Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,315 E. Elwood Lewis and James McDonald Plaintiffs-Appellants-Appellees v. Walston & Co., Inc., Jackie Decasenave

487 F.2d 617, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 6884
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 1973
Docket72-3535
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 487 F.2d 617 (Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,315 E. Elwood Lewis and James McDonald Plaintiffs-Appellants-Appellees v. Walston & Co., Inc., Jackie Decasenave) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,315 E. Elwood Lewis and James McDonald Plaintiffs-Appellants-Appellees v. Walston & Co., Inc., Jackie Decasenave, 487 F.2d 617, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 6884 (5th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

The plaintiffs, Elwood Lewis and James McDonald, brought this suit against Walston & Co., a brokerage firm, and its registered representative, Mrs. Jackie DeCasenave, to recover for losses they sustained on the purchase of unregistered securities. They sue under §§ 12(1) and 12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77Z(l)-(2) (1970), and under the Florida Blue Sky Law, Florida Statutes § 517.21. 1 After a jury verdict for $70,000 in favor of the plaintiffs against both defendants, the trial judge, 347 F.Supp. 995, granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict in Walston’s favor, but refused to set aside the verdict against Mrs. DeCasenave. The plaintiffs appeal from the grant of judgment n. o. v. in favor of Walston, and Mrs. DeCasenave appeals from the denial of judgment in *619 her favor. We reverse the judgment for Walston, and affirm the judgment against Mrs. DeCasenave.

I.

The two plaintiffs were both longtime customers of Walston’s Fort Lau-derdale office before the events leading up to this suit began. Mrs. DeCasenave had regularly serviced Lewis’s account for about a year and McDonald’s account for about three years. This suit concerns the plaintiffs’ purchases of stock in Allied Automation, a company that until it went into receivership had been developing a machine for converting all forms of currency into money orders. Lewis purchased $50,000 worth of stock in this company in three different blocks between January and April 1969; McDonald purchased $20,000 in two different blocks between January and June 1969.

From November 1968 on Mrs. De-Casenave touted Allied Automation to the plaintiffs by telephone and whenever they came in to the Walston office on business. She told them about the company, and about its plan for developing the money changing machine; in the Walston offices she showed them pictures of the machine and literature on the company; she voiced optimistic opinions about the appreciation potential of the company’s stock. In early December 1968, in the Walston offices, she introduced McDonald and Lewis to one F. N. (“Jim”) James, an officer of Allied-Automation. After that introduction, she continued to tout the stock as a “potential IBM”. She told the plaintiffs that the company would go public at a price between $13.50 and $15 per share, but that they could then purchase the stock at the “ground floor” because a certain number of shares could be allocated to them at a price of $5 per share. She falsely stated that Walston would be “taking a position” in the stock.

On January 3, 1969, Mrs. DeCasenave arranged a meeting among Lewis, McDonald, James, and Ron Lucas, James’s partner in a partnership called International Industries. Lucas, who was also an Allied Automation officer, had come to Fort Lauderdale from the company’s headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, apparently for the express purpose of arranging a deal with Lewis and McDonald. The four met first at the Wal-ston office, then went to a nearby coffee shop where they met for at least one and a half hours negotiating their deal, and returned to the Walston offices, where they consummated the deal. On the morning of the meeting Mrs. De-Casenave had again told McDonald that Walston would be taking a position in Allied Automation. She also told him that Lucas would meet in the afternoon with Jim Gaff, Vice President and Manager of Walston’s Fort Lauderdale office. Mrs. DeCasenave, in the presence of McDonald and Lewis, took James and Lucas into Gaff’s office at Walston where they spent about 25 minutes with Gaff. In consummating the deal at the Walston office, Lewis gave Lucas and James his personal check for $10,000 for 2,000 shares of Allied Automation stock at $5 per share. In return, James and Lucas, in the name of their partnership, issued him a receipt and an “investment letter” covering the 2,000 shares. The “investment letter” stated that Lewis had purchased the shares for investment purposes only and not for distribution or resale. He received no stock certificates, either on January 3 or on any later date; his understanding was that stock certificates would be issued to him only when the company went public. Mrs. DeCasenave assured him that the “investment letter” was an ordinary letter of purchase of stock.

McDonald also agreed to buy Allied Automation stock at the January 3, 1969, meeting, but he did not have the cash available to give the partnership his personal check. He agreed to purchase 3,000 shares for $15,000. A few days after January 3, he delivered his check for $15,000 to the partnership’s bank. McDonald, however, according to his own testimony, did not intend to hold all 3,000 shares for himself and he *620 did not pay for the stock entirely with his own funds. He testified that he bought only $5500 of that stock for himself; the rest he purchased for four of his relatives. This included 200 shares ($1,000 worth) for his father, Alex McDonald; 200 shares ($1,000) for his uncle, Peter McDonald; 1100 shares ($5,500) for William Johnston, an in-law of McDonald’s; and 400 shares ($2,000) for Joe Gordon, the husband of Johnston’s niece. McDonald got the money for these blocks of stock from the parties for whom he bought them, except that he appears to have purchased the stock he was to give his father with money borrowed for that purpose from Johnston. But, although he purchased the stock for his relatives with their money, the “investment letter” that Lucas-James partnership gave him in return for his $15,000 cheek — the only evidence of stock ownership given him or anyone else 2 — showed McDonald to be the purchaser of the entire 3,000 share block. McDonald testified that he intended to distribute the stock to his relatives on Allied Automation going public.

After the January 3. meeting, Mrs. DeCasenave continued to tout Allied Automation, and she kept Lewis and McDonald abreast of developments in the company. In March, she called Lewis, who was then vacationing in North Carolina, to tell him that an additional 1,000 shares of Allied Automation were available. When Lewis returned to Florida, he went to Mrs. DeCasenave’s office at Walston; on March 17, he purchased the additional thousand-share block at Mrs. DeCasenave’s desk. Later Mrs. De-Casenave again called him to tell him more stock was available; and Lewis bought his final block of shares — 7,000 shares for $35,000 — at a meeting at his home with James. Lewis testified that all the negotiations for this purchase were conducted in Mrs. DeCasenave’s Walston office. McDonald made his final purchase of 1,000 shares for $5,000 on June 19, 1969. This purchase, too, was made after Mrs. DeCasenave had called McDonald to tell him that an additional 1000 shares had been allocated to him at $5 a share; she advised him to take them, and he did.

Mrs. DeCasenave procured most of the purchase price for the plaintiffs by selling listed stocks out of their accounts at Walston and providing checks from the proceeds for the plaintiffs to use in purchasing stock in Allied Automation.

According to his own testimony, Gaff, the Vice President and Manager of the Fort Lauderdale office knew about Allied Automation and its plans for producing a money-changing machine; and he knew that Mrs. DeCasenave was interested in and was touting the stock.

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487 F.2d 617, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 6884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fed-sec-l-rep-p-94315-e-elwood-lewis-and-james-mcdonald-ca5-1973.