Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Alfalfa Butter Co.

178 N.W. 766, 104 Neb. 797, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 256
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1920
DocketNo. 21048
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 178 N.W. 766 (Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Alfalfa Butter Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska State Railway Commission v. Alfalfa Butter Co., 178 N.W. 766, 104 Neb. 797, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 256 (Neb. 1920).

Opinion

Flansburg, J.

Suit in equity, brought by the Nebraska State Railway Commission, to require,' for the alleged benefit of stockholders, an accounting- of corporate funds, and to enjoin the defendant company, its officers and agents, from the further sale of defendant’s corporate stock. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the petition, and, plaintiff having- elected to stand upon the petition, the case was dismissed. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff claims its authority for this action under the provisions of the so-called “Blue Sky Law” (Rev. St. 1913, secs. 796-811), and the primary question to be determined is whether or not the defendant company is a corporation within the purview of that act.

[798]*798The petition discloses that this company was incorporated in October, 1915, and had been in existence for more than one year at the time of the commencement of this proceeding. It is contended that the defendant corporation, having been in existence for one year, was exempted from the operation of the act under that provision of section 798, Rev. St. 1913, which reads as follows: “This article shall not include within' its purview sales of stock in Nebraska corporations already in existence, and in Nebraska corporations hereafter created, but which have been in existence one year or more at the time of such sale, and in corporations of other states which have been in existence five years or more at the time of such sale, the majority of stockholders, directors and officers of which were at the time of commencing business, and are at the date of the approval of this article, citizens of the state of Nebraska, nor individual sales of securities owned by the seller prior to the taking effect of this article and purchased by suqh seller prior to March 1, 1913, when no commission or other compensation of any character whatsoever is to move in the transaction, and no publicity is used in accompanying the sale.”

The question is whether or not the words, “when no commission or other compensation of any character whatsoever is to move in the transaction, and no publicity is used in accompanying the sale,” refer only to those individual sales of securities by the owner, or whether they refer back to Nebraska corporations already in existence, -to Nebraska ' corporations to be created, and to foreign corporations of five years’ existence where a majority of the officers and stockholders are citizens of this state.

The intention of the legislature is the law, and such intention is to be gathered from the meaning of the language used, in the light of the necessity for or reason of the enactment and the objects sought to be attained, and, in determining the meaning of the lan[799]*799guage, its ordinary and its grammatical construction is to be followed, unless an intent appears to tbe contrary, or unless, by following sucb construction, the intended effect of tbe provisions would apparently be impaired.

Tbe evident purpose of tbis enactment was to stop tbe sale of stock in companies organized for fraudulent stock exploitation. Tbe frauds thus perpetrated seem to have been considered by tbe legislature to especially arise in the organization and sale of stock in new companies and promotion schemes, having no proper plan or bona fide intent of applying tbe proceeds from tbe sale of sucb stock to tbe carrying on of any actual business, but for tbe purpose only of exploiting the public. A. statute of tbis kind is to be given a prospective effect only, rather than a retroactive operation, unless another intent is expressed. It is reasonable to assume that, as to tbe great number of Nebraska corporations, then existing- and actually doing business in this state, no regulation was considered necessary. In sucb corporations the stock bad, for the most part, been sold prior to the time of tbis enactment, and tbe great body of sucb corporations would not, therefore, come within tbe purpose of tbe act. For this reason, and for tbe reason that outstanding stock in sucb corporations was not intended to be affected, the general exemption of Nebraska corporations, then existing, may have been provided.

As to corporations to be thereafter created in tbis state, the legislature evidently considered it necessary to prohibit tbe sale of stock unless the organization and plan of the enterprise to be carried on and tbe sale of stock should be under-the supervision of and be approved by some agency of tbe state. Such supervision by tbe railway commission was limited to one year only, no doubt because it was thought sucb corporations could come into existence only under tbe supervision and permission and direction of tbe railway commission, [800]*800and that, if properly organized npon a legitimate plan of business, and with proper assets and valuation representing the stock, the danger of stock speculation would have been avoided. By this supervisory power, the railway commission could, by criminal or other proceedings, prevent the sale of stock in that class of companies which were .organized for the purpose óf exploitation in the sale of stock and not for legitimate business.

If, as plaintiff contends, the proviso in question applies to Nebraska companies created after the enactment, we can see no reasonable purpose of fixing the one-year limitation, for, if a corporation is to continue under the operation of the law in all practical manner the same after the year has elapsed as before, why did not the legislature leave out the provision of the one-year limitation entirely? It is true that under plaintiff’s construction such a corporation, after a year, would not be prohibited from selling stock when no commission or publicity was resorted to, which sales, prior to that time, would have been prohibited; but it is during the first year of a corporation’s existence that commissions and publicity are necessary, and it is then that stock is not ordinarily sold without such means being employed. In other words, it is more likely that stocks may be sold without resort to commissions and publicity after the first year of the corporation’s existence than before, and, if the corporation was one which the legislature considered should be under the supervision of the railway commission after a year’s existence, it would seem plausible that the same power of supervision should continue, to prevent the fraudulent sale of stock, regardless of how such sales should be effected.

Having exempted the sale of stock in those corporations expressly mentioned, it was in the mind of the legislature that still other stock in other corporations, not exempted (since all foreign corporations, less than five years old, and all foreign corporations, a majority [801]*801of whose stockholders, officers and directors were not residents of the state, were not exempted), was at that time held by owners who had purchased the same prior to the enactment of the law, and it was considered that those persons should he protected in their property rights in that stock. It was therefore provided that such persons or owners might dispose of their stock in the ordinary course of business, and thus derive a fair value therefrom, but provided that such sales should not be made without a permit and approval of the sale by the state, if agents were employed or publicity used in effecting the sale, since such means might make possible the sale of securities at more than a fair valuation.

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Bluebook (online)
178 N.W. 766, 104 Neb. 797, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-state-railway-commission-v-alfalfa-butter-co-neb-1920.