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Page 248
167 F.Supp. 248  SECURITIES & EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
v.
MONO-KEARSARGE CONSOLIDATED MINING COMPANY,
a Utah corporation; Jean R. Veditz Co.,
Inc., a New York corporation; R. B. Gravis,
Inc., a New York corporation; James B.
Boren; Charles E. Collins; Charles
Pennington and N. R. Real, Defendants.
No. C-58-58. United States District Court D.
Utah, Central Division. October 7, 1958.
Page 249
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 250
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 251
John F. Lee, Salt Lake City,
Utah, Milton J. Blake, Joseph F. Krys,
Denver, Colo., Charles T. Kappler,
Washington, D. C., for Securities & Exchange
Commission.
Alexander H. Walker, Jr., Salt
Lake City, Utah, for defendant
Mono-Kearsarge Consol. Mining Co.
Jordon R. Metzger, New York City,
and Samuel Bernstein, Salt Lake City, Utah,
for defendant Jean R. Veditz Co., Inc.
Leon M. Frazier, Provo, Utah, and
Thomas A. Bolan, New York City, for
defendant R. B. Gravis, Inc.
CHRISTENSON, District Judge.
This is an action brought by the
Securities & Exchange Commission,
hereinafter referred to as "SEC", to enjoin
the defendants from making use of any means
or instruments of communication or
transportation in interstate commerce or of
the mails for selling or delivering the
stock of Mono-Kearsarge Consolidated Mining
Company, or other securities, in violation
of Section 5, of the Securities Act of 1933,
15 U.S.C.A. § 77e.
The defendants Charles Pennington
and N. R. Real were not served. Injunctions
already have been entered against Charles E.
Collins and James B. Boren by consent. The
remaining defendants Mono-Kearsarge
Consolidated Mining Company, a Utah
corporation, Jean R. Veditz Co., Inc., a New
York corporation and R. B. Gravis, Inc., a
New York corporation, have contested the
plaintiff's claims. The corporate defendants
last mentioned will be referred to
respectively as "Mono-Kearsarge", "Veditz
Co.", and "Gravis, Inc."
Basic and largely undisputed
facts are these:
In the fall of 1957, the
defendant Mono-Kearsarge was in financial
difficulty. Boren approached its president,
Alonzo Mackay, and proposed a plan which in
the latter's view promised to breathe life
into the company. Boren was to transfer to
Mono-Kearsarge certain oil and gas
interests, and to enlist the support of
other individuals and dealers in promoting
the company. In return he and his nominees
were to receive 51% of the corporation's
outstanding stock. To effectuate this plan,
and as a part thereof, the company by mail
and personal contact solicited its
shareholders to donate to it 51% of the
stock held by them. In response to this
request, a total of 962,000 shares was
received by the company. This amount did not
comprise 51% of the outstanding stock, so
from its authorized but unissued capital the
company issued an additional 250,000 shares
to make up at least a majority control. On
December 10, 1957 this total of 1,212,000
shares was transferred to Boren and his
nominees in return for the oil and gas
interests.
During the first part of 1958,
Boren and his associates commenced
distributing the 962,000-share block to the
public. The distribution was accomplished
primarily by delivering the stock through a
New York attorney, Sidney B. Josephson, to
the defendant Pennington who resided in
Canada. The latter, and persons connected
with him, transferred a substantial portion
to the defendants Veditz Co. and Gravis,
Inc., who are securities dealers in New York
City registered with the Securities &
Exchange Commission. The defendant Real and
one Benjamin Goldstein helped to interest
the dealers in the stock. Real and Goldstein
were among the persons nominated by Boren to
take stock out of the 962,000-share block.
Goldstein worked for Veditz Co. and was
acquainted in a business way with Gravis,
Inc. Jean R.
Page 252
Veditz, the managing officer and
beneficial owner of Veditz Co., and R. B.
Gravis, who occupied a similar position with
his company, were not acquainted personally
prior to the institution of this action.
Veditz Co. and Gravis, Inc. procured through
Pennington and his associates in Canada
totals of 436,000 and 657,000 shares,
respectively, including the greater part of
the 962,000-share block, and sold
substantially all of these to numerous
investors in various parts of the United
States by using the mails to deliver
advertising brochures and stock
certificates, and by long distance telephone
calls to promote and arrange sales.
The stock was not registered with
the Securities & Exchange Commission in
accordance with the Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77f.
Mono-Kearsarge contends that the
transaction whereby the 962,000-share block
was delivered to Boren and his nominees was
exempt under 15 U.S.C.A. § 77d(1) as a
transaction "by an issuer not involving any
public offering."
Securities and Exchange Commission v.
Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S. 119, 73 S.Ct.
981, 97 L.Ed. 1494.
Let it be granted for the purpose
of this discussion that if in good faith the
corporation, as issuer, transferred stock to
Boren and a limited number of persons
designated by him because of consideration
furnished by some of them to the corporation
and because of the continuing interest of
all of them as long-term investors in the
success of the corporation, a private
offering under the surface indications of
this case would be indicated. Such investors
with such special knowledge of, and interest
in, the corporation and in view of such
continuing connection, could well be
considered a class able to fend for itself
in a transaction not involving any public
offering within the doctrine of Securities
and Exchange Commission v. Ralston Purina
Co., supra.
If known to the company, or under
circumstances reasonably placing it on
notice, however, Mono-Kearsarge transferred
stock to persons, however limited in number
or well informed, who did not intend to
treat it as investment stock but who claimed
the right of immediate redistribution to the
public and who actually made such
redistribution, I am of the opinion that the
company must be held to have acted at its
peril. Under the latter circumstances it
properly could not claim by virtue of the
mere form of the transaction that a private,
rather than a public, offering was involved.
If this were otherwise, the prohibitions of
the Act without warrant would be made
pusillanimous and futile to accomplish the
purposes intended by Congress. In such
event, an issuer with impunity, through a
limited group and by a transaction private
in form only, for its own benefit and for
such consideration as it might exact, could
distribute to the public whatever quantities
of stock it desired without protection to
the public contemplated by law. Neither an
issuer nor an underwriter may separate parts
of a series of related transactions the
totality of which is designed and known to
constitute an unlimited offer and rely only
upon that part which in form indicates that
the offering was private.
It becomes important, therefore,
to determine whether Mono-Kearsarge had
reason in good faith to believe that Boren
and his nominees were taking the stock as
investors without the purpose of making an
immediate public distribution, as contended
by Mono-Kearsarge, or whether it knew that
Boren considered the stock "free" and
intended to make public distribution, as it
turned out that he actually did.
The basic requirement is that
registration must occur before any security
is offered or sold unless there is involved
either an exempt security or an exempt
transaction.
The burden of proof is upon the
person claiming an exemption to show that it
applies. On the point of discussion, not
only did Mono-Kearsarge fail to discharge
this burden, but on the record before the
Court it is clearly established
Page 253
that it had reason to know, and did know
before it made the transfers in question,
that Boren recognized no limitation upon
retransfer and that he took it under
circumstances which made this consequence
the natural, if not the inevitable, one.
In his deposition Boren attempted
to support the private investment theory by
saying he wanted to help "this little
company" merely for the possibility of some
long-term realization on his part. He
emphasized that his nominees were limited in
number, and he contended that he left stock
with Attorney Josephson not for the purpose
of sale but in "escrow". His explanation on
the latter point would have to be rejected,
if only upon the basis of the receipt which
Josephson gave him which clearly
contemplated disposition of the stock by
Josephson, but there are other cogent
reasons for doing so. The identity of his
"nominees" was so vague in his mind that it
is fair to infer that the initial limitation
of their number was a rather meaningless
attempt to afford semblance of privacy to
the transaction. He said when asked whether
there were people other than he had named
who initially received part of the stock:
"Well, there was quite a few people
involved, but I don't remember all of their
names, but just like I suggested to
individual stockholders, Mr. Collins
suggested to me certain ones and Mr. Real
suggested certain ones." In response to his
counsel's question at another point he
explained his idea of private transactions
by saying he would not "step downstairs and
hail someone he didn't know * * *" but "it
would be a friend or business associate."
Boren testified that when he learned in the
course of negotiations that some question
had been raised about the status of the
962,000-share block he called William J.
O'Connor, Jr., director of Mono-Kearsarge
and told him that if it were "free" he would
go ahead.
On November 4, 1957 Mackay, as
president of Mono-Kearsarge, gave notice of
a stockholders' meeting (plaintiff's exhibit
1) with reference to the "proposed purchase
by the company" of oil interests "the
consideration being 51% of the outstanding
stock of our company." On several occasions
thereafter this proposal of the corporation
was elaborated upon and supported and while
it was never acted upon by the stockholders
in a formal meeting, the evidence leaves no
room for doubt that it was carried out by
the corporation. On November 21, 1957
O'Connor wrote one of the stockholders of
Mono-Kearsarge (Mono-Kearsarge's exhibit L)
that he had asked an officer to check with
the company attorney to be sure that the SEC
regulations were not being violated by the
plan, and that he was consulting another
attorney (presumably Alexander H. Walker,
Jr.) on the question.
Prior to December 10, 1957 it
developed that there were insufficient
relinquishments of stock by stockholders to
make up the 51% and that it was necessary to
add to the 962,000 shares then available for
this purpose an additional 250,000-share
block from the unissued stock of the
corporation. On December 10, 1957 when both
blocks of stock were delivered to Boren,
Walker already had indicated to O'Connor
that in his opinion the transaction
involving the 962,000-share block was not a
sale but further suggested that unless the
shares to be delivered to Boren were for a
limited number of nominees, and for
investment purposes only, registration would
be necessary. However, it was not until
December 12, 1957 that Walker put this
opinion in writing (plaintiff's exhibit 6).
In the meantime, the transfer of the stock
to Boren and the transfer by Boren of the
oil interests to the corporation had been
substantially completed.
The situation of the corporation
with respect to these matters then is well
demonstrated by O'Connor's letter dated
December 11, 1957 to Boren (Mono-Kearsarge's
exhibit K). This letter concerned both the
250,000-share block and 962,000-share block.
It is clear from this letter that despite
the warning signs already received, up to
that point
Page 254
the corporation had been impressed with
Boren's idea that the 962,000-share block
was "free" stock. Based at least in part on
Walker's oral opinion, there apparently was
now some real question in the minds of its
officers; but the corporation still willing
to proceed on Boren's theory, contenting
itself with the following mild caution to
him:
"As you indicated, we can expect
a signed copy of the agreement by the
individuals receiving investment stock in
the smaller of the two transactions, to the
effect that each stockholder receives the
stock for investment purposes and agrees to
hold the same for the required number of
months.
* * * * * *
"The former S. E. C.
representative in this area, who now
practices here, tells me that he believes
the 962,000 shares are also subject to the
investment rule controlling sale by your
associates. I know you are interested in
this point, and you should have your
attorney get an expert opinion on the
subject."
Mackay testified that he thought
the 962,000 shares were not investment stock
and that no steps were taken to prevent
their transfer. He somewhat naively
suggested that the reason that they didn't
require investment letters with respect to
the 962,000 shares was because they didn't
get the full 51% of the stock from the
stockholders. Yet, in certain other respects
the Court was impressed with Mackay's
sincerity. At one time he rejected the
suggestion of Mono-Kearsarge's counsel that
the corporation did not act as such in
procuring the stock for the Boren deal, but
that this was accomplished through a
committee of stockholders. He said he knew
of no such committee and first heard of it
at the trial. But a reference to certain
other exhibits will further demonstrate that
Mono-Kearsarge, as well as Boren, on
December 10, 1957, when both blocks of stock
were delivered, understood that with regard
to the larger block, Boren would accept the
larger block as "free" stock subject to
immediate retransfer and that both he and
the corporation treated it as such,
notwithstanding the question that existed in
the minds of the corporation officers
concerning the legality of this procedure.
Mono-Kearsarge's exhibits C and D
are two receipts signed by Margaret Simpson
from the files of Mono-Kearsarge. The first
receipt is for 125,000 shares out of the
250,000-share block and this contains the
express statement that the signer understood
that the stock was for investment purposes
only and not for resale or distribution. The
other receipt dated the same day
acknowledges receipt of 105,000 shares of
stock from the 962,000-share block; it is
silent as to any limitation on distribution.
Simpson was one of Boren's nominees.
Presumably, these receipts though dated
theretofore, were delivered to the
corporation when Boren picked up the stock.
As late as April 18, 1958, the
transfer agent of the corporation returned
to Veditz Co. certificates Nos. 92A to 94A,
inclusive, in the name of Margaret Simpson,
with the explanation that these certificates
were out of the "investment stock issued in
December, 1957 and are not to be transferred
until January, 1959 under the agreement
which was entered into." (Mono-Kearsarge's
exhibit H.) The transfer agent, for that
expressed purpose, refused to issue any
stock certificates in the names of the
transferees D. Lee Chesnut and Howard
Williams. His letter added: "The numbers of
the stock certificates in the name of
Margaret Simpson which cannot be transferred
until January, 1959 are 70A to 94A
inclusive." Certificates 80A to 94A came out
of the 250,000-share block and were covered
by the receipt first above mentioned,
containing an acknowledgment of transfer
limitations. The record shows that the
certificate mentioned in the second receipt
was delivered to the transfer agent for the
issuance of numerous new certificates which
were freely transferred by the corporation
without any question being raised.
Page 255
The view already has been
indicated that an issuer cannot take at face
value the assurances of buyers that they buy
only for investment purposes when
circumstances would show to a reasonable
person that these assurances are formal
rather than real and when there are
preponderant indications that the
representations are made to avoid the
requirements of law. Much less was
Mono-Kearsarge in a position to rely upon
the investment theory when its understanding
at the crucial time of the transfer was that
the stock was not being taken by the
recipients solely for investment purposes
and when its own words and actions,
including its subsequent handling of the
stock for transfer purposes, reasonably
indicated that the corporation understood a
public distribution was being accomplished.
What has been said largely
disposes of the related contentions that the
transfer of the 962,000-share block
constituted a mere "gift" between individual
stockholders of the corporation on the one
hand and Boren and his associates on the
other, thereby making the stock "free" and
not subject to registration. Additional
fill-ins are these: It further appears that
the minutes of the board of directors
concerning the December 10, 1957 meeting,
related the assignments of oil and gas
interests from Boren exclusively to the
issuance of the 250,000 shares by the
corporation. The receipt given to Boren was
to the same effect. The forms of these were
inconsistent with the proposals repeatedly
presented to the stockholders that they
relinquish 51% of their stock to be
transferred by the corporation in return for
the oil and gas interests. Neither the form
of the minutes nor that of the receipt
changed the patent facts that the oil and
gas interests, part of which had been
assigned to the corporation even before
December 10, 1957 (see Mono-Kearsarge's
exhibit L, dated November 21, 1957) were all
assigned in exchange for the controlling
stock interest in the corporation; that the
corporation arranged for stockholders to
return to it the bulk of the necessary stock
to effect this transaction; that to make up
the balance of control the corporation
issued 250,000 additional shares; that the
consideration for such control in its
entirety went to the corporation as a result
of negotiations carried on, controlled and
consummated by the corporation and that the
corporation as a part of such transaction
issued both blocks of stock to Boren and his
nominees.
The transfer to Boren of the
962,000-share block constituted a sale of
securities. With respect to both blocks
under the definition contained in the Act,
Mono-Kearsarge was an issuer, and as to the
962,000-share block there was a public
offering. 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 77b(3), 77b(4),
77d(1).
Beyond the nominees named by him
in the immediate transfer, Boren intended to
effect a public distribution of the stock
and this intent obviously was shared by his
associates and nominees. They did so. They
were underwriters within the meaning of 15
U.S.C.A. § 77b(11) in that they purchased
from an issue with a view to the
distribution of the stock. Securities and
Exchange Commission v. Chinese Consol.
Benev., 2 Cir., 1941, 120 F.2d 738,
certiorari denied 314 U.S. 618, 62 S.Ct.
106, 86 L. Ed. 497; Merger Mines Corp. v.
Grismer, 9 Cir., 1943, 137 F.2d 335,
certiorari denied 320 U.S. 794, 64 S.Ct.
261, 88 L. Ed. 478; Landay v. United States,
6 Cir., 1939, 108 F.2d 698, certiorari
denied 309 U.S. 681, 60 S.Ct. 721, 84 L. Ed.
1024.
Boren testified in his deposition
that part of his plan was to interest the
public in Mono-Kearsarge stock and that to
effectuate this plan, he included Goldstein,
an employee of Veditz Co., as one of the
nominees with reference to the 962,000-share
block. Although Boren in his deposition
denied it, the evidence established that he
and Collins, then the new president of
Mono-Kearsarge, as a result of the control
vested in Boren and his nominees, including
Collins, delivered
Page 256
the stock to Josephson in order that it
might be sold through Canadian sources. It
is reasonable to infer that at the time of
this delivery, Goldstein and Josephson
envisaged that Veditz Co. and perhaps other
New York dealers ultimately would distribute
the stock in the United States after it had
been channeled through Canada.
What was accomplished by Boren,
Collins and their associates constituted a
violation of the Act. Not only were they
underwriters, but they were persons then in
control of Mono-Kearsarge. In effect, the
term "underwriters" as defined in the Act
includes one who has purchased from any
person directly or indirectly controlling an
issuer or in direct or indirect common
control with the issuer, with a view to the
distribution of the security in question. 15
U.S.C.A. § 77b(11).
It must now be determined whether
Veditz Co. and Gravis, Inc. acquired
Mono-Kearsarge stock from controlling or
commonly controlled persons with a view to
distribution to the public under such
circumstances as to render them also
underwriters for the purposes of the Act.
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Kaye,
Real & Co., D.C. S.D.N.Y., 1954, 122 F.Supp.
639. If they did not, their primary
contention that the transactions in which
they were engaged were "dealer transactions"
and thus exempt by virtue of 15 U.S.C.A. §
77d(1) would have to be sustained. If they
did, their position as underwriters would
have required registration of the
securities, for the exemption accorded a
dealer does not apply when he is acting as
underwriter. 15 U.S.C.A. § 77d(1).
Goldstein received 240,000 shares
of the so-called "free" stock according to
Boren. Part of this was taken in the name of
his wife. Josephson testified that a week or
two after Collins and Boren visited him, he
called up Pennington and was told that
Pennington would acquire their shares and
make distribution in Canada, taking blocks
in the names of various persons. Josephson
said that at first Pennington was to sell
the stock in Canada but added, "Pennington
or Goldstein, I think more likely
Pennington, asked me if any brokers in the
United States were interested in stock. I
told him that it was a listed stock out on
the Salt Lake Stock Exchange but I
understood that a person by the name of
Goldstein was supposed to be interested in
the stock here in New York and I would find
out more about it. Goldstein gave me
Gravis's name and I gave that name to
Pennington. * *" Josephson later said that
he gave Pennington the name of Veditz also.
He further testified that Pennington was to
remit the funds received for the stock to
Boren and Collins. Even without this direct
evidence it rather clearly appears that
Pennington and his associates in Canada were
mere conduits through which stock was to be
distributed in the United States.
Josephson had worked for Veditz
Co. before the period in question but he
said he "wouldn't call him a client." Veditz
testified that no specific proposition was
presented to him when Boren and Collins,
with Goldstein, first approached him
concerning Mono-Kearsarge but that on the
strength of their conversation he went up to
see "his attorney," Josephson, who told him
"the corporation was sound." Josephson
further reported to Veditz that someone had
called up from Canada and said they had
about 200,000 shares and that he, Veditz,
would receive a call from Pennington on the
subject.
The first meeting between
Collins, Boren, Goldstein and Veditz, the
latter testified, was around December 28,
1957. Immediately after a second meeting,
Veditz said he decided to go through "with
the proposition." What proposition this was
is not clear but it seems fair to infer that
it was to buy Canadian stock, of which he
had been told by Josephson. However, Veditz
testified that he initially contemplated
getting stock from brokers or dealers when
he first decided
Page 257
to go ahead, which he said was about the
middle of February, 1958.
Veditz testified that nothing was
said by Boren and Collins about their having
stock that would be on the market, and that
he did not know of Goldstein's stock
holdings. The reason Boren and Collins gave
for their interest, according to Veditz, was
to increase the value of the stock so that
the power of the corporation to buy other
property for stock would be increased. This
seems a dubious explanation which should
have invited critical inquiry. It was
somewhat on a par with Boren's claimed
explanation to Mono-Kearsarge that the
reason he wanted more than a million shares
of its stock then being traded on the Salt
Lake Stock Exchange was not that he might in
the near future realize its value, but that
he could be put in a position to help this
"nice little company" for some long-term
realization to all of the stockholders,
including himself.
On February 28, 1958 Pennington,
c/o Guardian Trust Company, Montreal, wrote
Veditz Co. (Veditz Co.'s exhibit B) granting
it a 30-day option to purchase 200,000
shares of Mono-Kearsarge at 12 per share
and stating that he was neither an officer,
director or controlling stockholder of
Mono-Kearsarge, and that he did not own 10%
of the outstanding stock and had no
connection with the company other than as a
stockholder. He said he consulted with
Josephson concerning the legality of this
acquisition and was told orally that it was
legal. Notwithstanding this opinion, Veditz
said that prior to the time he closed the
transaction, believing that Josephson was an
"interested party", he consulted another
attorney. He acted upon the latter's oral
opinion, which was confirmed in writing to
him only after this lawsuit was instituted.
It was signed by one Gedalecia who Veditz
said was an attorney, but whose letter was
not on law office stationery and who did not
sign as such. It refers to a conversation of
some months before, assumes as true the
facts related in Pennington's letter to
Veditz Co. and concludes: "Based solely on
the foregoing I have advised you that, in my
opinion, you had justifiably relied on the
representation of Mr. Pennington and that
your transactions were exempt from Section 5
of the Securities Act * * *." The letter
adds for good measure the rationalization
that "If any facts existed which were
unknown to you and could not have been
readily discovered by you in the normal
course of business, you certainly could not
be charged with a wilful violation of
the Securities or Securities & Exchange
acts. * * *"
In the period February 2, 1958
through April 11, 1958, Veditz Co. sold to
investors a total of 608,900 shares of
Mono-Kearsarge stock at a price of from 19
to 30. Cancellation of some of these sales
was made totaling 177,500 shares.
Accordingly, its net sales to investors
amounted to 431,400 shares for $102,779.60.
A substantial part of this stock was
acquired by Veditz Co. through Pennington.
The number of investors buying from Veditz
Co. approximated three hundred. In the sale
of the stock the instrumentalities of
interstate commerce were used. Veditz said
that this company started to sell to
customers the middle of February, 1958 under
the Salt Lake market, asserting that while
he then had no stock tied up, he had talked
to Pennington early in February. He
testified that he relied upon Pennington's
representations, and upon inquiries he made
concerning the stability of the company and
indicated that both Josephson and Goldstein,
as well as Collins and Boren, had concealed
the true facts from him. He admittedly made
no attempt to find out through the transfer
agent of the corporation or from other
likely sources where the Pennington stock
came from, choosing to accept the formal
representations of Pennington couched mainly
in the language of Veditz's letter to him,
that the stock was not being obtained from a
controlling person. He testified that he
intended to handle no more Mono-Kearsarge
stock.
Page 258
Gravis knew Goldstein prior to
the transactions involved here. He visited
Goldstein in Josephson's office once or
twice just before or after the sale of the
stock. Gravis testified, however, that
nothing was discussed on these occasions
concerning it. There is no evidence that
Gravis and Veditz were acquainted before
these transactions occurred or during their
course. On February 14, 1958 Pennington
wrote Gravis, Inc., from Montreal with
repect to the sale of 200,000 shares of
Mono-Kearsarge stock. On February 20, 1958
Gravis, Inc. wrote Pennington that before
undertaking the sale of these securities it
would like to know whether Pennington was or
had been an officer, director or controlling
stock owner in Mono-Kearsarge and whether he
owned 10% or more of its outstanding shares.
On February 24, 1958 Pennington replied in
the negative and stated, "* * * I havenot
been connected with the said company either
directly or indirectly in any capacity
except as a stock holder." On February 28,
1958 Gravis wrote with reference to the last
mentioned letter: "As per our telephone
conversation, I understand that you
purchased your stock in the open market and
that such stock was not controlled." An
offer of 10 per share was made. This
correspondence, as did the letters of
Veditz, indicated acquaintanceship with the
possible legal consequences of such control;
but more, they suggest to me a desire to
formally negate any such idea without
reasonably exploring the possibility of
details to the contrary.
On March 4, 1958 John Steczko
wrote from Montreal making indirect
reference to the Pennington deal, asserting
that the writer and his "associates" also
owned "substantial blocks" of these
securities and that none of them were in any
way connected with the company and an offer
to sell for 11 per share was included. On
the same date, in substantially the same
words and apparently on the same typewriter,
Lorraine Beaulieu wrote to Gravis, Inc.
(Gravis, Inc.'s exhibit H) also from
Montreal. Gravis replied to each letter of
March 7, 1958 in substantially the same
language, setting out arrangements for the
purchase of the stock within sixty days.
These arrangements were accepted by the
sellers by written endorsements on returned
copies of the Gravis letters.
On March 19, 1958 Gravis, Inc.
delivered checks to Josephson of New York
City for the purchase of Pennington's stock.
On April 3, 1958 Attorney Gilbert Wallach of
New York City gave an opinion (Gravis,
Inc.'s exhibit N) to Gravis, Inc., "Based on
the information which you have furnished to
me, and the correspondence between yourself
and Charles Pennington * * *" that the
transaction was exempt from registration.
The opinion noted that the sale price was
10, whereas the day the agreement was made
the stock was selling at approximately 15
on the Salt Lake market. On April 10, 1958
the Guardian Trust Company of Montreal wrote
Gravis, Inc. (Gravis, Inc.'s exhibit P) that
90,000 shares had been paid for by Gravis,
Inc. by means of a check sent by it to the
bank, such shares being forwarded with the
bearer of the letter; and that the balance
of 45,000 shares in the Steczko and Beaulieu
transactions would be delivered when
uncertified checks had cleared.
Gravis said he accepted the
representations of the Canadian
correspondents at their face value. While
inquiry was made concerning the soundness of
Mono-Kearsarge no attempt was made by him to
find out where the Canadian stock came from
or how it happened to be offered under the
circumstances indicated. Gravis also
testified that he had received an oral
opinion concerning the validity of the
transaction before he received the written
opinion from Wallach and that he acted in
good faith believing that the transaction
was lawful.
In the period March 25, 1958
through May 7, 1958, Gravis, Inc. sold
1,140,800 shares to investors at prices
ranging from 25 to 30 a share for a total
price of $307,605.40. In this period sales
of 501,300 shares were cancelled. The net
Page 259
sale to investors was 639,500 shares for
a total proceeds of $167,902.40. These net
sales involved some four hundred investors.
The greater part of the stock thus sold by
Gravis, Inc. was acquired from Pennington
and those associated with him. In the sale
of the stock the instrumentalities of
interstate commerce were used.
In order to have it split up into
smaller certificates for delivery to
customers, Gravis turned over to Josephson a
stock certificate for 195,000 shares which
he had acquired through Pennington but which
stood in the name of Mrs. Charles Collins.
Josephson forwarded it to the transfer agent
of Mono-Kearsarge where it was seized by
Charles Collins on his authority as
president of Mono-Kearsarge. It is
presumably still retained by him under the
claim that it was improperly released by
Josephson to Pennington. At the trial Gravis
testified that he intended to sell no
further stock but that, unless he were
enjoined, he would endeavor to obtain the
195,000-share certificate and have it broken
up into smaller shares for delivery to
buyers who had already contracted and paid
for the stock, in order that those deals
might be completed.
Under these circumstances,
granting, arguendo, that Josephson's and
Goldstein's knowledge was not imputable to
Veditz Co., nor Josephson's to Gravis, Inc.
(which seems less likely) as a matter of
law, both proceeded at their peril as
underwriters by reason of having purchased
from controlling persons with a view toward
distribution to the public. If Pennington
and those associated with him were not
controlling persons, they were under direct
or indirect common control through Boren et
al. with the issuer. 15 U.S.C.A. § 77b(11).
Veditz and Gravis contend that
while this may be so, they did not know of
the controlling or controlled position. The
defendants are held to have knowledge of
those facts which they could obtain upon
reasonable inquiry. Probably the facts
directly known by them were sufficient to
acquaint them with the true situation. If
not, they were sufficient to impose upon
them the duty of making further inquiry.
Under the circumstances, they were not
entitled to rely solely on the self-serving
statements of Pennington and the other
Canadians denying those facts which would
have indicated that they were representing
controlling persons, or were under common
control with an issuer. With all these red
flags warning the dealer to go slowly, he
cannot with impunity ignore them and rush
blindly on to reap a quick profit. He cannot
close his eyes to obvious signals which if
reasonably heeded would convince him of, or
lead him to, the facts and thereafter
succeed on the claim that no express notice
of those facts was served upon him. The
transactions whereby Veditz Co. and Gravis,
Inc. publicly distributed substantial
portions of the 962,000-share block were not
exempt, and such distributions in the
absence of registration were unlawful.
The final inquiry must be whether
an injunction should issue as prayed for by
the plaintiff. The plaintiff's position
seems to be that illegality of the
transactions being established, an
injunction should issue somewhat as of
course. The defendants argue that whatever
the transactions were which may have
constituted the improper ones, they have
been completed. Since the purpose of an
injunction is preventative rather than
punitive, they say no purpose would be
served except to adversely affect innocent
investors and to furnish the basis for
revocation of registrations which would have
unjust repercussions beyond the control of
the Court.
It is provided in 15 U.S.C.A. §
77t(b):
"Whenever it shall appear to the
Commission that any person is engaged or
about to engage in any acts or practices
which constitute or will constitute a
violation of the provisions of this
subchapter, or of any rule or regulation
prescribed under authority thereof, it may
in its discretion, bring an action in any
district court of the United States, United
States court of any Territory,
Page 260
or the United States District Court for
the District of Columbia to enjoin such acts
or practices, and upon a proper showing a
permanent or temporary injunction or
restraining order shall be granted without
bond. * * *"
It is to be noted that the
failure to register a security in accordance
with the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.
C.A. § 77a et seq., of which plaintiff
complains here, arises under provisions of
law different than those governing
registration of securities on a national
securities exchange which are found in the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.
C.A. § 78a et seq. As far as the record
discloses, Mono-Kearsarge stock is
registered for the purpose of being listed
on the Salt Lake Stock Exchange. An
injunction would not, in and of itself,
affect that registration. The Commission has
the power, however, after appropriate notice
and opportunity for hearing to suspend such
registration for exchange purposes upon a
finding that the issuer has failed to comply
with any provision under "this chapter * *
*", referring to the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934. Only with respect to brokers or
dealers, do I find provision similar to the
following, authorizing the Commission as an
alternative to proof before it of wilful
violation to accept a court injunction as a
basis for revocation of registration:
"* * * The Commission shall,
after appropriate notice and opportunity for
hearing, by order deny registration to or
revoke the registration of any broker or
dealer if it finds that such denial or
revocation is in the public interest and
that (1) such broker or dealer whether prior
or subsequent to becoming such, or (2) any
partner, officer, director, or branch
manager of such broker or dealer (or any
person occupying a similar status or
performing similar functions), or any person
directly or indirectly controlling or
controlled by such broker or dealer, whether
prior or subsequent to becoming such * * *
(B) has been convicted within ten years
preceding the filing of any such application
or at any time thereafter of any felony or
misdemeanor involving the purchase or sale
of any security or arising out of the
conduct of the business of a broker or
dealer; or (C) is permanently or temporarily
enjoined by order, judgment, or decree of
any court of competent jurisdiction from
engaging in or continuing any conduct or
practice in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security; or (D) has willfully
violated any provision of the Securities Act
of 1933, or of this chapter, or of any rule
or regulation thereunder. * * *" (15 U.S.
C.A. § 78o(b)).
My attention has been called to
only one case where the relationship between
the registration revocation provisions and
the granting of an injunction has been
expressly considered. Securities and
Exchange Commission v. Torr, D.C.
S.D.N.Y.1938, 22 F.Supp. 602 (former appeal
2 Cir., 87 F.2d 446). There are a number of
other special problems confronting courts in
determining whether an injunction should or
should not be granted under the Securities
Act which seem to have received little
attention. I have therefore taken the
liberty of summarizing below what I believe
to be the governing principles deducible
from the terms of the pertinent statutes,
general principles of equity and the few
cases that have discussed the problem.
1. The fact that the statute is
in form mandatory in providing that an
injunction "shall" issue upon a proper
showing does not make the granting of an
injunction obligatory upon the Court, or as
a matter of course even though a violation
of the law has been established; general
principles of equity should be guides in its
granting or refusal.
Hecht Co. v. Bowles, 321 U.S. 321, 64 S.Ct.
587, 88 L.Ed. 754.
2. If at about the time of the
commencement of the action a defendant
Page 261
was neither engaged in, nor about to
engage in, acts or practices constituting,
or which will constitute, a violation of the
Act, or rules or regulations thereunder, an
injunction should be denied.
3. The continuation, after suit
is threatened or brought, of practices which
constitute the completion or consolidation
of illegal transactions already
substantially completed may indicate a
defendant's present engagement in violation
of the law for the purpose of the
injunction; and from past violations, even
though fully consummated at the time of the
commencement of an action, the Court may
infer that the responsible party is about to
engage in other similar transactions in the
future with respect to the same or different
securities.
4. The mere fact that pendente
lite the defendant discontinues violating
the Act or promises to refrain from doing so
in the future is entitled to little or no
weight against the granting of an
injunction.
5. An injunction may be granted,
and in an otherwise appropriate case should
be granted, even though it is not
demonstrated that the violations or
threatened violations furnishing its basis
are wilful in the special sense of being
fraudulent, in bad faith or with deliberate
intent to violate known requirements of law.
6. In the event acts are of the
latter nature, the intent or danger of
future violations making the granting of an
injunction necessary will be the more
readily inferred; but even though violations
fall short of those that would be wilful in
a criminal sense, the Court may infer from a
wanton or even careless willingness to take
a chance on the legality of questionable
transactions that a defendant is about to
similarly violate the Act if afforded an
opportunity to do so in the absence of an
injunction, equitable grounds for an
injunction otherwise being shown.
7. An affirmative showing of
threatened irreparable injury to the
plaintiff or the public is not essential
beyond that which will be implied as a
natural result from any failure to
appropriately prevent threatened violations.
8. Where an injunction cannot
issue without unfairness to a defendant it
should be denied on the theory that however
important it may be to vindicate the Act the
overriding public interest would be to avoid
judicial injustice; but where the public
interest can be subserved by enjoining
future violations without injustice to the
defendant, it should not deter the Court
from doing so that the self-invited
consequences which might be suffered by the
defendant, though just, are severe.
9. The possible indirect effects
of a decision upon those not parties, while
appropriate for consideration by the Court
in a general way, may not be deemed
controlling, since it would be impossible,
if not inappropriate, to evaluate those
collateral effects either in and of
themselves or in relation to the benefits
which indirectly will accrue to others from
the enforcement of the Act.
10. One of the considerations to
be observed on the problem of possible
injustice to the parties before the Court is
that an injunction could be accepted by the
SEC by virtue of subdivision (c) of 15
U.S.C.A. § 78o as a substitute for a
finding on its part of a wilful violation
with the result that the dealer defendants
could be put out of business. It is not the
province of the Court in an injunction suit
such as this to determine the precise
meaning of the term "wilfully" as used in
subdivision (d) concerning revocation of
registrations (see Pierce v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, 9 Cir., 1956, 239 F.2d
160; Weber v. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 2 Cir., 1955, 222 F.2d 822,
certiorari denied 350 U.S. 947, 76 S.Ct.
322, 100 L. Ed. 826; Hughes v. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 1949, 85 U.S.App.
D.C. 56, 174 F.2d 969). If it were of the
view that an injunction justifiable in and
of itself under the special facts
Page 262
of a case would be unfairly seized upon
by the Commission for the purpose of
revoking a registration which would not or
could not otherwise be revoked, the Court
would hesitate to issue it. However,
arbitrary action on the part of a commission
is not to be readily apprehended; and it
must be recognized that it is the SEC's
responsibility in the first instance, not
this Court's, to determine whether the
public interest would be subserved with
justice to the respondent, and in accordance
with the statute, by an order of revocation.
11. The burden is upon the
defendants to establish that transactions
were exempt from the general requirements of
the Act, but this does not affect the burden
of the plaintiff to prove that an injunction
should issue.
The corporate defendants are in
no position fairly to say that an injunction
would be unjust. Despite the absence of a
showing herein of fraud or wilfulness in the
criminal sense, they accommodated themselves
to the plan of Boren, Collins, Goldstein and
their associates to accomplish by
indirection what legally could have been
done only after registration of the
securities. That they did this knowing that
there was a serious question about the
legality of their procedure and were willing
to take a chance in view of the rewards
offered is abundantly established. Beyond
this, it may be suspected that each of the
three to some extent was a co-conspirator
with Boren, Josephson or Goldstein et al. in
wilfully, deliberately and deceptively
evading understood requirements of the Act;
but mere suspicion does not justify such a
finding, and I do not base the conclusions
herein reached upon this ground. The
plaintiff made no attempt to show that
Goldstein had, to the knowledge of the
officers of Veditz Co., theretofore engaged
in similar shady transactions. It has not
been shown that in other transactions prior
to those in question any defendant had
demonstrated an inclination to violate the
requirements of the Act; that the oil and
gas interests conveyed by Boren were
worthless or out of proportion in value to
the amount of stock recovered; or that in
the instant transactions in addition to what
I have indicated, there were involved actual
deception, fraud, false advertising or other
circumstances typically present in
registration revocation cases and frequently
present when injunctions are issued under
the Act. Likewise, the view might be
entertained that the knowledge and acts of
Goldstein, if not Josephson, are imputable
to Veditz Co.; those of Collins, its
president, to Mono-Kearsarge. But having
determined the illegality of transactions
engaged in by each of these corporations
independent of the question of imputed
knowledge from those who might be said to be
in a position antagonistic to that of their
principals, resort to that doctrine as the
primary base on which to hang an injunction
would not be justified.
The Court therefore, is
confronted with the hard choice between
granting an injunction in the absence of
convincing proof of wilfulness in the
criminal or analogous sense, with the
likelihood of difficult problems to ensue
for the defendants in connection with the
handling of, or settlement for, the stock of
alleged innocent purchasers or other
customers, and with the legal possibility of
the Commission's basing revocation
proceedings on the mere fact that an
injunction has issued; and denying an
injunction where violation of the Act has
been abundantly established, where at least
two of the defendants have indicated an
inclination to risk further violations if
not enjoined; and where all defendants have
demonstrated, to put it most mildly, a
casual attitude toward compliance, which it
is fair to infer will continue as to other
securities offering rewards justifying the
taking of a further chance unless an
injunction issue.
Upon this choice, it is believed
that there is a duty to issue an injunction.
The absence of established wilfulness in the
more culpable sense, and the completion of
the bulk of the illegal
Page 263
transactions involving the particular
security, which defendants say commend the
denial of an injunction, make less likely
any action on the part of SEC toward
revocation of registration which the
defendants infer would be more prejudicial
than an injunction; and an injunction would
seem to render less necessary or likely the
revocation of registration.
It seems clear that unless an
injunction issue, the same willingness to
take a chance on questionable practices
which occasioned this suit will continue on
the part of Mono-Kearsarge. After this suit
was instituted it continued freely for a
time to transfer on its books and issue new
certificates for stock out of the
962,000-share block, on the claim that to do
otherwise might render it liable to innocent
purchasers for value. Upon the plaintiff's
application for a temporary injunction its
counsel assured the Court that
notwithstanding the latter problem, it would
make no transfers pendente lite and would
maintain the status quo. The Court accepted
such assurance and refrained from issuing a
preliminary injunction in view of an early
trial setting. Immediately before the trial,
however, it was reported to the Court, and
confirmed by evidence at the trial, that two
certificates of the questioned stock had
been received by the corporation and new
certificates issued in direct disregard of
the assurance so given to the Court on the
basis of which it stayed its hand.
Without assuming to determine now
whether such further action pendente lite
was illegal or not, and accepting the
corporation's explanation that there was
some misunderstanding, the fact remains that
something more emphatic than an admonition
or request seems necessary in the case of
Mono-Kearsarge. Furthermore, Mono-Kearsarge
in its answer takes the position that where
its stock is in the hands of innocent
parties, it will have to make transfers and
issue new stock upon request, even though
the transactions which resulted in the base
transfer were illegal. I will not assume to
decide this question either; but there is
further indication that questioned
transactions will be completed by the
corporation largely as it sees fit in the
absence of some external restraint. An
injunction will at least assure that in
making decisions as to its duties to
stockholders it will use more care and
circumspection than it has in the past in
evaluating its duties to the public.
A similar situation exists with
regard to Gravis, Inc. Gravis testified that
his company has no intention to further deal
in Mono-Kearsarge stock but that it will,
unless restrained, endeavor to obtain from
Collins the 195,000-share certificate which
Collins now holds, and will persist in
delivery of certificates based thereon to
persons who already have made purchases of
the questioned stock from him. It, too,
should proceed with whatever is right in
this respect with more than the
circumspection it employed in the base
transaction. This can be appropriately
assured by an injunction.
The necessity of an injunction in
the case of Veditz Co. is not so clearly
indicated. Yet, the primary difference
between it and the other two defendants is
that Veditz Co. was fortunate enough to have
completed all of the deliveries of stock
which it intended to sell shortly prior to
the institution of this action. I do not
believe this circumstance should be
determinative. As between it and Gravis,
Inc., its responsibility in carrying on the
prohibited transactions was greater and at
least as clearly, if not more clearly shown,
because of the direct participation of its
own employee and the closer contact with
other personnel of the scheme by Veditz.
Moreover, circumstances of its prior
participation make it fair to suppose that
unless enjoined it, with the continued help
of such people as its employee Goldstein,
will continue to indulge in the loose
practices of the instant case, if not
involving Mono-Kearsarge stock, then with
other securities offering similar
inducements.
Page 264
I conclude that it did reasonably
appear to the Commission upon the
commencement of this action that the
defendants were engaged and were about to
engage in acts and practices constituting a
violation of the Securities Act; and that a
proper showing was made at the time of
trial, as is more particularly indicated
above, for the granting of a permanent
injunction, the form of which will be
settled upon plaintiff's motion. |