People v. Witzerman

29 Cal. App. 3d 169, 105 Cal. Rptr. 284, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 684
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1972
DocketCiv. 38700
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 29 Cal. App. 3d 169 (People v. Witzerman) 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. Witzerman, 29 Cal. App. 3d 169, 105 Cal. Rptr. 284, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 684 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion

COBEY, J.

Appellants, Joe Witzerman, John Sarver and William S. Eichelberger, appeal from a judgment enjoining them and other persons from, among other things, offering for sale and selling certain cattle care contracts and making or causing to be made certain untrue and misleading statements in connection therewith. The judgment also subjects them and three defaulted defendants, 1 Ranchland Management, Inc., De B. Forslund and Dorothy C. Forslund, jointly and severally, to a civil penalty of $50,000.

The judgment was entered in an action brought by the Attorney General and the Commissioner of Corporations pursuant to Business and Professions Code sections 17535 and 17536 (civil sanctions against false advertising) and former Corporations Code section 26101 (injunction against violation of Corporate Securities Law). Appellants contend that the penalty portion of the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons: (1) they were denied their constitutional right toi a trial by jury; (2) the contracts were not secúrities within the meaning of Corporations Code section 25008; (3) Business and Professions Code sections 17500 and 17536 are unconstitutionally vague; (4) section 17536 is unconstitutional since it imposes penal sanctions without providing the constitutional safeguards requisite for criminal due process; (5) the trial court erroneously interpreted the penalty provisions of section 17536; (6) essential findings of statutory violation are not supported by substantial evidence. We disagree and affirm.

Facts

Around November 15, 1965 defendant Forslund suggested to appellant Eichelberger, an advertising salesman for the Sarver and Witzerman Advertising Agency in Long Beach, and to' appellants Sarver and Witzerman, the two partners owning and operating the agency, that they become the exclusive worldwide agents for him and his family-owned and controlled corporation, Ranchland Management, Inc. (which did business as Saddle *174 Butte Ranch), to sell cattle care contracts to the public. For some two years Forslund, under such contracts, had been engaged in raising cattle owned by others on his Saddle Butte Ranch at Princeton, Oregon. The advertising agency had prepared for him in 1963, on the basis of material submitted by him, an advertising brochure and was then revising the brochure.

Sarver, Witzerman and Eichelberger were intrigued by the idea and a week or so later took an overnight trip to the ranch to verify some of the things that Forslund had told them about his operation. He showed them deeds, leases, contracts and options to purchase covering about 13,000 acres (a total they verified). He also had them check out a long list of ranch equipment. Neither Sarver, Witzerman. nor Eichelberger had any background or training whatever in. the business of cattle production and marketing. They tried to familiarize themselves with the business through contacting a professor in the field, the editor of one of the principal trade publications, and reading some governmental pamphlets. They failed, however, to make any real credit check on Forslund or on the financial condition of his operation and they likewise failed to determine whether the ranch actually had the resources in feed to' accomplish the cattle care program he was asking them to sell.

This program offered persons of moderate means the opportunity to enjoy the long-term profits and income tax advantages of the cattle raising business by a single investment of $500 or $600 for a cow and a. calf to be raised on Saddle Butte Ranch by Forslund. 2 Under the cattle care contracts the proceeds from the annual sale of the calf crop belonging to the purchaser of a contract would be divided between him and Forslund over a six-year period. At the end of the six years the purchaser of such a contract could expect a five-fold increase in the size of his herd without any further investment beyond his original $500 or $600.

On November 29, 1965 the newly formed partnership of Sarver, Witzerman and Eichelberger signed a worldwide exclusive sales agency agreement with Forslund to sell his cattle care contracts for him under the name of Saddle Butte Ranch of Long Beach. The sales agency recruited a sales force and the advertising agency then prepared, for subsequent use the necessary sales literature from the material that Forslund submitted to it.

The ensuing campaign of appellants to sell the cattle care contracts in *175 California lasted for approximately six months. During the campaign Sarver devoted over one-half of his time to the management of the sales agency. Witzerman spent only about 10 percent of his time on the work of the sales agency but did do and direct the work that the advertising agency did for the sales agency in preparing the sales literature used in the campaign. Eichelberger, who had been a salesman all of his adult civilian life, became the full time sales manager for the sales agency and trained (with the help of Forslund) and directed a sales force of some eight to nine persons plus a few franchisees.

Some 152 cattle care contracts were sold in California by the sales agency between December 13, 1965, and June 16, 1966. Total receipts from these sales amounted to $220,705, including perhaps $5,000 for the sale of four franchises; $96,740.62 was spent in the purchase of cows and calves to be raised on the Saddle Butte Ranch under the cattle care contracts. The total sales commissions realized on these sales by the sales agency amounted to $91,500. Of this sum the franchisees and salesmen received $40,340.03.

Within a month or so of the signing of the sales agency agreement, Sarver, Witzerman and Eichelberger discovered that Forslund was substantially in arrears on his ranch bills and the advertising agency began advancing him money to pay these bills, to pay off a mortgage on the land where the ranch house itself was located, and to pay off a note of approximately $20,000 on much of his equipment which had been seized by one of his neighbors on his default on the note. In all, in the next few months the advertising agency loaned Forslund $33,868.09. In addition, in order to keep the ranch going and to expand its facilities sufficiently to accommodate the increase in the number of cattle being raised on the ranch from less than approximately 150 head to at least 600 to 700 head or more, the sales agency advanced him $51,158.97, which was all of the commissions the agency itself received in the course of the sales campaign. 3 Forslund repaid only $100 of these loans and advances.

Meanwhile, on February 16, 1966, the California. Corporations Commissioner issued a desist and refrain order directing Sarver and Witzerman, among others, in effect, to stop selling the cattle care contracts in California. This order was promptly served upon both Sarver and Witzerman. Eichelberger apparently promptly learned of its contents. But the three appellants, on the advice of the attorney they then consulted, did not comply with the order. Instead their sales campaign in California continued with an imma *176 terial change in the form of the cattle care contracts offered for sale and some revision of their sales literature.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Cal. App. 3d 169, 105 Cal. Rptr. 284, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-witzerman-calctapp-1972.