Telling v. Sullivan

22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 312
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedFebruary 14, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 312 (Telling v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telling v. Sullivan, 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 312 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

WINCH, J.

By this action, which is brought here on appeal, the plaintiff seeks to effect a rescission of the sale, which was made by him to the defendants, May 20, 1908, of 170 shares of stock in the Peerless Motor Car Company. The purchase price of $90 per share, or $15,300 in all, has been tendered back, and the plaintiff prays for the restoration to him of said stock and for an accounting of the dividends meanwhile paid to the defendants thereon. Tie contends that the defendant, J. J. Sullivan, while acting for the plaintiff, as his agent to sell said stock, purchased the same for himself and his son Corliss, without disclosing to plaintiff their identity as such purchasers. The defendant, J. J. Sullivan, was president of the bank where plaintiff and his firm, the Telling Brothers, did some, at least, of their banking business, and it is admitted that plaintiff con-suited him about the sale of this stock; but Colonel Sullivan now denies that he undertook to act for plaintiff in that behalf. His first answer filed herein is, however, significant as setting forth in detail, on oath and over his own signature, his version of the conversation had between plaintiff and himself. This answer is superseded, as a pleading in the case, by the amended answer subsequently filed on leave obtained. But its admissions are in evidence, and the language used by the parties in their in[315]*315terviews is so carefully and minutely rehearsed, in contradistinction'to plaintiff’s version thereof as alleged in his petition, that we cannot acquiesce in the suggestion now made, of a misconception by defendants’ counsel as to the words used by his client, and of an oversight by the latter in signing and verifying the same when embodied in the answer.

It is worth while to quote the averments of the original answer at length:

“He denies that he had with plaintiff the conversations set forth in said petition, or that he ever, in any way, acted as agent for plaintiff in and about the sale of the stock mentioned in said petition, or any part of it, or as the representative of plaintiff in and about such sale; he denies that he ever advised plaintiff to sell said stock, or any of it, or was, in any way, responsible or the cause of his making said sale.
“He avers that the statements contained in said petition, in manner and form as therein stated, are untrue, and avers that the facts in relation thereto are these:
“About May 5, 1908, plaintiff told this defendant that he thought of selling his stock in the Peerless Motor Car Company, which he said had cost him par, and said he thought he ought to get that for it. This defendant replied to plaintiff that he would see what could be done about it. About May 15, 1908, plaintiff asked defendant if he had heard of any probable buyer, and defendant told him that he knew of a person who would give him $90 a share cash. Plaintiff said he did not like to sell it for less than it cost him, but would think about it. About May 20, plaintiff informed defendant that he had made up his mind to let his stock go at $90. This defendant asked plaintiff: ‘"Why do you want to sell.it?’ Plaintiff said: ‘Oh, I want to raise a good deal of money at present. ’ Defendant replied: ‘I would be glad to loan you all you want,’ to which plaintiff answered: ‘I would rather sell some things I have than go in debt so much. ’
‘ ‘ This defendant did not advise said sale, but instead sought to dissuade plaintiff from making it.
“In the interval between plaintiff’s first speaking to this [316]*316defendant on the subject, and said May 20, this defendant had made' inquiries as to what could be got for the stock, and had not been able to find anyone who would give more than $90 per share, and that offer was made by said defendant, Corliss E. Sullivan, the son of this defendant. Said defendant, Corliss E. Sullivan, was a director in the Peerless Motor Car Company, having nominally fifty shares of stock in his name, which had bee'n loaned to him by this defendant to qualify him to act as a member of the board of directors. He authorized this defendant to pay $90 per share for said stock, and this defendant paid plaintiff on said May 20, 1908, at said rate for said 170 shares of stock. Thereafter, when said Corliss E. Sullivan settled with this defendant for said purchase, he, for the first time, requested this defendant to keep seventy shares of said stock, as he did not want to borrow the amount he would have to if he paid for the whole stock, and he also repaid this defendant the fifty shares of stock which had been loaned to him by this defendant.
“This defendant denies that said stock was worth more than $90 per share, or that this defendant had any knowledge that said stock was worth more than $90 per share, and avers that $90 per share was as much as could then be got for said stock. The statement made to plaintiff by this defendant, that the best offer that he had been able to get of $90 per share, was true. He denies that he made any statement to plaintiff which was false or untrue, or made for the purpose of deceiving plaintiff, or which did deceive plaintiff, or that plaintiff relied upon any statement made by this defendant, or that this defendant was the banker of said the Peerless Motor Car Company, or fully, or at all informed as to the condition of said company, or that the book value of said stock at the time of said transfer was more than $90 per share, or that, at that time, large profits had been made, or that either of said defendants had any knowledge of the making of large profits by said the Peerless Motor Car Company, or that the book value of said stock was more than $90 per share, or that either of these defendants had any knowledge, either as to the profits made by said the Peerless Motor Car Compiany, or the book value of said stock, which was not disclosed to [317]*317plaintiff, or that was not equally as accessible to plaintiff as to these defendants, or either of them.
“Defendant avers that he and said Corliss B. Sullivan dealt ■with plaintiff at arm’s length, and not in any respect as agents or trustees, or in a confidential relation.
“The probabilities of dividends being declared on said stock were as much within the knowledge of plaintiff as of this defendant.
“He avers that the transfer of the property of said corporation, and the issuance of stock in payment thereof, was entirely the result of matters and negotiations not known to exist, or existing, at the time of said purchase. ’ ’

It will be noticed that in this answer the defendant, J. J. Sullivan, declares that when the sale of the stock was broached, he “replied to plaintiff that he would see what could be done about it.” Again, he says, that he later “made inquiries as to what could be got for the stock and had not been able to find anyone who would give more than $90 per share. ’ ’ Still further he avers, that, “The statement made to plaintiff by this defendant that the best offer that he had been able to get of $90 per share, was true.”

With these allegations the original answer, though it perhaps repelled the ascription of actual fraud to the defendant, J. J. Sullivan, clearly fixes upon him both the obligation of a fiduciary, and the breach of such obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telling-v-sullivan-ohiocirct-1911.