Willett v. Herrick

242 Mass. 471
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 242 Mass. 471 (Willett v. Herrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willett v. Herrick, 242 Mass. 471 (Mass. 1922).

Opinion

Carroll, J.

This is an action of tort brought by George F. Willett and Edmund H. Sears, former partners, for the use and benefit of George F. Willett, assignee and trustee. All the defendants demurred to the plaintiffs’ declaration. In the Superior Cotut the demurrers were overruled and the case reported to this court.

The declaration alleges in substance that the plaintiffs (hereafter called the firm), held by direct and indirect ownership practically the entire issue of all the common stock in a large number of corporations, named in the declaration; this constituted a controlling interest in these companies and the business [475]*475of the firm was their management and operation. Two of the companies, the American Felt Company (hereafter called the Felt Company), and the Daniel Green Felt Shoe Company (hereafter called the Green Company), were prosperous and earning profits of over $1,000,000 per annum. The other companies had been organized in pursuance of the firm’s plans for combining all the companies into units for the manufacture of textile products, and were with some negligible exceptions prosperous and of great value. It is averred that in July, 1918, the defendants entered into a secret combination and conspiracy, by illegal and fraudulent means to deprive the plaintiffs of their shares in the Felt and the Green companies, to secure the same at a nominal cost for their own profit, and did effect the purpose of the conspiracy by acquiring practically all the plaintiffs’ shares in the companies in question to the value of $10,000,000 without substantial cost to themselves, and this was done by wrongful means. In the year 1918 the Felt and Green companies, owing to large contracts then on hand, required a special loan of from $2,500,000 to $3,000,000 in addition to their regular banking accommodations. It is alleged that F. S. Moseley and Company, a partnership whose members are with others the defendants, had been employed for several years’in negotiating loans on the firm’s account, and the business of obtaining this special loan was given to it, and in turn committed by it to the defendant Fessenden, a member of F. S. Moseley and Company. Fessenden entered upon the undertaking and shortly afterwards reported to the firm that a syndicate of bankers had agreed to the loan upon terms assented to by the plaintiffs. Later Fessenden informed the plaintiffs that the Chase National Bank of New York held two notes of the firm of $200,000 each, for which notes it held as collateral twelve thousand of the firms’ shares in the Felt Company, and that a special loan could not be arranged unless the Chase National Bank would extend these notes. Fessenden asserted that he was unable to secure the special loan or the consent of the Chase National Bank to any extension of the notes. According to the declaration, this statement of Fessenden was untrue. In fact, on July 8, the Chase National Bank, through its president, one Thayer, gave assurances regarding the notes held by the bank, which were accepted by the syndicate and the bank became a [476]*476member of the syndicate. The plaintiffs believed the statements of Fessenden, that the loan could not be secured, were true and were ignorant that the actual facts concerning it were concealed by him. The declaration states that the agreement for the loan is set out in letters which are a part of the declaration, and that Fessenden assented to the agreement in behalf of the plaintiffs.

It is further alleged, that the defendant Herrick was employed in behalf of all the parties, to prepare an instrument in writing expressing the agreement which had been reached; that he did not act in good faith, but planned the scheme and co-operated with the defendant Wing in the promotion of it, with the knowledge of the defendants, and influenced the syndicate not to make the special loan or any loan, in order that the defendants might secure from the plaintiffs the agreement which assured to the defendants the management of the firm’s property; that the defendants concealed from the plaintiffs that the syndicate had agreed to make the loan and the fact that Wing and Herrick prevented the agreement from being carried into effect and did not disclose to the firm the conspiracy or means by which it was to be carried out, and the defendants “by concerted action in pursuance of said conspiracy, caused various applications to others by the plaintiffs for such assistance to be successively refused,” and concealed from the plaintiffs, the identity of those associated with F. S. Moseley and Company and ICidder, Peabody and Company, and concealed the fact that Wing and the Chase National Bank were such associates; that thereafter efforts of the plaintiffs to secure financial assistance had been unsuccessful because of the conspiracy; that Fessenden still pretended to act as the plaintiffs’ fiduciary agent and fraudulently advised and persuaded them to enter into an agreement by which the plaintiffs transferred to Kidder, Peabody and Company and F. S. Moseley and Company sixteen thousand five hundred shares of the Felt Company and five hundred shares of the Green Company, that the management and control of the companies passed to the defendants, and that Herrick, Fessenden and Winsor thereafter exclusively managed and controlled the companies; that the plaintiffs assented to this agreement, on the representation and distinct understanding that the companies were to be managed in accordance with the fiduciary duty which the defendants and their [477]*477associates assumed; that the companies were not managed in good faith; that, knowing that the plaintiffs relied on their other companies to assist them in redeeming the Felt and Green shares, the defendants, in pursuance of the conspiracy, wrongfully destroyed the value of the other companies; that they proceeded to secure control of the plaintiffs’ liabilities and fraudulently represented to certain bankers that the Norwood Housing Association and the United Printing Machinery Company were bankrupt, and secretly through one Morse, “acting as a dummy” with funds furnished by Herrick, purchased notes to the amount of $490,000 for the sum of $44,500,' which facts were concealed from the plaintiffs; and that by fraudulent means they persuaded other creditors of the plaintiffs to accept, when offered by the defendants, a small percentage of their debts, thus enabling the defendants either to acquire for themselves all the plaintiffs’ obligations or to manipulate them so as to carry out the purposes of the conspiracy.

The first ground of the demurrer is, that the declaration does not state a legal cause of action in tort against the defendants. In the consideration of this question and the other questions raised by the demurrers, we must, of course, assume that the allegations of the declaration are true. Granara v. Italian Catholic Cemetery Association, 218 Mass. 387, 392. The declaration in describing the means by which the conspiracy was accomplished does not allege that the acts were merely joint acts; its allegations of conspiracy are in and of themselves allegations of a tortious act. The declaration narrates the steps taken by the defendants in carrying out their purpose, but these acts are not stated as independent wrongs and the plaintiffs do not seek to recover damages for any of them considered separately. The declaration recites one scheme of fraud and seeks to recover the damages resulting from it. The plaintiffs’ cause of action is, that the defendants conspiring together entered into a plan to defraud them, and to carry out this scheme by a series of connected acts. The averments of conspiracy are not matters of mere characterization, as in

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Bluebook (online)
242 Mass. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willett-v-herrick-mass-1922.