Warren People's Market Co. v. Corbett & Sons

151 N.E. 51, 114 Ohio St. 126, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 401
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1926
Docket19174
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 51 (Warren People's Market Co. v. Corbett & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren People's Market Co. v. Corbett & Sons, 151 N.E. 51, 114 Ohio St. 126, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 401 (Ohio 1926).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The legal questions in this case arise out of the following facts:

Upon the 14th day of April, 1922, certain persons made the proper application for articles of incorporation for the Warren People’s Market Company. Upon the 19th day of April, 1922, articles of incorporation were issued to the incorporators by the secretary of state. Upon April 23, 1922, Corbett & Grarghill, of Warren, doing business as Corbett & ■ Sons, subscribed for six shares of the preferred capital stock of the Warren People’s Market Company. Upon May 29, 1922, a certificate of subscription was filed with the secretary of state by the incorporators, showing subscription *129 of 10 per cent, of the capital stock, and thereafter the corporation was duly organized by the election of directors, who, in turn, elected their officers in the regular way.

As shown by the record, no commission, cost, or expense of any kind whatever was incurred by the Warren People’s Market Company in the sale of the stock in question, whieh sale was made for the sole account of the Warren People’s Market Company, to be issued by such company at the full par value thereof. The record also shows that no part of such stock so subscribed, common or preferred, was issued or proposed to be issued, either directly or indirectly, in payment for patents, services, good will, or for property not located in the state of Ohio.

Now the Warren People’s Market Company was entitled, under the Blue Sky Law, to file with the securities division .of the Ohio state banking department a written statement setting forth the existence of these facts (Section 6373-2 [f], General Code), and to secure a certificate of exemption from the department upon the ground that, under the Blue Sky Law, the company was not required to take out a license with the department before disposing of, or offering to dispose of, such stock. However, the market company neither filed such a written statement with the securities division of the state banking department nor took out a license with the department for disposal of the stock.

The defendant in error refused to pay for its subscription, and grounded its defense to the instant action upon two propositions: One, that the *130 partnership of Corbett & Sons, which was served with summons, did not do business in Warren, Ohio, and never had subscribed for the stock in question; the other, that the stock subscription was invalid under the facts stated, since the plaintiff in error had not secured a certificate of exemption under the Blue Sky Law.

Taking up these propositions in inverse order, we shall consider the sections of the Blue Sky Law under which the question of the validity of the stock subscription must be determined. They are as follows:

Section 6373-1, General Code:

“Except as otherwise provided in this act no dealer shall, within this state, dispose or offer to dispose of any stock, * * * issued or executed by any private or quasi public corporation, * * * without first being licensed so to do as hereinafter provided.”

Paragraph or subdivision 3 of Section 6373-2, General Code, defines a dealer as follows:

“The term ‘dealer,’ as used in this act, shall be deemed to include any person or company, except national banks, disposing, or offering to dispose, of any such security, through agents or otherwise, and any company engaged in the marketing or flotation of its own securities either directly or through agents or underwriters or any stock promotion scheme whatsoever, except * *

There are five exceptions under this definition, designated by the letters (a) to (f), inclusive. Exception (f) is as follows:

“The issuer, organized under the laws of this state where the disposal in good faith and not for *131 the purpose of avoiding the provisions of this act is made for the sole account of the issuer, without any commission and at a total expense of not more than two percentum of the proceeds realized therefrom plus five hundred dollars and where no part of the issue to be disposed of is issued, directly or indirectly, in payment for patents, services, good will, or for property not located in this state; provided that the president and secretary, or the incorporators if done before organization, of the issuer shall, prior to such disposal, file with the ‘commissioner’ a written statement setting forth the existence of all such facts and that such issuer is formed for the purpose of doing business within this state.”

Section 6373-20, General Code, imposes a fine of not less than $100, nor more than $5,000, or imprisonment in the penitentiary, or both, upon any one who knowingly makes a false statement upon any matter of information required by the act to be filed with the commissioner; such false statement being made to aid in the disposal of securities. The same section also imposes a penalty for violating the other provisions of the act.

The Court of Appeals based its ruling upon the proposition that, as the Blue Sky Law is a penal act, any sale or contract of sale of stock by a person or company that fails to comply with the provisions of the law is absolutely void. It is to be noted that neither the corporation nor its officers could have been prosecuted under the first provision of Section 6373-20, above quoted, for no false statement was made by the company, *132 nor by any of its officers, and all of tbe facts set forth in the record entitle the plaintiff in error to come within the exception to the definition of “dealer” embodied in subdivision (f) of Section 6373-2. Therefore the failure to file the statement with the commissioner, setting forth the existence of these facts, could not subject the corporation or its officers to punishment under the first part of Section 6373-20. However, the corporation and its officers could have been penalized under the blanket provision in the same section which imposes a penalty for violating “the other provisions” of the act. Since the corporation was “not a dealer” within the exception of Section 6373-2, it was not bound by the provisions of the law as to dealers, and was only required to furnish the statement of exemption demanded under exception (f). Its failure to do this is the action penalized by the statute.

The defendant in error claims, and the Court of Appeals held, that the sale of stock was invalid, because the violation of any of the provisions of the act was forbidden under penalty, and hence the sale itself without the statement being filed was prohibited. And as a general proposition a penalty does imply a prohibition. However, this rule has been somewhat modified in the state of Ohio, where it has been held that to determine whether a contract made contrary to a penal statute is illegal and void the statute must be considered as a whole to ascertain whether or not it was the intention of the Legislature that the statute should have such effect. Vining v. Bricker, 14 Ohio St., 331; Tod v. Wick Brothers & Co., 36 *133

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 51, 114 Ohio St. 126, 114 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 1926 Ohio LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-peoples-market-co-v-corbett-sons-ohio-1926.