subscribing for the stock are “ that said corporation was to have a capital of $200,000, all of which was to be paid in full,” and “ that the [104]*104business of said partnership had been very profitable, the profits being as high as $65,000 per year and had never gone below $35,000 in its poorest year.” There is not a word in the complaint which shows that the latter statement is or was false, nor does it appear that the corporation thereafter failed to make a profit of at least $35,000 in any year. Plaintiff alleges a willingness to return his dividends, which shows that some profit must have been made, but whether more or less than $35,000 does not appear. As to the statement that the proposed capital of $200,000 would be paid in full, that is a promissory statement and not a statement of an existing fact. If, from the allegations of the complaint, however, it can be inferred that this was a statement of an existing intention which was false, within the rule affirmed in the case of Adams v. Gillig (199 N. Y. 317), as claimed by the plaintiff, I am still of the opinion that the subsequent allegations of the complaint, are insufficient to show that the failure to comply with the letter of that statement damaged the plaintiff in any way or that the corporation failed to make profits because of lack of capital. It does not appear, therefore, that the alleged statement was false in any material respect which resulted in damage to the plaintiff. The rule applicable to actions based upon false representations is aptly stated by the Appellate Division of the Fourth Department in Robinson v. Syracuse Rapid Transit R. Co. (100 App. Div.

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Related

Caracas Realty Corp. v. Jeremias
31 Misc. 2d 1074 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
Ritzwoller v. Lurie
180 A.D. 934 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 A.D. 100, 162 N.Y.S. 475, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritzwoller-v-lurie-nyappdiv-1916.