People v. Murphy

62 P.2d 592, 17 Cal. App. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 619
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 1936
DocketCrim. 1491
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 592 (People v. Murphy) 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. Murphy, 62 P.2d 592, 17 Cal. App. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 619 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendants have appealed from judgments of conviction of the offenses of unlawfully selling shares of stock of a mining corporation without having procured a license therefor, contrary to the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act of California. (Stats. 1917, p. 673, and amendments; 2 Deering’s Gen. Laws, p. 1924, Act 3814.) They have also appealed from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

It is contended the verdicts and judgments of conviction are not supported by the evidence; that the court was guilty of prejudicial misconduct, and that it erred in admitting evidence in the course of the trial and in giving to the jury certain instructions.

The evidence is conflicting, but the following statement of facts is adequately supported by the record. The defendants are husband and wife. During all of the time involved in this transaction they resided in Stanislaus County, California. They were neither miners nor mining experts, but were engaged solely as stock brokers. In 1927, Andrew Johnson and Stephen Gardella located and owned nine adja *579 cent mining claims in Sierra County, California. Johnson and Gardella organized a California mining corporation under the name of Deadwood Mining Company, with 500,-000 shares of capital stock. They employed the defendants to market the stock of that company for the purpose of financing the enterprise. A. E. Murphy received a one-half interest in the corporation for his service. Pursuant to this employment the defendants went to San Francisco and sold stock without procuring a permit to do so from the corporation commissioner. October 9, 1928, Mr. Murphy was personally notified by a representative of the commissioner that he was violating the securities act in selling the stock without a permit, and he was directed to discontinue such sales. The defendants then visited the office of the corporation commissioner in Sacramento regarding their alleged violation of the law, and they were again warned not to sell other shares of stock of the corporation without first procuring a license as required by law. Following the advice of counsel, the defendants proceeded to organize a similar mining corporation in the state of Nevada. A. E. Murphy was elected president of the California corporation, and his wife was made secretary of that company. The Nevada corporation was organized under the same name of Deadwood Mining Company, with 250,000 shares of capital stock. A. E. Murphy as president and his wife as secretary conveyed by deed all of the property of the California corporation to the Nevada company. There was no other consideration than that transfer of title. Thirty-seven thousand shares of stock were issued by the Nevada corporation, without further consideration, to each of the following persons: A. E. Murphy, Andrew Johnson, Stephen Gardella and Mrs. Murphy. No other shares were issued in that corporation except a nominal block of 100 shares which was given to the daughter of Mrs. Murphy for the purpose of organization. By resolution duly adopted by the corporation, Mr. Murphy was constituted sole manager of the Nevada company. He and his wife subsequently purchased for a nominal consideration all of the other shares of the corporation except the 100 shares held by her daughter. Gardella died. His estate was paid $250 for his shares, and Johnson’s interest was purchased for $1,000. The defendants thereby became sole owners and controllers of the Nevada corpora- *580 t.ion. They then proceeded to sell without license from the corporation commissioner some 20,000 shares of stock at a dollar per share to purchasers in Stanislaus County, California.

. It is true that much of the stock which was sold and transferred nominally stood in the name of either Mr. or Mrs. Murphy. Some of the Johnson and Gardella stock was cancelled and other stock in lieu thereof was issued directly to purchasers. It is also true that some of the money derived from the sales of stock was used for the personal benefit of the defendants to defray their own individual expenses, such as rent and maintenance. But it appears with some conflict of evidence, that purchasers of stock were told by the defendants at the times of the sales that the money was to be used to promote the interest of the mining corporation. There is evidence from which the jury was warranted in assuming that some of the money derived from the sales of stock was actually used to promote the interest of the corporation, such as payments for property and corporation taxes; the costs of quieting title to the mining claims; the settlement of certain demands against the property; the hiring of experts; the procuring of reports upon the prospect of a successful operation of the mines, and expenses incurred by the defendants in an eastern trip, which was taken for the purpose of selling 25,000 shares of the treasury stock of the company. It appears the entire activity of the defendants was devoted to marketing the stock of the corporation in the indirect method of purporting to issue the stock to themselves and then to sell it with the claim that it was their own individual Iona fide stock. The mine was never actually developed or operated. The enterprise appears to have been conducted as a wildcat scheme to evade the law.

It is true the stock which was issued to Dr. B. A. Julien was transferred to him in payment of money formerly loaned to the defendants, a part of which money was used to promote the interest of the mining corporation as heretofore stated. Mr. Murphy attempted to sell him stock at the time when the money was borrowed, but the doctor refused to take it. He advanced to the defendants from time to time ten or fifteen thousand dollars. When he later concluded that the defendants were unable to repay his money, the doc *581 tor consented to accept 12,500 shares of stock in payment of the debt.

The appellants contend that since this stock was transferred in payment of a previous debt, the sale was not in violation of the securities act, but, on the contrary, that the transaction falls within the exception announced in section 2 (c) of the act, which declares:

“ . . . The provisions of this act shall not apply to the sale ... by or for the account of a pledgee or mortgagee selling or offering for sale or delivery in the ordinary course of business, to liquidate a bona fide debt, a security pledged in good faith as security for such debt.”

The sale of stock to Dr. Julien does not come within the previously quoted section of the act. The exemption from the general provisions of the act, therein mentioned, applies only to a person who holds stock as a pledgee, and who sells the stock pursuant to the pledge for the purpose of satisfying a previous bona fide debt for which the stock was held as security. Dr. Julien never held that stock as security for the payment of his previous loan to the defendants. The stock was never pledged or hypothecated to anyone. The consideration for the stock was the money previously loaned to the defendants, a part of which was used to promote the interest of the corporation. It is immaterial that the stock was not sold for cash at hand.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 592, 17 Cal. App. 2d 575, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-murphy-calctapp-1936.