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Page 799
73 F.2d 799
BLYTHE
v.
DOHENY et al.
No. 7444.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth
Circuit.
November 26, 1934.
Appeal from the District Court of
the United States for the Southern District
of California, Central Division; William P.
James, Judge.
Action by James C. Blythe against
Edward L. Doheny and others. From a judgment
for defendants, plaintiff appeals.
Affirmed.
L. Frank Ottofy, of Los Angeles,
Cal., for appellant.
Homer D. Crotty, Bruce Wallace,
David P. Evans, and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher,
all of Los Angeles, Cal., for appellee Pan
American Western Co.
Olin Wellborn, Jr., and Olin
Wellborn, III, both of Los Angeles, Cal.,
and Frank J. Hogan, of Washington, D. C.,
for individual appellees.
Before WILBUR, SAWTELLE, and
GARRECHT, Circuit Judges.
SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.
The appellant, a citizen of
Missouri, brought an action alleging fraud
and deceit against the appellees, based upon
two sales of
Page 800
shares of the appellee corporation, which
shares it is alleged were void for failure
to secure the permit of the commissioner of
corporations of California. The prayer was
for $19,225 compensatory damages and $25,000
punitive damages. The corporate appellee was
organized under the laws of Delaware, and
the individual appellees are citizens of
California.
By express stipulation of the
parties, a jury was waived. The case was
submitted on its merits by counsel for the
individual appellees. From a judgment in
favor of the appellees, the present appeal
is being prosecuted.
For a proper understanding of the
appellant's situation here, there is
necessary a brief chronology of the
proceedings below after the case was
submitted, on September 9, 1932.
On March 18, 1933, the lower
court entered upon its minutes an order
setting forth that the court had concluded
"that the proof does not sustain the cause
of action alleged in the complaint," and
that "findings and judgment are accordingly
ordered to be entered in favor of the
defendants [appellees]."
On March 23, 1933, the appellant
filed a request for "special finding of
facts," but the record does not show that he
at that time proposed any special findings.
On the contrary, the record shows only the
following statement: "Now comes the
plaintiff [appellant] in the above-entitled
cause and respectfully requests the Court to
make a special finding of facts in the
above-entitled cause before entry of
judgment herein, in view of the following
recital of the Minute Order entered herein
on the 18th day of March, 1933, to-wit: `and
the court having fully considered the facts
and the law, now concludes that the proof
does not sustain the cause of action alleged
in the complaint.'"
So far as the record shows, it
was not until July 10, 1933, nearly four
months after the court had indicated the
judgment that it intended to render, that
the appellant submitted proposed findings of
fact.
On the same day, the appellant
filed a "motion for judgment," and on the
day following he filed his objection to the
appellees' proposed judgment and proposed
findings of fact.
On July 13, 1933, the court
entered an order adopting the findings of
fact and form of judgment presented by the
appellees, reciting that such findings and
judgment were signed and filed, and noting
an exception in favor of the appellant to
the refusal of the court to make findings as
proposed by the appellant and to make the
judgment requested by him.
On September 12, 1933, the
appellant filed a motion for a new trial,
alleging, inter alia, "newly-discovered
evidence." In a supporting affidavit,
counsel for the appellant deposed that since
the trial of the cause "he has been informed
by the Secretary of State of the State of
New York that the Pan American Western
Petroleum Company [the corporate appellee
herein] had no right to maintain an office
in the State of New York or to issue
certificates of stock in said State without
authority from him so to do and that,
consequently, the said certificates of
stock, evidencing the ownership of the
shares, which were delivered to plaintiff
and for which he paid are and were at all
times void when the said stock was sold to
the Petroleum Securities Company and Blair &
Company in the State of California."
On September 25, 1933, the court
denied the motion for a new trial, to which
ruling the appellant duly excepted.
There are seventeen assignments
of error. One assignment deals with the
court's denial of the appellant's motion for
a new trial. It is too well established to
require citation of authority that such a
motion is addressed to the sound discretion
of the trial court; and a study of the
record convinces us that the court did not
abuse such discretion.
Five assignments of error relate
to the special findings of fact and to the
court's refusal "to make the judgment
requested by the plaintiff [appellant]."
While we are of the opinion that
the findings made by the court are supported
by the evidence, we further hold that,
because of the state of the record, the
appellant is not in position to attack the
sufficiency of the evidence to support the
findings, or to complain of the court's
refusal to enter the judgment requested by
him. The appellant may, however, question
the sufficiency of the findings to support
the judgment. The merits of this latter
contention will be considered hereafter.
From the foregoing statement of
the case, it is observable that the
appellant did not request any special
findings of facts until five days after the
lower court had announced its intended
judgment, and that the appellant did not
propose any findings of his own until nearly
four months after such announcement by the
court. Similarly, the appellant did not file
a motion for judgment until four
Page 801
months after the court had indicated the
judgment that it would enter.
All the requests and motions
referred to in the foregoing paragraph came
too late. In Continental Nat. Bank v.
National City Bank, 69 F.(2d) 312, 317, 318,
this court said:
"Appellant also assigns as error
the refusal of its request for a declaration
of law that, on the stipulated facts
admitted in evidence, plaintiff, because of
its failure to comply with the terms of the
letter of credit, was not entitled to
recover. Unless the request was made and its
refusal excepted to `in the progress of the
trial,' as required by the statute we cannot
consider the alleged error. [Cases cited.]
It is settled that they come too late if
made after judgment, even though the trial
judge after judgment granted leave to make
the request. [Cases cited.] In the instant
case, while made after the entry of the
trial judge's opinion with the order that
`judgment be for plaintiff,' they were made
before the rendition on September 5th and
the entry on September 6th of the judgment
itself. The order of August 10th, we are
satisfied, was neither intended nor regarded
as the rendition of a judgment. It was the
announcement by the trial judge that he had
concluded to direct a judgment in favor of
the plaintiff; the ordering part was `for a
judgment' which he would thereafter direct
as distinguished from a present judgment.
[Cases cited.]
"Nevertheless, the question
remains whether or not rulings made and
exceptions thereto taken, not merely after
submission of the case, but even after the
announcement by the court of its opinion and
intended judgment, but before rendition of
the final judgment, are made and taken `in
the progress of the trial.' In the opinion
in Edwards v. Robinson [(C. C. A. 9) 8
F.(2d) 726], supra, an examination of the
record discloses what is not entirely clear
from the opinion, that there, as here, the
declarations of law were requested some time
after the judge had filed his opinion which
concluded with the words `the complaint will
be dismissed' but also some time before
the trial judge signed and filed the actual
judgment of dismissal and his own findings.
This court there said that no motion or
request for a finding in favor of plaintiff
was made `until long after the close of the
trial, and not until 10 days after a
decision in favor of the defendants had been
announced by the court. Under such
circumstances, we are without jurisdiction
to consider the sufficiency of the testimony
to support the findings.' There are also
expressions of opinion in other cases that,
for these purposes, the progress of the
trial is concluded when the cause is
submitted to the judge, or at least when he
announces his decision. [Cases cited.] This
interpretation accords with the function of
the request for ruling and exception to the
denial thereof; it is to direct the judge's
attention to the specific proposition of law
relied upon, so that prior to the
announcement of his conclusions he may have
the opportunity to consider it. True it is
that after entry, and until the end of the
term during which the judgment has been
entered, it may be set aside and a new trial
granted, or, if tried without jury, a
contrary judgment entered. That, however, is
a matter entirely within the court's
discretion, and offers no guide to the scope
of the general rule. We conclude that there
were no rulings `in the progress of the
trial,' properly before us for review, other
than that on the evidence hereinabove
considered.
"The sufficiency of the special
findings to sustain the judgment is
reviewable without an exception whether they
were made before or after judgment. [Cases
cited.]"
In this appeal, therefore, we are
limited to a consideration only of the facts
found by the court below.
Succinctly stated, the findings
of fact filed by the court were as follows:
The corporate appellee,
hereinafter referred to as "the
corporation," was formed on May 8, 1925, and
was dissolved by the secretary of state of
Delaware on September 24, 1929. Meetings of
the board of directors and two meetings of
the stockholders of the corporation were
held in Los Angeles, Cal., but at no time
prior to June 18, 1928, was the corporation
doing business in California, and at no time
did it maintain its principal office in the
latter state.
The corporation was not organized
for the purpose of having conveyed to it any
property in California, or for the purpose
of evading the laws of that state.
The appellees Doheny, Anderson,
Smith, and Ritter were directors of the
corporation from May 8, 1925, to June 18,
1928, and the appellee Sands was a director
from September 19, 1925, to June 18, 1928.
The articles of incorporation
provided that the stock should be divided
into "class A" and "class B." Both classes
should confer the same rights and privileges
and be subject to the same limitations,
except that the holders of class B stock
should have no voting power.
Page 802
The appellee Doheny was president
of the corporation, and the appellee Ritter
was its treasurer for the duration of their
respective directorships.
At a meeting of its directors,
held in Los Angeles on July 28, 1925, the
corporation authorized the issuance of
certain shares of its class B capital stock,
including the shares purchased by the
appellant and enumerated in his complaint.
The corporation, however, did not authorize
any of such shares, including the
appellant's, to be issued, and they were not
issued or sold, in California. The appellant
did not purchase from the individual
appellees any of the corporation's capital
stock, and did not pay them any money for
the stock that he purchased.
On September 8, 1925, in St.
Louis, Mo., the appellant placed an order
with a firm of brokers of that city, to
subscribe for 100 shares of class B stock of
the corporation, at $23.50 a share, and paid
the brokers therefor the sum of $2,350. The
appellant, however, did not receive a stock
certificate for the 100 shares until August
17, 1928. The stock certificate obtained by
the appellant was issued in New York, and
was executed by the vice president and the
assistant secretary of the corporation, was
registered by a bank of New York City, and
was countersigned by a trust company, also
of New York.
On July 23, 1928, in St. Louis,
the appellant placed an order with another
firm of St. Louis brokers, to buy for him
1,000 shares of class B stock, which was at
that time quoted on the New York Stock
Exchange, was known by the appellant to be
so traded in and quoted, and was by him
intended to be bought on the open market.
The brokers bought the 1,000 shares for the
appellant, and, on or about July 27, 1928,
the latter paid them $16,875 therefor and
received from them, in St. Louis,
certificates evidencing such shares. The
1,000 shares were executed, registered, and
countersigned in the same manner as the 100
shares theretofore issued to the appellant.
At the time that the shares were
purchased by the appellant the corporation
had not complied with any of the provisions
of the Corporate Securities Act of
California (St. Cal. 1917, p. 673, as
amended). The corporation, however, was not
required by any of its acts, or by the
provisions of that statute, to comply
therewith or to secure a permit thereunder,
and the class B stock was not issued in
violation of the Securities Act, nor were
the 1,100 shares purchased by the appellant
void or worthless.
None of the individual appellees,
either as officers or agents of the
corporation, or as individuals, in any way
authorized, directed, or aided in the
issuance or sale of any of the shares bought
by the appellant.
They at all times knew that the
corporation commissioner of California had
not issued any permit for the issuance of
the corporation's capital stock shares,
while, at the time he purchased the shares
and received his stock certificates, the
appellant did not have this knowledge, and
did not acquire it until August, 1930.
The appellees did not act in
collusion or conspiracy to cheat, defraud,
or deceive the appellant, or to cause any
shares of stock to be issued in violation of
the California Corporate Securities Act, and
the shares were not so issued. The 1,100
shares purchased by the appellant were
executed at New York, but not at the
direction of any of the appellees.
The appellees did not perform any
void or illegal acts; the appellant was not
caused to lose any money by any void or
illegal acts of any of the appellees; the
appellant has not been damaged in the sum of
$19,225 or at all; and it is not true that
there was no consideration for the payment
of such sum by the appellant for the shares
of stock, or that no rights whatever were
transferred to the appellant by the purchase
of such shares.
The first assignment of error
deals with the court's refusal to admit
evidence offered by the appellant from the
minute books of the appellee corporation to
the effect that at a board of directors'
meeting, held March 17, 1926, reference was
made to $15,000,000 of first mortgage bonds
of the Pan American Petroleum Company, which
evidence, according to the assignment,
showed that the appellees "thereby
dissipated the value of defendant
corporation's assets." It is difficult to
see the relevancy of such evidence in
connection with a suit based upon the
issuing of stock without a permit, and we
hold that the court below properly excluded
it.
The next ten assignments complain
of the court's refusal to admit in evidence
against the individual appellees entries in
minute books of the corporate appellee,
recording various proceedings, most of which
were held at gatherings that are
characterized as "directors' meetings," and
all of which occurred after June 18, 1928,
on which date, as we have seen, the court
found that the individual appellees had
ceased to be directors of the corporation.
We do not believe that
Page 803
the exclusion of this evidence, as
against the individual appellees, was
improper.
We advance, finally, to the
principal question of law presented by the
record: Do the facts found by the court
support the judgment?
It will be recalled that the
court found that, at a meeting of the board
of directors, held in Los Angeles, on July
28, 1925, the corporation authorized the
issuance of certain shares of class B
capital stock, including the shares
purchased by the appellant, but that it did
not authorize that such shares be issued,
nor were they issued or sold, to the
appellant or to any one else, in California.
It is also to be observed that there was no
authorization that the stock be issued to
any particular individual, in California or
anywhere else.
The precise point for us here to
determine is whether or not such general
authorization that stock should issue,
without more, constituted a violation of the
Corporate Securities Act of California, and
thus rendered void the shares purchased by
the appellant.
At the outset, it may be conceded
that the issuance of a security without a
permit is included within the prohibition of
the Corporate Securities Act of California,
the pertinent provision of which had not
been amended at the time of the transactions
that we are here considering. St. Cal. 1917,
c. 532, p. 679, § 12. To the same effect are
the decisions of the courts of the State.
Tatterson v. Kehrlein, 88 Cal. App. 34, 47,
263 P. 285; 6 Cal. Jur. 781, § 184.
It therefore becomes necessary to
inquire as to what constitutes an "issuance"
of a corporate security.
Quoting with approval from 5
Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations, p. 5740, §
3478, this court has held that, to
effectuate an issue of stock, a certificate
is not necessary. Los Angeles Fisheries v.
Crook (C. C. A.) 47 F. (2d) 1031, 1035. See
also,
Mitchell v. Beckman, 64 Cal. 117, 121, 28 P.
110;
California S. H. Co. v. Callender, 94 Cal.
120, 127, 29 P. 859, 28 Am. St. Rep. 99;
San Joaquin L. & W. Co. v. Beecher, 101 Cal.
70, 79, 35 P. 349; San Francisco, etc.,
Agency v. Miller, 4 Cal. App. 291, 293, 87
P. 630; 1 Machen on Modern Law of
Corporations, §§ 164 and 171, pages 149 and
153, 154.
It is, however, necessary that
there be an issuance to some specific
shareholder. A mere blanket authorization,
passed by the board of directors, to the
effect that there shall be an issuance of
stock, without more, does not meet either
the legal or the popular definition of
"issuance."
In American Pig Iron Storage v.
State Bd. of Assessors, 56 N. J. Law, 389,
29 A. 160, 161, the Supreme Court of New
Jersey said: "`To issue,' as defined by
lexicographers, signifies to send out; to
put in circulation. In a popular sense, a
corporation engaged in organization is said
to issue stock when it obtains subscriptions
for it; and, in the construction of tax
laws, words are to be interpreted in their
popular sense."
In Scott v. Abbott (C. C. A. 8)
160 F. 573, 577, certiorari denied 212 U. S.
571, 29 S. Ct. 682, 53 L. Ed. 655, the court
said: "The word `issue' here employed is
obviously used in its ordinary commercial or
financial sense, meaning `to emit,' `put
into circulation,' or `dispose of
securities' already authorized and prepared
for disposition. [Authorities cited.]"
And in Marshall on Private
Corporations, § 209, p. 528, we find the
statement: "By the `issue of stock,' as the
expression is here used, is meant the act or
contract of the corporation by which shares
of its capital stock are vested in persons
as stockholders or members, and not merely
the issue of certificates of stock, which,
as we have seen, are not the stock itself,
but merely the evidence of the ownership of
stock, and the rights of the owners as a
stockholder."
See, also, 5 Fletcher op. cit., §
3478, p. 5740; 2 Clark and Marshall on
Private Corporations, § 382, p. 1177; 5
Thompson on Corporations (3d Ed.) § 3510, p.
350.
Furthermore, it is to be borne in
mind that the court below found that none of
the shares of stock authorized to be issued
by the board of directors, "were authorized
to be issued or were issued or sold in"
California, to the appellant or to any one
else.
The authorization that we have
just considered is the nearest approach to
any issuance of stock made by the
corporation in California, as disclosed by
the findings of fact made by the court. And,
as we have seen, in the present discussion
we are limited to the facts found by the
court.
Accordingly, we hold that the
findings of fact support the judgment, which
is therefore affirmed.
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