People v. Dean

21 P.2d 126, 131 Cal. App. 228, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 768
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1933
DocketDocket No. 2293.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 126 (People v. Dean) 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. Dean, 21 P.2d 126, 131 Cal. App. 228, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 768 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, J., pro tem.

Defendants were jointly charged in count I of an information with the crime of grand theft, and in counts II and III thereof with a violation of the Corporate Securities Act. They severally moved to set aside each of said counts on the ground that they were not legally committed, in that the evidence introduced before the committing magistrate failed to show that the offenses charged were committed. The trial court granted the motion of defendant Seidlitz as to all counts and that of defendant Dean as to counts II and III. Plaintiff has appealed from such orders of dismissal.

The evidence taken before the committing magistrate except in so far as the exhibits are concerned, is not before us. The record in the superior court on the matter of the motions is, however, and it appears therefrom that the theory under which count I was framed was that there was a conspiracy to commit the act between the two defendants. The trial *230 court stated at the hearing that there was no evidence connecting the defendant Seidlitz with the transaction, and appellant concedes that the dismissal of such defendant as to count I was proper.

It was stipulated at the hearing in effect that there was no evidence introduced at the preliminary hearing showing that no permit was issued by the corporation commissioner permitting the securities in question to be sold.

Count I of the information charges the sale of a security to one Walter P. Sagar without permission of the corporation commissioner so to do, and count II alleges a similar sale to one A. R Greenslit. Section 3 of the Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917, p. 673; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1931, vol. 2, pp. 1924, 1928) prohibits the sale of any security by the issuer thereof without a certificate having first been issued by the corporation commissioner permitting the same. Section 6 of the act prohibits anyone from acting as agent or broker without first having secured a certificate from such commissioner authorizing such action. Section 17 makes it unlawful for any company, which includes any corporation, etc., or individual, issuing securities, either directly or indirectly, without such a permit, or contrary to the conditions of a permit if one has been issued, to issue or sell any security; and section 18, so far as material here, provides that " Every officer, agent or employee of any company and every other person who knowingly authorizes, directs or aids in the issue or sale of or issues or executes or sells, or causes or assists in causing to be issued, executed or sold, any security . . . contrary to the provisions of this act ... is guilty of a public offense” and shall be punished as provided therein. Appellant admits that respondents are not charged either as being issuers of securities involved or as acting as agents or brokers for the issuer, but of violating section 18 of the act in selling a security for which no permit was obtained authorizing the issuance thereof. It is appellant’s contention that having shown the sale of a security coming within the meaning of the act, the burden of negativing the issuance of such a permit was not required of the prosecution to support a commitment, but that the burden was upon defendants to prove the affirmative thereof as a matter of defense.

*231 The general rule of evidence respecting the proof of negative averments is laid down in the case of Commonwealth v. Boyer, 7 Allen (89 Mass.), 306, at page 307, as follows: “When the defendant is in the first instance shown to have done an act which was unlawful unless he was distinctly authorized to do it, the proof of authority is thrown upon him.” In the case of People v. Boo Doo Hong, 122 Cal. 606 [55 Pac. 402, 403], the defendant was charged with unlawfully practicing medicine without a license. The evidence showed that defendant had been practicing medicine at Red Bluff, “but no evidence was introduced on either side showing, or tending^ to show, that defendant had or had not a certificate to so practice as required by law”. The court instructed the jury that the burden was upon the defendant to establish that he had such certificate, and that if he failed to prove such fact it must be taken as true that he did not have one. Such instruction was challenged and it was urged that the verdict was not justified because in a criminal case the defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; that such presumption continues throughout the trial; that inasmuch as the information charged that defendant had practiced medicine without having a certificate so to do, the burden was upon plaintiff to make such proof, and that not having done so the defendant should have been acquitted. In regard to such contention the Supreme Court said: “The general rule is undoubtedly as above stated, but there is a well recognized exception to the rule where there is a negative averment of a fact which is peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant. ... We think the rule upon the subject generally recognized and followed the correct one, and therefore conclude that the court did not err in giving the instruction complained of, and that the verdict was justified by the evidence.” Appellant urges that such rule applies in the instant case. Respondents admit the existence of the rule but say that it does not apply to them inasmuch as they did not issue the securities; that the burden was not upon them to obtain the permit and hence the matter of its issuance, not being to them as individuals as in the case of a license to practice medicine, dentistry, etc., it was not a fact peculiarly within the knowledge of either of them. They also urge that as any permit was not issued to them *232 but to the issuer of the security, the means of proving the fact are as much within the control of plaintiff as of them, in which ease the burden is upon the party averring the negative (Jones, Commentaries on Evidence, vol. 2, sec. 494, p. 882).

The security involved in count II appears to have been issued by the “South Vulture Gold Mining Co., Ltd., Trustees of a Common Law Estate”, and is for “5000 equities” of the “normal par value of $1.00 each”. The signature on the security appears as follows: “South Vulture Gold Mining Co., Ltd., Trustees of a Trust Estate Harry J. Mumma, Vice President ¥m. G. Dean Secretary”. In the lower left-hand corner appears a gilt seal with the name of the company imprinted thereon, and in the center thereof the words “Trustee's Seal”. Apparently preceding the issuance of this security Sagar signed three agreements in writing by which he subscribed the sum of $300, $100 and $100, respectively, payable to the “Treasurer of the Trustees, Harry J. Mumma, upon demand, for the purpose of assisting in completing a fund to furnish tools, supplies and machinery to enable said group of [unemployed] mining workers to make efficient recovery of the gold values in the ores obtained from above named properties”, of which the South Vulture Gold Mining Co., Ltd., was purported by the agreements to have obtained control. Such agreements were accepted on behalf of the trustees “by ¥m. G. Dean, Secretary of the Board of Trustees”. The agreements also provided that Sagar was to receive one per cent of the net profits for each $100 subscribed “from the Net Bullion Returns from the Gold Bar Mine in the Peck Mining District, Yavapai County, Arizona, owned by Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 126, 131 Cal. App. 228, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dean-calctapp-1933.