Technomedical Labs, Inc. v. Utah Securities Division

744 P.2d 320, 68 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1987 Utah App. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 15, 1987
Docket860107-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 744 P.2d 320 (Technomedical Labs, Inc. v. Utah Securities Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Technomedical Labs, Inc. v. Utah Securities Division, 744 P.2d 320, 68 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1987 Utah App. LEXIS 562 (Utah Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

BENCH, Judge:

Plaintiffs appeal an order of defendant Department of Business Regulation (“Department”) which denied effectiveness to plaintiffs’ securities registration statements. 1 We affirm.

FACTS

Plaintiffs, Technomedical Labs, Inc. and Connections Marketing Corp. (formerly TPI, Inc.), are publicly-held corporations. In early 1984, plaintiffs each organized a new corporation and thereafter acquired all of the stock of the new corporation, making each new corporation a wholly-owned subsidiary of the parent corporation. 2 Subsequent to the formation of the subsidiaries and after plaintiffs had acquired the stock thereof, plaintiffs’ boards of directors voted to submit for shareholder vote a resolution that would allow distribution by plaintiffs of the subsidiaries’ shares as partial liquidating dividends. Upon advice of counsel, both boards resolved to register the shares in compliance with the Utah Uniform Securities Act, Utah Code Ann. § 61-1-1 through 30 (1986) (“Utah Act”).

On February 15, 1984, plaintiffs filed applications and registration statements with defendant Utah Securities Division (“Division”) to register “by notification” the subsidiaries’ stock. On February 17, 1984, the Division filed with the Department petitions and orders to show caúse why stop orders should not be issued, pursuant to section 61-1-12, to deny effectiveness to plaintiffs’ registration statements.

Each petition alleged three counts:

I. Plaintiffs were not “nonissuers” and therefore ineligible to register by notification.
II. Plaintiffs did not receive the securities in an exempt transaction and were therefore ineligible to register by notification.
III. The proposed transaction would tend to work a fraud upon purchasers or would so operate.

A pre-hearing conference was held on March 5, 1984, before an administrative law judge of the Department. In a pre-trial order, the administrative law judge dismissed Count III as too speculative. The administrative law judge accepted a stipulation as to facts and agreed to decide the issues based on the stipulated facts, the registration statements, and legal briefs.

The administrative law judge submitted his recommended findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order to the Department. The Department, with the approval of the Division’s Securities Advisory Board, adopted the administrative law judge’s findings and conclusions, and on April 17, 1984, issued stop orders denying the effectiveness of plaintiffs’ registration statements. The Department found plaintiffs could not register the securities by notification since plaintiffs did not qualify as “non-issuers” within the statutory definition. The Department concluded that since the proposed transaction did not qualify as *322 nonissuer distributions, no determination as to Count II was necessary.

On June 12, 1984, plaintiffs filed a petition for review of the Department’s order in Third District Court pursuant to section 61-1-23(1). In a memorandum decision dated January 30, 1985, the trial court affirmed the actions taken by the Department.

REGISTRATION UNDER THE UTAH ACT

The Utah Act, enacted in 1963, is a substantial adoption of the Uniform Securities Act (“Uniform Act”) approved by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1956. To date, the Uniform Act has been adopted, in whole or in part, in 37 jurisdictions. See 7B U.L.A. 509 (1985). The purposes of securities acts in general are to prevent fraud and to encourage disclosure of information through registration, thereby protecting investors from the sale of fraudulent and worthless speculative securities. Activator Supply Co., Inc. v. Wurth, 239 Kan. 610, 722 P.2d 1081 (1986); Lowery v. Ford Hill Inv. Co., 192 Colo. 125, 556 P.2d 1201 (1976); State, Comm’r of Sec. v. Hawaii Market Center, Inc., 52 Haw. 642, 485 P.2d 105 (1971). “[Securities laws are remedial in nature and should be broadly and liberally construed to give effect to the legislative purpose.” Payable Accounting Corp. v. McKinley, 667 P.2d 15, 17-18 (Utah 1983).

Three forms of registration of securities are prescribed in the Utah Act: registration by qualification (section 61-1-10), registration by coordination (section 61-1-9), and registration by notification (section 61-1-8). Registration by qualification may be used to register any security and is therefore the method used when no other method of registration or exemption is available. This section enumerates a number of specific requirements and generally applies to non-federally registered issues of new companies. Registration by coordination correlates state registration with the Federal Securities Exchange Commission by permitting the federal prospectus to be substituted for the ordinary state application form and coordinating the time when both registrations become effective. The state disclosure requirements are minimal under registration by coordination since the federal requirements are quite exacting. Registration by notification is a streamlined procedure which allows for minimal, yet adequate, disclosure of information in the registration statement and automatic effectiveness of registration absent any affirmative action by the Division. Note, The Uniform Securities Act, 12 Stan. L. Rev. 105, 108 (1959); see also, Hill, Some Comments on The Uniform Securities Act, 55 Nw. U.L. Rev. 661, 675 (1961); Bennett, Should Utah Adopt the New Uniform Securities Act?, 5 Utah L.Rev. 471, 474 (1957).

Registration by notification is available in either of two situations. The first situation, specified in section 61-l-8(l)(a), clearly does not apply in the instant case. 3 The second situation is specified in section 61-l-8(l)(b) which provides as follows:

(1) The following securities may be registered by notification, whether or not they are also eligible for registration by coordination under § 61-1-9:
(b) any security ... registered for nonis-suer distribution if any security of the same class has ever been registered under this chapter or a predecessor act, or the security being registered was originally issued pursuant to an exemption under this chapter or a predecessor act.

The question presented in the instant case is whether registration by notification is available to plaintiffs under subsection (l)(b). The question turns on whether plaintiffs can register, as nonissuers, the stock of their subsidiaries.

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744 P.2d 320, 68 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1987 Utah App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/technomedical-labs-inc-v-utah-securities-division-utahctapp-1987.