State v. Robbins

240 N.W. 456, 185 Minn. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 22, 1932
DocketNo. 28,676.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 456 (State v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Robbins, 240 N.W. 456, 185 Minn. 202 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Olsen, J.

Defendant Avas convicted of the crime of selling unregistered and unlicensed securities in violation of L. 1925, p. 197, c. 192, as amended, 1 Mason, 1927, §§ 3996-1 to 1000. He appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a neAV trial.

The claimed securities sold Avere in the form of contracts made by the Ten Thousand Lakes Fur Farms Corporation. The defendant Avas the president of this corporation and signed the contracts. He is charged with selling a set of two of these contracts to one Arthur J. F. Schmidt on February 8, 1927. It is not claimed that the contracts Avere registered and licensed as securities under the laAV cited.

The indictment is not seriously questioned on argument here. But it is urged that the evidence as a matter of laAV fails to prove the guilt of the defendant of the crime charged; in other Avords, that the evidence does not sustain the verdict of guilty.

The indictment sets out in full the two contracts in question, alleges the sale thereof to Schmidt by defendant and one O’Malley; that the contracts were not registered as required by law; that they were sold in the course of repeated and successive sales of like contracts and were sales of an interest in and under a profit-sharing and participating agreement and scheme, defined as securities under the law. It is urged that the two contracts do not constitute a sale of an interest in or under a profit-sharing and participating agreement or scheme so as to come within the definition of a security as given in the law in question.

*204 The first contract purports to be for a sale of “Two ‘Breeding Trios,’ each Trio consisting of one male and two female dark northern muskrats.” The price to be paid was $75 cash on execution of the contract and $75 additional in monthly payments of $10 each month thereafter until fully paid. The contract provides for the delivery of the animals sold to the purchaser at such time and place as may be designated by him, within 12 months from date of the contract. It then further provides that the purchaser may at his option require the seller to deliver the animals to the Pine River Colony of the corporation, to be there kept and cared for in accordance with the terms of the corporation’s breeding contract for said Pine River Colony. The contract is silent as to where the animals are located and contains no description by which the ones sold could be identified. Title to any specific animal could not Avell pass until delivered, or at least segregated. It is reasonably apparent that the purchasers of these “breeding trios” Avere not expected to go into the business themselves of raising muskrats, and that the important part of the sale was the “Breeding Contract,” to be given by the corporation upon completion of the payments on the first contract. This breeding contract, one of which the purchaser, Schmidt, received after he had completed his payments, provides that the corporation shall place the two breeding trios purchased on its breeding grounds knoAvn as Pine River Colony; that it will feed, breed, care for, pelt, and generally supervise and manage the animals, to the best interest of the purchaser; that the corporation is to, receive one-half of the purchaser’s proportionate share of all cash proceeds accruing from the sale of pelts and live animals from said Pine River Colony breeding grounds, as compensation for its services. There are other provisions in reference to removal of the animals to other breeding grounds, or removal thereof by the purchaser, and other provisions not here material. The contract is to' continue in force for the life of the corporation, unless sooner terminated by the purchaser.

Considering the tAvo contracts together, they constitute a sale of an interest in a profit-sharing scheme or venture and are a security, *205 as defined by the law cited, and the court correctly so charged the jury. State v. Gopher T. & R. Co. 146 Minn. 52, 177 N. W. 937; State v. Evans, 154 Minn. 95, 191 N. W. 425, 27 A. L. R. 1165; State v. Ogden, 154 Minn. 425, 191 N. W. 916; State v. Bushard, 164 Minn. 455, 205 N. W. 370; Kerst v. Nelson, 171 Minn. 191, 213 N. W. 904, 54 A. L. R. 495; State v. Swenson, 172 Minn. 277, 215 N. W. 177, 54 A. L. R. 490; State v. Code, 178 Minn. 492, 227 N. W. 652.

One other question requires consideration. The statute makes it a crime to sell unregistered securities by the issuer or owner thereof, or by his representative, when such sale is made in the course of repeated and successive sales of securities of the same issue. It defines “securities” as including an interest in or under a profit-sharing agreement or scheme. Defendant presented a plea of former jeopardy, and offered in- support thereof the record in a case in Nicollet county wherein the defendant was informed against, charged with selling a set of two of the same kind of contracts to one A. K. Brown, and a partial trial thereof had, sufficient to place defendant in jeopardy in that case. That sale was charged to have been made in Nicollet county on January 31, 1928. It was for a sale of one trio of muskrats, to be bred, cared for, and kept on the company’s Brainerd Oak Lawn Ranch. The indictment in our present case charges the sale to Schmidt, in Hennepin county, on February 8, 1927, of two trios of muskrats, to be bred, cared for, and kept on the company’s Pine River Colony breeding grounds. The court sustained objection to the proof in support of the plea of former jeopardy.

It is clear that the two sales were separate transactions, made at different times, at different places, to different purchasers and involved separate rights and properties. Defendant contends that, as the sale for Avhich defendant is tried must be a sale made in the course of repeated and successive sales, all sales of the same issue made in the course of repeated and successive sales constitute but one offense, and jeopardy in a prosecution for any one of such sales is a bar to any further prosecution for any sale made prior to the time of the finding of the indictment in the first case. The in *206 formation in the Nicollet county case, having the same force as an indictment so far as this question is concerned, was presented in October, 1929. We conclude that under our securities law separate sales and not a course of business are aimed at and sought to be prohibited, and that each sale is a separate offense. We are not cited to much helpful authority.

16 C. J. p. 265, § 4.45, states the rule almost universally applied as follows:

“If the evidence which is necessary to support the second indictment was admissible under the former, was related to the same crime, and was sufficient if believed by the jury to have warranted a conviction of that crime, the offenses are identical, and a plea of former conviction or acquittal is a bar. But if the facts which will convict on the second prosecution would not necessarily have convicted on the first, then the first will not be a bar to the second, although the offenses charged may have been committed in the same transaction.”

The evidence in the present case did not include evidence of the sale to Brown in Nicollet county, and evidence of that sale would not have sustained a conviction here". To have claimed a conviction here for that sale would have been a clear departure from the present indictment.

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Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 456, 185 Minn. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robbins-minn-1932.