In Re Girard

200 P. 593, 186 Cal. 718, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 503
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 2393.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 200 P. 593 (In Re Girard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Girard, 200 P. 593, 186 Cal. 718, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 503 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The petitioner alleges that he is unlawfully imprisoned by the sheriff of the county of Los Angeles upon a warrant of arrest issued out of the justice court of Los Angeles township upon a complaint which fails to charge a public offense.

The complaint charges that the Crystal & Colored Glass Company was a company of which four persons, namely, Mayer, Marshall, Stevenson, and the petitioner Girard, were trustees, and that neither' said company nor any of said trustees thereof had plained any permit from the commissioner of corporations to issue or sell any of the securities of the company or any shares, interests, or rights into which the capital stock or property of the said company and the rights of stockholders and members thereof were divided, or to sell any instrument issued or offered to the public by said company and trustees evidencing any right to a share in the profits or earnings or distribution of assets of the business of said company; that said Mayer, Marshall, Stevenson, and Girard did then and there willfully, unlawfully, knowingly, and feloniously, and for a valuable consideration, direct and aid in the issue and sale of, and execute and sell, shares, interests, and rights into which the capital stock and property of said company and the rights of members and holders thereof were divided and a certain instrument offered to the public by said com *720 pany, evidencing a right to participate and share in the profits, earnings, and distribution of assets of the business of the company, to wit: To John Phillips one thousand unit interests, to William Phillips one thousand unit interests, to Earl Fulton five hundred unit interests, and to John Blaine one thousand unit interests, in consideration of the sum of three hundred dollars paid by William Phillips, three hundred dollars by John Phillips, one hundred dollars by Earl Fulton, and $150' by John Blaine, contrary to the statute, etc.

The complaint attempts to state a cause of action under the provisions of the act known as the ‘ ‘ Corporate Securities Act,” in common parlance known as the “Blue Sky Law,” enacted in 1917, as amended in 1919. (Stats. 1917, p. 673; Stats. 1919, p. 231.) Section 2 of the act declares that “the word ‘company’ includes all domestic and foreign, private corporations, associations, joint stock companies, and partnerships, of every kind, and also trustees, as hereinafter defined” (subd. 3); also that “the word ‘trust’ as used in this act includes all voluntary trusts, as the same are defined in the Civil Code, expressly created by or declared in an instrument in writing, other than a will or judicial writ, order, decree, or judgment, to carry on any business or to secure the payment or repayment of money” (subd. 4), and that “the word ‘trustee,’ except as hereinafter used in subdivision 9 of this section, includes only persons or companies executing trusts as hereinbefore defined” (subd. 5). Subdivision 9 of the section refers only to trustees of a testamentary trust or trust established by judical decree. It has no bearing on the character of trust here in controversy. The act further provides that “no company shall sell,” except for delinquent assessment, as provided for sales of stock under the Civil Code, “any security of its own issue until it shall have first applied for and secured from the commissioner a permit authorizing it to do so” (sec. 3). The act creates a state corporation department and provides for the appointment of a commissioner of corporations to perform the duties prescribed in the act. Section 13 provides that every company which shall directly or indirectly issue or cause to be issued any security contrary to the provisions of the act shall be punishable by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars. The petition al *721 leges that the Crystal & Colored Glass Company is a common-law trust company existing and organized in pursuance of a declaration of trust filed for record with the county recorder of Los Angeles County on March 31, 1921; that it is not incorporated, and that the sole claim of the prosecution in the ease is that the sale of the unit interests provided for in said declaration of trust constitutes a violation of said Corporate Securities Act.

Said declaration,of trust is to the effect that it constitutes an agreement between the said four trustees above named “for the purpose of enabling the holders of trust shares hereunder to distribute the advantages and risks of their investments from different securities and business enterprises in a way ordinarily possible to investors and to that end hold as a common or joint investment for the common or equal benefit of the shareholders ratably according to their several holdings of unit shares the real or personal property transferred or conveyed to, vested in or acquired by the trustees under this agreement and to invest and reinvest such money and funds as may be paid to the trustees or be realized by them from the disposition of shares issued hereunder in such manner and in such business enterprises, securities and real or personal property as under the terms of this instrument shall be permissible and in the judgment of the trustees . . . shall tend to enhance the value of the shares issued hereunder as investments.” The trustees thereby declare that they will hold all property acquired by them as trustees in trust for the benefit of the holders of the certificates of shares issued as evidence of interests, in accordance with the terms of the agreement. The name of the trust is declared to be “The Crystal & Colored Glass Company.” The trustees are given power and authority “to issue common shares representing unit interests of no par value.” It provides that negotiable certificates for twenty-six thousand units are to be issued to the four trustees named above in equal quantity, each trustee to receive six thousand five hundred unit shares, evidenced by certificates which, as above stated, are to be negotiable. Each unit certificate had the effect of transferring to the holder thereof a proportional interest in the property held by the trustees in pursuance of the trust.

*722 The offense described in the complaint was the sale of these unit interests to the different persons therein mentioned for the prices therein stated without having received from the commissioner of corporations any permit so to do.

[1] It will be seen from the above definitions of the words “company,” “trust,” and “trustees” that the Crystal & Colored Glass Company comes precisely within those definitions and constitutes a company within the meaning of the act and of the provisions thereof forbidding such company to sell securities of its own issue without a permit. The charge is that the four trustees made the sales set forth in the complaint. A sale of unit shares or unit interests as described in the said declaration of trust without a permit from the corporation commissioner is without doubt a violation of the act.

[2] The defendant argues that the law is unconstitutional for the reason that it is discriminatory, in that it permits trustees created by a will or by an order of court in a judicial proceeding to sell securities issued by such trustees without a permit, while forbidding it in a case of a trust created under an instrument executed between individuals such as that here under consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 P. 593, 186 Cal. 718, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-girard-cal-1921.