Conrad v. Superior Court

209 Cal. App. 2d 143, 25 Cal. Rptr. 670, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1962
DocketCiv. 10538
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 209 Cal. App. 2d 143 (Conrad v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conrad v. Superior Court, 209 Cal. App. 2d 143, 25 Cal. Rptr. 670, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

PIERCE, J.

Petitioner seeks a writ of prohibition restraining the superior court from further proceedings based upon an information in four counts charging petitioner with violations of California’s Corporate Securities Law, familiarly known as the “Blue Sky Law” (Corp. Code, § 25000, et seq.) After demurrer to an original information had been sustained, an amended information was filed, demurrer thereto was overruled and a motion to dismiss was denied. Thereafter a not guilty plea was entered. The specific sections stated in the amended information are sections 26104, subdivision (a), 25500 and 25152. And section 25003 is incidentally relevant.

Section 25500 prohibits any company from selling or offering or negotiating for the sale of any security of its own issue (with exceptions not here pertinent) “until it has first applied for and secured from the commissioner a permit authorizing it so to do.”

Section 25003 defines “Company” as including “(a) All domestic and foreign private corporations . . . ”; also “(c) Individuals selling, offering for sale, negotiating for the sale *146 of, or taking subscriptions for, any security of their own issue. ’ ’

Section 26104, subdivision (a), makes it a public offense of felony proportion for any person knowingly to authorize, direct, aid in the issue or sale of any security “in nonconformity with a permit of the commissioner then in effect authorizing such issue, or contrary to the provisions of this division, or of the Constitution of this State.”

Section 25152 provides that the law “does not apply to the sale of securities when (a) made by or on behalf of a vendor not the issuer or underwriter thereof who, being a bona fide owner of the securities, disposes of his own property for his own account, mid (b) the sale is not made, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of the issuer or an underwriter of the security, or for the direct or indirect promotion of any scheme or enterprise with the intent of violating or evading any provision of the Corporate Securities Law.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The contention of petitioner is that the evidence at the preliminary hearing was insufficient to justify petitioner’s being held to answer for the crimes charged. Specifically, his principal contention is that neither the foregoing sections, nor any other provisions of the Corporate Securities Law, make it a crime for an individual to sell or offer for sale corporate securities which he owns for the benefit of the corporation which issued such shares; and that if section 25152 were to be so construed it would be unconstitutional as a denial of due process. His secondary contention is that even if such act of selling for the corporate benefit is a crime, the evidence at the preliminary hearing was insufficient to establish reasonable and probable cause that petitioner committed such an act.

Our review of the regulation involved and the cases construing it establishes that acts charged against petitioner are criminal, and that the statutes are constitutional; and our review of the evidence before the committing magistrate convinces us that reasonable and probable cause was established.

The evidence was this: Petitioner, on July 21, 1959, met at the Elks Club in Red Bluff with four individuals, the alleged victims. At this meeting the agreements which are the basis of four counts of the information were initiated. The four individuals had previously been solicited by petitioner to subscribe, and had actually subscribed, substantial sums of money for the purposes of a corporation to be organized under the laws of Nevada to carry on placer gold-dredging exploration and operation near Ely, Nevada. In the prospectus presented *147 by petitioner he had described himself as the “principal underwriter ’ ’ of the shares to be issued. The corporation, the White Pine Mining Company, thereafter had actually been organized and an application (containing the prospectus mentioned above) signed by “Arnold Conrad” had been filed with the California Commissioner of Corporations. This was in March, 1959. On this application no permit had been issued. In fact, said application had, on July 8, 1959, been removed from the “pending calendar” of the corporation commissioner (and was later declared “abandoned”). The corporation commissioner’s file (introduced into evidence by petitioner at the preliminary hearing) discloses that petitioner was then fully aware that no permit would issue on the application without radical amendment. At the outset rather extensive demands for more complete data had been made by the commissioner; a memo in the file by Deputy Commissioner J. T. McMenamin states: “Mr. Conrad is rather disturbed over the request by our engineer for a more complete engineers report . . . Mr. Conrad stated that he might withdraw the application and sell all of the stock of the company in New York. He will notify us in due course whether he desires to submit another engineers report or abandon the application.” No compliance with the demands of the commissioner was ever made, and there is nothing to indicate that compliance was ever contemplated.

At the meeting held July 21, 1959, petitioner and the four individuals mentioned in the information, Handley, Tandy, Eeddy and Pettinger were present. Petitioner represented that he controlled the corporation. He informed those at the meeting “he was the president and the general manager of it and he had the say of what there would be done, if and when.” The secretary of the corporation was A1 Burnham, his son-in-law. (Later when Conrad was requested to give the name of a dredging company with whom he was dealing and to give an accounting for funds expended he informed Tandy, so the latter testified: “It was none of my business, that when he got ready he would present the essence [sic} of the money that he had or the accounting of the money when he felt he was ready and that he would not give any name of the company whom he felt was better than Yuba.”)

At the meeting in July 1959 petitioner informed those present that more money was needed for exploratory drilling. He represented that these tests were a condition precedent demanded by Yuba Consolidated before it would agree to *148 work the property. Petitioner informed them that if they would advance additional sums ($300 apiece) to the corporation, petitioner would give them his personal shares which were then in escrow (although as shown above none, in fact, were authorized to be issued). He presented four separate agreements to each of the “investors” present containing provisions to this effect, each of which agreements also states that “the party of the second part [Conrad] will be transfering and assigning his personal stock to the party of the first part [the investor] and all monies will be used for the benefit of the White Pine Mining Co.”

Based upon these representations, checks were issued by each of the four, which were later mailed to the corporation at its Nevada office, after counterparts of the aforesaid agreements, each purporting to bear the signature of “Arnold Conrad” had been received by the several investors. These checks were cashed and honored.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 Cal. App. 2d 143, 25 Cal. Rptr. 670, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-v-superior-court-calctapp-1962.