Sullivan v. Pierce

125 F. 104, 60 C.C.A. 148, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 1903
DocketNo. 1,053
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 F. 104 (Sullivan v. Pierce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Pierce, 125 F. 104, 60 C.C.A. 148, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152 (5th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

SHELBY, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by Daniel Sullivan, a citizen of Great Britain, against Abel H. Pierce, a citizen of Texas, to rescind a sale. The parties had been friends for many years, and each had confidence in the business integrity of the other. They formed a partnership for the purpose of purchasing real estate and cattle and to raise and sell cattle. Sullivan put in one-fourth of the capital, and Pierce and his brother three-fourths. Pierce soon bought his brother’s interest, so that the assets of the firm were owned by Pierce and Sullivan, the former owning three-fourths interest and the latter one-fourth. Pierce was the active or managing partner. He bought for the firm about 55,000 acres of pasture and farm lands, and cattle to stock them. The investment of cash advanced and accruing profits amounted to large sums, variously estimated from $200,000 to $300,000. During the partnership, which existed about a year, Pierce lived on or near the ranch, and Sullivan in a county near by. Pierce was a “cowman,” and was in charge of the partnership business, and Sullivan was a banker. Pierce furnished Sullivan annually with an account or statement showing the condition of the partnership business. By mutual agreement, in the year 1883, a corporation was formed to own the ranch and cattle, which was capitalized at $1,000,000. Stock of the par value of $250,000 was issued to Sullivan, and stock of the par value of $750,000 was issued to Pierce, less a few shares, probably 5 or 6, which were held by a member of Pierce’s family. By agreement, Pierce was. to be, and he did become, president, and Sullivan secretary, of the corporation. The officers received no salaries. Pierce continued to manage the business just as he did during the partnership, but there were regular meetings of the directors, of which minutes were kept.

On May 9, 1896, after correspondence and negotiations, which will be referred to later, Sullivan sold his stock in the corporation to Pierce [106]*106for $50,000 in gold, $10,000 to be paid before July 1, and $40,000 on or before December 1, 1896, with 6 per cent, interest. Pierce paid the purchase money and received the stock. Two years after the sale, May 9, 1898, this bill was filed for its rescission. It charges that the sale was procured by fraud. It is alleged that the complainant had great confidence in the defendant, and in making the sale’ relied on his assertions regarding the property. The following are the false and fraudulent statements alleged in the bill to have been made by the defendant to the complainant: “(1) That the land, if put up and sold for cash, would not bring the amount paid for it; (2) that a large and valuable plantation upon the land had been totally ruined by Johnson grass; (3) that high taxation and continued land litigation had depreciated the value of the land; (4) that the stock interest in that section of the country was on the heels of the biggest die up that was ever known in that country, thereby intending to cause your orator to believe that a large number of the cattle belonging to your orator and said defendant, as stockholders of the said Pierce-Sullivan Pasture & Cattle Company, had recéntly died; (5) that the ranch would not pay two per cent, on the investment; (6) that complainant’s interest in the property was not worth more than $50,000.”

The defendant having answered, and evidence having been taken (nearly 2,000 printed pages), the Circuit Court dismissed the bill, refusing on the merits to cancel the contract of sale. The complainant appealed, and the decree of the Circuit Court, with specifications, is assigned as error.

The theory of the bill is that there were confidential relations between the complainant.and the defendant growing out of their long and intimate business and personal association, and that the sale was made by the complainant “believing that said representations were truthful, and represented the actual facts, and relying upon the obligation of the defendant to deal fairly and truthfully with him in relation to said property.” It is averred, and an effort made to prove as an essential part of the complainant’s case, that the relations between the parties to the contract were such that the complainant was entitled to and did rely in making the sale on the defendant’s representations, and that he did not rely on knowledge obtained from other sources and on an independent investigation.

It is clear that if Sullivan sold to Pierce, exercising his own judgment as to the value of his interest, depending on his knowledge of the value of the property obtained from other sources, and not relying on Pierce’s statements, that it is immaterial whether Pierce’s statements were true or untrue. It is a necessary step in the complainant’s case to show that in making the sale he relied on the alleged false representations of the defendant. Until that appears, we are not called on to investigate in detail whether the statements are true or false.

The evidence abundantly shows that for many years the complainant and the defendant were intimate friends; that they had large business dealings, showing mutual confidence; that they became partners ; that the defendant was. the active partner in control of the business; and that the relation between them was one of great personal confidence, aside from what the law implies from the fact of their part[107]*107nership and the mode of conducting the business. Notwithstanding the fact that they formed a corporation and transferred to it the partnership property—they being practically the only stockholders and the business being conducted in practically the same way as during the partnership—this relation of confidence would be presumed prima facie to continue. Although the sale of the stock was made by the secretary to the president of the corporation, the peculiar facts of the case are such that we may look at it as practically a sale by one partner to another of his interest in the partnership property. Looking at the substance, and not at the form, we may consider the trade as one made between partners.; and prima facie, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we would conclude that the complainant relied on the statements and representations of the defendant. But we find the record pregnant with evidence—much of it the evidence of the complainant—which rebuts this conclusion. The evidence does not present to us the picture of one partner confidently relying on the representations of another, and being induced to make a sale by such representations, but of two unfriendly men, anxious to separate their joint holdings, and negotiating at arm’s length to produce that result, ■each acting on his own judgment, and the seller placing no confidence whatever in the buyer’s statements.

In February, 1895, the pleasant personal relations between the complainant and the defendant were interrupted by a disagreement between members of their families, and the latter announced that he would never enter the banking house of the former again. Sullivan claimed that it was agreed that the corporation’s stockholders’ meetings should be at San Antonio, and that the president was to have no salary. On February 3, 1896, Pierce, the majority stockholder, caused the by-laws to be so changed as to remove the company’s office from San Antonio to the company’s ranch, and to permit the president to be paid a salary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 F. 104, 60 C.C.A. 148, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-pierce-ca5-1903.