Dokken v. Minnesota-Ohio Oil Corp.
This text of 232 So. 2d 200 (Dokken v. Minnesota-Ohio Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Vernon DOKKEN, Appellant,
v.
MINNESOTA-OHIO OIL CORP., a Foreign Corporation, and Richard D. Wachtler, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*201 Harold S. Wilson, Clearwater, for appellant.
Charles F. Barber, of Allbritton & Barber, Clearwater, for appellees.
PIERCE, Judge.
Appellant Vernon Dokken, plaintiff below, appeals from a final judgment rendered after a jury trial in favor of the appellees Minnesota-Ohio Oil Corp. and Richard D. Wachtler, defendants below.
Dokken filed his amended complaint on August 23, 1966, pursuant to F.S. § 517.21, F.S.A., seeking to recover from the defendants the purchase price of unregistered *202 securities sold in purported violation of F.S. chapter 517, F.S.A., (the Uniform Sale of Securities Law), less certain amounts received from the seller, Minnesota, together with interest and attorneys' fees. The defendants' answer denied violation of the statute, pleaded estoppel, and claimed that the sale was an exempt transaction under the statute.
The record shows that Dokken had known Wachtler, president of Minnesota-Ohio Oil Corp., since 1959, had had business dealings with him in Minnesota, and had played golf and socialized with him after he came to Florida. Dokken had visited the site of the Riley oil lease in Ohio with Wachtler when the subject oil well came in about a year prior to the sale in question. Wachtler testified that Dokken expressed a desire to get into the oil business, although this was denied by Dokken. After the visit Wachtler told Dokken that they were informed by a bank in Ohio that there was an interest in the Riley lease available for sale. On the basis of Dokken's interest Wachtler contacted someone in the bank who suggested that it would expedite matters if Minnesota-Ohio brought the interest from the bank, paid off the mortgage at the bank, got the transfer into Minnesota-Ohio and then transferred it to Dokken. Dokken entered into an agreement in Pinellas County, Florida, with Wachtler to purchase 6.25 per cent interest in the Riley oil lease for $25,000.00, plus one-eighth of the working interest cost on future drilling on the lease. At the time the agreement was made the interest Dokken subsequently purchased was not owned by either Minnesota-Ohio or Wachtler, and the lease was not controlled or developed by either of them. Minnesota-Ohio and Wachtler owned only a 25 per cent interest in the lease. Dokken made a down payment and subsequently delivered a cashier's check to Wachtler in Pinellas County for the balance. Minnesota-Ohio accomplished the transfer at no profit for either Minnesota-Ohio or Wachtler. An assignment of working interest was received by Dokken in Pinellas County from Minnesota-Ohio after it had been recorded in Ohio on January 26, 1966. A corrected assignment was subsequently recorded in Ohio on March 23, 1966, and received by Dokken in Pinellas County.
The interest in the Riley lease was not registered in Florida under the provisions of F.S. chapter 517, F.S.A., and Wachtler was not a registered securities dealer in Florida. During May of 1966 Dokken became dissatisfied, demanded the return of his money, and made a tender of the security to Minnesota-Ohio, which was refused. Dokken paid a total of $37,895.52 as the purchase price and his proportionate share of developing and keeping the lease in good shape, and received $9,395.14 as income from said security up to the time of filing suit in July 1966. A stipulation was filed that payments made to Dokken during litigation were to be offset against his claim.
Dokken was not a director or officer of Minnesota-Ohio and did not participate in the decisions of the corporation. At the time of the purchase of his security he was a holder of 500 shares of stock in Minnesota-Ohio out of a capitalization of 145,000 shares issued and outstanding.
Dokken objected to the trial Judge giving the following instruction on estoppel:
The Court instructs the jury that regardless of all other findings or instructions, if you believe that the Plaintiff, by reason of his own acts, conduct, knowledge and business relationships that occurred at or about the time of the sale of the security is now inconsistent with such acts, conduct and knowledge in the bringing of this suit, and that the Defendants did rely upon the past acts, conduct and knowledge of the Plaintiff to their detriment, and that they would be, therefore, wrongfully injured by now allowing the Plaintiff to recover upon this *203 inconsistent action at law, then you must find that the Plaintiff cannot prevail, having so conducted himself, and your verdict must be for the Defendants.
It is Dokken's contention that estoppel is not available to the seller of unregistered securities where it is not alleged or shown by the testimony that the purchaser was involved in the business affairs of the seller as officer, director, controlling stockholder, manager or participated in the affairs as a seller. To support this contention he cites Popper v. Havana Publications, Inc., Fla.App. 1960, 122 So.2d 247, 84 A.L.R.2d 476; Harrison v. McCourtney, Fla.App. 1963, 148 So.2d 53; Monroe v. Dixon, Fla.App. 1963, 152 So.2d 744; Krasny v. Richter, Fla.App. 1968, 211 So.2d 612. These are the only Florida cases relating to estoppel as a defense to a violation of the Florida Securities Act. In each of the cases cited the security which had been sold was corporate stock issued by a defendant corporation and represented an element of control over the defendant corporation. The Court in each case outlined the degree of control that would be necessary by reason of direct participation in the affairs and management of the corporation as a stockholder, officer, or director, in order for the defense of estoppel to be available. Where there was a lack of such participation the defense was not made out in those cases.
The security involved in the case sub judice was an interest in an oil lease which was purchased by the defendants for Dokken at Dokken's request and in which defendants owned only a 25 per cent interest. Defendants did not own or develop the oil lease in question or control the drilling of the oil wells and were not the "issuers" or the agents of the "issuer" of the security. Defendants and Dokken were minority interest holders in a producing oil well and the defendants had no greater control over the operation than Dokken had. The element of control was lacking.
In some other jurisdictions having securities statutes similar to our Sales of Securities law by which sales made in violation of its provision are not made void but voidable at the election of the purchaser, the Courts have held that the purchaser of securities sold in violation of the act may be estopped by his conduct from asserting the invalidity of the transaction. Re Racine Auto. Tire Co. (1923, CA7 Wis.) 290 F. 939; Wichita Duntile Co. v. Wright, 1930, 130 Kan. 139, 285 P. 635; Thomas v. United Royalty Co., 1937, 180 Okla. 230, 68 P.2d 490; Farmers' Union Co-op Royalty Co. v. Little, 1938, 182 Okla. 178, 77 P.2d 33; Winfred Farmers Co. v. Smith, 1924, 47 S.D. 498, 199 N.W. 477. Estoppel depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case. The elements of estoppel as set out in the instruction given by the Court (compare 31 C.J.S. Estoppel § 108, p. 548; United Contractors, Inc. v. United Construction Corp., Fla.App. 1966, 187 So.2d 695), were based upon the evidence adduced at the trial, and the giving of such instruction was not error.
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232 So. 2d 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dokken-v-minnesota-ohio-oil-corp-fladistctapp-1970.