Foshay v. United States

68 F.2d 205, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4923
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1933
Docket9708, 9709
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 205 (Foshay v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foshay v. United States, 68 F.2d 205, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4923 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

Wilbur B. Foshay and Henry H. Henley were convicted on counts 1, 3, 4, and 5 of an indictment in 17 counts, charging them and five others, with having devised a scheme and artifice to defraud and to. obtain money and property by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises, and with having used the mail in violation of section 215 of-the Criminal Code (18 USCA § 338). They were each sentenced on said counts to fine and fifteen years’ imprisonment. They appeal.

The indictment, excluding some formal parts, is appended.

The appellants associated themselves in business in 1921, Foshay then being about 39 years old and Henley of the age of about 36, both having worked their way up- from humble beginnings and acquired experience in various lines of the utility business. Since 1921 and up to November 1,1929, when their enterprises went into receivership, they have carried on the business of acquiring public utility and other properties and bringing them under unified management and control; raising the money by sales of corporate stocks and securities to the general public and to financial institutions, the scale of their operations constantly expanding. All of their business was corporate in form — a great number of corporations figuring in the record from first' to last — but at all times they kept control of the corporations and the enterprises by retaining command of the voting corporate stock. They had a holding or parent company, bearing the name of Foshay, and subsidiaries, and there were companies subsidiary to the subsidiaries, but all ultimate management and control remained with Fo-shay and Henley. The scale of their stock selling operations is indicated in a summary of their security sales between the year 1921 and the year 19-29, reflecting a total of sueh sales in those years amounting to $63,894,521, and a somewhat sketchy outlining of their affairs may be quoted from an advertisement published by them early in 1929.

“The business of W. B. Foshay Co. was founded in 1917 in a small office in the First National-Soo Line Building in Minneapolis, *207 and has enjoyed a continuous and steady growth until its interests are nation-wide and international in scope. Beginning with only one employee, the Company and its affiliated organizations now employ over 2,100 people in various localities throughout North and Central America. Three major groups of utilities, with a combined valuation of over $50,000,000.00 have been consolidated and built up under Foshay management since the establishment of the business. * * * W. B. Foshay Company is a proprietory and management company, specializing in the management of public utility and selected industrial enterprises, doing the engineering, accounting and construction work of such companies, and distributing securities for the advancement of such companies to its customers through a national sales organization with offices in more than twenty-five cities from coast to coast. Other interests and activities include the control of three city banks, Public Utilities Consolidated Corporation, Fo-shay Building Corporation, which owns the 32-story Foshay Tower, unlike any other office building in the world, the Leamington Hotel, an exclusive apartment and residential hotel in Minneapolis, and Tower Press, Ine., through which is obtained moire economically the large quantity of printing required by the Foshay organization and its associate companies, as well as miscellaneons investments in public utilities and industrials. Public utilities now under Foshay Management are located in twelve states, two Canadian provinces, Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Alaska. * * * Thus, Foshay interests have geographical, economic and political diversity. * * * Headquarters of the business are in Minneapolis in the 32-story Foshay Tower. Executive offices are also maintained in Chicago, New York and in the Foshay Building, San Francisco. The Foshay Building in San Francisco houses headquarters of the Pacific Coast Division of the Investment Department, San Francisco Security Sales Office, Western Utility Acquisition Manager, and also quarters the executive operating personnel of the western properties of Public Utilities Consolidated Corporation and subsidiaries. Braneh offices are located in New York, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Denver, Dos Moines, Saint Paul, Hartford, Manchester, N. H., Portland, Maine, Los Angeles, San Diego, Stockton, San Jose, Sacramento, Santa Barbara, Portland, Oregon, Seattle, Spokane, Houston, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Fort Worth, Dallas, and Wichita. This nation-wide contact keeps the management in touch with the pulse of the entire country and gives a breadth of viewpoint which is an invaluable aid in serving its customers and continuing its successful growth. * * * The management of the W. B. Foshay Co. is in the hands of those executives responsible for the continued successful growth of the business, assisted by a highly skilled staff of experts. The management has followed a policy of active but constructive expansion along conservative lines with noteworthy success and with a steady increase and improvement of its facilities. * * * W. B. Foshay Co. has an uninterrupted dividend record from the inception of the business over eleven years ago. Cash dividends aggregating over $811,-000.00 (afterwards increased to $9'69,626.72) have been paid to stockholders of W. B. Fo-shay Co. since the inception of the business. * * * The story of Foshay Management is best told by the slogan: ‘For over eleven years — All your money — All the time — On time.’ ” At the time of the receivership the stocks and securities were scattered in the hands of thousands of investors totaling many millions of dollars.

The trial court epitomized the accusation of the indietment in its instructions to the jury as follows: “The heart of the fraudulent scheme charged is that the defendants schemed to and did falsely represent that, owing to the good management of tho Foshay companies, they were earning and paying large dividends upon the stock of such corporations and that the stock furnished a safe and conservative investment; whereas, in fact, the stock did not furnish a safe and conservative investment, and that the companies were not earning dividends as represented, and were not earning any dividends, but were paying said dividends out of capital of the corporations for the purpose of inducing potential investors to purchase such stock.”

Undoubtedly, the representation that a corporation is being so successfully managed that it is earning and paying, and will continue to earn and pay, dividends is the most effective of all inducements to buy its securities. Sentiment rarely controls and people buy shares in corporations in order to share in the earnings being made and to be made, and these appellants always made the representation that the Foshay Companies had had and would continue to have large net earnings and so were paying, had paid, and would continue to pay large dividends on their stock. The charge in the indictment that the companies were not earning the dividends and that these monthly dividends were not really from earnings but that they were taken out of capital *208 went, as the trial court stated, to the heart of the case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Mandel
415 F. Supp. 997 (D. Maryland, 1976)
United States v. Mirabile
369 F. Supp. 1108 (W.D. Missouri, 1974)
United States v. States
362 F. Supp. 1293 (E.D. Missouri, 1973)
United States v. Faser
303 F. Supp. 380 (E.D. Louisiana, 1969)
United States v. Finley McAdoo Painter
314 F.2d 939 (Fourth Circuit, 1963)
Securities & Exchange Commission v. F. S. Johns & Co.
207 F. Supp. 566 (D. New Jersey, 1962)
Monclova v. Financial Credit Corp.
83 P.R. Dec. 770 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
Arthur E. Schaefer v. United States
265 F.2d 750 (Eighth Circuit, 1959)
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Franklin Atlas Corp.
154 F. Supp. 395 (S.D. New York, 1957)
Ben H. Frank v. United States
220 F.2d 559 (Tenth Circuit, 1955)
United States v. Whitmore
97 F. Supp. 733 (S.D. California, 1951)
United States v. Coplon
185 F.2d 629 (Second Circuit, 1950)
Epstein v. United States
174 F.2d 754 (Sixth Circuit, 1949)
Pilgreen v. United States
157 F.2d 427 (Eighth Circuit, 1946)
Deaver v. United States
155 F.2d 740 (D.C. Circuit, 1946)
Harper v. United States
143 F.2d 795 (Eighth Circuit, 1944)
Holmes v. United States
134 F.2d 125 (Eighth Circuit, 1943)
Adams v. United States Ex Rel. McCann
317 U.S. 269 (Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 F.2d 205, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foshay-v-united-states-ca8-1933.