Conner v. Craig
070rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
Careful consideration of the petition for rehearing does not disclose any material point which was not carefully considered by the court in reaching its conclusion. It is impossible that the opinion of the court could be construed as holding that the administratrix of John S. Conner is entitled to share in the proceeds of the sale of any property except that which was owned by John S. Conner and James S. Craig as tenants in common. It is true that at the argument mention was made of the insolvency of the Weston Lumber Company, but its agreement with Craig & Wolverton provided for a vendor’s lien for the unpaid purchase money, and the court could not assume that the security was inadequate nor could it require that Conner should act upon that assumption. Should the extremely improbable contingency arise that the amount received from Weston Lumber Company for Conner’s half interest be less than the amount which Craig & Wolverton agreed to pay Conner, it will be time enough for the defendants to ask for the proper relief. But the court cannot allow such a remote possibility to influence it to deny Conner’s estate the right to participate in the advantage of the sale to Weston Lumber Company.
The petition for rehearing is dismissed.
Opinion of the Court
It is but just to say before entering upon a review of this finding that the evidence leads to the conclusion that James S. Craig, and A. I,. Craig, who acted for Craig & Wolverton, believed themselves to be acting within their legal rights in their transactions with Conner. But their belief cannot protect them if Conner suffered loss, by reason of their dealings with him, which courts of equity hold to be fraudulent in the sense that they were unfair. The books are full of cases in which bargains have been annulled because the parties acted on their own standards of right below the standards which courts of equity enforce. The conclusions of the district judge who tried the cause must always have great weight, but in this instance facts which seem decisive are not in dispute, and this court must draw from them its own conclusions.
The perspective will appear from a statement of the relations of the parties. John S..Conner was a jurist and afterwards a practising lawyer living in Cincinnati, Ohio, having little personal knowledge of the quantity and value of the timber. James S. Craig lived in West Virginia near the land, and, though he had not had it surveyed or the timber estimated, he had bought and sold similar property and was familiar with market values. For about 30 years he had the entire management of the land, paid taxes and other expenses, conducted suits involving the title, and in all respects acted for himself and for Conner. From time to time lie made statements of his accounts to Conner, and occasional adjustments were made. Although he and Conner seldom met, their relations were those of warm friendship, and Craig had voluntarily assumed toward Conner the position of a trusted agent and manager of the land. A. C. Craig was the son of James S. Craig, but he sustained no trust relation to Conner, and was of course free to deal with him at arm’s length and to buy his timber at the lowest price. In 1907 Conner was in failing health, and though not in financial distress needed money and was anxious to sell his interest in the timber if a fair price could be obtained.
The negotiations were opened by a letter from Craig & Wolverton to Conner dated March 23, 1907. Conner was in great perplexity as to the price and the wisdom of making a sale and sought advice and information from his friend and agent, James S. Craig. In responding to this call, Craig, except in two particulars, fully recognized and discharged his trust as the confidential adviser and agent of Conner. He told him in interviews and letters that he thought timber would advance in price, that he would not sell his own interest at the price offered, and that he expected at some time in the future to1 get $40 an acre for the timber on his share of the land. He reminded Conner of his embarrassment in advising him in reference to a trade with his own son, but promised to give him all the information he himself might have. He wrote on June. 18th, after mentioning a number of sales of similar timber at smaller prices,
*732 “still, In my own right and as your agent I am making written offers to close out our timber at forty dollars per acre and am having good hopes that I shall stagger on a man who can see that much in it for him and have the money to close at that price.”
Conner’s letters show that he regarded James S. Craig’s advice to be strong against the sale at the pirice proposed by Craig & Wolverton. Yet with all this James S. Craig failed in the trust he had undertaken in the concealment of two important facts from Conner: First, on June 17, 1907, James S. Craig, for himself and as agent of Conner, had given to Q. R. Squires an option running till July 2, 1907, to buy the entire timber at $40 an acre; and, second, on the same day he had promised to give Craig &. Wolverton an option on his one-half of the timber in case Squires should not comply. Failure to communicate the latter fact would be of little consequence but for its close connection with the concealment of the first. James S. Craig knew that Conner was in great perplexity as to his course, and as an intelligent business man he could not fail to see what an important factor in Conner’s consideration would be the knowledge that Squires, with faith in his ability to comply, had taken an option on the timber at twice the price he then had under consideration. Not only was the importance of this information manifest on its face, but the course of the transaction shows that both the Craigs regarded it of great moment. James S. Craig refused to bind himself to sell to his son while the Squires’ option was in force. His correspondence with Squires, his renewal of the option, although his son was complaining of his course towards him, and his testimony in this case indicate that he was hopeful of consummating a sale to Squirés. A. L. Craig regarded the Squires’ option so important that he wrote his father a letter, bitterly reproaching him for having given it, and in his testimony he says that after hearing of it, though he thought the price so excessive, a sale could not be made under it, and though he continued to write Judge Conner about allowing his firm to make a sale, yet he practically gave the matter up. It is. true Squires did not comply, but he testified he was confident of his ability to comply, but for lack of time.
Not only did James S. Craig and A. L. Craig allow Conner to place himself in the most embarrassing position of unwittingly giving an option to Craig & Wolverton while the Squires’ option was outstanding, ■ but A. L. Craig considered whether under his option he would not be entitled to the advantage of a sale at the higher price named in the Squires’ option if it should be accepted. Under these facts it is not possible to accept the explanation made by James S. Craig that he did not mention the Squires’ option because he attached no importance to it, and because he wanted to surprise’ Conner with good news if Squires complied. Nor is it possible to agree that the statement above quoted from James S. Craig’s letter to Conner of June 18, 1907, to the effect that he was making written offers to close out the timber at $40 and that he had good hopes of staggering on a man who would take it at that price, was notice to Conner of the Squires’ option. On the contrary this statement could not but lead Conner to the inference that there was no definite negotiation pending at the higher price mentioned, and no definite prospect of sale to a particular individual. It
Focusing all the circumstances on this letter and the interview of July 4, 1907, the attitude and motive of James S. Craig is brought into view. He saw his obligation to Conner and was unwilling to sacrifice Conner’s interest for the benefit of his son; but he knew that if the Squires’ option failed and Conner sold his half interest for $20 an acre,, there would be a strong inducement to the purchaser to acquire his own half interest at a greater price. But motive is not of paramount importance. Whatever be the motive, equity will not allow an agent and cotenant to take a greater price for himself to the exclusion of his principal and coteuant, when the principal and cotenant sells at the less price because of the agent’s failure to disclose an important fact which it was his duty to disclose. In the leading case of Van Horne v. Fonda, 5 Johns. Ch. 388, Chancellor Kent lays down the rule, which has since been often restated and followed, that the bare relation of cotenants creates “a mutual obligation” to deal “candidly and benevolently” with each other. In addition to this obligation and far beyond it in significance, James S. Craig voluntarily assumed the duties of agent and trustee, promising to keep Conner informed as to all material facts which would affect his interest. The concealment of a material fact which induced Conner to sell at a lower price and contributed to his own sale at a higher price requires a court of equity to hold that, even if Craig & Wolvcrton had been innocent purchasers, James S. Craig should at least share with his principal and cotenant the benefit which he took. The rule that a trustee cannot be allowed to profit by such concealment is too familiar to require support by citation of authority. It is thus stated in Perry on Trusts, 206:
“All the knowledge of an agent belongs to his principal for whom he acts, and if the agent uses it for his own benefit he will become a trustee for his principal.”
“But a very little is sufficient to affect the application of that principle; if a word, if a single word, be dropped which tends to mislead the vendor, that principle' will not be allowed to operate.”
Here the conduct of A.' L. Craig is fatal to his claim that he merely exercised the right of a vendee to keep silence. He knew that his father, who was Conner’s agent, was concealing the important fact of the negotiation with Squires, and availed himself of that concealment to make a bargain with Conner. Where a vendee knows that a vendor is misled by a breach of trust of his agent, he cannot hold his bargain, because by availing himself of the breach of trust hé becomes a participant in it. In such case the aid of the court is afforded, not only against the trustee, but against all claiming any benefit from his acts. Perry on Trusts, 172, and cases cited; Bush v. Bush, 1 Strob. Eq. 377; Wooddell v. Bruffy’s Heirs, 25 W. Va. 465.
Besides, A. E. Craig actively participated in at least one important act by which Conner was misled. The letter of June 18th from James S'. Craig to Conner plainly conveyed to Conner on its face the impression, contrary to the fact, that there was no definite negotiation pending with any particular person for the purchase of the timber; and this communication, bearing that plain implication, was copied and mailed for his father by A. L. Craig. Participation of A. L. Craig in the concealment of James S. Craig precludes Craig & Wolverton from the benefit of their bargain with Conner.
The charge that James S. Craig was to have a portion of the profit made on Conner’s interest is not sustained by the preponderance of the evidence. But the confessed and successful efforts made by the Craigs after the sale to Weston Lumber Company to conceal from Conner the sale at $40 an acre and to make him believe that James S. Craig had not sold his interest strengthen the conviction that they intentionally concealed from him the fact that Squires was negogiating for the timber at $40 an acre.
The result is that Conner’s representative must share in the proceeds of the sale to Weston Lumber Company as if he had been named as a party in interest to the sale at $40 an acre. The evidence shows, however, that the sale was a most advantageous one, and Conner’s estate will receive great benefit from the sale and the work of Craig &
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CONNER v. CRAIG
- Status
- Published