Vulcan Fire Insurance v. Jorgensen

166 P.2d 835, 166 P. 835, 33 Cal. App. 763, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 416
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 2027.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 835 (Vulcan Fire Insurance v. Jorgensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vulcan Fire Insurance v. Jorgensen, 166 P.2d 835, 166 P. 835, 33 Cal. App. 763, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 416 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

In an action to recover the balance due from the defendant upon a subscription to stock in the plaintiff corporation, the defendant denied liability, and in a cross-complaint averred that he had rescinded his contract of subscription sued upon because of certain fraudulent representations of the plaintiff’s agent by which it was induced, and prayed judgment for the recovery of the amount paid by him upon said subscription. The court rendered judgment in defendant’s favor, and granted him the relief sought by his cross-complaint, basing its judgment upon findings, among others, as follows:

“In procuring said subscription the plaintiff was represented by and acted entirely through one J. B. Harper. . . . On said last-named day said J. B. Harper . . . went to the ranch and home of the defendant in the county of Merced . . . and as an inducement to defendant to subscribe for said capital stock stated to defendant as follows:
“That one J. F. Carlson, the president of the Central National Bank, in the city of Oakland, had given to said Harper, as the agent and representative of plaintiff, a letter directed to defendant, advising the defendant to become a purchaser and subscriber for capital stock in Vulcan Fire Insurance. Company, plaintiff herein, and that by some oversight he, the said Harper, had left said letter in his hotel, and that said J. F. Carlson was very angry with said Harper because he had not before solicited the subscription of defendant.
‘‘ That said Carlson was going to quit his position with said Central National Bank in Oakland within six months and take complete and active charge of the business of plaintiff and do nothing else; that said Carlson was head of plaintiff at that present time, but was not willing the general. public should know about it, and that in accordance with the directions of said Carlson he, said Harper, had come to obtain defendant's subscription to said stock.
“At the time of the making of the aforesaid statement and representations, said J. B. Harper well knew that said defendant placed great reliance upon the business sagacity of said *765 J. F. Carlson and in his judgment as a business man, and also held the said J. F. Carlson in high esteem as a friend, and if defendant could be induced to believe that said Carlson had given a letter to Harper directed to defendant, advising defendant to subscribe for capital stock in said plaintiff corporation, and that said Carlson was anxious for defendant to do so, and was angry with said Harper because he had not before that time solicited said subscription from defendant, and that said Carlson was going to quit his position with said Central National Bank within six months and take complete and active charge of the business of plaintiff and do nothing else, and that said Carlson was at the head of plaintiff at that present time but was not willing the general public should know about it, and that in accordance with the directions of said Carlson Harper had come to obtain defendant’s subscription for said stock, said defendant would subscribe for the same; and the said statements and representations were so made by the said Harper with the design and for the-purpose of obtaining from said defendant said subscription.
“The said defendant believed the said statements . . . and relied upon the said statements and all of them, and believing the same and relying upon them, the said defendant then and there paid to the said Harper, as agent and representative of plaintiff, the sum of $750, being $5 per share upon 150 shares of the capital stock of plaintiff, for which said defendant then and there subscribed and agreed to pay to plaintiff the further sum of three thousand dollars, the balance of said subscription price.
“The said statements hereinabove referred to . . . were and each of them was false and untrue, and the said Harper . . . well knew that the same and each of them was false and untrue, and he well knew that the said defendant believed the said statements to be true and that he relied upon them and each of them as being true, and was induced by them and each of them to pay the said sum of money ... to plaintiff, and became a subscriber for said 150 shares of stock, believing and relying upon the said statements, and there was no other inducement to the said defendant than as hereinabove stated to become the subscriber for said stock, and each and all of said representations were untrue and were material, and without the said statements and representations so made to the defendant, said defendant would not have paid to said *766 Harper for plaintiff or to the plaintiff said sum of $750, or become a subscriber for said capital stock. ’ ’

The court also found that the defendant, upon discovering the falsity of the representations, promptly rescinded his subscription, and, having reference to the duty of one seeking to rescind a contract, to return to the other party to it anything received under it, found that the defendant had received nothing.

In urging a reversal of the judgment and order denying its motion for a new trial, the plaintiff makes several contentions, viz., (1) that the record contains no allegation, evidence, or finding that the cross-complainant was in any way pecuniarily damaged by the alleged false representations; (2) that he failed to rescind promptly upon discovery of the facts entitling him to rescind; (3) that the notice of rescission by the cross-complainant was insufficient for various reasons, but chiefly because it failed to state the grounds upon which the right was attempted to be exercised; (4) that the defendant lost his right to rescind because he did not offer to return whatever of value he had received, and (5) errors of law in the admission of certain testimony.

(1) Addressing ourselves to the first of these contentions, in an action such as this, where the defendant and cross-complainant merely recites the payment of his subscription and asks for its rescission, an allegation or proof of pecuniary damage sustained by him is not necessary. The author of Cook on Corporations, speaking of the rescission of a subscription to corporate stock, says:

“It is the duty and right of directors, without waiting for a bill in equity or other legal proceedings, to revoke a subscription contract, and remove from the stockholders’ list the name of a subscriber who reasonably proves that he was induced to subscribe by fraudulent representations chargeable to the corporations and who requests a rescission of the subscription. . . . Where, upon such a demand being made by a subscriber, the directors refuse to dissolve the subscription contract, the subscriber need not always resort to a bill in equity to have the contract set aside for fraud. A mere notification to the corporation is generally sufficient.
‘ § 154. The most common remedy of a subscriber induced by fraud to subscribe is to wait until the corporation brings suit to collect the subscriptions, and then to set up the fraud *767 as a defense. Nearly all of the cases in this country are cases where this remedy has been adopted . . . ” (1 Cook on Corporations, secs. 153, 154, p. 422.)

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 835, 166 P. 835, 33 Cal. App. 763, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vulcan-fire-insurance-v-jorgensen-calctapp-1917.