Rothmiller v. . Stein

38 N.E. 718, 143 N.Y. 581, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 993
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 38 N.E. 718 (Rothmiller v. . Stein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rothmiller v. . Stein, 38 N.E. 718, 143 N.Y. 581, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 993 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The defendants insist that there is no legal fraud alleged in the complaint, and that even if there be such allegation the complaint does not contain any statement showing that legal damage can flow from the fraud.

We think the complaint is good in both particulars. The first ground upon which the defendants allege the action is not. maintainable is founded upon the statement that the plaintiff was not induced to take affirmative action by defendants’ false representations, but that he simply remained passive, did nothing, and refrainéd from selling his stock at a price which would have been more advantageous to him than that at which he in fact sold.

The plaintiff did not remain passive. He had received two different offers from one who was also a stockholder and who offered to purchase from him his stock. The one offer was. $80 cash per share; the other was $50 cash, with the right to another $50 per share in Jan., 1894, in case the company should in the meanwhile have paid dividends for 1893 equal to ten per cent. The plaintiff asked these defendants for facts in relation to the condition of the company upon which he might make up his mind which offer to accept, and they were informed of the character of the two offers and of the reasons for his inquiries. The defendants being directors and knowing the facts, and for the purpose of deceiving the plaintiff, made statements in regard to the condition of the company *587 which, they knew to be false, and they did it for the purpose of making him believe, for reasons of their own, that the business of the company was flourishing, and they advised him not to sell his stock at less than par. The plaintiff relied upon these false statements of the defendants thus made to him, which they knew were false, and which they made with a fraudulent purpose, and he, because of the false representations, accepted the offer for the purchase of his stock at the above-mentioned $50 cash rate per share with the conditional promise of $50 more, instead of taking the $80 cash. Instead, therefore, of remaining passive the plaintiff took affirmative-action, induced thereto by the fraudulent statements of the defendants. We do not, however, mean to imply the correctness of the doctrine advanced by the counsel for the defendants, that if a person simply refrain from acting, induced thereto by the fraud of another, he can in no case recover damages sustained by him on account of such fraud. Such a case is not here now. Here the plaintiff alleges he has sustained damages because the company was in such a condition pecuniarily at the time of his sale of the stock that it would have been better for him in the money result if he had accepted the $80 cash instead of the $50 conditional offer of purchase which was made to him, and that he would have-sold at the former price if the defendants had told him the truth. He had two courses open in selling his stock, and the defendants knew it, and he was induced to take the one from which he has suffered loss because of the fraudulent representations of defendants. It is not alone a failure to sell, but there is also an actual sale produced by the fraud of the defendants. The damage arises from the sale at one price, coupled with the fact that plaintiff would have sold at the other price but for the fraudulent representations of the defendants. The fact that their chief purpose was'to induce by means of these false representations a belief on the part of the plaintiff that the company was prosperous, and that their representations were not specially and solely made to induce the plaintiff to sell his stock at one figure rather than another, *588 is, in the light of all the facts, not material. The defendants knew the reason for and the purpose óf the plaintiff’s inquiries, and they knew that the direct, proximate and natural result of their fraudulent representations would in that particular case be the sale of the plaintiff’s stock by him at the conditional sale at par, rather than the absolute cash one. They must, therefore, be held to have intended what was the natural and direct result of their misrepresentations, although such misrepresentations were not specially induced by a design to bring about such sale.

They cannot in such case shelter themselves under the statement that they did not make the representations, i. e., commit 'the fraud with the motive or for the purpose of inducing the plaintiff to sell his stock. They intended to deceive the plaintiff and they were induced thereto by other causes, yet the natural, proximate and direct result of such deception they knew or had reasonable ground for believing would be this sale, although its accomplishment was not the particular purpose of their fraud. In such case their liability would seem to be plain.

There is nothing in the case of Brackett r. Griswold (112 N. Y. 454) which runs counter to this doctrine. In that case it was asserted what there can be no doubt about, that to sustain a recovery in an action for fraud and deceit, the fraud and injury must be connected. The one must bear to the other the relation of cause and effect, and it must be seen in an appreciable sense that the damage flows from the fraud as the proximate and not as the remote cause.

The complaint in this case we hold shows such to be the case. From the allegations in the complaint, if properly denied, it might be a question for the jury to decide whether the plaintiff, if the truth had been told him, would or would not have sold his stock at the rate of $80 cash. The demurrer admits that he would. Having two offers for the purchase of his stock, the inference might be drawn from all the facts stated that if the truth had been told by defendants the plaintiff would have sold at the $80 cash price. The inference *589 arising from all the facts alleged, that he would have done so if the truth had been told, is neither too remote, indefinite or contingent to form part of the basis of a cause of action. The case differs widely in these respects from Bradley v. Fuller (118 Mass. 239) and cases therein cited. What a person would have done, but did not do because (as he alleges) of the fraud of another, may not always be a matter of such vague conjecture as to render the question incapable of that degree of proof upon which courts of justice may properly act.

Oases may readily suggest themselves where such possible action would be too problematical and vague to base any verdict upon it. Some of the cases cited in the Massachusetts case (supra) would seem to be of that nature. In the case under consideration we think the complaint presents facts from which a jury ought to be permitted to decide the issue whether or not, but for the fraud, the plaintiff would have sold at the cash price. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the complaint contains allegations sufficient to show the commission of actionable fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E. 718, 143 N.Y. 581, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothmiller-v-stein-ny-1894.