MERRILL V. FLORIDA LAND ,&
mI". co.
17
clearly for application prospectiYely, and as 'not intended to apply to cases in which decrees had been rendered prior to the act specifically providing for the place of sale, and the time and place for advertisement. It is further objected to the confirmation that the sale was made of all the property subject to intervener's lien as an entirety and not in parcels, in relation to which it is averred that either parcel was of sufficient value to pay intervener's lien. The answer to this objection is twofold: First, the decree so directed, and neither party complained until afterwards; second, there is no offer now by anyone to pay a higher price for any parcel, or for the whole, than the sale realized, in case the bidding shall be reopened. It is true there are averments as to the cost of parcels and of the whole, which tend to show that the property realized an inferior price, compared with its cost, but these averments fall short of showing that on another sale a better price would be realized. The pl,'esent hard times, and the depreciation attending all property of the kind in question,. play possibly account for the situation; and the case seems to be somewhat like Mining Co. v. Mason, supra. The de· cree is a sufficieut answer, however, to the objection that the sale was not made in parcels. Hammock v. Trust Co., 105 U. S. 77··86; Central Trust Co. v. Wabash, etc., Ry. Co., 30 Fed. 332. Another objection to the confirmation is that other liens bear upon the same property, of equal rank, and that the property ought to be resold, and for the benefit of all lienholders. The record of the cases discloses that there are other and large liens on the property, of equal and perhaps prior rank to the intervener's lien. This in part accounts for the price brought at the sale, as the purchaser as well as other bidders knew that the property offered was incum· bered. But such fact is no reason why the sale, as made, should not be confirmed; the other lienholders not complaining, and otherwise being able to take care of theIIlselves. On the whole, we see no reason why the sale should not be confirmed, and an order to that effect will be entered. As the sale should be confirmed, the complainants in the dependent and supplemental bill and in amended supplemental bill ought not to have the injunction pendente asked for. McCORMICK, Oircuit Judge, concurs.
MERRILL v. FLORIDA LAND & IMP. CO. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit. No. 189.
December 12, 1893.)
1. 2.
SALE-FRAUDULENT REPRESENTATIONS-BANK STOCK.
An intending purchaser of bank stock is entitled to rely upon a state. ment of its president as to the bank's condition, w:ithout inquiring further.
SAME-RESCISSION AS AGAINST A BANK-RIGHTS OF CREDITORS.
The receipt by a bank of the proceeds of a fraudulent sale of stock belonging to it, and the subsequent appointment of a receiver, give its
v.60l!'.no.1-2
18
FEDEBAIJ
:REPO:RTEn, vol. 60.
eredttQJ"I(IlC)' such right In the
,2
8$ will' prevent the, .purchaser from the sale and requll.'ll.tlg restitution. 52 Fed. 77, 2 O. O. A. 629, App. 484, reatflrmed.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern' District of Florida. In Equity. This is a suit by the Florida Land & Improvement Company against T. B. Merrill, as receiver of the First National Bank of· . Palatka, Fla., the Florida Land & Lumber Company, the. Manhattan Trust Company" and William J.Winegar for the rescission' of lU1 alleged fraudulent sale of bank stock. The bill was originally dismissed On demurrer by the court below, but, on an appeal to this court, the decree was reversed. 2 C. C. A. 629, 52 Fed. 77. The case was then heard on the merits, and a decree entered granting the relief prayed, from which the defendant MerriU appeals. The decree is now affirmed. · tW., Stripling, for appellant. H. Bisbee, for appellee. Before PARDEE and McCORMICK, Circuit Judges, and LOCKE, District Judge.
PARDEE', Oircuit Judge. This cause was before this court at the term on appeal from fi.decree sustaining' a demurrer to thebillp,oomp1llint and dismissing t4e bill, and it, was then held thatthe·p1l;\tters averred in the bUI, taken as truly stated, entitled the cOIP.plIMnant to relief. 2 U. S. App. 434, 2 0. C. A. 629, 52 Fed. 77. TlUi!,,<!ause,when rt;!turned to the circuit court, was put at issue On' what purports tope the joint and several answer of T. :So Merrill, receiver, W. J. Winegar, and the Florida Land & Lumber Company. It will be noticed, with regard to this answer, that the Florida Land & Lumber Company did not sign the answer, nor was its seall;tttached thereto, or oath made to it by any of its omeers, and that, while this answer purports to be the joint and several answer of all the defendants, it is doubtful whether it should be;considere4 other than the answer of T. B. Merrill, receiver. ';I'heManhattan Trust Company filed its former answer, but, under the developments of the, case, this trust company bepracticallYl an unnecessary party. On filing the mandate of. this court remanding the case to the below for further proceedings, an injunction against T. B. Merrill, as receiver, enjoining him frOID disposing in any manner of the bonds of the Florida Land & Lumber Company in his possession, was reinstated, and he was thereby prevented from making flay salt} of the bonds; but, in the order of injunction referred to, it was provided that if, at any time, he should deposit a sufficient sum of money in the registry of the court to cover any decree which might be rendered in. favor of' the complainant, then such injuneti9Il' .be dissolved. In accordance with this provision, by agreement of the parties, the receiver, desiring to make sale of deposited in the registry of the court the sum of $15,260., and thereupon the order was entered, by agreement of the
MERRILL tI. FLORIDA LAND & IMP. CO.
19
parties, dismissing the Florida La·nd & Lumber Company from the case, and providing that any decree for the complainant should be satisfied out of the moneys so deposited. The cause being fully at issue by replication to the alleged answer, testimony was taken, and the cause submitted to the court for final hearing. From a decree giving the complainant all the relief prayed in his bill, Merrill, receiver, has taken this appeal. The errors assigned are as follows: ·'First. That the court erred in rendering a decree in favor of the complainant, and against said defendant. "Second. That the court erred in refusing to render a decree in favor of the defendant, and dismissing the complainant's bill. "Third. That the court erred in decreeing that the complainant has a vendor's lien on all of the lands described in the bill of complaint for the balance of purchase money, viz. $11,500, together with interest at 8 per cent. per annum from the 29th day of December, 1890. "Fourth. That the court erred in decreeing that tbe complainant be paid the sum of $13,743.78 out of the moneys deposited in the registry of the court by the defendant Merrill. "Fifth. That the court erred in decreeing that the complainant be relieved from any and all liability for assessment made, or to be made, on one hundred shares of stock, and that the said MerrllI, as receiver as aforesaid, and his successors, be enjoined from collecting or enforcing from the complainant any assessment made or to be made on said one hundred shares of stock,"
The learned counsel for appellant, in presenting his case, resolves these errors into two general questions stated by him, as follows: "First. That the court erred in decreeing a rescission of the contract relating to the bank stock and lien upon the lands, and in requiring the payment of the $11,500 and interest out of the funds deposited by the appellant in the registry of the court. "Second. That the court erred in enjoining the collection of the assessment against the appellee on the shares of stock held by it, and in not denying the relief prayed, and dismissing the bill."
The evidence adduced on the trial in the court below, and brought up in the record, fully sustains the allegations of the bill. In regard to the matter of the ownership of the shares of bank stock which were transferred to the complainant, and made a part of the consideration given for the large property rights acquired from the complainant, the showing is not as clear as in other matters, but that we consider as the fault of the appellant, and resolve the matter accordingly. From the answer it appears that GO shares of the said stock belonged to the bank, leaving it in doubt as to who was the owner of the remaining 40 shares. The testimony of Winegar, president of the bank, shows that the remaining 40 shares belonged, prior to the transaction, 30 to him and 10 to a Mr. Mersereau, but were acquired by the bank to complete the transaction with the complainant, credit being given on the books of the bank to pay for the same. As to the representations alleged. the evidence is clear and conclusive. While it was true that the bank, on January 6, 1891, had a paid-up capital of $150,000, and had deposits to the amount of $250,000, and, further, had paid the
20
FEDERAL REPORTER',VOI.
60.
dividends as alleged, it was not true th3Jt the bank had a surplus of $23,600, or ::Lny actual surplus. The fact was that, on paper,the bank had an e'Xcess of assets over liabilities of between, thirteen and fourteen thousand 9.o11ars, but really, while the bank was not insolvent, by reason of bad investments its capital stock was largely impaired. The evidence further shows that the representations complained of were made by the president of the bank, who was, or ought to have been, in full possession of all the facts in the case. The learned counsel for, the appellant con· tends that the appellee had no right to rely upon the representations of the president of the bank, but should have instituted an ,inquiI/yin other directions, and that the representations with regard to the assets of the bank should have been inquired into through other sources,and that the appellee should have informed hims,eli;as to who were the debtors of thehank, how the moneys of the bank were invested, etc. In this view we cannot concur. The information with regard ' to the business of the bank was peculiarly within the control and of the president, and for information as to its condition the appellee was not required to look further. In giving our former decision we said: "On the facts as stated, all admitted by the demurrer, the appellant has been defrauded of a property right, and is entitled to reUef, unless, in the mean time, the rights of innocent third parties have intervened. The learned judge presiding 'in the circuit court gave no reasons in writing fOI' his decision, and we are left to infer what they may have been. It is suggested in the briefs that the court held that, by the declaration of insolvency of the bank and the appointment of a receiver, the rights of innocent third parties, to wit, creditors of the ba.nk, have intervened, and that, as the receiver represents the creditors of the bank as well as the bank, although it did not appear that there were any creditors of the bank who had given credit to it on the faith Of the bonds issued on the lands in controversy, yet the court would infer, from the fact that the receiver had been appointed, that there were creditors of the bank who were prior in equity to the appellant. As it is admitted that the bank stock, when fraudulently sold and delivered to the appellant, was the property of the bank, and that the proceeds of the fraudulent sale were at once turned over to the ,bank, and are now held by the receiver as the property of the bank, we do not understand how it can be that any creditor of the bank can have such an interest as would prevent restitution. The receiver, representing creditor!!, has only the rights of property possessed by the bank. It does not appear, nor is it to be inferred, that the receiver or the creditors of the bank have parted with anything of value upon .the faith of the bonds fraUdulently held by the bank; and. to allow the receiver, on the theory that there may be some bona fide creditor of the bank, to retain the proceeds of the fraudulent aala would be to give the creditors of the bank the fruits of a gross fraud, which, by taking and holding, would make them partillepscrlminls. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. 193a; Kerr, Fraud & M. 233. Counsel for appellees contends in this court 'that the capital stock of :an incorporated company is afund set apartfor the payment of its debts;' citing Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56. And he says, further: 'Under this principle the interesisof the insolvent bank and its stockholders are secondary and contingent,They have no interest until the last obligation of the bank to its creditors . shall have been fully discharged. After the payment of all debts they at:e to the residuum. The creditors are interested par,. ties, and, under the circumstances, the bill should allege that they had notice of the allegeQ,fraud, and that the credit was not extended upon the faith of thE.' bonds in question, nor upon the faith of appellant being a. stock-
READ
v.
DINGESS.
21
bolder. Fraudulent misrepresentations of the officers or a bank, made to stockholders at the time of purchase, constitute no defense after its in solvency, and. the appointment of a receiver.' Citing Benj. Sales, par 709; Kerr, Fraud & M. pp. 48, 49; Ogilvie v. Insurance Co., 22 How. 380; Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S.45; Fartar Y. Walker, 3 Dill. 506, Fed. Cas. No. 4,679, and note; Upton v. Englehart, 3 Dill. 496, Fed. Cas. No. 16,800; Duffield v. Iron Works, (Mich.) 31 N. W. 310; Moore v. Jones, 3 Woods, 53, Fed, Cas. No. 9,769. In our opinion, these arguments and authorities do not apply in this case. This is not a case of subscription to the capital stock of an incorporated company; nor a case of transfer of stock by an ordinary stockbolder, but it is a case where the bank, as an actor, made a fraudulent sale of its own stock, and now, by its receiver, holds the proceeds thus, acquired. In other words, the receiver of the bank holds property that does not belong to the bank, to which neither he as receiver nor the creditors of the bank are entitled in equity and good conscience. * * * Considering, however, as we do, that the bill charges, and the. demurrer admits, that the bank was the real vendor of the stock, we think that, in equity, the appellant is entitled to have a complete rescission of thefrauduleilt ttansaction complained of."
As counsel for appellant gives us no new authority nor' wellgrounded argument to the contrary, we still adhere to these views, and, as they control the. case, it follows that the decree appealed from must be affirmed with costs, and it is so ordered. .
READ v. DINGESS et al. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit. No. 53. 1. EQUITY JURISDICTION-REMEDY AT LAW-FoRFEITURE OF LANDS.
February 7, 1894.)
Lands were forfeited through failure to enter same for taxation. Const. W. Va. art. 13, § 6. 'HeIr]., that a deed from the state would not be set aside upon the ground that the complainant had been deprived' of his property without "due process of law," because the forfeiture is in that event a nullity, and complainant has au adequate remedy at law. The privileges given to former owners of forfeited lands by the West Virginia statute of February 21, 1887, and prior acts of like character, cannot, by any rule of construction, be enlarged into an absolute right of redemption, but, on the contrary, are mere matters of grace on the part of the state, and are confined by the terms of the act to (1) a right to obtain from the state the excess of purchase money, in case the lands have been sold by it; and (2) the right to intervene by petition at any time pending proceedings for sale, and redeem by paying all taxes and costs. Hence, after the sale is complete, the former owner has no interest whatever therein. McClure v. Maitland, 24 W. Va. 576, followed. Even if the school commissioner of the state sells forfeited lands as "waste lands," when he has no right to do so, the former owner has no rights therein which he can enforce in a court of eqUity; for the sale is either void, in which case there is an adequate legal remedy, or it is merely irregular, in which case relief must be had in the state court in which the proceedings for sale were had. A court of equity will not be disposed to exercise any merely discretionary powers in order to relieve from statutory forfeiture lands which for 30 years have paid no taxes, and have not been reported for taxation
2.
TAXATION-FoRFEITURE-REDEMPTION.
8.
SAME-EQUITY JURISDICTION.
4.
EQUITY-LACHES.