People v. Revesz

229 Ill. App. 616, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 72
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 20, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,477
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 229 Ill. App. 616 (People v. Revesz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Revesz, 229 Ill. App. 616, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 72 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, Emory R. Fodor, having been adjudged guilty of violating the Illinois Securities Law of 1919, in offering and selling certain securities defined therein as securities in class “D” without having complied with the provisions of the law relating to securities of that class, prosecutes this writ of error.

The amended information filed by the Attorney General contains substantially the following charges: that one Revesz and Fodor, of Chicago, the former being president and the latter treasurer of the Dakota Coal Mining Coiporation, did on or about March 26, 1920, in Chicago, unlawfully and wilfully then and there invite offers for certificates of share's of capital stock of that corporation by personal solicitation and otherwise, and did then and there unlawfully and wilfully offer for sale and sell 410 shares of the stock of that corporation to one Joseph Enzsol, for which he was induced to sign and transfer to the corporation four $1,000 mortgage notes, the said Emory R. Fodor and Mathias R. Fodor having previously negotiated a loan with Enzsol and received from-him $4,000 in cash, “the said notes and mortgage being assigned, transferred and delivered to said Mathias R. Revesz, as president, and Emory R. Fodor, as treasurer, of the said Dakota Coal Mining Corporation for the said company and its uses in payment of said four hundred and ten (410) shares of the treasury stock of said company, said stock and certificates of shares of the capital stock of the said Dakota Coal Mining Corporation being then and there a security, the inherent qualities of which did not then and there assure their sale and disposition without the perpetration of fraud; * * * the said stock and certificates of - shares of said corporation, * * * the inherent qualities of which, or in the nature of one or both parties to the sale thereof, did not then and there assure their sale and disposition without the perpetration of fraud; said stock and certificates of shares of said corporation being a security not then and there based on established income but being then and there a security based on prospective income and known as a security in class D as defined in and under the provisions” of an Act relating to the sale and disposition of securities; that Revesz and Emory R. Fodor and the said corporation had not first filed or caused to be filed with the Secretary of State the statements and documents required to be filed by section 9 of the aforesaid Act [Cahill’s Ill. St. ch. 32, [¶] 262], all of which it is stated was “contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and contrary to the peace and dignity of the People of the State of Illinois.”

No process was served upon the defendant Mathias B. Bevesz. The defendant, Emory B. Fodor, was arrested upon a warrant issued out of the municipal court of Chicago and pleaded not guilty to the charges contained in the information and gave bond for his appearance at the trial. There was a motion to quash, which was overruled, and, subsequently, a trial before a jury.

The evidence showed substantially the following: • The defendant, Emory B. Fodor, was, at the time of the offense in the information and prior thereto, a director and treasurer of the Dakota Coal Mining Corporation, an Indiana corporation, capitalized for $150,000. Bevesz was a director and president of that corporation. No petition or statement was ever filed for that corporation with the Secretary of the State of Illinois. The object of the Dakota Mining Corporation, according to the articles of incorporation, was to acquire by purchase, or lease, or otherwise, real estate for the purpose of prospecting for and obtaining coal and to own, maintain and operate coal mines; to sell coal at wholesale and retail, build buildings, erect structures and other buildings incident thereto and to sell coal at wholesale in the State of Indiana and other states. Its principal place of business was Gary, Indiana.

Joseph Enzsol, who lived at 6408 Langley avenue, Chicago, and had known Fodor for about five years, in the early part of November, 1919, loaned Bevesz $4,000 of his own money, and received therefor four $1,000 notes and a real estate mortgage, on a certain building situated in Gary, Indiana. The notes were signed by Bevesz and were due in three months. Sometime in January, 1920, Fodor talked with Joseph Enzsol about the coal mine property of the Dakota Coal Mining Corporation. Veronica Enzsol, wife of Joseph Enzsol, testified that Fodor, whom she had known since he was eight years old, came to their house in Chicago and spoke to her and her husband about a coal mine that was located in Dakota, advocating an investment in it, and suggested that her husband, Joseph Enzsol, should go out and look at the property with him; that they, Fodor and her husband, did go out and stayed three days and that after they came back Fodor telephoned her and asked her if she was ready to buy the shares and that she said, “If you will assure me and guarantee that they are all right I will do it.” She further testified that she bought $4,000 worth of the stock; that that was after the $4,000 mortgage had been made. She also testified that the stock that was received was company stock and, on cross-examination, when asked whose money it was that was loaned to Revesz, for which the notes were received, she answered that it belonged to her husband and herself. Further, that the original loan was for three months; that when she called to get the money back he told her that the coal business was a money making proposition. Also, that when the certificates of stock were delivered and she asked Fodor why the stock was made out in the name of Revesz, Fodor said, “Because that is the president’s name, and all stocks go that way. It is the same way, ’ ’ that Fodor told her it was company stock. She further testified, on cross-examination, that after her husband went out to North Dakota and came back, he went to Gary and got the two certificates of stock and showed them to her; that that was about March 17 or 18,1920; that he then took the notes and the mortgage out to Gary.

The evidence of her husband, Joseph Enzsol, is to the effect that, after talking the matter over with Fodor, he went to Dakota about February 21, 1920, to look at the property; that after he and Fodor came back, Fodor called him up and asked him to meet Mm in Gary; that he went ont to Fodor’s house; that Fodor took him to Bevesz’s office; that they told him “they got $40,000. I thought if they got that much money I would join.” He further testified that he got two certificates of stock which were handed to him by Bevesz for his mortgage papers; that he was told that they had the right to sell shares in this State. On that subject, the witness’ testimony is contradictory and confusing.

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Bluebook (online)
229 Ill. App. 616, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-revesz-illappct-1923.