State v. Woolsey

259 P. 826, 80 Mont. 141, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 41
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketNo. 6,163.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 259 P. 826 (State v. Woolsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Woolsey, 259 P. 826, 80 Mont. 141, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 41 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

By information G. V. Woolsey and W. B. Stone were charged jointly with the crime of obtaining money by false representation and pretense from one Cora M. Doll. Specifically, it was charged that between the twenty-ninth day of March, 1923, and the second day of July, 1923, they represented themselves, respectively, to be the secretary and agent of the Western Home Improvement Company, a corporation; represented that the corporation was incorporated for $500,000, the capital stock of which was paid up and divided into 10,000 shares of the par value of $50 each; that the company was a building and loan association and functioned as such; that the success of the company was based on first mortgages, that it *143 operated along proved successful channels for loaning money on good securities, financing worthy enterprises, and constructing homes for sale on a monthly purchase plan, and that it provided annuities for old age; that they, the defendants, could sell to Cora M. Doll but a limited number of shares of stock in the company; that no single purchaser could hold to exceed 10 shares of $50 each, but that special concessions would be made to her and she would be allowed a greater amount; that by means of such representations they obtained from her the sum of $6,000; that she relied upon such representations and believed them to be true, and so relying paid her money to the defendants during the period of time stated; that such representations were false, and were known by the defendants to be false, in that the corporation was not a building and loan association and did not function in the same manner; that it did not have any money loaned on first mortgages; that its success was not based on first mortgage loans; that it had not financed any worthy enterprises and had not constructed any homes for sale on a monthly purchase or any other plan, and that it had not provided annuities for old age; that its capital stock was not paid up, and that, in truth and in fact, the corporation had no assets except a limited amount which had long prior thereto been consumed and used by the defendants for their operating and living expenses; and that the stock was worthless and to the defendants known to be such at the time of the sale thereof of which complaint is made; that the representations so made by the defendants were made knowingly and designedly and with intent in them to defraud Cora M. Doll out of such money; and that they did so defraud and cheat her. Upon his plea of not guilty, the defendant G. Y. Woolsey was separately tried on the information to a jury, which returned a verdict finding him “guilty as charged in the information, and that he obtained from Mrs. Cora M. Doll by means of false representation and pretense the sum of $2,500.” By its further verdict the punishment of the defendant was *144 left to the court. The court imposed sentence that the defendant be imprisoned in the state prison for not less than four nor more than eight years, and judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant made motion for a new trial, which was denied, and the case is now before us on appeal from the judgment.

Many alleged errors committed at the trial are assigned by the defendant, and a voluminous brief has been filed by his learned counsel. In disposition of the appeal, however, it is necessary to consider only one of the several questions presented , namely, is the evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict ?

Upon the trial, at the conclusion of the state’s case, the defendant moved the court to direct the jury to acquit him. The motion was denied, and he thereupon rested without offering any evidence. The apparent theory of the prosecution is that the defendant Woolsey is guilty as a principal, being criminally responsible for the representations and inducements made by Stone, his authorized agent. From a perusal of the entire record, and particularly noting all evidence reflecting upon the possible guilt of the defendant Woolsey, it appears that at least from early in the year 1921 until the month of May, 1926, the defendant Woolsey maintained an office in the city of Miles City. This is deduced from the fact- that Ethel E. Lasswell testified that she was there employed by him in the capacity of a stenographer for a period of about seven months prior to the fall of 1921, when she moved to Lewiston, Idaho; the subscription blanks used by him in connection with the Western Home Improvement Company, a corporation, which, in the year 1922, he had in process of organization, gave Miles City as his address as well as that of the company, and letters written by him as late as May 13, 1926, indicate that he still continued his office at that place. In the fall of the year 1922, at Lewiston, Idaho, he told Miss Lasswell that he was organizing a building and loan association and requested her to act as the president of such corporation, which she agreed to do. She was not acquainted with W. B. Stone, but at that time the de *145 fendant Woolsey said “that he was going to try to get Mr. Stone to sell stock of the Western Home Improvement Company.” Stone was actively engaged soliciting stock subscriptions in the city of Missoula for the company proposed the latter part of March, 1923. The stock subscription form used by Stone in obtaining contracts for the purchase of the capital stock in the corporation to be formed reads, in part, as follows:

“Western Home Improvement Company, Miles City, Montana.
This book is the property of -.
“The Home Builder — Your Home Built the Way You Want it.
“Capital, $500,000. Fully paid and nonassessable. Preferred stock, $250,000. Common stock, $250,000. Shares, $50 each. Sold only in combination of one share each of preferred and common for $100. Terms — $20 down, $10 each month, for 8 months, to Western Home Improvement Company.
“Western Home Improvement Company. Officers: B. E. Lasswell, President; Wm. Whitney Ames, Vice President; G. Y. Woolsey, Secretary and Treasurer. Directors: Robt. D. Kent, President, Merchants’ Bank of Passaic, N. J.; H. L. Gleason, Advertising, New York City; William Whitney Ames, Attorney, Montclair, N. J.; G. Y. Woolsey, Miles City, Mont.
“Application Blank. -, 192 — .
“I hereby apply for-combination shares of stock of the Western Home Improvement Company, for the sum of $-, and have paid your representative the sum of $- as first payment, and agree to pay $- to the Western Home Improvement Company, at its home office, each and every 30 days thereafter, until the full purchase price has been paid.
“Name: -.
“Address:-.
“The first payment of $20 on each combination of stock is to be collected by the agent, who will enter the payment in this book. This serves as a receipt. Each month’s payments are to be made direct or by mail to the Western Home Improve *146 ment Company, Miles City, Montana. Wlien the last payment has been made, the secretary will issue a stock certificate and take up this book. Do not fail to make "your payments regularly.

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Bluebook (online)
259 P. 826, 80 Mont. 141, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-woolsey-mont-1927.