Scherer v. State

95 N.W.2d 329, 168 Neb. 127, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 9
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1959
Docket34518
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 95 N.W.2d 329 (Scherer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scherer v. State, 95 N.W.2d 329, 168 Neb. 127, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 9 (Neb. 1959).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

An information filed by the State in the district court for Cuming County charged defendants, Warren M. Scherer and Ralph R. Neudeck, with violations: of what is known and cited as the Blue-Sky Law. The information contained nine separate counts involving six separate transactions in which designated securities were alleged to have been willfully and unlawfully sold by defendants to named persons, without the sale of such securities having been authorized by the Department of Banking, hereinafter called the department, and without defendants having secured from said department permits to do business as brokers or salesmen.

In that connection, counts I, V, and VIII separately charged that on designated dates defendants willfully and unlawfully sold described securities to named persons without the sale of such securities having been authorized by the department. Counts II and VI separately charged that on designated dates defendants willfully and unlawfully sold described securities without *128 having secured from the department permits to do business as brokers or salesmen. On the other hand, counts III, VII, and IX separately charged that on designated dates defendant, Warren M. Scherer, willfully and unlawfully sold described securities to named persons without the sale of such securities having been authorized by the department, and count IV separately charged that on a designated date defendant, Warren M. Scherer, willfully and unlawfully sold described securities without having secured from the department a permit to do business as a broker or salesman.

Defendants first filed separate pleas in abatement, but demurrers thereto were sustained, and thereafter defendants were each duly arraigned and entered pleas of not guilty. At all times here involved they were represented by able counsel.

Thereafter, defendants were tried jointly by consent to a jury. At conclusion of the State’s case, defendants’ separate motions for directed verdicts of not guilty were overruled, as were renewals thereof made at conclusion of all the evidence.

After submission of the issues to the jury by instructions, of which no complaint is made, two verdicts- were returned. One such verdict found defendant, Warren M. Scherer, guilty as charged in each and all of the nine counts. The other verdict found defendant, Ralph R. Neudeck, guilty as charged in counts I, II, V, VI, and VIII. Such verdicts were duly read and received, and the court fixed bail bond of $5,000 for each defendant pending the filing and pendency of motions for new trial. Such motions for new trial were duly filed and overruled, whereupon judgments of conviction were rendered against each defendant, and thereafter a hearing was held with regard to the character of sentence to be imposed. Thereat both defendants and the State adduced evidence from which it appeared without dispute that defendants had each theretofore been convicted of a felony and had served time in prison therefor, and that *129 each defendant had theretofore or thereafter been charged with other offenses, in some of which they had been convicted and others were still pending.

After being so advised, the court imposed sentence. In that connection, defendant Warren M. Scherer was ordered to pay a fine of $1,000 on count II, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the Nebraska State Penitentiary for 5 years on each of the nine counts upon which he was found guilty, said sentences to run concurrently. Also, defendant Ralph R. Neudeck was ordered to pay a fine of $1,000 on count II, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the Nebraska State Penitentiary for a period of 5 years on each of counts I, II, V, VI, and VIII, upon which he was found guilty, said sentences to run concurrently. Also, each defendant was ordered to pay the costs of prosecution. Thereupon, each defendant filed notice of application for writ of error, and applied for suspension of sentences and the fixing of bail bond pending disposition of error proceedings. Such applications were granted and bail bond for each defendant was fixed at $5,000, which they provided. Thereafter, defendants timely prosecuted error to this court.

In that connection, defendants’ joint brief assigned as error only that: “The District Court of Cuming County, Nebraska, erred in excluding evidence and the stipulations in reference to the application form for qualifying a security under the Blue Sky Law, Exhibit 19, the application form for securing a license as a broker, Exhibit 20, and application form for securing a salesman’s permit, Exhibit 21, and in excluding such exhibits and in overruling the plaintiffs’ in error offers of proof in relation thereto.” We do not sustain the assignment.

Defendants do not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdicts of guilty rendered against them or the reasonableness of the sentences imposed upon them. In such respect, there is ample evidence in this record that the sales of securities were made *130 as alleged; that such securities were not exempt under the provisions of the Blue-Sky Law; that the sale of such securities had not been authorized by the department; and that defendants never had any permit from the department to do business as brokers or salesmen. As a matter of fact, it was stipulated that no form of application was ever made or filed with the department for authority qualifying the sale of such securities and that defendants never made or filed any form of application with the department for a permit to do business as brokers or salesmen.

Defendants’ affirmative defense, except as hereinafter mentioned, was primarily that the securities sold by them were exempt from provisions of the Blue-Sky Law, which fact they sought to establish only by cross-examination of a witness for the State. In that connection, such issue was submitted to the jury in a manner favorable to defendants, and no complaint is made thereof.

On the other hand, defendants’ counsel by cross-examination of the assistant director of the department, and by calling him as their own witness, attempted to prove and offered to prove substantially the following: That the department had prepared exhibit 19, a form of application for qualification of securities; exhibit 20, a form of application for registration as brokers; and exhibit 21, a form of application for salesman permit. In that respect, it was stipulated, subject to objection, that none of such forms had been filed in the office of the Secretary of State. Defendants also offered said exhibits in evidence, and offered to prove that in order to qualify a security for sale, an applicant would be required to complete and file exhibit 19 under oath; that an applicant for registration as a broker would be required to complete and file exhibit 20 under oath; and that an applicant for a salesman’s permit would be compelled to complete and file exhibit 21 under oath. All such evidence, except the stipulation that defendants *131 filed no applications, was excluded upon objections by the State that it was immaterial.

Defendants’ contention with regard thereto was in substance that the forms in question were rules and regulations, which, under the provisions of section 84-902, R. R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.W.2d 329, 168 Neb. 127, 1959 Neb. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scherer-v-state-neb-1959.