Wood v. Hill

214 A.D. 417, 212 N.Y.S. 550
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 214 A.D. 417 (Wood v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Hill, 214 A.D. 417, 212 N.Y.S. 550 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Finch, J.:

Whether the amended complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action is the question here presented for decision.

The amended complaint alleges that the plaintiff was induced by certain false and fraudulent representations made by the defendant to sell to the defendant 450 shares of stock which the plaintiff held in a family corporation, in return for three unsecured and non-interest-bearing promissory notes, one for eight months and the other two for a year and eight months, each in the sum of $5,000. Plaintiff sues for the rescission of the sale and for the recovery of the stock, and tenders back the promissory notes received.

The learned court at Special Term, in holding that the complaint was insufficient, evidently relied upon a line of authorities holding upon the respective facts presented, that the plaintiff could, by electing to rescind and suing upon such rescission, recover the damages he had suffered, and determined that no such need was here shown as would entitle the plaintiff to invoke the aid of a court of equity.

The following is the substance of the complaint: That the plaintiff was the owner of 450 shares out of 1,000 shares of the common stock of B. F. Wood, Inc., a New York corporation, of which the defendant was secretary and treasurer; that for a period of two years before the representations relied on herein for a rescission were made, the defendant had been employed as an accountant by a firm known as Wood & McClure, of which the plaintiff was a partner, and also by the corporation B. F. Wood, Inc., which succeeded the said partnership; that the defendant had complete charge of all the books and records of both the partnership and the corporation which succeeded it, and of all income tax matters and the preparation and filing of income tax returns of the partnership and corporation and also of the plaintiff personally and of his family; that the partner of the plaintiff died, and the defendant balanced the old books of the partnership and opened and kept a new set of books for the plaintiff as liquidating partner of the partnership; that by reason of the foregoing the defendant became possessed of private and confidential information concerning the plaintiff, including his affairs and the affairs of others with whom he did business; that the plaintiff had no familiarity with the books of account or income tax laws or requirements, but relied wholly on the defendant to protect his interests; that an action was pending in the State of Connecticut in which a beneficiary of plaintiff’s deceased partner was plaintiff and the plaintiff herein was defendant; that the defend[420]*420ant in the case at bar requested, and recommended to the plaintiff herein, that he retain an attorney in Connecticut to act for him in the Connecticut litigation; that said defendant chose for this purpose an attorney who was related by marriage to him; that said defendant made to the plaintiff false, fraudulent and criminal representations that the United States government was about to investigate the business theretofore conducted by the aforesaid partnership of Wood & McClure, and that the books of account of said partnership had been improperly and dishonestly kept, whereby the United States government had been defrauded of taxes rightfully due, all of which would be shown by the investigation; that if such investigation were made, the plaintiff .would be liable to severe punishment and imprisonment; that defendant could bring about a settlement of the Connecticut action if the plaintiff would employ the defendant to effect the same, and the plaintiff would then be saved from all the threatened difficulties with the government; that by means of the aforesaid representations the defendant induced the plaintiff to employ him to settle the Connecticut action; that the defendant criminally and fraudulently obtained the employment to settle the Connecticut action not only to secure the money to be paid to him for his expenses and disbursements and also a further sum to be paid in the event that he was successful in effecting a settlement, but also in furtherance of a purpose to obtain from the plaintiff his 450 shares of common stock in the corporation; that thereafter the defendant obtained from the plaintiff a power of attorney granting to the defendant the absolute right to do whatever was requisite or necessary to compromise, settle or discontinue the Connecticut action, upon the threat that if the power óf attorney were not executed, the defendant would refuse to continue trying to effect a settlement, and in consequence the alleged impending investigation by the United States government would find the plaintiff helpless and without defense; that the said power of attorney was obtained in furtherance of the purpose of the defendant to extort from the plaintiff the said 450 shares of common stock of the corporation; that the defendant then, pursuant to the agreement before mentioned and the power of attorney, for the purpose of extorting the property from the plaintiff and securing a dominant interest in the corporation, falsely, wrongfully and criminally represented to the plaintiff that the beneficiary of the deceased partner of the plaintiff was about to tie up the said 450 shares of stock of the corporation owned by the plaintiff, arid that thereby the business of the corporation would be jeopardized, if not ruined; that. by means of these threats the plaintiff was induced, through [421]*421the fear wrongfully and criminally created in the mind of the plaintiff, together with all the other threats alleged, to consent to an agreement whereby the said shares were transferred, indorsed over and delivered to defendant in exchange for the notes, aforesaid; that the differences between the plaintiff and the beneficiary of the deceased partner were settled on the basis of a liquidation statement whereby the plaintiff paid to said beneficiary a certain sum; that the 450 shares of stock were worth over $45,000, but that their exact value was unknown, because they could not be purchased in the open market; that through the extortion of the stock by the threats above set forth, the plaintiff was deprived not only of the value of the stock, but of the opportunity of employment in the business with which he had been associated for more than thirty years, which business originally was created by his grandfather and carried on by his father; that for his loss and damage he has no adequate remedy at law. Plaintiff offers to restore to the defendant the three notes received by him upon the transfer of the stock, and consents that the judgment so provide as a condition of the rescission of the said agreement. Judgment is demanded that the agreement be rescinded and set aside, and that the defendant restore to the plaintiff his stock upon receiving back the notes, and that the defendant be required to pay to the plaintiff all the income, dividends and profits received by him on the stock while it has been in his possession.

The defendant contends that this is an action to recover on the ground of duress. From the complaint, however, it can also be taken as an action to recover on account of false representations. Because the plaintiff has alleged the resultant fear which seized him, is no reason why effect should not be given to the fact that he alleges that the fear and inducement were brought on by false, fraudulent and criminal representations. In other words, the theory of the action may be regarded as one for rescission upon the ground of fraud, and not exclusively upon the ground of duress.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 A.D. 417, 212 N.Y.S. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-hill-nyappdiv-1925.