Townsend v. . Felthousen

51 N.E. 279, 156 N.Y. 618, 10 E.H. Smith 618, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 738
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 279 (Townsend v. . Felthousen) 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
Townsend v. . Felthousen, 51 N.E. 279, 156 N.Y. 618, 10 E.H. Smith 618, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 738 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the fraud alleged to have been practiced upon the plaintiff by the defendant in the sale of shares of the capital stock of a corporation, known as the Buffalo Steam Pump Company. The plaintiff’s attention had been attracted to an advertisement, in FTovember, 1890, inserted by the defendant and offering his interest in the company for sale. He communicated with the defendant and, thereupon, negotiations, were set on foot and conducted, in interviews and in correspondence, which resulted in the purchase of the defendant’s 625 shares of the *621 stock, at the price of sixty dollars per share, in the latter part of January, 1891. The complaint charges that this purchase was induced by fraudulent representations on the part of the defendant, as to the amount of the actual property and assets of the corporation, exclusive of the value of the good will and inclusive of the profits made in the previous two years of its existence and of $25,000 paid in cash by the subscribers to an issue of capital stock at the time of its organization. It was charged, in substance, that the defendant undertook to, and did, make representations and statements to the plaintiff to show what was the condition of the company’s affairs; what its assets and liabilities and what the actual profits of the business in the two past years, and that these representations and statements made a false showing of these matters, and were knowingly made and furnished by the defendant for the purpose of deceiving the plaintiff as to the company’s true condition, past and present, and of thereby inducing him to purchase the defendant’s shares of stock. It was, also, charged that the cash paid in, at the time of the organization of the corporation, upon the sale of shares of its capital stock and which was represented by the defendant as forming part of the corporate assets, had been, in fact, at once withdrawn by him from the business ; as had been other moneys through the medium of the company’s notes, made by him as its president. The defendant’s "answer was a denial of the various allegations of the complaint, charging the defendant with the representations and statements complained of as being false and as having been made to deceive the plaintiff into the purchase of the stock, and it was alleged in defense that the plaintiff made the purchase upon his own investigations and judgment, and not because of any statements or representations of the defendant.

Upon the issue thus made the parties went to trial before a special jury and a great mass of evidence was submitted, containing the testimony and exhibits adduced on either side. The jury awarded the plaintiff a verdict for a substantial sum, though less than he had demanded, and the judgment upon the verdict has been affirmed by the General Term. A *622 review of the case contained' in the appeal book shows that there was sufficient support in the evidence for the verdict.

The corporation was formed in July, 1888, with a capital of $150,000, to take over the properties and business of the defendant’s firm of Volker & Felthousen and defendant became its president. Shares amounting to $125,000 of the capital stock were issued to the members of the firm, in purchase of its properties, business and good will, and the balance was issued to subscribers for cash. At the time of the negotiations for the sale to the plaintiff of defendant’s shares, the business had been going on for a little over two years and it was the plaintiff’s contention that oral and written statements were made and exhibited to him, which exaggerated the existing assets of the company, diminished its actual liabilities and falsely represented that substantial profits had been made in the conduct of the business since its inception; and in support of this contention he submitted much evidence in the testimony of himself and of other witnesses. On the other hand, the defendant contended that there was no fraud intended, or practiced, in the transaction; that it was a case where the plaintiff did not rely on the defendant’s representations, but upon his own judgment, after an inquiry and investigation into the company’s affairs, and that in no material respect were the statements from books or accounts inaccurate, or calculated to deceive. In support of his position, he relied not only upon evidence given by himself and by other witnesses, but upon what the evidence of the plaintiff himself showed, as to his inquiries and examinations to ascertain and fix the actual value of the corporate stock. To discuss the evidence in this record would subserve no useful end. Considerable latitude was allowed by the trial judge, in its admission, to both sides and not without reason; in view of the more or less necessary range of the inquiry over the acts and transactions of the parties. An issue involving the honesty of the part played by the defendant, in procuring the plaintiff to purchase his shares of stock, and the extent to which reliance was, in fact, placed upon his statements by the *623 plaintiff, as an intending purchaser, justified a broader field of judicial inquiry. It was necessary, not only that the evidence should establish, or tend to establish, the falsity of the statements made, but, also, that they were known to be false and, to that end, facts and circumstances showing the defendant’s means of knowledge and bearing upon the candor and integrity of his acts, in his connection with the corporation and the management of its business, were more freely admissible in evidence, in order that there might be furnished the basis for a decision as to the existence of an intention to dispose of his interest upon a fraudulent valuation. The latitude of examination, whether in the investigation of these facts and circumstances, or in those exhibiting the plaintiff’s attitude to the defendant and the extent of his dependence upon his statements and of the materiality of the injury complained of, rested, largely, in the wise discretion of the trial court. A full revelation of facts concerning the formation and affairs of this corporation, organized as it was by the defendant to buy out the property and moneys of his old firm and thereafter, more or less, under his direction, could not prejudice him, if the representations and statements were honest on his part. His liability to respond to the plaintiff’s claim depended upon an intention to deceive and damages resulting in consequence. If he made his statements and representations in ah honest belief of their truth, he would not be liable in such an action. If it was a case of bad judgment, or of carelessness in statement, merely, there' would be no element of fraud. It was for the jury, therefore, after being put in possession of all the facts and circumstances of the case, to pronounce upon the questions raised and to say whether the plaintiff made the purchase as the result of his own investigations and in the exercise of his judgment, as informed in material matters by himself; or whether the defendant had intentionally deceived him and had procured him to make the purchase, relying upon his' statements, to his material injury. Their decision, affirmed by the General Term below, should be conclusive upon us as to the inferences to be drawn from the con *624 flicting evidence, under the well-settled rule.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 279, 156 N.Y. 618, 10 E.H. Smith 618, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-felthousen-ny-1898.