State v. . Agey

88 S.E. 726, 171 N.C. 831, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 3, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 88 S.E. 726 (State v. . Agey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Agey, 88 S.E. 726, 171 N.C. 831, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 192 (N.C. 1916).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

Tbe defendant is indicted under Rev., 4805, and cb. 196, Laws 1911, and cb. 156, Laws 1913, being sec. 4805a of “Gregory’s Supplement” (amending said Rev., 4805), known as tbe “Blue-sky Law.”

Upon the special verdict tbe court was of opinion that tbe defendant was guilty, and tbe jury so found, and from tbe judgment thereon tbe defendant appealed.

*832 The special verdict finds that the foreign corporation represented by the defendant is authorized under the laws of the State of Tennessee to buy and sell real estate, and that it has bought la'rge tracts of land in Tatnall County, Georgia, which it has divided, and is selling these tracts of land for fig orchards, and, in some instances, is contracting to furnish and set out fig trees on said tracts for a stipulated period of time, and has not obtained a license so to do of our Insurance Commissioner.

The indictment and the special verdict, which are set out in full, present two questions:

1. Whether such contract is within the provisions of the statute.

2. If so, is the statute invalid as a regulation of interstate commerce ?

As to the first proposition, ch. 196, Laws 1911: “Before any bond, investment, dividend, guarantee, registry, title guarantee, debenture, or such other like company (not strictly an insurance company as defined in this chapter), or any individual, corporation, or copartnership who shall be agents, offer for sale or sell the stocks, bonds, or obligations of any foreign corporation, whether organized or to be organized or being promoted, shall be authorized to do business in this State, it must be licensed by the Insurance Commissioner, which the Commissioner is authorized to do when he is satisfied that such company or corporation is safe and solvent and has complied with the laws of this State applicable to fidelity companies and governing their admission and supervision by the Insurance Department. If such company is chartered and organized in this State and has its home office within the State it may, if a stock company, commence business with a capital stock of twenty-five thousand dollars, provided it is solvent to the extent of not less than fifteen thousand dollars. The license issued to such companies and their agents shall be issued and paid for as provided for those of insurance companies.”

Gregory’s Supplement, sec. 4805a, subsec. 1 (ch. 156, Laws 1913), provides: “Every corporation, company, copartnership or association, all of which are in this act termed company, organized, proposed to be organized, or which shall hereafter be organized without this State, whether incorporated or unincorporated, which shall in this State sell or negotiate for sale any stocks, bonds, or other evidences of property, or interest in itself or any other company, all of which are in this act termed securities, upon which sale or proposed sale the whole or any part of the proceeds are used, or to be used, directly or indirectly, for the payment of any commission or other expenses incidental to the organization or promotion of any such company shall be subject to this act.”

The question, therefore, is whether the company represented by the defendant is an "investment” company, or whether the defendant was offering for sale the “obligation of any foreign corporation,” within the *833 meaning of section 4805, or whether the defendant, as the agent of the foreign corporation, was offering for sale in this State “evidences of property, or interest in itself or any other company,” within the meaning of section 4805a.

In addition to the parts of the special verdict referred to, it appears from the exhibit, which was made a part of the special verdict, that in an application of a prospective purchaser the following stipulations appear:

“In event of death of purchaser hereof, warranty deed will be delivered to his or her estate, provided payments are not in arrears.”
“The company guarantees to scientifically develop, cultivate) prune, and take care of said orchard plot or plots for five years, and, upon completion of the payments as above set forth, to make, execute, and deliver to the purchaser hereof a general warranty deed for the number of plots mentioned above, which shall have at that time 200 living trees thereon.” And “The company guarantees the purchaser hereof 3 cents per pound for all fruit grown on said trees delivered at the preserving plant in good condition.”

It will be apparent from the facts set out in the special verdict that the contract offered by the defendant for his company comes within at least three provisions of the statute.

It is an “investment company” offering to the public an investment in lands and fig orchards in Georgia. It is also offering the “obligations of said corporation” to cultivate said land, and giving its contract to make title on compliance with certain terms; and, lastly, it is offering for sale, within the terms of Laws 1913, eh. 156, such “evidences of property.” Under all three of these provisions it is within the scope of the act.

This transaction took place entirely within the State of North Carolina, and is subject to the police power of this State. There can be no interstate commerce unless, as a part of the transaction, there is in contemplation some act of transportation between two or more States. In this case the defendant was selling to a citizen of this State an obligation to make title to real estate in Georgia, and, upon compliance with the terms therein stated, to make title to a certain small lot of land in Georgia. There is nothing to be transported either from this State to Georgia or from Georgia to this State. There is no element of interstate commerce involved. Paul v. Virginia, 75 U. S. (8 Wall.), 168, at p. 183.

The intent of the statute is to protect our people, under the police power, from fraud and imposition by irresponsible nonresident parties. These instances have been so frequent that the U. S. Postoffice Depart *834 ment has estimated that the people of this country have been losing annually more than one hundred millions of dollars by speculative schemes which have no more substantial basis than so many feet of “blue sky.”

To prevent such impositions on its people is an essential duty of government. If there is fraud and imposition in a case of this kind the parties imposed on can rarely go to Georgia and hunt up the guilty party, even if to be found there, and undergo the expense incident thereto. Even if this could be done, there would rarely be any assets which could be applied to the demands of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.E. 726, 171 N.C. 831, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-agey-nc-1916.