Jackson v. Robertson

368 P.2d 645, 90 Ariz. 405, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 320
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1962
Docket6750
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 368 P.2d 645 (Jackson v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Robertson, 368 P.2d 645, 90 Ariz. 405, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 320 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

UDALL, Vice Chief Justice.

The principal question presented by this-, appeal is whether a provision in a contract between joint venturers calling for the issuance of corporate stock not then registered, in accordance with the Arizona Securities Act renders the contract illegal and therefore unenforceable.

Plaintiff D. H. Jackson, his wife and his. attorney were the incorporators and directors of Octave Gold Mining Corporation, when it was lawfully incorporated in 1953.. At that time the corporation had neither assets nor stockholders and carried on no-business. But plaintiff personally owned a number of leases on unpatented placer mining claims in Yavapai County and a lease with an option to buy the nearby patented Octave Gold Mine. In addition he owned a. placer gold gravel washing plant or dredge. Plaintiff planned to carry on a placer mining operation on these claims, using for the-washing process the water which had collected in the underground workings of the-Octave Mine. Save for preparation of an elaborate brochure describing the details and. possibilities of such a venture nothing came-of the scheme until September of 1956..

At that time defendants Robertson and. Nierstheimer, mining engineers from Alaska, were introduced to the plaintiff and on. September 14, 1956 the three agreed to sub- • stantially the following plan. Plaintiff was.. to (and subsequently did) transfer title to.. *407 his placer claim leases and dredge to the corporation. In return defendants were to take up the option on the Octave mine (for $8,500), purchase what additional equipment was necessary to commence operating and convey title to these properties to the corporation. The agreement also provided that defendants would actively assist plaintiff, whó was to he general manager, in the operation of the mine. Finally, the agreement called for the corporation to issue all of its authorized capital stock 1 2 in the following percentages: thirty (30) percent each to Jackson, Robertson and Nierstheimer, and five (5) percent each to Walker and Meacham who it appears did little more than introduce defendants to the plaintiff.

On September 14, 1956 a proposal embodying the above terms was submitted to and accepted by the corporation whose directors then were plaintiff and the two defendants. 2 The above described agreement (including the stock issue provisions) was reduced to a written contract between plaintiff and defendants on December 20, 1956. During the period before and after the contract defendants expended approximately $70,000 on the purchase of equipment and supplies necessary for the operation.

In March of 1957 defendants returned to Alaska to handle some unfinished business and gave plaintiff a four-month option to buy their interest for the amount of their cash investment in the project plus twenty percent thereof. Defendants planned to continue the operation when they returned barring exercise of the option by plaintiff. Shortly thereafter, however, (April) plaintiff filed this suit for alleged breach of contract. In addition to damages 3 ***for the alleged breach by the individual defendants, he requested that the court order issuance of thirty (30) percent of the corporation’s stock to him and that the corporation be restrained from issuing any shares to the individual defendants. Defendant corporation counterclaimed against plaintiff for the value of certain items of its machinery sold by the plaintiff subsequent to defendants leaving for Alaska.

The matter came to trial in December of 1957. The jury returned interrogatories and verdicts favorable to plaintiff and against *408 defendants Robertson and Nierstheimer, and also found for the corporation on its counterclaim against plaintiff. 4 On January 31, 1958, however, the Superior Court set aside the verdict for plaintiff against Robertson and Nierstheimer on the grounds that (1) the contract in question was null and void because violative of the Securities Act, and (2) lack of evidence to substantiate plaintiff’s alleged damages. Further, and in order to do equity, the corporation was ordered to reconvey the personal and real property to the respective parties from whom it received same. Finally, the court set aside the verdict for the corporation against plaintiff on the ground that plaintiff had sold such items to preserve the remainder of the property at the mine site.

On appeal plaintiff contends that the Securities Act does not reach this type of transaction because it involved a joint venture. Rather, he argues, the corporation was only a convenient receptacle into which the business assets could be placed and by which the venturers would conduct the operation. It must be admitted that the proposition that a joint venture is beyond the pale of the Blue Sky laws has been made, usually in dicta, 5 in some cases. See, e. g., Brown v. Cole, 155 Tex. 624, 291 S.W.2d 704, 59 A.L.R.2d 1011 (1956), noted in 35 Tex.L.Rev. at 127; Polk v. Chandler, 276-Mich. 527, 268 N.W. 732 (1936). And in Hathaway v. Porter Royalty Pool, Inc., 296 Mich. 90, 112, 295 N.W. 571, 579-580, 138 A.L.R. 955 (1941) the Michigan court held:.

“ * * * that the agreement in question was an agreement for a joint adventure ; that the formation of the corporation pursuant to the agreement in no way changed the relationship of' joint adventure between the parties;, that the agreement for the use of the-corporate medium was only a convenient method of carrying into effect the-joint adventure, and was not a contract within the prohibition of the blue sky law; that the issuance of stock by the corporation to the pool members was not the sale of securities, within the intendment of the statute.”

But we are not persuaded that such is the-better view. For, if use of the corporate-form by joint venturers violates the Securities Act the public may be injured nonetheless. In this regard the following language of the Supreme Court of Missouri, is apposite:

“ * * * [Ajppellants * * * contend that ‘The Missouri Securities *409 Law’ is not applicable to the transactions here, because the parties were all ■engaged in a series of joint adventures. However, if the conceded facts * * * ■ clearly bring the mentioned transactions within the provisions of the mentioned Act, it is immaterial whether the parties were engaged in a series of joint adventures or whether joint adventures generally are under the Act.”

Covert v. Cross, 331 S.W.2d 576, 583 (Mo. 1960).

We think, moreover, that the purpose and •spirit of the Arizona Securities Act (A.R.S. §§ 44-1801-2037 (1956)) and the decisions •of this court thereunder require affirmance ■on the illegality issue. In Reilly v. Clyne, 27 Ariz. 432, 441, 234 P. 35, 38, 40 A.L.R.

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Bluebook (online)
368 P.2d 645, 90 Ariz. 405, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-robertson-ariz-1962.