Whitcomb v. Shultz

223 F. 268, 138 C.C.A. 510, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1915
DocketNo. 34
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 223 F. 268 (Whitcomb v. Shultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitcomb v. Shultz, 223 F. 268, 138 C.C.A. 510, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707 (2d Cir. 1915).

Opinions

ROGERS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] The plaintiff has come into a court of equity to obtain the cancellation of a contract of suretyship into which he entered, and he asserts that he is entitled to be discharged from all liability therein because o E the fraud practiced upon him in inducing him to enter into the aforesaid contract. And as an action at law was brought against him on the contract, and a judgment was obtained in the amount of $24,-607.95, which this court affirmed in 215 Fed. 75, 131 C. C. A. 383 (1914), an injunction is sought to restrain the defendant from enforcing it. At the trial of the law action the defendant in that action, who is plaintiff in this, offered evidence tending to show the alleged false and fraudulent representations upon which he now relies, but tiie evidence was excluded by the trial judge. As the contract was under seal, the defense was of an equitable character, and could not be interposed in an action at law brought in a federal court. The plaintiff has therefore come into the equity court to obtain that relief from the contract which he thinks he is entitled to and which was denied to him at law.

[272]*272The representations upon which he relies, and which he asserts were fraudulent, are stated in his complaint as follojvs:

“At the time of said negotiations, which was slightly prior to December 3, 1908, representations were made by or on behalf of the said Manufacturing Company to the plaintiff herein and to the said Sales Company to the effect that the said Manufacturing Company did a large business and had great experience in the manufacture of vending machines; that its factory was so equipped for work of that character, both in machinery and expert mechanics and workmen, as to enable it to meet the demands of the said Sales Company for more rapid deliveries and a larger output, and that, if the said Sales Company should enter into a contract with the said Manufacturing Company, it. would at its own plant and under the supervision of its own experts manufacture the machines required by the said Sales Company in substantial compliance with a model shown it, which was one of the machines manufactured by the said Plumb, and that it would make or procure and keep in proper working order for use in its own factory all dies, patterns, and special tools Which might be necessary for the manufacture of these particular machines. During the course of said negotiations, it was further represented by and on behalf of the said Manufacturing Company that its facilities for making at its own plant said machines were superior to the facilities of the said Plumb, and that it already had at its factory every machine, tool, and appliance necessary for the making of said vending machines, except the dies, patterns, and special tools which were to be especially made for the manufacture of said machines.”
“Plaintiff says that the statements made to him and to the said Sales Company, as an .inducement to enter .into said contract of December 3 and December 4, 1908, upon the truth of which he relied, and as a result of which he had entered into said contract of suretyship, were in fact wholly false and untrue, and were known by the said Manufacturing Company, and its officers and agents making.such representations, to be wholly false and untrue; and that, so far from said factory being suitably equipped for the speedy manufacture and delivery of vending machines of the kind exhibited in said model hereinabove referred to, said factory was as a matter of fact without the necessary appliances and machinery, and without the workmen who were experts in the manufacture of vending machines of said character, or even experienced in this character of work; that so far from said machines being manufactured by said Manufacturing Company, it was never its intention that they should be manufactured in its own plant, by its own machines, or by its own workmen. On the contrary, said Manufacturing Company had the design, at the time said representations were made, of letting out bids to the cheapest bidder in various sections of the country to supply the different parts deemed necessary for the construction of the said vending machines; and, further, its design at the time of making said representations was that only the work of assembling the various parts so secured from other manufacturers should be done at said factory and under the supervision of its own employes. And plaintiff says that each and every one of the representations made to him as an inducement for the execution of the principal contract' by his company, and of the contract of suretyship by him, was essentially false, and that almost immediately after the execution of said contracts said Manufacturing Company, so far from carrying out the alleged intentions herein-above set forth, secured bids from various factories throughout the country, and in fact did nothing more than assemble the various parts so secured.”

And he avers that in entering into the contract of suretyship he relied upon the pretended responsibility, skill, mechanical ability, and facilities of the Manufacturing Company; and that, but for his belief in the truth of the representations made, he would not have executed the contract of suretyship upon which the judgment has been obtained against him.

When the case was before this court on writ of error, we did not comment upon the exclusion of this testimony in the action at law. [273]*273As the exclusion of the testimony was proper, we disposed of the case upon other points. But as a misunderstanding seems to exist on The part of counsel for appellant in regard to the matter, we shall in a subsequent part of this opinion state fully the reason why the testimony was inadmissible in the former action. We did not hold, as the bill of complaint avers that we did, that fraud in the inducement of a contract of suretyship was a purely equitable defense, and one not cognizable in an action at law. There is not a word in the opinion upon that subject, and if the fraudulent representations relied upon were of such a nature as have no material relation to the contract involved, the exclusion of the testimony either at law or in equity, and whether the contract had been sealed or unsealed, could not have been reversible error.

[2, 3] The complainant has asked that an injunction issue restraining the defendant from assigning or enforcing the judgment which he obtained in his action at law. It is well established that under certain circumstances courts of equity will interfere to restrain proceedings at law, and its jurisdiction to stay legal proceedings may, in a proper case, he exercised at any stage of the legal cause. An injunction may be granted to stay trial, or after verdict to stay judgment, and after judgment to stay execution, and to prevent an assignment of the judgment. In the great case of the Earl of Oxford, 1 Ch. Rep. 1 (1615), Lord Chancellor Ellesmere discussed the principles on which equity restrains proceedings under a judgment obtained at law and declared that:

“Tlie use of tlie eliancery lias been in all ages to examine equity in all cases, saving against tlie king’s prerogative.”

And that:

“When a judgment is obtained by oppression, wrong, and a hard conscience, the chancellor will frustrate and set it aside, not for any error or defect in the judgment, but for the hard conscience of the party.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 F. 268, 138 C.C.A. 510, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitcomb-v-shultz-ca2-1915.