State Ex Rel. Mays v. Ridenhour

811 P.2d 1220, 248 Kan. 919, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 24, 1991
Docket65556
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 811 P.2d 1220 (State Ex Rel. Mays v. Ridenhour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Mays v. Ridenhour, 811 P.2d 1220, 248 Kan. 919, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 118 (kan 1991).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ALLEGRUCCI, J.:

This is an action brought by the plaintiff, Securities Commissioner of the State of Kansas (Commissioner), seeking equitable relief against the defendants under the provisions of the Kansas Securities Act, K.S.A. 17-1252 et seq. The defendants appeal from an order of the district court granting the plaintiff summary judgment and ordering the disgorgement of profits.

The Commissioner filed a civil suit in the Shawnee County District Court, alleging that some defendants, none of whom is appealing here, organized a “pyramid scheme” and that the appealing defendants materially aided in the operation of the scheme. Under K.S.A. 17-1266, the Commissioner is authorized to bring civil actions seeking equitable relief to enforce the Kansas Securities Act. The petition alleged violations of (1) K.S.A. 17-1255, which prohibits selling unregistered securities, (2) K.S.A. 17-1254, which requires securities salespersons to register, and (3) K.S.A. 17-1253, which prohibits material misstatements of fact in selling securities. The petition sought a mandatory injunction, the disgorgement of profits, the appointment of a receiver, and the production of records to allow an accounting.

After completing discovery, the Commissioner filed a motion for summary judgment on September 1, 1989, alleging violation of K.S.A. 17-1255. Defendants filed their response and motion for summary judgment on October 20, 1989. Defendants’ only response to the statement of facts contained in the Commissioner’s motion was to contest use of the term “actively solicited others,” arguing that this was a legal issue to be resolved by the court.

The trial court adopted the Commissioner’s statement of facts in its entirety, as follows:

*921 “1. During November and December of 1986, an individual named Lynn Ridenhour introduced a multi-level sales program to residents of Shawnee County and surrounding areas. This was done through meetings or seminars held at the Holiday Inn and Ramada Inn in downtown Topeka and at private residences located in and surrounding Shawnee County, Kansas.
“2. The program was called the Top Flight Success System (‘TFSS’). The TFSS program was marketed by Ridenhour on behalf of Products Management Corporation (‘PMC’), an Oklahoma corporation. PMC was organized in 1976 but remained inactive until October of 1986. Prior to 1986, Ernest Mullenax was president and a director of PMC. Mullenax’s wife, Margaret, was an original incorporator of PMC. Subsequent to October, 1986, Ridenhour was vice-president, Mullenax was director, and both were control persons of PMC.
“3. Participants joined the program by paying a $1500 entry fee. Payment of the fee entitled the payor to have his/her name placed on a chart in an entry level position as a ‘passenger.’ The charts consisted of four levels organized in a pyramid fashion. At the base of the pyramid were eight positions called ‘passengers.’ Above this in ascending order were four positions as ‘crewmen,’ two positions as ‘co-pilots,’ and one position as a ‘pilot’ at the apex. The system was metaphorically referred to as an airplane pyramid. Once eight passengers paid their money (‘boarded the airplane’), the pilot cashed out, and the remaining participants split into two new pyramids with everyone advancing one level. Each new airplane in turn recruited eight new passengers, in which event the pyramids again multiplied. Theoretically, the process continued ad infinitum. The longer the TFSS program operated, the need for passengers increased exponentially.
“4. The $1500 entry fee was paid in two checks. One check for $1250 was made payable to TFSS. A second check for $250 was made payable to PMC. The check made payable to TFSS was deposited into a TFSS account, and the money deposited was paid to the pilot of the chart the payor was entering. A pilot on a pyramid which successfully filled all eight passenger positions “cashed out” or exited the system with $10,000. PMC received $250 from every participant when they entered the program.
“5. The offer and sale of participation units in the TFSS system were ostensibly joined with two products: 1) a ‘Top Flight Vacation Card’ entitling the holder to use of a recreational facility (to be developed later by a subsidiary of PMC) for 20 weeks a year for five years, and 2) a set of motivational tapes. The value of these products was insignificant in comparison to the value of the $1500 entry fee. Participants were encouraged and did, in fact, re-enter the TFSS system multiple times. Multiple sets of vacation cards and motivational tapes were of no additional value to the participants. There is no known or demonstrable market for the products outside the TFSS network.
“6. Ridenhour, on behalf of PMC, offered and sold the participation units in TFSS in meetings or seminars as described in paragraph 1. Interested persons and participants were encouraged to bring other prospects to the *922 meetings. Prospects were encouraged to join through expectation of a short-term return of $10,000 on a $1500 investment. As a result, over 250 individuals from the Shawnee County area purchased units of participation, and many of these individuals purchased multiple units.
“7. As the program was originally structured, PMC centrally maintained investor charts and kept track of the placement of participants’ names and their movement on the various charts. As mentioned, payments to the pilots were originally made to PMC d/b/a TFSS, which then made payment to the ‘pilots’ cashing out. As the program proliferated, these arrangements broke down and individual participants kept track of the charts, and TFSS checks were endorsed over for direct payment to the ‘pilots.’
“8. There is some factual dispute as to the degree of involvement of certain defendants in actively promoting the program and soliciting others to join. However, there is no dispute that all named defendants 1) knowingly purchased participation in the TFSS program with the expectation that they would progress through the levels and ultimately ‘cash out,’ earning a significant return, 2) knowingly permitted their names to remain in the system on various charts as they progressed through the levels, 3) ‘cashed out’ as pilots and actually received payments from other participants, and 4) retained such payments.”

The district court made the following conclusions of law:

“1. The units of participation in Top Flight Success System (TFSS) are a security within the definition of K.S.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
811 P.2d 1220, 248 Kan. 919, 1991 Kan. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mays-v-ridenhour-kan-1991.