Brocalsa Chemical Co. v. Langsenkamp

32 F.2d 725, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 1929
Docket5070
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 725 (Brocalsa Chemical Co. v. Langsenkamp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brocalsa Chemical Co. v. Langsenkamp, 32 F.2d 725, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The subject of fraudulent misleading may be summarily disposed of. There is no allegation of any misstatement as to the value of the bonds, or, indeed, any pleading claim that they were not worth the price paid. There is no substan *728 tial proof of any plan or representation that the proceeds of the bonds were not to be used for all ordinary corporate purposes, naturally including the refunding in a longtime form of debts whieh were due or currently to become due — indeed, on their face the bonds were refunding bonds. It would not normally be very important to the company whether this $50,000- was put at once into the corporate operations, leaving Tom-linson’s debt maturing in a short time, or was used to retire Tomlinson’s debt, correspondingly increasing the company’s credit; but, even if this were material, the record is entirely barren of any proof of misleading. In this respect the trial court was plainly right.

As to the other feature, we are convinced both that the Indiana law was not intended to apply to such a transaction as this, even if the sale occurred in Indiana, and also that the sale must be treated as having occurred in Ohio, and therefore as not being subject to the Indiana law. We pass by without consideration the point made that the Indiana law and others of that class are not intended to, even if they seerh to, apply to a transaction by which additional corporate securities are absorbed by existing stockholders. The first blue sky laws were thought by some of the District Courts to be unconstitutional, as unduly restricting liberty of contract. Alabama & N. O. Transp. Co. v. Doyle (D. C.) 210 F. 173; Compton Co. v. Allen (D. C.) 216 F, 537; Bracey v. Darst (D. C.) 218 F. 482 — all in effect overruled in Blue Sky Cases, 242 U. S. 539, 37 S. Ct. 217, 61 L. Ed. 480, L. R. A. 1917F, 514, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 643; 242 U. S. 559, 37 S. Ct. 224, 61 L. Ed. 493; 242 U. S. 568, 37 S. Ct. 227, 61 L. Ed. 498. The Supreme Court reached the contrary conclusion in reliance upon the theory that the laws there involved bore some reasonable relation to the subject of preventing fraud in the sale of corporate securities. From a reading of the Supreme Court opinions, it is evident that, if the law application there challenged had been to a sale by a corporation to a large and active stockholder, of a security which he, by his representatives, had duly authorized, quite another conclusion might have been reached. 3

However, for the purpose of this opinion, we assume that the Indiana law is rightly applicable to sales from a corporation to its existing stockholders. That law (Act July 26, 1920 .[Acts Sp. Sess. c. 26]) after the various prohibitions which it may be assumed would by their generality forbid such a bond sale as this, if occurring in Indiana, proceeded by section 11, to say: “The provisions of this act shall not apply: (1) To one who, in a trust capacity * * * or by judicial authority,” etc. (2) “To pledge to sell in the ordinary course of business, a security pledged to [one] as security for debt in good faith and not for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of this act.” (3) To the disposal in good faith of the corporation’s own securities at an expense and under conditions carefully specified and not here applicable.

We are concerned with subdivision (2). Its precise language as quoted is literally unintelligible, and we find no Indiana court construction, but we think we may be reasonably certain of the intent, and that it can rightly be construed according to that intent. To be effective along that line, it must mean that, when corporate bonds have been duly authorized and issued, the statutory prohibitions do not apply to the pledge of such bonds as collateral security for a valid corporate debt, when the pledge is made in good faith, and not to avoid the operation of the act, and that bonds so pledged may be sold by the pledgee in the ordinary course of business, when also the sale is in good faith, and not to avoid the act. Neither from the suggestions of counsel, nor from 'observation of the language, have we been able to get any other interpretation. 4 It is not questioned that the $50,000 of bonds had been pledged with Tomlinson in November, 1923, as collateral security for a $50,000 loan then made, and there is no reason to think that such pledge was not in good faith or was made rrith any purpose of avoiding this act. The company had no equity in these 50 bonds. As to the $4,000, the plain inference is, from the testimony of Lauritzen and Wambaugh, that the $7,000 of bonds whieh McNamara had with him in Indianapolis had been pledged by the company to Wambaugh as collateral for-a $10,000 loan by him, and had been by him intrusted to McNamara for sale, and that to him McNamara accounted for and paid over the entire proceeds; the company having no equity in these bonds. There is no proof that this pledge had not been made in good faith or with intent to avoid. We see no opportunity to indulge in any such inference.

Upon this record both the $50,000 sale *729 and the $4,000 sale by or for the pledge should be considered as made “in the ordinary course of business.” This statutory phrase should not be restricted to a sale in the nature of a foreclosure) made by the pledgee without the co-operation of the pledgor. It is at least as ordinary a course of business, after a temporary loan has been obtained upon the pledge of securities, for the pledgor to co-operate with the pledgee in finding a purchaser who will take over the securities permanently; nor is it outside the usual course of business for the pledgor to offer additional and sufficient inducement to one who will permanently make this refunding loan.

It follows that the Indiana statute does' not purport to invalidate the $4,000 sale, which occurred in Indiana as stated, nor the $50,000 sale, even if that might be considered as an Indiana transaction. In neither ease did the company get a dollar as the proceeds of the sale of these bonds; the pledgees took all.

As to this $50,000 sale, what happened in Indiana must be deemed negotiations, leading to a conditional offer made in Ohio to a resident of Ohio, and which offer was accepted in Ohio. The question involved is not whether the negotiator's, by what they did in Indiana, violated a law of that state; it is whether a sale, otherwise valid, was made void or voidable by the express declaration of the Indiana statute that all transactions in which the law is not followed shall be void. It is fundamental that such a statute can have no extraterritorial effect (Hilton v. Guyot, 159 U. S. 113, 163, 16 S. Ct. 139, 40 L. Ed. 95), and that the validity of the contract is determined by the law of that state where occurred the last act necessary to make the contract complete (Restatement Conflict of Laws, §§ 333, 353).

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32 F.2d 725, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brocalsa-chemical-co-v-langsenkamp-ca6-1929.