People v. Kuder

276 P. 578, 98 Cal. App. 206, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 582
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1929
DocketDocket No. 1757.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 276 P. 578 (People v. Kuder) 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. Kuder, 276 P. 578, 98 Cal. App. 206, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 582 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

This case was before us on motion to dismiss an appeal by the People (People v. Kuder et al., 90 Cal. App. 594 [266 Pac. 337]), and upon the merits of that appeal, the same being from an order granting a motion in arrest of judgment (People v. Kuder et al., 93 Cal. App. 42 [269 Pac. 198; Id., 93 Cal. App. 55 [269 Pac. 630]).

It appears that during the month of July, 1925, a corporation named Fishelton Farms, Incorporated, was incorporated under the laws of this state by J. M. Kuder, Edward B. Fishel, U. R. Fishel, C. G. Luke and Stephen Bedford, appellant herein. In August of the same year, by a petition verified by J. M. Kuder, filed with the commissioner of corporations, it was recited among other things that the corporation was organized with a capital stock of $25,000, divided into 250 shares of the par value of $100 each, which the incorporators agreed to subscribe and pay for in cash, and prayed leave to issue and sell the whole thereof to said incorporators at par, without payment of brokerage. A permit was thereafter issued, authorizing Fishelton Farms, Inc., a California corporation, to sell and issue to its five incorporators an aggregate of 250 shares of its capital stock at par, for cash, so as to net the applicant the full amount of the selling price thereof.

The appellant and his co-incorporators were subsequently indicted by the grand jury of San Bernardino County, and charged with having violated the Corporate Securities Act, a felony. Specifically, they were alleged to have wilfully, unlawfully,' knowingly, fraudulently and feloniously authorized and directed and aided in the issue and sale of, and caused and assisted in causing to be issued, executed and sold, 246 shares of the capital stock of said corporation, *209 without paying, remitting or delivering to the corporation, or demanding, obtaining or receiving for and on its behalf, or paying, remitting or delivering thereto, cash, so as to net it the full amount of the selling price of said shares as provided by the terms of the permit, with intent to avoid and violate the terms thereof, contrary to the uses and purposes to which the petition of the applicant had represented to the commissioner of corporations that the proceeds of sale should be applied. Briefly stated, the grand jury charged the defendants with having issued to themselves $24,600 worth of corporate stock without paying anything therefor, but for which they agreed as a basis for obtaining a permit, and were accordingly directed to pay to the corporation full cash value at par. Pursuant to a trial upon the foregoing charges, a verdict was returned reciting that “the jury in the above entitled action, find the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment.” The trial court, following the proceedings therein and in the appellate tribunals, as above recited, ruled that: “This is not a felony. They are guilty of a misdemeanor. They are not guilty of n felony. . . . I think the law is clear enough that the penalty determines the degree of the crime,” and assessed a fine of $500 in each instance, with the alternative of being imprisoned in the county jail one day for each $2 thereof. The defendant Stephen Bedford appealed “from the order . . . denying his motion for a new trial, and from the judgment rendered in this cause.”

The appellant’s argument is premised by quoting the indictment as a “statement of the offense,” and a presentation of certain exhibits introduced upon the trial which it is asserted constitute all of the evidence against him. The exhibits in their numerical order, as introduced by the People consist of the following: (1) A book entry showing assets in the nature of a poultry business in Indiana inventoried at $34,990, and one in California inventoried at $33,319.64; liabilities $23,869.46, surplus $44,440.18; and reciting that the poultry business was purchased from J. M. Kuder for $25,000 by Fishelton Farms, Inc., whose entire authorized capital stock of $25,000 was sold to the five incorporators for cash, with the agreement that the corporation should pay the liabilities above mentioned, all “as set forth in the following balance sheet,” which latter does *210 not exist. (2) Certain book entries showing credits to- the corporation by issuance of stock, $24,600 to Kuder, and $100 to each of the other incorporators, with corresponding debits of like amounts appearing as cash in bank received from the same persons on the same date. Also entries, “Purchase price $24,600,” “Stephen Bedford, legal services, $100,” and $100 to each of the other incorporators for services rendered. (3) Stock journal, showing stock certificates issued, of which appellant received one share. (4) Minutes of directors’ meeting, authorizing purchase of certain real and personal property from Kuder at $24,600 cash and promissory note of $12,000, and payments for services above noted. (5) Stock certificate book showing issuance of said shares. (6) Articles of incorporation. (7) Application of the corporation for permit, and (8) the permit, to issue stock. (11) Five bank checks in favor of Kuder in the sum of $24,600, and $100 each to the other incorporators. (12) Ledger sheet, bearing entries to account of the corporation of a deposit of $25,000 on September 30, 1925, and issuance on the same date of the checks last mentioned, leaving “Balance .00,” and deposit to the company’s credit on October 2, 1925, of $6.10. (13) Loose leaf ledger sheet account of Stephen Bedford, consisting of a deposit September 30, 1925, of $100, and corresponding withdrawal of the same amount by check on the same date, leaving “Balance, .00.” (14, 15, 16) Like accounts of others of the incorporators, including J. M. Kuder, “deposit $24,600, checks $24,600, balance .00,” on September 30, 1925. (17) “San Bernardino Valley Bank, Deposit of Fishelton Farms, Inc.,” deposit slip of the same date last mentioned, of checks received from the incorporators, four of $100 each, and one of $24,600. (18, 19, 20, 21, 22) Five individual deposit slips, showing deposits in the same bank on the same date to their respective private accounts of similar amounts, including “Stephen Bedford 9-30-25 Check $100.00.”

The case was prosecuted upon the theory that as to appellant herein, a certificate for one share of stock for which he was required by the permit to pay cash, was issued to him; that he deposited in an account wherein he had no funds, a cheek of the corporation for $100 which his co-incorporators issued against its account which had no funds, and that appellant in turn gave to the corporation as an ostensible *211 payment for his share of stock a personal check for $100, which merely offset the worthless check of the corporation. In short, it was contended by the People, and the evidence strongly tends to show without contradiction, that the whole purpose of the incorporators was to mulct the corporation of the entire issue of $25,000 in capital stock without payment of one dollar of cash or credit. The purported entries tend to indicate that appellant received $100 by check for legal services in incorporating the Pishelton Farms, Inc., which he deposited in its bank, and immediately checked out in its favor for his one share of capital stock.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P. 578, 98 Cal. App. 206, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kuder-calctapp-1929.