Securities & Exchange Commission v. Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining Co.

167 F. Supp. 248, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3410
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedOctober 7, 1958
DocketC-58-58
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 167 F. Supp. 248 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining Co., 167 F. Supp. 248, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3410 (D. Utah 1958).

Opinion

CHRISTENSON, District Judge.

This is an action brought by the Securities & Exchange Commission, hereinafter referred to as “SEC”, to enjoin the defendants from making use of any means or instruments of communication or transportation in interstate commerce or of the mails for selling or delivering the stock of Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining Company, or other securities, in violation of Section 5, of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77e.

The defendants Charles Pennington and N. R. Real were not served. Injunctions already have been entered against Charles E. Collins and James B. Boren by consent. The remaining defendants Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining Company, a Utah corporation, Jean R. Veditz Co., Inc., a New York corporation and R. B. Gravis, Inc., a New York corporation, have contested the plaintiff’s claims. The corporate defendants last mentioned will be referred to respectively as “Mono-Kearsarge”, “Veditz Co.”, and “Gravis, Inc.”

Basic and largely undisputed facts are these:

In the fall of 1957, the defendant Mono-Kearsarge was in financial difficulty. Boren approached its president, Alonzo Mackay, and proposed a plan which in the latter’s view promised to breathe life into the company. Boren was to transfer to Mono-Kearsarge certain oil and gas interests, and to enlist the support of other individuals and dealers in promoting the company. In return he and his nominees were to receive 51% of the corporation’s outstanding stock. To effectuate this plan, and as a part thereof, the company by mail and personal contact solicited its shareholders to donate to it 51% of the stock held by them. In response to this request, a total of 962,000 shares was received by the company. This amount did not comprise 51% of the outstanding stock, so from its authorized but unissued capital the company issued an additional 250,000 shares to make up at least a majority control. On December 10, 1957 this total of 1,212,000 shares was transferred to Boren and his nominees in return for the oil and gas interests.

During the first part of 1958, Boren and his associates commenced distributing the 962,000-share block to the public. The distribution was accomplished primarily by delivering the stock through a New York attorney, Sidney B. Josephson, to the defendant Pennington who resided in Canada. The latter, and persons connected with him, transferred a substantial portion to the defendants Veditz Co. and Gravis, Inc., who are securities dealers in New York City registered with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The defendant Real and one Benjamin Goldstein helped to interest the dealers in the stock. Real and Goldstein were among the persons nominated by Boren to take stock out of the 962,000-share block. Goldstein worked for Veditz Co. and was acquainted in a business way with Gravis, Inc. Jean R. *252 Veditz, the managing officer and beneficial owner of Veditz Co., and R. B. Gravis, who occupied a similar position with his company, were not acquainted personally prior to the institution of this action. Veditz Co. and Gravis, Inc. procured through Pennington and his associates in Canada totals of 436,000 and 657,000 shares, respectively, including the greater part of the 962,000-share block, and sold substantially all of these to numerous investors in various parts of the United States by using the mails to deliver advertising brochures and stock certificates, and by long distance telephone calls to promote and arrange sales.

The stock was not registered with the Securities & Exchange Commission in accordance with the Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77f.

Mono-Kearsarge contends that the transaction whereby the 962,000-share block was delivered to Boren and his nominees was exempt under 15 U.S.C.A. § 77d(l) as a transaction “by an issuer not involving any public offering.” Securities and Exchange Commission v. Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S. 119, 73 S.Ct. 981, 97 L.Ed. 1494.

Let it be granted for the purpose of this discussion that if in good faith the corporation, as issuer, transferred stock to Boren and a limited number of persons designated by him because of consideration furnished by some of them to the corporation and because of the continuing interest of all of them as long-term investors in the success of the corporation, a private offering under the surface indications of this case would be indicated. Such investors with such special knowledge of, and interest in, the corporation and in view of such continuing connection, could well be considered a class able to fend for itself in a transaction not involving any public offering within the doctrine of Securities and Exchange Commission v. Ralston Purina Co., supra.

If known to the company, or under circumstances reasonably placing" it on notice, however, Mono-Kearsarge transferred stock to persons, however limited in number or well informed, who did not intend to treat it as investment, stock but who claimed the right of immediate redistribution to the public and who actually made such redistribution, I am of the opinion that the company must be held to have acted at its periL Under the latter circumstances it properly could not claim by virtue of the mere form of the transaction that a. private, rather than a public, offering-was involved. If this were otherwise,, the prohibitions of the Act without warrant would be made pusillanimous and' futile to accomplish the purposes intended by Congress. In such event, an issuer with impunity, through a limited' group and by a transaction private in form only, for its own benefit and for such consideration as it might exact, could distribute to the public whatever quantities of stock it desired without protection to the public contemplated by law. Neither an issuer nor an underwriter may separate parts of a series, of related transactions the totality of which is designed and known to constitute an unlimited offer and rely only upon that part which in form indicates-that the offering was private.

It becomes important, therefore, to-determine whether Mono-Kearsarge had reason in good faith to believe that. Boren and his nominees were taking the stock as investors without the purpose-of making an immediate public distribution, as contended by Mono-Kearsarge, or whether it knew that Boren considered the stock “free” and intended to make public distribution, as it. turned out that he actually did.

The basic requirement is that registration must occur before any security is-offered or sold unless there is involved either an exempt security or an exempt transaction.

The burden of proof is upon the person claiming an exemption to show that it applies. On the point of discussion, not only did Mono-Kearsarge fail to discharge this burden, but on the record before the Court it is clearly es *253 tablished that it had reason to know, and did know before it made the transfers in question, that Boren recognized no limitation upon retransfer and that he took it under circumstances which made this consequence the natural, if not the inevitable, one.

In his deposition Boren attempted to support the private investment theory by saying he wanted to help “this little company” merely for the possibility of some long-term realization on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
167 F. Supp. 248, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-exchange-commission-v-mono-kearsarge-consolidated-mining-co-utd-1958.