People v. Eiseman

248 P. 716, 78 Cal. App. 223
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1926
DocketDocket No. 1206.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 248 P. 716 (People v. Eiseman) 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. Eiseman, 248 P. 716, 78 Cal. App. 223 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

The defendants, J. J. Eiseman, Alexander R. Abrams, Holmes Ives, N. J. Whelan, and John I. Pankratz, were jointly indicted by the grand jury of the city and county of San Francisco for the crimes of conspiracy to violate and of having violated the California Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917, p. 673), which declares in part that “no company shall sell . . . , or offer for sale, negotiate for the sale of, or take subscriptions for any securities of its own until it shall have first applied for and secured from the commissioner a permit authorizing it so to do . . . ” (sec. 3); and 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 assists in causing to be issued, executed, or sold, any security . . . contrary to the provisions of this act ... is guilty of a public offense. ...” (see. 12'.)

The indictment contained eight counts, the first charging a conspiracy to violate said act, and the seven subsequent counts charging unlawful sales of corporate .securities. .The defendants were tried jointly and during trial the charges against Pankratz were dismissed; as, to the other defendants the jury disagreed. Upon second trial Eiseman was convicted on all eight counts; Abrams was found guilty on seven counts charging actual violations of said act, but the jury disagreed as to the conspiracy charge; Ives was convicted on the conspiracy charge, the jury having failed to agree upon the remaining ones, and Whelan was convicted on the conspiracy charge and acquitted as to the others. All of the convicted defendants have appealed, and, with the exception of Ives and Whelan who join in their defense, are represented by different counsel and have filed separate briefs. The legal contentions advanced by the respective appellants are substantially the same, howeyer, and therefore the separate appeals may be considered together.

*229 Aside from the claim that the evidence as a whole is insufficient to constitute the offenses charged, no question of disputed facts has arisen, but a statement of the evidence seems necessary to a correct understanding of the conspiracy charge and of the numerous legal problems presented. The record on appeal is voluminous, containing some 4,500 typewritten pages of reporter’s transcript and more than 500 pages of printed and typewritten briefs; and although we shall attempt to relate only the essential facts, the summarization of them will necessarily be somewhat extended.

The transactions which eventually resulted in the indictment and conviction of appellants had their inception in a legitimate effort to aid in the financial affairs of an automobile tire company operating under California law, but developed into the consummation of a fraudulent scheme conceived by appellant Eiseman, in the promotion and profits of which his coappellants shared, whereby the worthless securities of a corporation organized by appellants in another state purposely to circumvent the effect of the California Corporate Securities Act, were, in violation of said act, brought into this state and sold to the stockholders of said tire company in particular, and to anyone else in general who might be induced to buy them.

During the year 1922 said tire company was and for some time prior thereto had been engaged in the manufacture and sale of automobile tires, Ives being its president, and Whelan its vice-president and chairman of the board of directors. It had issued and sold a large amount of its stock throughout California, but early in the year 1922, in order to increase its working capital, undertook a further stock selling campaign in which it enlisted the services of Eiseman, who at the time was a duly licensed stock broker. The campaign was not successful, and during the summer of 1922 Eiseman’s connection with the enterprise ended. He then went to Los Angeles where he followed the brokerage business in connection with establishments unrelated to the tire company until his certificate as a broker was revoked for cause by the state corporation commissioner. Having learned while selling stock for the tire company that its stockholders were generally dissatisfied with their investments, Eiseman returned to San Francisco and unfolded to *230 one Max I. Smith, then a licensed broker and since deceased, a plan to develop a Utah coal mining corporation and to trade its stock to the stockholders of the tire company, of whom he had a complete list, for their stock in the latter company and certain cash considerations. Smith did not look upon the plan with favor, however, and declined to enter into it. Eiseman then suggested that a so-called finance company be formed for the ostensible purpose of financing the tire company by discounting the latter’s trade acceptances and loaning it money upon the security of customers’ accounts, Eiseman predicting that the stock and other securities issued by such a company could be readily disposed of to the dissatisfied stockholders of the tire company for their stock in the latter company at par and a like amount in cash or its equivalent. Smith encouraged the scheme and in furtherance thereof Eiseman, accompanied by Smith and one Carroll, a licensed salesman of corporate securities, visited the tire company’s plant, where he conferred privately with Ives in regard to it. At the conclusion of the conference Eiseman informed Smith and Carroll that the proposition had been favorably received and if consummated he, Eiseman, would eventually be the owner of the tire company’s factory. Thereupon, in the early part of September, 1922, Eiseman consulted with Roy Bronson, his attorney, as to the feasibility of the formation of the proposed finance company under the laws of the state of Delaware, so as to evade the effect of the California Corporate Securities Act and allow such company to operate and to sell its stock and securities in this state without the necessity of obtaining a permit for that purpose from the corporation commissioner. Bronson prepared an outline of such a company, together with a plan for the sale of its stock and securities in that state to Eiseman, and advised that such proceedings would be legal and if carried out would allow said stock and securities to be disposed of in this state by licensed brokers without • interference or permit from the California corporation commissioner. Bronson’s plans were later approved at a conference attended by Eiseman, Ives, and Whelan, and on December 19, 1922, at the request of those mentioned, he caused said projected company to be incorporated in Delaware, under the name of “Bankers *231 Mortgage and Discount Company,” with three “dummy” directors and an authorized capital of $2,500,000 of class “A” common stock of the par value of $100 per share, and 5,000 shares of class “B” common stock of no par value. Immediately after organizing, the directors in Delaware authorized the issuance to Ives and Whelan of the entire class “B” stock in purported consideration of services rendered by them in organizing the new company, and also authorized the issuance of $1,000,000 of six per cent “income gold debentures” of the denomination of $100 each.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 716, 78 Cal. App. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-eiseman-calctapp-1926.