Commonwealth v. Harrison

8 A.2d 733, 137 Pa. Super. 279, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 13, 1939
DocketAppeals, 203 and 202
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 733 (Commonwealth v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Harrison, 8 A.2d 733, 137 Pa. Super. 279, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

Foundation Realty Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, was engaged in the development and sale of a real estate subdivision in Baldwin Township, Allegheny County, known as Baldwin Manor. Myer Harrison was its president and Joseph Mandel its vice-president. It is now in the hands of receivers for liquidation. These defendants were charged in separate indictments with violations of The Securities Act of April 13, 1927, P. L. 273, 70 P. S. 1, and were convicted and sentenced. The specific charges are that each of them sold or disposed of stock of this corporation without first having registered as a dealer in accordance with the provisions of Section 3 of that act. That section provides that no dealer nor salesman nor agent in behalf of any dealer shall “sell, offer for sale, tender for sale or delivery, or solicit subscriptions to or orders for, or dispose or undertake to dispose of, or invite offers for or inquiries about, any securities within this State,” without first being registered as in this act provided. Neither of these defendants nor the corporation was registered with the Pennsylvania Securities Commission in accordance with the act.

Several methods were employed by these defendants in disposing of the stock of the corporation. In some *282 instances preferred and common stock were sold outright to a purchaser, or the preferred stock alone was sold with the common stock as a bonus. In others the transaction took the form of loans to the corporation. A subscriber, at the solicitation of defendants, made advancements to the corporation and received the note of the corporation for the amount advanced together with the corporation’s agreement to invest the proceeds in real estate. In each instance one hundred shares of common stock was issued to the subscriber for each one thousand dollars loaned to the company, and the corporation agreed to pay its note given to the subscriber, from the net proceeds of the first sale of real estate made by it, the common stock to be retained by the subscriber in consideration of his supplying capital to the company. There was also a variation of this latter method. In some transactions subscribers gave notes to the corporation for the amount of their subscriptions and at the same time delivered securities to the company which in each instance exceeded in marketable value the amount of the subscriber’s note. These securities were rehypothecated by the defendants with the consent of the subscriber with the understanding that the proceeds of loans raised on the collateral would pay the subscription and would be used by the corporation in the purchase, development, and sale of real estate.

Each of the defendants was convicted by the jury on counts in the indictment based on transactions falling within one of the above classes, and the testimony as to each count submitted to the jury is sufficient to support the charge that each of the defendants sold or disposed of stock of the corporation. The issuing of common stock to a subscriber in consideration of a loan of capital to the corporation is disposing of stock within the purview of the act.

The Commonwealth, on the trial of these cases, following the admission that defendants were not regis *283 tered, proved that they sold or disposed of the stock, and then rested. In the act there are certain exceptions limiting the definition of a “dealer.” In Section 2(C) the act provides: “The term ‘dealer’ shall include every person or entity, other than a salesman who engages in this State, either for all or part of his or its time, directly or through an agent, in selling......or undertaking to dispose of......or dealing in, any manner in any security or securities within this State, including securities issued by such entity.” Then follows a provision that transactions of certain types shall not constitute the person a dealer within the meaning of this act, among them, “wherein the issuer, a company organized under the laws of this State, disposes of its own securities, in good faith and not for the purpose of avoiding the provisions of this act, for the sole account of the issuer, without any commission or fee, and at a total expense of not more than three per centum of the proceeds realized thereon,......”

When the Commonwealth rested after proving sales of securities by both defendants it was then incumbent upon them, since they admitted they were not registered, to prove that their acts in disposing of stock came within the exceptions and did not constitute them dealers under the definitions of the act. In a case of this nature the burden is never upon the Commonwealth to prove negatively that a defendant does not come within a proviso or an exception of a statute: 1 Wharton’s Crim. Ev., sec. 202; Com. v. Wenzel, 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 467. To the same effect is Com. v. Johnson, 89 Pa. Superior Ct. 439, construing the predecessor of the act under consideration here; in that case the ruling “that if the defendant claimed exemption from prosecution under any other exception in the act the responsibility was upon him to bring himself within such exception,” was approved.

If the defendants sold the stock of a corporation wholly for its benefit they are not dealers *284 within the contemplation of the above act: Com. v. Pastor, 289 Pa. 22, 136 A. 862. In meeting the burden upon them, defendants produced only the office manager, the wife of one of the defendants, who testified that the entire proceeds of all sales of these stocks went into the treasury of the corporation. The books of the company were available and the defendants were familiar with them, and yet no records were produced to corroborate the bald statements of their witness, and the jury by convicting the defendants indicated that they did not accept this testimony. This phase of the cases was adequately submitted to the jury by the court and there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdicts of guilt on all counts in the indictments except the first count against defendant Harrison. That count of the indictment against defendant Harrison charges the sale of 4000 shares of stock of the company to Anna Hornick. It was admitted that this defendant made the sale and kept the proceeds but it was claimed that the stock was his and that this was but an isolated transaction coming within the exception of paragraph 3 of section 2(C) of the act which exempts transactions where securities are sold by the owner thereof for the owner’s account, not in the course of repeated and successive transactions of like character. The trial judge charged, in effect, that unless the jury found that the proceeds of sale of this stock went into the treasury of the company, the defendant was guilty of the charge. This was error. This defendant was entitled to have submitted the question whether the sale was not an isolated transaction relieving him from liability. The 13th assignment must be sustained.

A number of other assignments of error relate to the refusal of the court to grant a continuance of the trial of the cases because of alleged prejudicial articles appearing in newspapers just before the cases were called for trial. “In such matters, the court below is in a *285

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 733, 137 Pa. Super. 279, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-harrison-pasuperct-1939.