Securities and Exchange Commission v. Geotek

426 F. Supp. 715
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 11, 1976
Docket73 0819 WTS
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 426 F. Supp. 715 (Securities and Exchange Commission v. Geotek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Geotek, 426 F. Supp. 715 (N.D. Cal. 1976).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AS TO JACK BURKE DEFENDANTS AND ARTHUR YOUNG & COMPANY DEFENDANTS WITH SUMMARY OF SEPARATELY FILED SPECIFIC FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS AS TO SAID DEFENDANTS

SWEIGERT, District Judge.

After trial of the above case before the Court without a jury, the Court, having previously rendered an oral decision from the bench as to Jack Burke and the Jack Burke-controlled defendant companies which were directly involved in the JB and Geotek programs (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the Jack Burke defendants”); 1 and as to Arthur Young & Company and four individual Arthur Young & Company Certified Public Accountants (hereinafter referred to collectively as “AY”), 2 now files this Memorandum of Decision elaborating on that oral decision and including herein a summary of its separately filed “Specific Findings and Conclusions re 'Jack Burke Defendants and 'Arthur Young & Company Defendants”, with references thereto.

The Court has found against the Jack Burke defendants on some issues and in their favor on others. (See p. 728, infra).

The Court has found in favor of the Arthur Young & Company defendants on all issues. (See p. 730, infra).

BACKGROUND AND STATUS OF THE LITIGATION

For a better understanding of the issues considered in this Memorandum of Decision and in the separately filed Specific Findings and Conclusions, we first set forth a brief statement concerning the background of the case.

During the 1960’s defendant Jack Burke began to form a number of investment programs for the purpose of exploring and drilling for oil and gas. The first series of such programs were joint ventures, known as the JB-64, JB-65, JB-66, JB-67 and JB-68 Oil Exploration Programs, in which defendant JB Oil Company, a corporation owned and controlled by Jack Burke, served as manager and in turn contracted with defendant The Fundamental Oil Company (hereinafter “Fundamental”), also a corporation owned and controlled by Jack Burke, to serve as operator of the programs.

In September, 1969, an exchange offer was made pursuant to which investors in the JB-64, JB-65, JB-66 and JB-67 programs exchanged their interests in those programs for corporate shares in defendant Petroleum 2000 Corporation (hereinafter “P-2000”). In October, 1970, investors in the JB-68 program exchanged their interests in that program for corporate shares in defendant Petroforce Corporation (hereinafter Petroforce).

Since these JB programs were intended for only intra-state investment, interests in them were sold under permits obtained from the California Corporation Commissioner, without any registration with the SEC.

*723 In 1969, Burke began another series of programs which were limited partnerships and were known as the Geotek 69-1, 70-1, 70-2, 71-1 and 71-2 programs. In these programs Geotek Resources Fund, Inc., (hereinafter “GRF”), a corporation owned and controlled by Jack Burke, was named as the general partner, and it in turn contracted with GTR Management Company, Inc., (hereinafter “GTR”), a corporation also owned and controlled by Jack Burke, to serve as manager of the programs. 3 GTR, in turn, utilized Fundamental for various purposes in furthering oil and gas exploration, property acquisitions and operations on behalf of the Geotek programs. The Geotek limited partnerships were sold both within and without the State of California and were for that reason registered with the SEC.

In 1969, defendants Jack Burke and Percy Goodwin sold in the State of Washington interests in two other California limited partnerships — Hydrocarbon Associates, Ltd., (hereinafter “Hydro”) and Petro Development Associates, Ltd., (hereinafter “Petro”). In both of these programs Percy Goodwin appeared as the general partner along with the Citrix Oil Company, a corporation wholly owned and controlled by Jack Burke. In October, 1970, investors in these Hydro and Petro programs exchanged their program interests for corporate shares in defendant Washington Oil Investors, Inc., (hereinafter “Washington Oil”).

By 1971, a total of approximately $30 million had been invested by the public in these three series of programs — $12 million by 379 investors in the JB programs; $17 million by 1200 investors in the Geotek programs; $600,000 by 21 investors in the Hydro program; and $400,000 by 16 investors in the Petro program.

THE SEC INVESTIGATIONS

In January, 1970, the SEC, then having before it the matter of the clearance of certain registration materials for Geotek 69 — 1, made an order of investigation and, in the course of its investigation, concluded that the prospectus for that program did not adequately reflect Jack Burke’s previous oil and gas affiliations. This matter was soon resolved by the SEC’s acceptance of an offer from the Jack Burke defendants to issue voluntarily a modified prospectus for Geotek 69-1 and also to allow any Geotek 69-1 investor, who desired to do so, to rescind his investment.

In February, 1971, the SEC, then having before it the matter of the clearance of some proxy material prepared in connection with a proposed merger of the Geotek and other programs into corporate form with the Pacific Oil and Gas Company, made a second order of investigation and received from Jack Burke an affidavit dated January 28, 1972.

In this Jack Burke affidavit, which purported to disclose all his prior activities in the oil and gas business, Burke omitted to disclose his previous connection with four companies — Island Oil Corporation, Regent Oil Corporation, Northern Continental Petroleum Corporation and Ramada Drilling Company- — which companies he had secretly set up, and which he owned and controlled through his brother Robert Burke. Thereafter, Jack Burke caused these companies to enter into certain transactions with Fundamental in its capacity as the Jack Burke-controlled operator of the JB programs.

Shortly after receiving this Jack Burke affidavit, the SEC happened to come upon information indicating to it for the first time a possible connection between Jack Burke and the Island Oil Corporation. When the SEC asked Burke to explain this connection, Burke, on February 14, 1972, confessed to his business associates and, in effect, to the SEC, his past connection with these so-called secret companies and the fact that his SEC affidavit was false in omitting to so show.

Thereafter, at the insistence of his business associates, Burke resigned all officerships and directorships which he had held in *724 the so-called Jack Burke-controlled companies. Subsequently, but prior to the filing of the instant action, Petroforce brought suit in California State Court against Jack Burke, the four so-called secret companies and other Burke-controlled companies, alleging improper dealings by those defendants with the JB programs — a lawsuit that has not been prosecuted.

THE PENDING ACTION

In May, 1973, the SEC brought this civil action under the federal securities acts (15 U.S.C. §§ 78e

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Related

Securities And Exchange Commission v. Peter E. Aaron
605 F.2d 612 (Second Circuit, 1979)
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Paro
468 F. Supp. 635 (N.D. New York, 1979)
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Aaron
605 F.2d 612 (Second Circuit, 1979)
Sec v. Arthur Young & Co.
590 F.2d 785 (Ninth Circuit, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
426 F. Supp. 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-and-exchange-commission-v-geotek-cand-1976.