Dunham v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co.

1937 OK 457, 71 P.2d 468, 180 Okla. 537, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 13, 1937
DocketNo. 26870.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1937 OK 457 (Dunham v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunham v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co., 1937 OK 457, 71 P.2d 468, 180 Okla. 537, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 488 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

BAYLESS, Y. C. J.

This ease originated in the district court of Oklahoma county, where the plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, sought to recover damages in an action sounding in tort and arising out of certain purchases made by *539 her of certificates of stock in the Western Service Corporation, a corporation. Her action was directed against the defendants in error, D. W. Ohern, J. Murray Henry, Dean M. Stacy, P. A. Janeway, T. E. Braniff, Albert C. Hunt, and the Chemical Bank & Trust Company, a corporation. The Marine Midland Trust Company of New Xork also was named in plaintiff’s petition as a party defendant, hut went out of the case through having its plea to the jurisdiction of its person sustained by the trial court, which action on the part of the trial court subsequently was affirmed by this court. See Dunham v. Marine Midland Trust Co., 175 Okla. 461, 53 P. (2d) 254. Certain other individuals also were named in her petition as parties defendant, but the record before us does not disclose that they were served with process or ever entered their appearance in the case in any manner.

In the trial court, at the conclusion of the evidence on behalf of plaintiff, the court sustained demurrers to the evidence as to the defendants Chemical Bank u & Trust Company and Albert C. Hunt. Thereafter evidence was introduced on behalf of the defendants Ohern, Henry, Stacy, Janeway, Garnett, and Braniff, and the cause submitted to the jury as to them. Separate general v'erdicts were returned by the jury in favor of each of said named defendants. And from the judgments rendered in the trial court in favor of the Chemical Bank & Trust Company, Albert C. Hunt, and the other defendants last named, the plaintiff has appealed.

The Western Service Corporation was incorporated under the laws of the state of Delaware in the early part of May, 1930, and thereafter w'as admitted to do business as a corporation within the state of Oklahoma. Its principal place of business in Oklahoma being Oklahoma City, where it maintained its offices. The total number of shares of all classes of stock authorized in its certificate of incorporation to be issued was $500,000, of which 100,000 shares was to be preferred stock without par value, and 400,000 shares was to be common stock without p’ar value.

Said corporation engaged the services of Earl R. Ernsberger & Co., Inc., another corporation organized under the laws of Delaware, to conduct a sales campaign for the sale of its stock. And through Earl R. Ernsberger & Co., Inc., plaintiff purchased 558 shares of the preferred stock at $37.50 per share, and agreed to purchase more for which she made certain payments thereon. The agreement to purchase, the purchase, ’and the delivery of the certificates of stock were all made in Oklahoma. And in making and consummating said stock sale transactions there was no previous compliance, in any respect, by the Western Service Corporation, with the then existing Blue Sky Statutes of Oklahoma.

No contention appears to be made that stock in the Western Service Corporation was issued in excess of its authorized capital, or that the stock issued to plaintiff was watered stock or fictitiously paid up stock. But according to the statement of plaintiff’s counsel, in their brief, “plaintiff’s ease is predicated upon the facts that she was defrauded in the purchase of shares of stock in the Western Service Corporation ; that under the Blue Sky Law no permit to sell the same had been granted and because the sale was in violation of the Blue Sky Law the stock was null, void and valueless, and the defendants in error all having had something to do with the promotion and issuance and sale' of the stock are jointly and severally liable.”

We will consider first whether failure and omission of the Western Service Corporation to obtain from the State Issues Commission of Oklahoma a permit, under which it would be permitted and authorized to sell its stock in Oklahoma, rendered the certificates of stock in said corporation purchased by plaintiff null and void. We have found no statute of this state so declaring. The Blue Sky Statutes as enacted in 1919 (chapter 49, S. L. 1919; C. O. S. 1921, secs. 2270-2285), contain no such declaration, but merely prohibit the making of sales of speculative securities until certain requirements therein provided have been met, 'and declare that the commission of any act declared unlawful by certain sections thereof shall constitute a felony, the penalty therefor being provided. It was, however, by subsequent enactment (S. L. 1931, ch. 24, art. 2, sec. 16; Okla. Statutes 1931, sec. 4912) provided for such sales to be “voidable 'at the election of the purchaser.”

In contending that, for the reasons aforementioned, the stock which she purchased was null and void, the plaintiff necessarily must take the position that the provision of our Blue Sky Statutes, making the authorization of the State Issues Commission a prerequisite to the issuance of stock, is applicable to foreign and domestic corporations alike. The defendants in error take *540 the position that the issuance of stock in 'a corporation is essentially an internal function thereof, cognizable and regulatable only under the laws of the state creating the corporation. And we are of a like opinion. It undoubtedly was within the power of the Legislature of Oklahoma to enact for the regulation of s'ales of securities, whether domestic or foreign, to the public and to provide for penalties to be inflicted upon all those making sales in violation of the enactment. It doubtless would be equally competent, if in enacting such law the Legislature had provided for the voiding of stock of its own creatures if sold in violation of said law. But no appellate court appears to have gone so far as to say that the legislative power can extend so far as to operate extraterritorially by w'ay of declaring to be void the stock of a corporation created under the law of another sovereignty. In Mau v. Montana Pacific Oil Co. (Del.) 141 Atl. 828, it was held that stock of a foreign corporation sold in violation of !a Blue Sky Law, even though the Blue Sky Law purports to declare such stock to he void, is not void. And in arriving at that conclusion, it was said:

“If one state has the power to enact laws declaring void as unlawfully issued the stock of 'a corporation of a sister state, lawfully issued under the law of the domicile, it is apparent that inextricable confusion is in danger of being introduced into the internal affairs of corporations. The membership in and the internal life of a state’s corporate creature will he subject to as may conflicting masters as there are foreign jurisdictions. The logical result of such a doctrine is that one state has the power in effect, though not perhaps in form, to destroy the creatures of a sister sovereignty, for if it can nullify its stock for one reason it can for another. I do not think the state of California in the enactment of section 12 of its ‘Blue Sky Law’ meant to declare void the stock issues of any corporation other than those of its own creation, over which of course it has complete control.

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Related

Braniff v. Coffield
1947 OK 369 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1947)
Coffield v. Ernsberger
1940 OK 183 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)
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1938 OK 127 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 457, 71 P.2d 468, 180 Okla. 537, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-v-chemical-bank-trust-co-okla-1937.