Tyler v. Moses

13 App. D.C. 428, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1898
DocketNo. 761
StatusPublished

This text of 13 App. D.C. 428 (Tyler v. Moses) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler v. Moses, 13 App. D.C. 428, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227 (D.C. Cir. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

1. This is a suit in equity for the recovery of certain sums of money alleged to have been paid through fraudulent misrepresentations, and the defendant has appealed from a decree of the Supreme Court of the District sustaining the bill.

The bill was filed by Arthur C. Moses, and W. Woodville Flemming against Richard K. Tyler, and its substantial -allegations are as follows:

(1) On June 8, 1893, defendant Tyler called upon Moses and told him that a friend of the defendant owned 1,000 shares of stock in the American Automatic Protector Company; a corporation capitalized at $100,000, and formed for the purpose of introducing automatic devices for the pror tection of telephones from lightning and the prevention of fires, etc.; that the company had several hundred devices in operation in Washington and Baltimore at good rentals.

(2) That the said friend, by reason of financial embarrassment, was compelled to sell, and that he (defendant) could purchase the stock for $2,000; that he desired to make the investment, but was able to command but $1,000, and wished said Moses to unite with him and furnish the remaining $1,000.

[433]*433(3) That Moses, believing these statements to be true, paid defendant said sum of $1,000, who, upon the completion of payment about July 3, 1893, delivered to him a certificate for 500 shares of said stock that had been issued to B. K. Tyler, trustee, and was endorsed in blank by him.

(4) Shortly afterwards defendant again came to said Moses, representing that for the sum of $300 he could procure an option on 1,500 more shares running until October 31, 1893, and expressing his desire to have some third person of capacity and experience in the matter of promoting such enterprises to unite with Moses and himself; and inquired if Moses knew of such suitable associate.

(5) Moses introduced the complainant, Flemming, to-defendant, who repeated to Flemming the statements formerly made to Moses, in respect of the number of devices then in use, and stated that he had invested $1,000 of his own money in the purchase of 500 shares of said stock, and $1,000 of Moses’ money in like manner.

(6) That he had an option to purchase 1,500 additional shares at two dollars per share, good until October 31,1893, and wished Moses and Flemming to unite with him; the said Flemming to pay $1,000 for 500 shares of the option stock, and he and Moses to pay each $100 as their pro rata contribution to the cost of said option; the remaining 1,000 shares of the option stock to be disposed of to the best advantage for their common profit.

(7) Belying upon the said representations, Moses and Flemming each contributed the sum of $100 to the price of the said option; and Flemming, through Moses, paid the further sum of $1,000 for the purchasing of said 500 shares of said option stock.

(8) Before the expiration of the option period, to wit, some time in October, 1893, Flemming discovered that the statements made to him by defendant were untrue, in that defendant had paid nothing for the option which he stated had cost him $300, and informed Moses that he should de[434]*434cline to receive tlie stock which had not been, up to that time, tendered to him.

(9) The foregoing induced an investigation of all the facts in relation to the stock, and some time afterwards complainants learned that the 500 shares transferred by-defendants to Moses for $1,000 were a part of 1,000 shares procured by the defendant himself, not from any financially embarrassed friend, as represented, but directly from the organizers or promoters of said corporation, and at an actual cost of $1,000 for the 1,000 shares, and that the stock proposed to be transferred to said Flemming was not a part of the stock covered by the said option upon 1,500 shares, but was the remainder of the stock that had been procured by the defendant at the rate of one dollar per share as aforesaid; and .that the defendant had retained no stock at all in 'said company, he having had no other stock therein than the 1,000 shares aforesaid.

(10) Immediately upon discovery of these facts Flemming notified defendant that he would not accept any stock of said corporation, and demanded the return of the $1,000 paid on account of said purchase, and, also, the $100 obtained from him on account of the alleged cost of the said option. The said Moses also demanded the return of the $1,100 paid by him as aforesaid.

(11) About November 16, 1893, the defendant sent a certificate for 500 shares of stock to Moses for delivery to Flemming, who refused to receive the same and ordered it returned; and afterwards said Moses, acting for himself and Flemming, tendered to the defendant all of the said stock and demanded return of all the money so paid. The defendant refused to receive the stock or to repay the money.

(12) The bill concluded with the following paragraph:

“Your complainants are advised and believe and therefore aver that it was not competent for the defendant, representing himself as purchasing stock for the complainants and himself together for a common adventure and for their [435]*435equal benefit, to .sell secretly his own shares of stock to the complainants, and especially at double the price which he himself paid for them, and that they are entitled in this honorable court to a decree requiring said defendant to return to them the moneys so received from them by him, with interest, they here offering to retransfer the said shares of stock upon which no dividends or profits have been received to said defendant.”

The prayers were that defendant be decreed to repay to the complainants all the moneys so obtained; and for general relief.

2. The answer of the defendant Tyler gives the following account of the original acquisition of the stock:

“In the month of March, 1893, James B. Reynolds, of Boston, and myself paid Samuel L. Bryan the sum of one thousand dollars, each of us contributing five hundred dollars, in consideration whereof said Bryan delivered to me five hundred shares of stock in the American Automatic Protector Company in my own name and five hundred shares of stock in the same company in my name as trustee; also an option to purchase seven hundred and fifty shares ■of stock in said company, at two dollars per share, at any time within six months, and another option to purchase seven hundred and fifty shares, at two dollars per share, at any time within one year. At the same time and as a part of the consideration for the said sum of one thousand dollars said Bryan gave to me an agreement in writing signed by said Bryan by which he agreed that on the first day of April, 1894, he would purchase back from me five hundred shares of said stock, delivered as aforesaid to me, at an advance of ten per cent, on the one thousand dollars paid him, provided three days’ notice should be given him. Not long afterwards said Bryan gave me, at my request, in lieu of said guarantee, another, in substantially the same form, except that it did not contain my name, but was a general agreement on his part to repurchase five hundred shares of said stock on said [436]*436terms. Said certificate for-five hundred shares in my name as trustee I held for the benefit of said Reynolds; the other certificate for five hundred shares belonged to me. Said options and said guarantee I held for the joint benefit of said Reynolds and myself.

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Bluebook (online)
13 App. D.C. 428, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-moses-cadc-1898.