Southern Insurance v. Milligan

157 S.W. 37, 154 Ky. 216, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 37 (Southern Insurance v. Milligan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Insurance v. Milligan, 157 S.W. 37, 154 Ky. 216, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 57 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming in Part and Beversing in Part.

On September 7, 1911, tbe appellee, Milligan, subscribed for one hundred shares of the capital stock of the appellant, Southern Insurance Company, and signed two subscription papers, each being for fifty shares of stock and. each a duplicate of the other except as to the maturity of the notes given by appellee in payment of the subscription. The subscription paper reads:

“Stock subscribed to the Southern Insurance Co., Nashville, Tenn. Par value of each share, ten dollars. Surplus on each share, twenty dollars. Authorized capital stock, five hundred thousand dollars. ■ I, Gr. H. Milligan, of Bound Hill, Ky., hereby subscribe for fifty shares of the capital stock of the Southern Insurance C'o., to be fully paid and non-assessable, for which I agree to pay fifteen hundred dollars, being at the rate of $30 a share. No certificate of stock shall be issued until the company has received payment in full for the shares herein subscribed for at the prices named herein. No conditions or agreements other than those printed and written herein shall be binding on the company. This subscription is subject to acceptance by the company. Payments to be made; fifteen hundred dollar note to be paid on or before March 7, 1913. Witness A. A. Streit. Date, Sept. 7,1911.”

The two notes executed by appellee were worded the same except as to the time of payment, each note being for fifteen hundred dollars, one maturing six months after date and the other twelve months after date. A few days after the execution of these notes, they were purchased from the Insurance Company, in the regular [219]*219course of business, by the Woodbury Deposit Bank, and soon thereafter there was issued to appellee two certificates of stock in the Insurance Company, each showing that he was the owner of “fifty shares of ten dollars each of the capital stock” of the Insurance Company.

In November, 1911, appellee brought this suit against the Insurance Company and the Woodbury Deposit Bank, tendering to the company the certificates of stock issued and asking that the notes executed by him be canceled, and that the Wodbury Deposit Bank and the Insurance Company be restrained from transferring or disposing of the notes.

This relief was sought upon the ground that A. A. Streit, the agent of the Insurance Company with whom the contract was made, at the time of the transaction falsely and fraudulently represented that the par value of the stock that would be delivered would be three thousand dollars, when in fact the par value of the stock was one thousand dollars; and that the Insurance Company was paying an annual dividend of 27 per cent on the stock, when in fact it had never paid any dividend; and that John M. Ciarson and others had purchased stock in the company, when in truth Carson had never purchased any stock; and that the value of the stock would double in twelve months; and that the price of the stock would advance and that if he did not buy at once he could not get it later at $30 a share, when in fact the stock both after and since had been sold by the company at less than $30, a share.

He further averred that when the contract was entered into he had no information, and no means of obtaining information, except from the agent Streit as to the truth of any of the representations that he made, and that he was induced by. these representations to enter into the contract.

For answer to this petition the Insurance Company denied that its agent made any false or fraudulent representations to appellee, or that appellee was induced to enter into the contract by reason of any false representations or statements made by the agent. It further set up that appellee, at the time he subscribed for the stock, was fully advised of the condition of the company and the value of the stock, and there was no fraud or overreaching or misrepresentation practiced in selling the stock to him.

[220]*220The Woodbury Deposit Bank also filed' an- answer in which it asserted that it purchased the notes in good faith, for a valuable consideration, before maturity, and asked that it be protected in its purchase.

Upon hearing the case the lower court entered a judgment cancelling the notes and also the certificates of stock' as well as the certificates of deposit issued by the Woodbury Deposit Bank to the Insurance Company. From this judgment the Insurance Company and the bank prosecute this appeal.

No person was present when the sale of the stock to appellee was made except himself and the agent Streit. Appellee testifies that Streit, who was a stranger to him, came with a letter of introduction from his friend, Dr. Cherry. That Streit showed him papers and circulars setting forth the standing of the company, and told him that John M. Carson and others had bought stock, and that the stock would double itself in value in twelve months, and was worth $30 a share; that the stock was non-assessable and was paying 27 per cent dividend, not on the par value of the stock, but on the investment, and that the company would pay the next dividend in January, 1912; that he bought one-hundred shares and was to pay $30 per share for it, and was under the impression when he bought the stock that the par value of the stock was $30 per share, and did not learn that it was only $10 per share until sometime later; that at the time he bought the stock, he did not have any means or opportunity of learning the value of the stock or the financial condition of the company, or of ascertaining the truth of what Streit told him and relied on the representations made by Streit.

A. A. Streit testified that he was selling stock for the company, and that he told appellee that the company was in a position to pay a dividend the first of January, but did not tell bim it would do so; and further told him that the company was on a gross earning basis of 27 per cent on the par value of the stock, and that as near as he could figure from the statements the dividends would be 12 per cent or 15 per cent on the par value, but that the matter of paying dividends was entirely with the board of directors. He further said that he did not tell bim that the stock would double in value in twelve months, but did tell him that John M. Carson had taken 25 shares of stock.

[221]*221John M. Carson testifies that Streit tried to get him to purchase some of the stock, but that he declined to take any of it.

It is also shown by the evidence that the company, although a solvent and going concern when the transaction was had with appellee and when the evidence was taken in May, 1912, had never declared or paid any dividends, and although it had a paid-up capital stock of $166,450, its surplus fund in 1911 was only $17,533.13.

- It will thus he seen that there is not material difference between the evidence of appellee and Streit as to the representations made by Streit in regard to dividends, and it appears without contradiction that Carson had not purchased any stock in the company and that the company had never paid any dividends.

¥e may put aside as not controlling the representations made by Streit as to the future prospects of the company and the future value of its stock.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 37, 154 Ky. 216, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-insurance-v-milligan-kyctapp-1913.