Cumberland Co-Operative Bakeries Inc. v. Lawson
Cumberland Co-Operative Bakeries Inc. v. Lawson
Opinion of the Court
These two cases will be considered in one opinion, as the questions for decision are practically identical in each case.'
Plaintiff proceeded by way of notice of motion for judgment against the defendants on notes executed by them. The Fisher note is for the sum of $300.00, dated July 1, 1920; and the Lawson note for $750.00, dated June 23, 1920. Each defendant pleaded nil debit; and each tendered special plea
Special plea No. One tendered and refused in each case avers that the notes were given by defendants as evidence of a subscription to shares of class B non-voting capital stock in plaintiff company, at a time when plaintiff was a non-resident corporation-and had not been admitted to hold property and transact business in this state, and for that reason could not maintain its suit. The court properly refused this plea. A foreign corporation which has not been admitted to hold property and transact business in the state under Sec. 30, Chap. 54 of the Code, is not prohibited thereby from selling its shares of capital stock in the state, nor from maintaining suits for enforcement of its contracts for such sales. Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Piggott, 60 W. Va. 532. “Holding* property and doing business” relates to the ordinary purposes for which the corporation was formed; hence, the sale of its capital stock is not within the meaning of the statute, and does not constitute ‘1 doing business.1’ Clark v. Kansas Petroleum Co., 144 Mo. App. 182; Bank v. Leeper, 121 Mo. App. 688, 97 S. W. 636; Union Trust Co. v. Sickles, 125 App. Div. (N. Y.) 105; Southworth v. Morgan, 143 App. Div. (N. Y.) 648.
Special plea No. 2 is practically the same in each case and avers that the notes were obtained from defendants by fraudulent and false representations made by plaintiff through its officers, employees .and agents; that it was represented to defendants by them that plaintiff was a going concern making large profits, to-wit, $200.00 each day in the City of Cumberland in the State of Maryland where it was engaged in business, and at other places in the said state; and that defendants by purchasing capital stock would participate therein; that it, plaintiff, intended to build and operate a large plant in the City of Elkins from which large profits would be real
Fisher’s plea No. 3 avers that he paid $15.00 per share for his stock upon the fraudulent and false representation that no stock was being sold for less; whereas, in truth and fact the stock was then being sold to other persons at $10.00 ■•per share, all of which was unknown to him and on which he relied.
Do these pleas constitute a valid defense? Plaintiff says that they do not, because the fraud is not alleged in definite -and specific terms; and that they do not allege that the cor•poration had knowledge of the supposed false and fraudulent representations made by its selling agents. The pleas ¡say that the notes were obtained by plaintiff by fraud and deceit practiced upon defendants by plaintiff through its officers, agents and employees, and specifically set out the acts and representations made, that they were untrue, material, were relied upon by defendants, and by which they were induced to enter into the contract and execute and deliver the notes. Did the corporation have notice of these alleged false
Do the facts alleged in the pleas constitute a good defense if proven? Mere opinions or statements of future prospective profits or value will not generally invalidate a sale or subscription although relied upon. Parker v. Thomas, 19 Ind. 213. The representations must be material matters of fact, and relied upon by the subscriber. The representations here made are substantially: that plaintiff’s business was being-conducted in Cumberland, and at other points in Maryland at large profit, whereas, it had always been conducted at a loss; that a lot had been purchased in the City of Elkins, and in the Lawson plea, paid for, whereas, a lot had been contracted for at $9,000.00 and not more than $10.00 paid; that machinery had been purchased and was in transit for the bakery and tea room at Elkins, whereas, no machinery whatever had been purchased; and that these representations were falsely and wilfully made. False representations that the corporation is solvent and in a prosperous condition have been held to be a good defense. Tyler v. Savage, 143 U. S. 79; Newbegin v. Newton Nat. Bank, 66 Fed. 701. Also that the corporation had purchased or owned certain property or rights. Savage v. Bartlett, 78 Md. 561; Ramsey v. Thompson Mfg. Co., 116 Mo. 313; Waldo v. Chicago, St. P. & F. R. Co., 14 Wis. 575; Lehman-Charley Co. v. Bartlett, 135 N. Y. App. Div. 674; Cunningham v. Morris, 56 Wash. 341, 105 Pac. 839; and our case of Cox v. National Coal & Oil Co., 61 W. Va. 291. In Savage v. Bartlett, cited, the representation was that the company owned certain property when in fact it only had an option to purchase it. Fisher’s special plea No. 3 avers that the stock was sold to him at $15.00 per share under the false statement that none could be purchased for a less sum when at the same time, it was being sold by the corporation at $10.00 per share. A like representation was held to be a fraudulent representation of a material fact in Briggs v. Reynolds, 176 Ill. App. 420.
A subscriber may set up fraud as a defense in an action at law by the " V recover the amount of the sub
Affimed in\ part. Remanded in part.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cumberland Co-Operative Bakeries Inc. v. H. T. Lawson and H. S. Fisher
- Status
- Published