Driver v. Brunemer

U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
Driver v. Brunemer, 40 App. D.C. 105 (D.C. Cir. 1913)
1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 2057

Driver v. Brunemer

Opinion of the Court

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The substantial allegations of the .bill were sustained by the evidence, the material facts of which are here stated. It appears that in 1890 one D. D. Stone organized a syndicate of eight persons to purchase the tract of 18 acres of land, known as Wesley Park. The land was then encumbered by a trust for $6,000, the validity of which has not been questioned. A second trust was executed to secure payment of certain notes amounting to $1,600 executed to one Burkett, a clerk in Stone’s office, which were indorsed to Stone. No money was advanced by Burkett, and the transaction was fictitious.

• On November 1, 1890, the land, subject to the aforesaid encumbrances, was conveyed to D. D. Stone and George W. Driver, trustees, for a syndicate of purchasers. The purchase price named was $21,600, of which $13,600 were represented by the trusts aforesaid, leaving $8,000 to be paid in cash. Seven persons joining with Stone composed this syndicate, contributing $1,000 each thereto. They were Timothy D. Keleher, Abel Hart, David D. Stone, Genevieve Yeager,’ Theodore Davenport, H. J. Bounds, and Edwin C. Fitz Simons. Peter J. Meehan subsequently bought the share of D. D. Stone.

*118The defendants and some other members of this syndicate of eight conceived a' plan to raise a second syndicate for the purchase of this land. The value of the land was fixed at $40,100, of which the unpaid trusts represented $11,600. The number of shares to be represented in the new syndicate were fifty-seven. Dividing the part of the purchase price to be paid in cash— $28,500—by fifty-seven made the face value of each share $500. November 1, 1891, Stone and Driver, trustees, conveyed the land to Edwin C. Eitz Simons and Timothy D. Keleher, trustees for the new syndicate, subject to trusts aforesaid of $11,600. But ten cash subscribers, for one share each, could be secured. These were Cassius M. Park, Judson Knight, Francis H. McKevitt, Sarah Klock, James H. Brunemer, Thomas H. Smith, Charles I. Kent, and J. H. Busher, each of whom paid $500 to the trustees.

The following account of the transaction was sent to the members of the syndicate of eight by Fitz Simons and Keleher, trustees:

“Memoranda of Sale of Property Adjoining Methodist University Site.”
Sold to E. C. Fitz Simons and T. D. Keleher, Trustees ...................................,. . $40,100
Cost ....................................... 21,600
Profit.......................... $18,500
New Syndicate formed consisting of 57 shares at $500 $28,500 Deeds of Trust on Property ................... 11,600
$40,100
Keceipts.
Cash for 10 shares .......................... $5,000

The unsold shares in the new syndicate consisting of forty-seven were divided between the members of the syndicate of eight, alloting.to each, five and seven-eighths shares, which represented their respective interests in the land.

*119The ten new subscribers had confidence in the members of the old syndicate who induced them to subscribe; were unaware that any profits had been made in the sale, and believed that all parties were on an equal footing. It appears that the syndicate of eight received the benefit of the cash contributed by the new subscribers. It was used to pay off part of the mortgage, but the first syndicate members, instead of contributing to the payment in money, received the benefit of the same by way of credits to each upon the amount of the assessment that he should have paid in full. Moreover, $725 were charged as commissions, but to what person paid, or on what ground, does not appear. The trustees appear to have kept no book account of these transactions, or of others relating to the trust, from which information could have been obtained by the beneficiaries, had their suspicions been aroused. They were in possession of no information to put them upon inquiry, or to shake their confidence in the trustees and others of the syndicate of eight, upon whose representations they had entered into the new syndicate.

The complainants, who sue on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated, held shares as follows: Brunemer, one share by subscription, one share by purchase from Keleher, and one and seven-eighths shares by purchase from the estate of Abel Hart; W. W. White, two shares by purchase from Hart’s estate; Cassius M. Park, one share by subscription; Mrs. O. M. Park, one share by purchase, apparently from one of the cash subscribers; Jennie W. Davenport, five and seven-eighths shares by purchase from her husband, Theodore Davenport, who was a member of the syndicate of eight. Hart and Stone are dead. Keleher has disposed of his shares, and is out of the jurisdiction, as are others of the syndicate of eight. None of the other subscribers to the new syndicate have made themselves parties. With this brief statement of the facts, the several assignments of error will be considered in their order.

1. Although years have elapsed since the formation of the new syndicate, we do not find that the delay in ascertaining *120the facts and bringing this suit is inexcusable. The circumstances of the trust relations of the parties, the confidence of the plaintiffs, and the concealment of the fraud, furnished reasonable excuse for the delay. George v. Ford, 36 App. D. C. 315—332; see also New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger L. R. 5 Ch. Div. 73-117, 46 L. J. Ch. N. S. 425, 36 L. T. N. S. 222, 25 Week. Rep. 436.

2. The conduct of the trustees has been such that their removal was necessary and proper in the interest of all concerned in the affairs of the syndicate. Having’ removed them, it was, of course, necessary to appoint others.

3-. The actual profits made by the syndicate of eight to which the three defendants belonged, in the resale of the land to the new syndicate organized by them for the purpose, was $18,500. This profit was unlawfully made; and justice and equity demand that they should be held accountable for it; Ferguson v. Bateman, 1. App. D. C. 279—296; Las Ovas Co. v. Davis, 35 App. D. C. 372-381. The proportion of this profit received by the three defendants was $6,937.50, instead of $7,465, as recited in the decree; which sum they were declared liable for to the subscribers to the new syndicate, and ordered to pay to the newly appointed trustees, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from December 1, 1891, for distribution to the parties entitled thereto under the direction of the court.

There was no error in holding that the other members of the syndicate were not necessary parties to the suit. Either one or all of the parties who participated in the secret profits could be sued. Las Ovas Co. v. Davis, 35 App. D. C. 372-379; Davis v. Las Ovas Co. 227 U. S. 380, 57 L. ed. —, 33 Sup. Ct. Rep. 197; Old Dominion Copper Min. & Smelting Co. v. Bigelow, 188 Mass. 315-329, 108 Am. St. Rep. 479, 74 N. E. 653. So much of the decree as awards recovery against the defendants for their share of the secret profits is correct, but it must be modified and corrected so as to make the principal amount decreed to be paid $6,937.50.

4. The fourth paragraph of the decree declaring an equitable lien upon the defendants’ shares and interests in the syndicate *121land, to the extent of the recovery before ordered, must also be modified and amended so as to make the amount of total lien $6,937.50, with interest, instead of $7,465, as therein recited.

5. The sixth paragraph of the decree relates to the shares of plaintiffs acquired not by original subscription, but by purchase of shares that had been issued to certain members of the syndicate of eight, of which, it will be remembered, each received five and seven-eighths shares in the new syndicate. Of these, White holds one share, Brunemer two and seven-eighths, and Jennie Davenport five and seven-eighths shares. The contracts by which they acquired these shares are declared rescinded. The defendants are declared liable to plaintiffs, respectively, for these shares, and reference is made to the auditor to ascertain the amounts paid by each of the aforesaid parties on account of their purchase of said shares, and assessments thereon, for which, with interest, the said defendants are declared jointly and severally liable.

We are of the opinion that so much of the decree as is contained in paragraph six, which rescinds those purchases, is without support in the pleadings and evidence. The shares were not purchased from the defendants or either of them, and the parties with whom they made their contract of purchase are not before the court. Moreover, the defendants have been decreed to pay to the trustees their entire proportion of the profits received, and this recovery is in addition to that. Their burden will have been discharged when they comply with the decree requiring them to account therefor to the trustees. As it appears that White and Brunemer, having confidence in the representations made as to the purchase price and value of the land, purchased their said additional shares in good faith and for a valuable consideration, they are entitled to a proportional share in the distribution of the proceeds of the syndicate in the final settlement of its affairs. It seems equitable also that they should share in the distribution of the proceeds of the recovery of the secret profits decreed against the defendants, in proportion to the actual price paid for the additional shares together with the assessments paid them, if any, which can be ascer*122tained in the accounting before the auditor, subject, however, to a preference of such of the shares of the ten subscribers as may be presented to the auditor. As to the shares held by Jennie Davenport the situation is different. Those shares were issued to her husband, Theodore Davenport, who was a member of the syndicate of eight, and shared in the profits of the same in the same manner as the defendants and other members did. She is not shown to be a bona fide purchaser from him for a valuable consideration. She as the assignee, and, standing in the shoes of one of the wrongdoers, is not entitled to share in the-money ordered paid by the defendants as their share of the proceeds of the wrong. The most that she is equitably entitled to is to share in the final distribution, when the lands of the syndicate shall have been sold and the net proceeds thereof ascertained. As the final account must be taken by the auditor under the direction of the court, it is proper to indicate as far as possible the manner in which final distribution shall be made.

(a) The ten cash subscribers and their assignees are entitled to preference in the distribution of the amount decreed herein to be paid by the defendants as their part of the secret profits. If all of the ten shares are presented and represented in the accounting, the entire recovery from the defendants should be divided equally between the holders of the said shares according to the number held by each. If all be not represented, then one tenth of the said fund shall be allotted to each of said shares. If all of said shares be not represented, the remainder of said fund shall first be shared in- by the plaintiffs Brunemer and White, and by such others as may hold by bona fide purchase shares derived from members of the syndicate of eight, prior to the institution of this suit, who may present the same to the auditor with the necessary proof of valuable consideration and good faith. None of such shareholders shall receive allotment as the owner of a full share, but such proportion only as the purchase price paid by him for each share and any assessment paid thereon by him bear to the face value of a single share, together with interest from time of purchase and pay*123ment. If there be a part of said fund remaining after the distribution as aforesaid, then the same shall be returned to the said defendants.

(b) The members of the syndicate of eight and their assignees, who may not be able to prove bona fide purchase for a valuable consideration as hereinbefore provided, are not to be excluded from a participation in the proceeds to be derived from the sale of the remaining land of the syndicate when final distribution shall be made. But each share so presented shall have first deducted therefrom the proportion of secret profits properly chargeable thereto, with interest, as heretofore determined.

(c) The defendants, after performing the decree heretofore made as to their share of the secret profits, shall be entitled to participate in the final distribution as full shareholders. But if any money shall have been returned to them from the fund heretofore ordered to be first distributed, the same shall first be deducted from their shares in the final distribution.

6. The paragraph of the decree providing for reference to the auditor is unobjectionable. The remaining paragraphs oi the decree affect Tait and Omwake, who have not appealed. Defendants are not affected thereby and have nothing to complain of therein.

The decree appealed from is right in the main, and with the modifications indicated, will be affirmed. The cause will be remanded to the court below with directions to enter a modified decree not inconsistent with this opinion.

The costs in this court will be taxed against the appellants.

Modified and affirmed.

070rehearing

Upon a motion for rehearing by the appellants,

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the court:

It is unnecessary to consider but one ground of the motion. It is contended that the court was in error in finding that the members of the syndicate of eight—called herein the old syndicate for convenience—made a profit of $18,500 in the sale of the land to the new syndicate. Admitting that there would have *124been such a profit had they succeeded in their attempt to secure new cash subscribers for the entire fifty-seven shares, their contention is that, because only ten new subscribers were secured at $500 each, and the members of the old syndicate were compelled in consequence to take the remaining shares themselves, the actual profit made in the sale of the land was only $5,000.

There is no reasonable foundation for this contention.

The sale was made by the old syndicate to the new, of land costing $21,600, at a valuation of $40,100, and the shai’es of the syndicate were fixed at $500 each. The new subscribers, ten in number, paid $500 each, receiving ten shares. The old syndicate members, having failed to procure subscribers to the remaining forty-seven shares, were compelled to take those themselves, or else abandon their scheme. Preferring not to abandon the scheme, they divided the shares equally, appropriating to themselves also the $5,000 obtained on the ten new subscriptions.

Land costing them $21,600 was thus capitalized at $40,100, making the profit in the sale of the land amount to $18,500. Having failed to obtain the remaining sum of $13,500 from new subscribers as expected, they took it in shares on the basis of the new capitalization. The memorandum of the transaction furnished to each member of the old syndicate, but kept from the knowledge of the new subscribers, shows that they so understood it. Had there been a rescission of the cash subscriptions-of the ten new members, on account of misrepresentations, the old syndicate would have the land back, charged only with the $5,-000 and interest. In other words, all of the parties would have been put in statu quo. But this was not the scheme of the bill. The new subscribers elected to hold their shares, and sued to compel the old syndicate members to account for the unlawful profit. The new syndicate remains undissolved, and the title to the land, is still in it.

The members of the old syndicate, having made this illegal profit, are decreed to make restitution. This restitution made, the interest in the land remains as before,—ten fifty sevenths in the new subscribers, and fourth-seven fifty sevenths in the *125eight members of the old syndicate. They -will share in the final distribution of the proceeds of the land in those proportions. This is the effect of the opinion reforming the decree and directing the accounting and distribution. As but three members of the old syndicate were parties to the bill, there is a decree against them for their proportion of the profit divided. Those who were not parties are made to account for their respective shares of the profit, as a condition of sharing in the final distribution. If the land shall have increased in value during these years of litigation, they may yet realize on their actual investment; what they will and ought to lose is the unlawful profit made in the sale to the new syndicate. The motion for rehearing is denied.

In consideration of the delay of the plaintiffs in asserting ■*heir rights, the court has concluded that it will be equitable to charge the defendants with interest on the recovery against them only from June 1, 1909, the date of filing the bill, instead of from the date of conveyance as directed in the former opinion; and the interest ordered to be charged by the auditor in the accounting directed in paragraph (b) will also be charged from June 1, 1909.

In these respects the former opinion is amended, and the court below in entering the decree ordered will be governed thereby.

Reference

Full Case Name
DRIVER v. BRUNEMER
Status
Published
Syllabus
Equity; Laches; Teustees; Accounting; Pabties; Secret Profits; Distribution; Interest. 1. Delay—for nearly eighteen years, to bring suit for an accounting and other relief, by persons induced by misrepresentations to become members of a syndicate for the purchase of land, is excusable, where trust relations existed between the parties and the fraud was carefully concealed. (Citing George v. Ford, 36 App. D. C. 315.) 2. On the removal for misconduct of trustees holding title to lands purchased by a syndicate, the appointment of new trustees is necessary and proper. 3. Members of a syndicate who organize a new syndicate to which they sell land, and who represent to the subscribers for shares therein that all the members are on an equal footing, when in fact large and secret profits were made by the members of the old syndicate on the sale, are accountable to the innocent members of the new syndicate therefor. (Citing Ferguson v. Bateman, 1 App. D. C. 279; Las Ovas Co. v. Davis, 35 App. D. C. 372.) 4. Any one or all the members of a syndicate organized for the purchase and resale of land, who participate in secret profits to the exclusion of others, may be made parties to a suit for an accounting. (Citing Las Ovas Oo. v. Davis, supra.) 5. The purchase of shares by members of a syndicate, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, from other members who have received them as their part of the proceeds of illegal and secret profits, and who have been decreed to account therefor, will not be rescinded, but such purchasers are entitled to a proportional share in the distribution of the proceeds of the syndicate on final settlement, and to share in the distribution of the proceeds of the recovery of seeret profits in proportion to the actual price paid for the additional shares, together with the assessments paid, if any. 6. Members of a syndicate for the purchase and resale of land, who have been decreed to account to comembers for secret profits, are entitled to participate in the final distribution as full shareholders, after first deducting from each share the proportion of secret profits properly chargeable thereto. On Rehearing. 7. That members of a syndicate settling land to a new syndicate at a price which would make a secret profit to the former of $18,500, if the entire fifty-seven shares had been taken up by new cash subscribers, were able to secure but ten of the latter, and took the remaining forty-seven shares themselves, does not limit their liability on accounting for the secret profits to $5,000 cash received, instead of the sum of $18,500. 8. In view of the delay of the complainants in filing their bill for an accounting of secret profits received by the defendants as trustee in a land transaction, this court directed that interest be allowed only from the date of the filing of the bill, and not from the date of the transaction.