
    COMMONWEALTH BONDING & CASUALTY INS. CO. et al. v. BOMAR.
    (No. 627.)
    (Court of Civil Appeals of Texas. Amarillo.
    May 30, 1914.
    Rehearing Denied Oct. 10, 1914.)
    1. Corporations (§ 80)— Stock Subscription — Fraud.
    Where, in a suit to set aside a subscription to the stock of a bonding and casualty insurance company for fraud, plaintiff alleged that the officers and agents of the corporation to induce him to subscribe, falsely represented that $200,000 of the corporation’s capital stock had been paid in in cash, and that the corporation had made arrangements to obtain all the money it wanted at 5 per cent., and would lend plaintiff as much as he might desire, provided he furnished good security, while in fact not more than $20,000 had been received in cash by the corporation for such stock, such allegation sufficiently showed that plaintiff was.damaged by the false representations made to induce him to subscribe, and this regardless of the fact that the representation that it would lend plaintiff money would not of itself-have been actionable.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Corporations, Cent. Dig. §§ 244, 246-264, 1407, 1407%; Dec. Dig. § 80.]
    2. Corporations (§ 80) — Stock Subscription-Fraud.
    Where plaintiff was induced to subscribe for stock in an insurance company on a misrepresentation that it then had $200,000 capital stock actually paid in in cash, the injury to plaintiff growing out of his signature by reason of the fact that the corporation in fact had only $20,000 capital stock paid in was suffered at the time of the subscription; and hence it would not be presumed against plaintiff that defendant had remedied the injury, so as to render plaintiff’s petition for rescission fatally defective because it did not charge that the whole amount of the stock had never been actually paid for.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Corporations, Cent. Dig. §§ 244, 246-264, 1407, 1407%; Dec. Dig. § 80.]
    3. Evidence (§ 434) — Parol Evidence — Written Contract — Variance—Fraud.
    Where a stock subscription contract recited that no conditions, representations, or agreements other than those printed therein should be binding on the corporation, parol evidence that the contract had been obtained from plaintiff on false representations as to the amount of the corporation’s capital stock that had been actually paid in was admissible to show that the contract, by reason of the fraud, never in fact came into existence and was not objectionable as varying the terms of the written subscription.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Evidence, Cent. Dig. §§ 2005-2020; Dec. Dig. § 434 ]
    4. Indemnity (§ 13) — Corporations—Fraud of Agent — Ratification—Agent’s Liability.
    Where an agent of a corporation, who was also one of its officers, induced plaintiff to subscribe to the corporation’s stock by fraudulent representations, and such agent was in constant communication with the other officers of the corporation, and after plaintiff’s subscription had been secured the corporation, with knowledge of the fraud, refused to rescind and place plaintiff in statu quo, but retained plaintiff’s money and notes given for the subscription, it thereby became an active participant in the fraud; and hence, on plaintiff being permitted to recover against it, was not entitled to recover over against the agent.
    [Ed. Note. — For other cases, see Indemnity, Gent. Dig. §§ 29-35; Dec. Dig. § 13.].
    Appeal from District Court, Baylor County; Jo. A. P. Dickson, Judge.
    Suit by E. P. Bomar against the Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company and others. Judgment for complainant, and defendants appeal.
    Reversed and rendered in part, and affirmed in part.
    F. H. Haddix, of Ft. Worth, for appellant Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. McLean, Scott, McLean & Bradley, of Ft. Worth, for appellant Stuart. C. D. Russell, of Plainview, J. A. Stephens, of Benjamin, and Carrigan, Montgomery & Britain, of Wichita Falls, for appellee.
    
      
       For other eases see same topic and section NUMBER, in Dec. Dig. & Am. Dig. Key-No. Series & Rep’r Indexes
    
   HENDRICKS, J.

This suit was instituted by the appellee, Bomar, to recover $1,500, paid upon a subscription contract of $4,000, to $1,000 of the capital stock of the Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company (designated herein as the Bonding Company), and for the cancellation of five notes of $500 each, executed as a partial consideration for said stock. The appellee alleged that certain agents, who were officers of said corporation, in soliciting the subscription .to said stock, falsely represented to him that the corporation, at that time, had received the sum of $200,000 in cash, in payment of stock, and also alleged that said corporation had made arrangements to obtain all the money it wanted at 5 per cent., and would lend to him (appellee) as much as he might desire, provided he furnished good security therefor; appellee making other allegations of fraud inappropriate, we think, to this discussion, further presenting, however, that said representations induced him to subscribe to the stock, and that but for such representations he would not have entered into the contract. Upon trial before the court, judgment was rendered against the bonding company for the $1,500 paid upon the stock and for the cancellation of the notes and the subscription contract.

Appellant bonding Company pleaded the written subscription contract, and especially the following clause, contained in the same, as a bar to the alleged fraud:

“No conditions, representations or agreements other than those printed herein, shall be binding on the Commonwealth Organization Company or the Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company.”

The bonding company assigns fundamental error that the judgment of the trial court was erroneous in granting the relief to the appellee “on the petition which sought recovery * * * that the subscription contract was obtained through fraudulent representations and agreements not intended to be performed, but which failed to show that the petitioner had sustained any pecuniary or actionable injury. * * *”

In addition to the allegation that the officers of said corporation, as agents, falsely represented that $200,000 of said capital stock had been paid in cash for the sale of said stock, appellee further alleged that “in fact not more than $20,000 had been received in cash by said corporation for said stock,” which allegation would have been, as against a general demurrer, and in this instance, without the presentation of any demurrer, sufficient to show damage or injury, conceding that some damage or injury is necessary to be shown, in accordance with the rule enunciated in Bremond v. McLean, 45 Tex. 17, and in the main, as to the principle, followed by the Supreme Court in the case of Moore v. Cross, 87 Tex. 558, 29 S. W. 1051. In the Bremond-McLean Case, Justice Moore said:

“It does not appear from the petition that plaintiff suffered any injury from the alleged false and fraudulent representations as to the character of the note transferred to him, or that the note would or could possibly have been of any greater value to him than it was if appellant’s representations respecting it had been true.”

However, it is reasonably deducible in this cause that stock, if $200,000 in cash had been paid to and had become the assets of a corporation, would have been more valuable than the same stock in the same corporation, where not more than $20,000. in cash had been paid to said corporation upon subscription contracts for the purchase of said stock, and that any business man would so regard it. Necessarily the assets of a corporation, consisting of paid subscriptions to its capital stock, and without which it is unable to transact its business, lends substance to the corporation, and would likewise affect the marketability of the stock in proportion to the amount of such assets. This contract of subscription as pleaded (and as shown by the testimony) is partially executory, was repudiated by the subscriber, and the record is without any estoppel brought forward in the brief, or exhibited by the evidence.

In reading numerous authorities, affirmative and negative, in favor of and against the proposition that damage or injury must be shown in matters of false representation as an inducement to the contract, where an executory contract is attempted to be rescinded, we do not find any cause deciding the question, or which refers to any edse which does decide, that a difference in value of the thing contracted for, and that represented, must be shown in accordance with the dollar mark; that is, that a measure of such damage or injury is required as a prerequisite to such right of rescission. The case of Moore v. Cross, supra, invoked by appellant, was decided by the Supreme Court squarely upon the evidence, and was one involving an executed contract, and was a cause, in reality, primarily sounding in damages for a difference in value, though rescission was also prayed for, and granted by the* trial court and Court of Civil Appeals. The evidence showed in that cause that Cross received in estimated value what he traded for, and parted with, in estimated value, the property he conveyed, and without any claim that the property received was less than such estimated value, and that the property conveyed in exchange was any greater than such value — Cross did not agree to pay more than the property he received was worth, nor did he part with his property for less than it was worth. In regard to the-representation in that cause by„Moore that certain railway shops and depot yards would be constructed contiguous to the property he traded to Cross, it was not shown that the latter would derive any pecuniary benefit from their construction, and while Justice Brown does not so remark, it was not a legitimate inference, from the evidence in that cause, that the value of the property would have been increased by the construction of such improvements. In this case it is a legitimate inference that the stock contracted for by appellee would have been more valuable if the assets of the corporation, as alleged, would have been as represented.

On this question we adopt the following portion only of the opinion of Circuit Judge Wallace, in the cause of Stern v. Kirby Lumber Co. (C. C.) 134 Fed. 510, appropriate to the status here:

“Doubtless a court of equity would not grant relief in a case of purely inconsequential fraud, but the present bill does not present such a case. The reasonable deduction from the allegations of the bill is that the plaintiff’s stock would have been of greater intrinsic value if the assets of the corporation had been such as they were represented to be.”

The amount of capital stock paid in is quite indefinite from the testimony, though the president and treasurer of the bonding company and the officers of an organization corporation, promoting said bonding company, testified in the cause; however, the maximum amount deduced from the record is so subordinate in comparison with the amount represented to have been paid in as to sustain, in the main, appellee’s contention upon this point; the assets really consisted of some secured and unsecured subscriptions to 'the capital stock which were never “whipped” into condition, in so far as the record shows, in order to do business.

It may be true that the promise pleaded, to the effect that the company would, within six months, lend the appellee the money he needed upon good security is too indefinite, though improperly made, to predicate an action for rescission. Moore v. Cross, supra. However, we are not prepared to say that the statement, alleged and testified to, that the officers of the corporation had made arrangements for money at 5 per cent, should be eliminated as an element of fraud.

Appellant confounds the issue when he says that the sole consideration moving Bo-inar was the promise of a loan of money; it may be that if Bomar knew he could not have 'obtained money — with reference to which it is practically admitted in this record that it was represented to him that he would obtain it — he would not have subscribed for the stock, but that does not argue that, if he had detected the falsity of the representation that the $200,000 had been paid in, when it was so stated, he would have subscribed to said stock. It would be more correct to say that Bomar’s expectation of obtaining the money was a moving consideration to hinj in his subscription to the stock.

Appellee says he relied upon each and all of the statements.- The statement that $200,-000 of the capital stock had been paid in cash was material in every way; in civilization, cash has a significant ring in all transactions. Though Bomar may have relied upon the promise, for the purpose of realizing his expectation in obtaining money, made by the officer of the corporation, he also had a right to rely upon the statement made by the same officer that $200,000 had been paid to the corporation, and that it was a material ingredient to him, as evidence that the promise would be fulfilled, that the company had advanced to that stage in its corporate development as to secure what he wanted. Because he relied upon the promise to lend him the money, which the law may say he did not have a' right to rely upon as an element for the rescission of the contract, it does not argue that Bo-mar did not rely upon a material representation, which would, with thinking beings, give color and strength t'o the promise made. Neither can it be said that, if the bare promise only had been made, Bomar would have subscribed to the stock. As the Court of Appeals of New York said (it is true not in a case of blended statements) quoting from an English case:

“We cannot assume, from what was done in .ignorance of the misrepresentation, what would have been done if the misrepresentation had been detected.” Harlow v. La Brum, 151 N. Y. 278, 45 N. E. 860.

We believe it is sufficient to say that if a material misrepresentation is shown to have been relied upon, though blended with other statements which may have partially actuated another’s conduct, it is not a defense to then indulge in psychology — to split hairs and attempt a metaphysical 'division — in order to escape the fraud. At least the question is: Was the statement material? If it were used, though along with other statements, to control Bomar’s will and influence his assent, and concurred to that end, it is fraud.

“It may be asserted that any false statement by an authorized agent of a corporation, in regard to the condition of the corporation, or material matters connected therewith, by reason of which subscriptions to the capital stock are obtained, is regarded as a fraudulent representation.” Thompson on Corporations, vol, 1, § 715.

If the statement was made as represented, the fact that it was not one literally that $200,000 had been paid “in cash,” still, as made, it argues an intention to deceive, as it is clearly a statement implying that cash had been paid.

The appellant suggests an additional reason why the petition failed to exhibit a cause of action; that “it was not charged that the whole amount of the stock had never been actually paid for” — the logic being that the appellee and not appellant was burdened with the statement and proof of such a matter. It is noted that appellant did not present or urge any exception whatever; we are, however, not denying that a petition bad upon general demurrer is not fundamental error, but if our premise is correct that it is dedueible from the pleadings that damage or injury is shown at the time appellee was induced to subscribe for stock in a corporation which did not at that time have the assets as represented, we think it is not to be presumed against appellee that appellant had remedied the injury. The fraud was a consummated fact at that time, and the injury was existent at that time as a result of the act. Appellant may say: But did it exist when you filed the bill, or when the cause was tried? The appellant is silent as to any pleading upon this point, and does not show that it remedied the wrong perpetrated as alleged, and the evidence and the record, in' sounding it, show to the contrary.

The appellant bonding company, objected to the introduction of the testimony delivered by several witnesses, discussed in this opinion, upon the ground that the same tended to vary the terms of the written contract, and that the contract showed upon its face that it contained ail the agreements between the parties, and upon the further-ground that said contract provided, as set out previously in this opinion, that no representations or agreements, or conditions, other than those printed in the original contract, should be binding upon the bonding company.

The case of U. S. Gypsum Co. v. Shields, 106 S. W. 726, involved a contract containing the following stipulation:

“It is agreed that this written order and printed terms hereon constitute the entire contract between the parties, and there are no verbal statements or agreements varying the same.”

Justice Neill, in that cause, said:

“If a party were denied the right to show facts which prevent a writing from constituting a contract, such a writing would be free from all defenses, and outside of all rules "which determine the validity of contracts. * * * The evidence objected to was not introduced for the purpose of varying the terms of the writing sued upon, which it did not tend to do, but to the end of showing that defendant was induced to sign the paper by the fraudulent representations of the plaintiff.”

There are numerous authorities to' the effect that if a fraud induces a contract with reference to the inception of the same, even though the fraud varies .the terms of the instrument, it is admissible to prove that no contract ever existed. The Shields Case was affirmed by the Supreme Court, 101 Tex. 473, 108 S. W. 1165. However, the specific point was not commented upon. This court is acting upon the presumption that the question was raised in that case, and that our higher tribunal has affirmed the doctrine announced by the Court of Civil Appeals. We can see no difference in .the principle between the Gypsum Case and the record here as to the particular question, and believe the analogy to be complete.

in the proceeding in the trial court, R. T. Stuart, who was the dominant spirit of an •organization company, constituting a partnership in the promotion of the bonding company, was made a party by the appellee, Bo-mar, but recovery against Stuart by the former was abandoned. The bonding company, however, obtained a judgment for $500 over and against Stuart, in the event it had to pay the Bomar judgment, this stun representing the first installment paid by Bomar upon his subscription contract.

The contract between the bonding company and the organization company entitled the organization company to 12% per cent, of subscriptions, for promotion expenses. The agent, who was the immediate cause of the successful solicitation of Bomar’s subscription contract, was a vice president and director, a member of the executive and finance committees of said bonding company, and was also the treasurer of the same; and when he obtained the first installment on Bomar’s contract of $4,000, he paid $100 of the same to Stuart, or the organization company, retaining $400 for himself, testifying as a conclusion that as to that transaction he was the agent of Stuart or the organization company, and that his agency of the bonding company as to Bomar’s subscription was not that of a direct agency of such bonding company, but only through the subagency route.

We are not advised upon what particular ground the trial court made Stuart liable to the bonding company, but we presume it was upon the doctrine of .the agent’s wrong to the principal, on account of which the principal could recover against the agent. We are rather prone to the conclusion, under the peculiar facts of this case, that .this officer’s agency of the organization company and the bonding company was a direct dual agency of both parties, directly representing the same, and he was not the agent of .the bonding company solely through the channel of the organization company. The other officers of the bonding company, as well as Stuart, instigated the treasurer to solicit subscriptions, and, while doing so, he was in constant and 'daily communication with Mills, the secretary of the bonding company. He testified .that he used his position in the bonding company as influentially as he could, for the purpose of obtaining subscriptions, and to show subscribers that he knew what the business of the company was going to be, and that he would be in a position to. .take care of his friends and see that they got their part of the money which was to be loaned by said company. He further testified that all .the officers knew about him selling this stock, and they desired him to sell it. As an officer of the company he had assisted, and it was his duty, to some extent, to assist, in passing upon other contracts, written by other agents. He was drawing $250 per month, and it seems that his salary for the month of April, when this contract with Bomar was written, was obtained from the company only after a “squabble” ; the latter contending that he should be satisfied with his commissions.

Again, the trial court found:

“That the defendant corporation, after it was fully informed of the fraud by which said money and notes were obtained, refused to restore said notes, and refused to repay the plaintiff the amount of money which it had received.”

Aside from the question of joint agency, of .this particular representative, we know that a principal’s responsibility to others for the improper acts of an agent, in obtaining beneficial contracts or property, from third persons, is based upon the proposition that, having placed his agent in a position where he may perpetrate a fraud upon innocent third parties, he is unable to retain the fruits of the same and defeat the claim of third parties, and cannot justify the ends obtained by the agent, without repudiating the means used by him, though the principal may be innocent of any act of fraud. The Supreme Court of Indiana said as to transactions of this character (Wolfe v. Pugh, 101 Ind. 293).

“This the’ principal may generally avoid [the improper actions of the agent], by submitting to a rescission of the contract, and restoring what he may have received as the fruit of the agent’s bad faith.”

If the principal does not do so, the fraud of the agent becomes his fraud. We are unable to see, upon the application of any legal principle, in what manner Stuart could become liable to the bonding company, especially so in claiming the benefits of the acts of Stuart by retaining the money and the notes of Bomar and refusing to restore the same, “after it was fully informed of the fraud by which said money and said notes were obtained.” When the principal knowingly adopted the active fraud of the agent, it was an active “particeps.” ' The judgment of .the trial court is reversed and rendered in favor of R. T. Stuart, on account of the judgment against him in favor of the bonding company, and affirmed in all other respects.

Reversed and rendered in part and affirmed in part ,  