
    (85 Hun, 557.)
    BRINKERHOFF v. SARTWELL et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department.
    April 12, 1895.)
    Sale—Rescission—Knowledge of Facts.
    In an action to rescind a sale of shares of stock for false representations, alleged to have keen made by the buyer to the seller’s agent, a finding that the agent had better knowledge than the buyer of the condition of the corporation, and that he acted with such knowledge, is sustained by the evidence, where it appears that the agent was one of the organizers of the corporation, that he took an active part in the business, and that in the year when the stock was sold he attended seven of the ten meetings of the trustees.
    Appeal from judgment on report of a referee.
    Action by Maria A. Brinkerkoff against Amarilla B. Sartwell, as executrix of tke will of Henry J. Sartwell, deceased, and otkers, to rescind a sale of skares of stock, and to compel a transfer of said skares. Tke complaint was dismissed on tke merits, and plaintiff appeals.
    Affirmed.
    Argued before DWIGHT, P. J., and LEWIS and BRADLEY, JJ.
    S. E. Payne, for appellant.
    W. E. Hugkitt, for respondents.
   BRADLEY, J.

Tke plaintiff was tke owner of 25 skares, and her son Frederick D. Brinkerkoff of two skares, of tke stock of tke Empire Wringer Company, at tke par value of $100 eack, and on tke 31st day of December, 1878, through Jacob Brinkerkoff, tke husband of the plaintiff, those 27 skares were sold to Henry J. Sartwell at the price of $31.50 per share. The plaintiff, having taken an assignment of the alleged claim of her son, seeks a rescission of tke sale and transfer of the 27 shares of stock, and recovery of the amount of dividends paid upon them since the transfer, on tke alleged ground that the sale of the stock to him was procured by the fraud of Sartwell. Tke Empire Wringer Company, as a partnership formed in 1873, composed of Jacob Brinkerkoff and otkers, continued until January 1, 1877, when it was succeeded by the company as a corporation, and its capital consisted of patents, material, manufactured goods, machinery, belting, tools, patterns, sheds, fixtures, and unexpired insurance, estimated at $62,278.97, transferred by the partnership to the corporation with the good will of the business of tke partnership, estimated at $1,121.03,-making together $64,000, which constituted the capital of the company. The corporation thereupon issued 640 shares of its capital stock, of the par value of $100 each, of which 134 shares were issued to Jacob Brinkerkoff, and 25 shares by his direction to the plaintiff, his- wife, and the residue to others; and it entered upon the business of manufacturing clothes wringers, barbed fence, cot beds, and wash benches. The manufacture and sale of the wringer proved to be a profitable business, which from and after 1878 was productive of dividends to the stockholders. The barb-fence branch of the business was a burden, and had resulted.in a loss of about $45,000 to the company at the time of the sale of the stock. The alleged fraud is predicated upon representations made by Sartwell to Jacob Brinkerhoff, who acted as the agent of his wife and son in making the sale. If the referee had adopted the testimony of Brinkerhoff as correctly representing the transaction of the sale, it is very likely that the conclusion would have followed that Sartwell was chargeable with misleading Brinkerhoff by false and deceptive representations in making the purchase. But the referee has not found, and has refused to find, the facts in accordance with such testimony, which, in view of the relation of Brinkerhoff to the transaction and to the plaintiff, the referee was permitted to do. In the outset Brinkerhoff applied to Sartwell for a loan upon the security of the stock, which was declined, with the remark that he would purchase it at its value. Shortly after Brinkerhoff advised Sartwell that his wife and son had concluded to sell the stock, and the referee found that thereupon Sartwell stated (as he had proposed in the first interview) that he had investigated the business; that it was in bad shape; was hardly paying expenses; that the wringer business had fallen off; that the fence business had absorbed a large amount of the assets; that he did not care whether he bought or not; that it would be a good deal like buying a cat in a bag; that he would pay $31.50 per share for the 27 shares, which, in his opinion, was all it was worth. His proposition was accepted, and the transfer of the certificates made. The referee further found that Sartwell made the statements, not from actual knowledge, but from the conclusion he drew from investigation of the books, and from conversations with the officers of the corporation, that he had reason to believe that the representations made by him were true, and they were so as nearly as he could ascertain; that they were not made with intent to deceive or to induce the sale of the stock for less than its value; that the agent Brinkerhoff, by reason of his relation to the corporation as one of its organizers, stockholders, trustees, and its general sales agent, had a better knowledge than Sartwell of the condition of its property, business, and affairs; and that “this knowledge was present to his mind when he sold these 27 shares of stock.” And the referee added that, in view of the situation as it appeared at the time of the sale, the shares of the stock were not fairly worth to exceed $31.50 per share. The view which the referee was permitted to take of the evidence as a whole enabled him to find the facts as he did find them. Sartwell’s death has deprived the defense of his evidence. And as the transaction occurred more than ten years before the trial, and eight years before the action was commenced, the referee may be deemed to have been justified in subjecting to his careful scrutiny the testimony of witnesses who seemed to have some interest in the question. His findings upon the subject of the statements made by Sartwell in the negotiations which resulted in the sale of the stock, and relating to the inducements for making it to him, were fairly permitted by the evidence, and on this review are treated as supported by it. As it turned out, the stock was at the time of ihe sale worth much more than the price paid for it, as for several years thereafter it was productive annually of a very respectable dividend. But, shutting out from view the subsequent events, the value of the stock at the time of the transfer was quite uncertain. It was dependent solely upon the success of the business. No dividend had then been made since the creation of the corporation. As part of the capital on its organization consisted of patents estimated at $25,000, reduced in 1878 to $19,269.51, some of which would expire in a few years, the branch known as the “barb-fence business” had been carried on at a loss of about $45,000, and there was then apparently an increasing competition in the wringer business. The sales of the wringer had in 1878 fallen considerably below those of each of the years 1875, 1876, 1877, and such decrease in the number was from 26,524 in 1875, to 18,256 in 1876, to 15,526 in 1877, and to 13,435 in 1878. The company had concluded to close out or dispose of the barb-fence branch of the business, which was done the next spring. And while the wringer branch had been productive, and would have yielded dividends in the years 1877-78, if the corporation had not been burdened with the losses in the barb-fence department, the result of the business in the then future was a matter of speculation- and uncertainty. The opportunity of Brinkerhoff to have and entertain an opinion founded on his judgment was no less than that of Sartwell. Brinkerhoff was one of the organizers of the business of the partnership as well as the corporation. He seems to have given the barb-fence branch his preference, and sought patronage more especially for that on his trips as'sales agent; but he was at the place of business of the company a considerable portion of the time, and in 1878 he attended seven of the ten meetings of the trustees that year. The finding of the referee that Brinkerhoff had better knowledge than Sartwell of the condition of the business of the corporation, and that such knowledge was present in his mind at the time of the transaction in question, was warranted by the evidence. And the conclusion properly followed that the plaintiff and her assignor were chargeable with the knowledge which their agent Brinkerhoff had of the property, business,' and prospects of the corporation at the time of the sale of the stock. Constant v. University of Rochester, 111 N. Y. 604, 19 N. E. 631. This proposition, however, has but little significance in the present case, since the question of fact on the main issue was determined by the findings of the referee adversely to the plaintiff. There was no error in the exclusion of the evidence of the plaintiff offered to prove what her husband told her Sartwell had said to him in regard to the stock. In that transaction Brinkerhoff was and acted as the agent of the plaintiff, and in no sense represented the purchaser. The judgment should be affirmed. All concur.  