People v. Baumgart

218 Cal. App. 3d 1207, 267 Cal. Rptr. 534, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 258
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 1990
DocketB020395
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 218 Cal. App. 3d 1207 (People v. Baumgart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Baumgart, 218 Cal. App. 3d 1207, 267 Cal. Rptr. 534, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 258 (Cal. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Opinion

LILLIE, P. J.

A jury found defendant Roy Baumgart guilty of six felony counts of the sale to six victims of securities without a permit (counts 19, 28, 31, 36, 56, and 58; Corp. Code, §§ 25110 and 25540) and guilty on count 59 of the felony of using false statements in the sale of securities (Corp. Code, §§ 25401 and 25540). The jury acquitted defendant on six counts of grand theft (Pen. Code, §487, subd. I). 1

*1211 Proceedings were suspended and defendant was placed on five years’ formal probation on certain terms and conditions one of which was that defendant pay restitution of $106,500. He appeals from the judgment.

Appellant claims that as to count 59 the court erred in failing to instruct the jury on criminal negligence; contends as to the other counts (selling securities without a permit) that this court should disregard existing authority that the offense is a strict liability crime and should import an element of knowledge or intent; and challenges the validity of the restitution order, claiming that the portion of the $106,500 imposed for selling securities without a permit, to wit, $57,900, represents victims’ losses not proximately caused by his criminal conduct, but by the fraudulent scheme of codefendant Gomez.

Facts

Prosecution Case

A. Sale of Securities Without a Permit to Day, Figurski, Heinz, Lambert, Wojciechowski (Counts 19, 28, 31, 36, and 56).

In 1978 defendant was employed selling insurance when he met Robert Gomez through their church; Gomez asked defendant if he knew anyone who might be interested in investing in equity real estate purchases; defendant referred his insurance clients to Gomez and defendant received commissions from Gomez; defendant would get 10 percent of the money invested and another 6 percent if the investor reinvested the same money. In 1979, defendant formed his own insurance agency and rented office space from Gomez; defendant began to spend 25 percent of his time referring clients to Gomez; in late 1979 or early 1980, defendant went to work full-time as a commissioned salesman for Gomez’s company, Financial Designs, until he left in January 1982.

Defendant was told that Financial Designs would be raising money, that another of Gomez’s companies, Homeowner’s Equity, would then use the money to buy properties, fix them up, and resell them. Gomez was president and owner of the company; defendant had no authority in the company other than as a salesman to solicit funds; most of the time defendant signed the investment agreements of the people he solicited, while Gomez made out the grant deeds and acquired properties; after about a year with Gomez, *1212 defendant was allowed to select properties for investors from a black notebook, which contained a legal description of the property, its market value, and equity.

At one time, before defendant left Gomez’s company, defendant was told he was made president, but his authority and duties did not change.

In January 1982, defendant and codefendant Paul Curtis, defendant’s brother-in-law, formed their own company, California Diversified Investors.

Neither defendant, Gomez, Curtis, nor any of their companies had a permit to sell securities and they were granted no exemption from the permit requirement. In the opinion of the supervising counsel of the enforcement division of the California Department of Corporations, all of the investment contracts and promissory notes involved in this case were securities.

The following facts relate to counts 19, 28, 31, 36, and 56, which involve transactions arising out of defendant’s activities on behalf of Financial Designs.

In August 1981, Joyce Figurski’s husband answered an advertisement about an investment in the Ontario Pennysaver; defendant came to their home and told her the company used investors’ money to buy up properties in foreclosure and sell them at a profit, they handled three to seven a week and the company had many homes and land and was “very safe.” The Figurskis met with defendant twice and Gomez once before investing; defendant told Joyce Figurski that she would be the only investor on the properties, that she would get a copy of a title report on the properties and, as security, she would get a grant deed and a trust deed. Joyce Figurski gave defendant a check for $20,000 for a six-month investment; she received an investment contract and a grant deed as security; defendant told her that the grant deed could not be recorded until after 180 days if they were not paid.

When the investment came due in February 1982, Figurski got a bad check for the interest due; she was told that the only way they could get their money back was to reinvest in four separate $5,000 investments; the Figurskis never got any of their money back; they discovered that a grant deed was “phony,” for a nonexistent piece of property. The Figurskis never got a copy of any title report.

Walter Wojciechowski saw an advertisement about a company offering a 20 percent interest payment; he called the company, and defendant, who *1213 introduced himself as a representative of Financial Designs, came out to his home; defendant gave him a choice of two properties in which to invest; he chose one and withdrew $15,000 from a T-bill in a savings and loan and gave it to defendant in December 1980; defendant told him the company would pick up what Wojciechowski would be losing for pulling funds out of the T-bills early. Wojciechowski received a deed and a note. In June 1981, Wojciechowski reinvested for six months, turned in his deed and note, and received new documents; in this transaction, he dealt with Gomez; defendant had introduced him to Gomez; Wojciechowski understood they were equal partners in the company.

In April 1982, Wojciechowski tried to get his money out; Gomez said he could have it May 1; on May 15, 1982, Wojciechowski found out that the company had no money in the bank and there was no way he could get any money; he never got any money back from Gomez or defendant.

In August 1980, John Heinz gave defendant $12,000 for investment and received a grant deed; defendant told him the investment would be for six months, he would receive 15 to 20 percent interest, and if after six months Heinz did not get his money back, he could take over the property. Heinz got an interest payment and rolled over the principal into a new investment; he got new documents and a new investment agreement. In late 1981, Heinz gave defendant another $10,000 to invest; even though defendant told him he could get his money back any time he needed it, he received nothing. Defendant did not tell Heinz that others would be given grant deeds to the same property. Defendant told Heinz that he was a partner at Financial Designs; when defendant left that company to form a new company, defendant asked Heinz to invest in it, but Heinz did not do so.

Theron Lambert knew both defendant and Gomez from their church affiliation; from October 1980 to early January 1982, the Lamberts engaged in a total of 15 transactions with defendant; some of the transactions were reinvestments or rollovers of prior investments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 Cal. App. 3d 1207, 267 Cal. Rptr. 534, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-baumgart-calctapp-1990.