People v. Main

242 P. 1078, 75 Cal. App. 471, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1219.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 242 P. 1078 (People v. Main) 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. Main, 242 P. 1078, 75 Cal. App. 471, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 67 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

CRAIG, J.

The defendant and appellant was charged by indictment in the county of Los Angeles with having violated the Corporate Securities Act. It was alleged in four counts *473 thereof that on the respective dates therein mentioned he sold and issued shares of the capital stock of a corporation which had not obtained a permit to issue or sell its stock; and in a fifth count that without first having obtained a permit or license so to do, from the commissioner of corporations, he engaged in the business of selling shares of the stock of the same corporation on the dates specified in the first four counts. General and special demurrers were interposed, which were overruled, and the defendant was convicted by a jury upon each of said counts. Motion for a new trial was thereafter presented and overruled, and this is an appeal from the judgment and the ruling upon said motion.

The charging part of the first four counts of the indictment to which exception was taken by demurrer and which constitutes the basis of attack here, alleged that “the said P. L. Main did then and there wilfully, unlawfully, knowingly and feloniously, and for a valuable consideration, sell and issue, and aid and abet some person or persons to complainant unknown in selling and issuing to one Carrie Bowman” certain shares of the capital stock of the Southern Oregon Oil and Gas Company, a corporation. It is said that inasmuch as none of the counts alleged that the stock was not the privately owned property of the defendant, each count failed to charge a public offense; that he might lawfully sell his own stock, and that in this respect the alleged sales would fall within an exception to the penal provisions of the act. It is doubtless true that the statute in question does not attempt to prohibit one from selling his privately owned corporate securities without a permit or license, provided his transactions do not bring him within the classification of “dealer,” or “broker.” (In re Lamb, 61 Cal. App. 321 [215 Pac. 109].) However, the indictment need not negative such exception, for it formed no part of the definition of the offense. (People v. Jevne, 179 Cal. 621 [178 Pac. 517]; People v. Cencevich, 64 Cal. App. 39, 44 [220 Pac. 448].) Another ground of demurrer, that the indictment failed to state by whom the stock was owned, or that it was not owned by the defendant, was directed at the fifth count; and in connection with both grounds it is insisted that there was no evidence tending to show the facts as to which the indictment is said to be silent. The principles *474 above stated apply to these criticisms, and we think that further discussion of the matter is not necessary.

The most serious point raised is that there is an entire lack of proof to support the allegation that the Southern Oregon Oil and Gas Company was a corporation having a capital stock. The indictment alleged in that behalf that “the Southern Oregon Oil and Gas Company was then and there a corporation having a capital stock”; that it had no permit to issue, nor did the defendant have a permit to sell, such stock; that said stock was a “security,” and that “the crime of violation of the corporate securities act, a felony, was committed by the said P. L. Main,” in that he did wilfully, unlawfully, knowingly, and feloniously, for a valuable consideration, sell and issue shares of the capital stock of said corporation.

“The securities which may not be issued or sold without the permission of the corporation commissioner are the ‘shares, or other interests or rights, into which the . . . property of companies ... or rights of . . . members thereof are divided, . . . and all certificates and other instruments issued by them or their authority, evidencing or representing such shares, interests or rights’; also ‘any instrument issued or offered to the public by any company’ evidencing any right to participate in the profits or earnings or the distribution of assets of any business carried on for profit by the company.” (In re Lamb, 61 Cal. App. 321, 331 [215 Pac. 109].)

The evidence offered by the People to prove the existence of the corporation was the testimony of witnesses that the defendant represented it to have been incorporated, and exhibited prospectuses, printed subscription contracts, and purported stock certificates, which’ were introduced at the trial, and that he had in his possession a book of printed stock certificates, all of which bore the name of the purported corporation. It is urged by the prosecution that, in view of the evidence referred to above, had this been a civil action the defendant would have been estopped to deny that the Southern Oregon Oil and Gas Company was a corporation, and further proof of that allegation would have been unnecessary.

Comparatively few criminal cases are to be found in the books where the facts create a situation permitting the ap *475 plication of the doctrine of estoppel. However, we are referred to several embezzlement cases where estoppel has been invoked against a defendant. In both People v. Hedley, 31 Cal. 108, and People v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226 [10 Pac. 502], the defendants were held estopped to deny that the relationship of principal and agent existed between them and the persons whose principals they had respectively held themselves out to represent, and thus secured the money in question. In People v. Leonard, 106 Cal. 302 [39 Pac. 617], the defendant was not allowed to deny that the corporation whose agent he had admittedly been was such corporation. Other cases to the same or similar import might be mentioned. In People v. Royce, 106 Cal. 173 [37 Pac. 630, 39 Pac. 524], language is contained in the opinion to the effect that the defendant, having received a draft, a part of the proceeds of which he was charged with having embezzled, could not be permitted to say that he was not authorized to receive the money as treasurer of a certain association, or that the association was not entitled to it, or that the draft was not a valid one. While these and a few other examples are to be found in which the rule of estoppel has been invoked against a defendant in a criminal action, the extreme infrequency of such instances suggests caution in extending its application. We are accustomed, in criminal cases, to regard the presumption of innocence as universally placing the burden of proof upon the People to establish every essential element of the offense charged, beyond a reasonable doubt. In none of the opinions which we have examined upholding the application of the rule of estoppel is any reference made to the presumption of innocence or the fact that a plea of not guilty is in itself a denial of every element involved in the charge to which that plea is entered. In fact, in none of these decisions is there to be found more than the statement of a conclusion that under the circumstances considered the defendant could not be heard to deny the fact as to which he was held estopped, with the further intimation, in certain instances, that to hold otherwise would be inequitable and place a premium on dishonesty.

It is true that the rules of evidence are generally the same in criminal and civil cases. (Pen. Code, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 1078, 75 Cal. App. 471, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-main-calctapp-1925.