PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 93-3227-CR
93-3228-CR
†Petition for
Review Filed
Complete
Title
of
Case:91-CF-282
STATE OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MARK W. MUELLER,
Defendant-Appellant.†
--------------------------------------
91-CF-283
STATE OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JAMES I. STOPPLE,
Defendant-Appellant.†
Submitted
on Briefs: October 6, 1994
COURT COURT OF
APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion
Released: March 28, 1996
Opinion
Filed: March
28, 1996
Source
of APPEAL Appeal from judgments
Full
Name JUDGE COURT: Circuit
Lower
Court. COUNTY: Dane
(If
"Special" JUDGE: Daniel
R. Moeser
so
indicate)
JUDGES: Gartzke,
P.J., Dykman and Sundby, JJ.
Concurred:
Dissented: Sundby,
J.
Appellant
ATTORNEYSFor the defendants-appellants the
cause was submitted on the brief of James Geis of James Geis Law
Office of Chicago, IL; Stephen H. Hurley of Hurley, Burish &
Milliken, Madison; John W. Markson of Bell, Metzner, Gierhart
& Moore of Madison.
Respondent
ATTORNEYSFor the plaintiff-respondent the cause
was submitted on the brief of James E. Doyle, attorney general, with Roy
Korte, assistant attorney general.
COURT OF
APPEALS DECISION DATED AND
RELEASED March
28, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.
See § 808.10 and Rule
809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
Nos.93-3227-CR
93-3228-CR
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN
COURT OF APPEALS
91-CF-282
STATE
OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MARK
W. MUELLER,
Defendant-Appellant.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
91-CF-283
STATE
OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JAMES
I. STOPPLE,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEALS
from judgments of the circuit court for Dane County: DANIEL R. MOESER, Judge. Affirmed.
Before
Gartzke, P.J., Dykman and Sundby, JJ.
GARTZKE,
P.J. Defendants Mark W. Mueller and
James I. Stopple appeal from judgments of conviction against them under the
Wisconsin Organized Crime Control Act (WOCCA), §§ 946.80 to 946.88, Stats.
Each defendant was convicted on one count of pattern racketeering
activity, §§ 946.83(3) and 946.82(2), Stats.,
for eighteen predicate violations of securities fraud under §§ 551.41(2)
and (3), Stats.
The
issues are: (1) whether the statute of
limitations bars this prosecution because warrants for defendants' arrests were
signed but never executed, the information was not timely filed and the
defendants appeared voluntarily at the initial appearance; (2) whether to prove
defendants "wilfully" violated state securities laws, the State must
establish that they acted with intent to defraud or knowingly violated the
securities law; (3) whether WOCCA requires knowledge or intent beyond that
required for the predicate offenses that constitute racketeering activity; and
(4) whether the jury could find from the evidence that the notes the defendants
issued on behalf of their corporation were securities and that the defendants
replaced corporate assets with less valuable assets.
We
decide all issues against the defendants and therefore affirm the judgments of
conviction.
I.
BACKGROUND
In 1979 the defendants
formed Diversified Agricultural Services (DAS), a Wisconsin corporation. DAS purchased three subsidiaries from Keefe
& Associates ("Keefe") for $1.8 million. FLS, a farm auction business, was one such subsidiary. Keefe had owed FLS $3.6 million. FLS forgave $1 million of the debt as part
of its acquisition by DAS, and Keefe transferred to FLS $2.6 million in
accounts receivable at their book value.
FLS then transferred those receivables to DAS, and FLS then showed in
its books the $2.6 million balance due it from DAS. By 1985 DAS owed FLS $1.5 million on the debt. In 1985 the defendants transferred DAS
receivables to FLS in exchange for cancellation of the DAS debt to FLS.
By
some time in 1981, defendants had acquired a majority interest in DAS. Mueller was the president and Stopple the
vice-president of both DAS and FLS, and they were directors of both
companies. While they were not involved
in the day-to-day operation of the business of FLS, they were directly involved
in its overall operation and controlled its finances.
FLS
offered its farm-auction customers an opportunity to defer their income tax on
gains realized from the sale of their properties. To accomplish tax deferment, customers sold their farm properties
to FLS, taking part of the sale price in cash and the balance in FLS's
unsecured installment notes. FLS
marketed these notes to its farm auction customers as investments and offered
higher interest rates than those available at local banks. Beginning in 1983, FLS offered investors the
option of buying either unsecured notes or bank-guaranteed notes. Investors usually took unguaranteed notes. Those notes paid more interest than the
bank-guaranteed notes.
In
1985 FLS wrote to its auction customers who held its installment notes,
offering to renew its notes as "an opportunity to invest in our
company." It offered commissions
to employees who "generated" its non-guaranteed installment notes.
FLS
operated at a loss in 1982 through 1985.
The State presented evidence that between 1981 and 1985 FLS issued or
renewed forty-six of its installment sales notes and paid off twenty-one
notes. In January 1986 FLS filed
bankruptcy, and could not pay $1.5 million on its unsecured notes.
The
State subsequently charged each defendant with one count of racketeering under
WOCCA, alleging that they had engaged in eighteen predicate acts of securities
fraud in violation of §§ 551.41(2) and (3), Stats. The State
alleged that in seventeen instances defendants failed to state material facts
relating to FLS's ability to pay its unsecured notes. For an eighteenth predicate act, the State alleged that
defendants violated Wisconsin securities laws by transferring worthless accounts
receivable to FLS in exchange for forgiveness of DAS's debt to FLS just eight
months before FLS went bankrupt.
Nine
farmers testified that through May 1985 they had acquired, in total, seventeen
unsecured notes from FLS in exchange for the sale of their farm
properties. Defendant Mueller
acknowledged that he had not told or directed FLS employees to disclose to
customers that FLS was highly leveraged, that it had operated at a loss every
year since 1981, that the notes were risky investments, that FLS had delinquent
accounts receivable, that its net worth depended on its good will, and that
certain long-standing FLS employees had resigned as directors in January 1985.
The
jury heard testimony that in 1985 DAS transferred worthless receivables to FLS
in exchange for cancellation of the DAS debt of about $1.5 million to FLS.
II.
STATUTE OF
LIMITATIONS
Section
939.74(1), Stats., provides in
material part:
[P]rosecution for a felony must be commenced within 6
years.... Within the meaning of this
section, a prosecution has commenced when a warrant or summons is issued, an
indictment is found, or an information is filed.
The
defendants' WOCCA violations terminated on May 27, 1985. Defendants contend that the State did not
timely commence the felony prosecutions against them. They assert that this prosecution was not commenced within six
years and no warrant issued and the information was not filed within the
six-year limitation. We conclude that
the felony prosecutions were commenced on February 26, 1991, and therefore the
actions were brought within six years.
Because
the facts are undisputed, the proper application of § 939.74 (1), Stats., is an issue of law which we
decide without deference to the trial court's opinion. State v. Pham, 137 Wis.2d 31,
33-34, 403 N.W.2d 35, 36 (1987).
On
February 26, 1991, the same day the State filed the criminal complaints with
the clerk of court, the circuit court judge signed warrants for defendants'
arrests and the prosecutor received the warrants. The court found that the warrants were never delivered to law
enforcement to be served and instead were placed in the prosecutor's
files. The warrants were never filed
because, the court found, the defendants' counsel arranged for them to appear
voluntarily for an initial appearance on February 26, 1991. The State filed the informations on June 12,
1991.
State
v. Lemay, 155 Wis.2d 202, 455
N.W.2d 233 (1990), controls the statute of limitations issue. In Lemay the defendant claimed
that the State had violated his right to a speedy trial because of a delay
between issuance of the complaint and the warrant for his arrest, on the one
hand, and execution of the warrant, on the other. Id. at 204, 455 N.W.2d at 233. The Lemay court held that
defendant's right to a speedy trial attached on the day the complaint was filed
and the warrant "issued." Id.
at 210, 455 N.W.2d at 236. On the same
day the judge signed the arrest warrant, the district attorney received and
sent the warrant to the clerk of court rather than to the sheriff. Id. at 205, 455 N.W.2d at
234. As a result, the warrant was not
served until thirty-seven months later, but the Lemay court
concluded that the warrant issued the day that the judge signed it and the
district attorney received it. Id.
at 205, 210, 455 N.W.2d at 234, 236.
Lemay means that an arrest warrant issues when it is signed
by a judge with intent that it be executed and the warrant leaves the
possession of the judge. That happened
here on February 26, 1991. The only
reasonable inference is that because the warrants were put in the hands of the
prosecutor on that day, the trial court had signed the warrants with intent
that they be executed. That the
prosecutor sat on the warrants is irrelevant.
The court issues a warrant, not the prosecutor. That the warrants command "any law
enforcement officer" to execute them and no law enforcement officer did so
is irrelevant to the question when the warrants issued.[1]
Defendants
contend that because they voluntarily appeared, the warrants should never have
issued and therefore issuance of the warrants did not commence the felony
prosecutions under § 939.74(1), Stats. Defendants base their argument on
§ 968.04(1)(a), Stats.,
which provides in relevant part:
"When an accused ... appears voluntarily before a judge, no warrant
shall be issued and the complaint shall be filed forthwith with a
judge." We reject the defendants'
argument. The record does not show that
the warrants issued after the defendants had voluntarily appeared. The fact is the warrants had issued, and
that commenced the prosecution under § 939.74(1).
III.
WILFULNESS
ELEMENT IN A SECURITY FRAUD
PROSECUTION UNDER
§§ 551.41(2) AND (3), STATS.,
DOES
NOT
REQUIRE PROOF THAT DEFENDANT ACTED WITH
INTENT TO DEFRAUD
OR KNOWLEDGE THAT THE LAW WAS
VIOLATED
The
eighteen predicate acts for the WOCCA charge are securities fraud charges
against defendants for violations of §§ 551.41(2) and (3), Stats.
Chapter 551, Stats., is
the Wisconsin Uniform Securities Law.
Section
551.41, Stats., provides:
It is
unlawful for any person, in connection with the offer, sale or purchase of any
security in this state, directly or indirectly:
(1) To
employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud;
(2) To
make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; or
(3) To engage in any act, practice or course of business
which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person.
Section
551.58(1), Stats., the penalties
provision in ch. 551, Stats.,
makes a violation of § 551.41, Stats.,
a crime. Section 551.58(1) provides:
Any person who wilfully violates any provision of this
chapter except s. 551.54, or any rule under this chapter, or any order of which
the person has notice, or who violates s. 551.54 knowing or having reasonable
cause to believe that the statement made was false or misleading in any
material respect, may be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than
5 years or both. Each of the acts
specified shall constitute a separate offense and a prosecution or conviction
for any one of such offenses shall not bar prosecution or conviction for any
other offense.
The
trial court instructed the jury in part:
Wilful ... means only that the defendant knowingly
committed the act charged. Wilful does
not mean that the defendant had an intent to defraud or that the defendant had
knowledge that the law was being violated.
The
defendants assert that the instruction was error. They assert that because § 551.58, Stats., provides that "wilful" violations of the
securities law are crimes, the penalties statute does not apply unless the
accused had intent to defraud, was aware of the facts giving rise to a duty to
disclose financial information and was aware of the legal duty requiring
disclosure. We disagree.
Whether
the defendants correctly read § 551.58, Stats.,
turns on its proper construction. That
is a question of law which we decide independently of the trial court's
opinion. Ball v. District No. 4,
Area Bd., 117 Wis.2d 529, 537, 345 N.W.2d 389, 394 (1984). Because reasonable persons could disagree
whether intent or knowledge is an element of § 551.58, we conclude the
statute is ambiguous. Kollasch v.
Adamany, 104 Wis.2d 552, 561, 313 N.W.2d 47, 51-52 (1981). Whether intent or knowledge is an element
depends on the legislature's intent. We
ascertain that intent by examining the statute's history, context, subject
matter, scope and purpose. Village
of Shorewood v. Steinberg, 174 Wis.2d 191, 202, 496 N.W.2d 57, 61
(1993).
We
turn first to the context of § 551.58, Stats. The context includes § 541.41, Stats., because it is, among others,
the statute whose "wilful" violation is critical under
§ 551.58. Nowhere in § 551.41
is there an express requirement that a defendant intend to make an untrue statement
or intend to omit a material statement, or intend to violate the statute.
The
statutory context of § 551.58(1), Stats.,
includes express reference to § 551.54, Stats. The latter makes it unlawful to make a
statement in a document filed with the commissioner of securities which is
false or misleading or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to
make the statements made not misleading.
Section 551.58(1) adds to the misleading filing offense the element of
"knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the statement made was
false or misleading." Sections
551.54 and 551.58 are counterparts to §§ 404 and 409 of the Uniform
Securities Act. Professors Loss and
Seligman comment as follows on these sections of the Uniform Act:
Section 409 [our § 551.58] distinguishes a willful
violation of § 404 [our § 551.54] from a willful violation of any
other section. To violate § 404,
which proscribes misleading filings, a person must not only act willfully but
also know a statement made to a state securities administrator "to be
false or misleading in any material respect...." Elsewhere in the Official Commentary to the 1956 Act, the term willful
is defined to require "proof that the person acted intentionally in the
sense that he was aware of what he was doing." Official Comment to § 204(a)(2)(B).
1 Loss and Seligman, Securities
Regulation 64 n.84 (3rd ed. 1989).
We
next turn to the purpose of the statute.
Chapter 551, Stats., is
the Wisconsin Uniform Securities Law.
Section 551.67, Stats.,
directs us to construe ch. 551 "to effectuate its general purpose to make
uniform the law of those states which enact the `Uniform Securities Act'
...."
The
other states which have enacted the Uniform Securities Act have held that in a
criminal securities fraud case, intent to deceive or defraud or to violate the
law, or knowledge that the law is being violated, is not an element of the
securities fraud offense.[2] Bayhi v. State, 629 So.2d 782,
791 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993); Clarkson v. State, 486 N.E.2d 501,
507 (Ind. 1985); People v. Mitchell, 437 N.W.2d 304, 306-08
(Mich. Ct. App. 1989); State v. Fries, 337 N.W.2d 398, 405 (Neb.
1983); State v. Russell, 291 A.2d 583, 588 (N.J. Super. Ct. App.
Div., 1972); State v. Cox, 566 P.2d 935, 939 (Wash. Ct. App.
1977). Bad motive or knowledge that the
law was violated has also been held not to be an element of offenses for
failure of a broker-dealer to register or for selling unregistered securities
under the Uniform Securities Act, Part II and III (subchs. III & II, ch.
551, Stats.). State v. Dumke, 901 S.W.2d
100, 102 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995); State v. Freis, 337 N.W.2d 398, 405
(Neb. 1983); and State v. Sheets, 610 P.2d 760, 770 (N.M. Ct.
App. 1980).[3]
Finally,
we consider the legislature's inaction in the face of a pertinent decision by
the court of appeals. The absence of
any reference to intent in § 551.41, Stats.,
led us to conclude in State v. Temby, 108 Wis.2d 521, 528, 531,
322 N.W.2d 522, 526, 527 (Ct. App. 1982), that intent to defraud is not an
element of the violation under §§ 551.41 and 551.58, Stats.
We said, "We conclude that given the construction of the term
`wilfully' under the prior statute, that had the legislature wanted to require
specific intent to defraud, it would have explicitly stated so." Id. at 530, 322 N.W.2d at 527.[4] Our reasoning in Temby also
means that a defendant's knowledge or awareness of the facts giving rise to a
duty to disclose or of the legal duty to disclose, is not an element of a
criminal violation of § 541.41.[5]
The
legislature's inaction after we decided Temby is some indication
that we correctly construed the "wilful" element in § 551.58, Stats.
Our construction of §§ 551.41(2) and 551.58, Stats., although by way of dictum, was
important to commerce, to the bar and to the courts of this state.[6] And yet the legislature has not amended
these sections to purge the force of our dictum. "[L]egislative inaction following judicial construction of a
statute, while not conclusive, evinces legislative approval of the
interpretation." State v.
Eichman, 155 Wis.2d 552, 566, 456 N.W.2d 143, 149 (1990).
To
support their position that "wilfulness" in § 551.58, Stats., requires intent and knowledge
in a securities fraud case, the defendants rely heavily on State v.
Collova, 79 Wis.2d 473, 255 N.W.2d 581 (1977). Because our Temby dictum is
not binding precedent, we review defendants' contentions regarding Collova.[7]
The
Collova court construed a statute which made it unlawful for a
person to operate a motor vehicle during suspension or revocation of his
operating privilege before filing proof of financial responsibility or before
obtaining a new license or reinstatement of the privilege. The required state of mind of the person was
not an express element in the statute.
The court nevertheless concluded that the statute required a "state
of mind."[8]
The
Collova court noted that strict criminal liability, i.e.,
liability regardless of the defendant's state of mind, has been held to attach
to "acts [which] are in and of themselves not innocent acts. Persons who choose to engage in these kinds
of unusual and dangerous activities may reasonably be held to the highest
standards of care and precision, enforced by strict criminal liability, in conforming
to government regulations." Id.
at 484, 255 N.W.2d at 587. The relative
innocence of the prohibited acts and severe penalties for violating the
statute--both fine and imprisonment--led the Collova court to
conclude that the legislature intended "some requirement of guilty
knowledge as an element of the offense."
Id. at 486, 255 N.W.2d at 587.
The
Collova rationale does not apply here. Securities fraud is not a situation where, in the words of the Collova
court, "[t]o inflict substantial punishment on a person who is innocent of
any intentional or negligent wrongdoing offends the sense of justice and is
ineffective." Id. at
486, 255 N.W.2d at 588. The person who
violates § 551.41(2), Stats.,
by making any untrue statement of a material fact or by omitting to state a
material fact is not innocent of wrongdoing.
To make a false statement is wrongdoing, and "[a] statement
containing a half-truth may be as misleading as a statement wholly
false." Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 529 cmt. a (1977). In the latter case "concealment is equivalent
to misrepresentation." Strong
v. Repide, 213 U.S. 419, 430 (1909).
Nor is a person innocent of wrongdoing when engaging in an act, practice
or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
any person, a violation of § 551.41(3).
The actor is a cheat and should, without more, have guilty
knowledge. It is unnecessary to make
guilty knowledge an element of the offense.
The
defendants refer to decisions under §§ 17 and 24 of the Securities Act of
1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77q(a) and 77x, as persuasive authority that proof of
criminal intent is essential to a criminal conviction. They cite U.S. v. Vasilios,
598 F.2d 387 (5th Cir. 1979); U.S. v. Henderson, 446 F.2d 960
(8th Cir. 1971); U.S. v. Boone, 951 F.2d 1526 (9th Cir. 1991); U.S.
v. Vandersee, 279 F.2d 176 (3d Cir. 1960); U.S. v. United Medical
& Surgical Supply Corp., 989 F.2d 1390 (4th Cir. 1993). Because § 77q(a) and 77x are similar to
§§ 551.41(2) and (3),[9]
and 551.58, Stats., defendants
argue that the State must prove they intended to defraud. We disagree.
Section
77q(a) of the Securities Act provides in pertinent part:
77q(a). It shall be unlawful for any person in the
offer or sale of securities by the use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communications in interstate commerce or by the use of the
mails, directly or indirectly--
(1) to
employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, or
(2) to
obtain money or property by means of any untrue statement of a material fact or
any omission to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading, or
(3) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of
business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the
purchaser.
The
penalties provision, § 77x of the Securities Act, provides in pertinent
part:
77x. Any person who wilfully violates any of the
provisions of this title [15 U.S.C. §77a et seq.] ... shall upon conviction be
fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
The
drafters' comment to the Uniform Securities Act directs that we construe the
term "wilfully" consistently with a provision in the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, not the Securities Act of 1933. Uniform Securities Act § 204, cmt. at 545, § 409 cmt.
at 632. "As the federal courts and
the SEC have construed the term `willfully' in § 15(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78o(b),[10]
all that is required is proof that the person acted intentionally in the sense
that he was aware of what he was doing."
Uniform Securities Act § 264, cmt. at 545. The comment persuades us that defendants'
position is not the law. We may
consider the official and published comments of the drafters of a uniform law
when determining the meaning of an ambiguous provision of that law. Spatt v. Balson, 183 Wis.2d
31, 42, 515 N.W.2d 474, 478 (Ct. App. 1994), citing 2B Norman J. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction, §
52.05, at 225 (5th ed. 1992).
Moreover,
other state courts have cited the drafters' comment when ruling that
"scienter" is not required for violations of §§ 101 and 409 of the
Uniform Securities Act (our §§ 551.41 and 551.58, Stats.). Bayhi,
629 So.2d at 791; Russell, 291 A.2d at 586. As we have already noted, we are to construe
ch. 551, Stats., "to make
uniform the law of those states which enact the `Uniform Securities Act'
...." Section 551.67, Stats.
Defendants
urge that we reject the quoted comment because, according to the Alaska Supreme
Court, the drafter of the Uniform Securities Act, Professor Loss, has
"expressed substantial doubt as to whether the meaning of `wilfully' for
administrative enforcement purposes is the same as for purposes of criminal
liability." Hentzner,
613 P.2d at 828. The pertinent portion
of the Loss treatise the Hentzner court cited is as follows:
It is
conceivable, therefore, that "willfully" means something less in
§ 15(b) [15 U.S.C. § 78o(b)] than it does in the penal provisions of
the SEC acts, and that it means something less when applied to a provision like
§ 5 of the Securities Act, which is malum prohibitum, than to one
of the fraud provisions, which more nearly approach mala in se.
At any rate, the
Commission has consistently held under § 15(b) that the term does not
require proof of evil motive, or intent to violate the law, or knowledge that
the law was being violated.
(Emphasis added.)
2 Louis Loss, Securities
Regulation 1309 (2nd ed. 1961).
In
his treatise, Professor Loss described the potentially varying meanings of
"wilfully" within different federal securities laws, not the meaning
of "wilfully" within the Uniform Securities Act. His conclusion that the Commission has
consistently held under § 15(b) that the term does not require proof of
evil motive, or intent to violate the law, or knowledge that the law was being
violated, hardly contradicts the Uniform Securities Act comment directing that
"wilfully" be construed in accordance with federal decisions to mean,
"all that is required is proof that the person acted intentionally in the
sense that he was aware of what he was doing."
Based
on our review of the statute's context, history and purpose, we conclude that
the wilfulness element in a security fraud prosecution does not require proof
that the defendant acted with intent to defraud or knowledge that the law was
violated.
IV.
WOCCA DOES
NOT REQUIRE PROOF OF INTENT OR KNOWLEDGE
BEYOND THAT
REQUIRED FOR THE PREDICATE OFFENSES,
IN THIS CASE
SECURITIES FRAUD
Mueller and Stopple were
charged and convicted under §§ 946.83(3)and 946.82(2), Stats., on one count of violating WOCCA
by conducting or participating in an enterprise through a pattern of
racketeering activity consisting of eighteen predicate offenses of security
fraud in violation of §§ 551.41(2) and (3), Stats. The pertinent
WOCCA provisions are as follows:
Section
946.83(3), Stats., provides,
"No person employed by, or associated with, any enterprise may conduct or
participate, directly or indirectly, in the enterprise through a pattern of
racketeering activity."
Section
946.82(3), Stats., defines
"pattern of racketeering activity" as "engaging in at least 3
incidents of racketeering activity that have the same or similar intents,
results, accomplices, victims or methods of commission or otherwise are
interrelated by distinguishing characteristics...."
Section
946.82(4), Stats., defines
"racketeering activity" as "the attempt, conspiracy to commit,
or commission of" specified predicate felonies, including § 551.41, Stats., the securities fraud statute.
Nothing
in the pertinent WOCCA statutes establishes that intent or knowledge that an
act is unlawful is an element of a WOCCA violation.[11] Because nothing in WOCCA suggests that such
an element exists, we look to § 939.23(1), Stats. That statute
provides,
When criminal intent is an element of a crime in chs.
939 to 951, such intent is indicated by the term "intentionally", the
phrase "with intent to", the phrase "with intent that", or
some form of the verbs "know" or "believe".
Since none of the terms or verb forms listed in
§ 939.23(1) appear in the pertinent WOCCA statutes, it is unlikely that
the legislature intended that criminal intent is an element of a WOCCA
violation.
Finally,
case law interpreting the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act (RICO) is persuasive authority when we interpret WOCCA. State v. O'Connell, 179 Wis.2d
598, 606, 508 N.W.2d 23, 26 (Ct. App. 1993); State v. Evers, 163
Wis.2d 725, 732, 472 N.W.2d 828, 831 (Ct. App. 1991). Federal case law establishes that RICO does not require an
element of intent or knowledge beyond that required to violate the predicate
offense. "The mens rea
element necessary for a substantive RICO conviction is the same as is required
for the predicate crime ...." United
States v. Baker, 63 F.3d 1478, 1493 (9th Cir. 1995), cert. denied
sub nom., Hale v. U.S., 116 S.Ct. 921 (1996), citing United
States v. Scotto, 641 F.2d 47, 55-56 (2nd Cir. 1980), cert. denied,
452 U.S. 961 (1981). Other federal
decisions are to the same effect. United
States v. Biasucci, 786 F.2d 504, 512 (2nd Cir. 1986), cert. denied,
479 U.S. 827 (1986); United States v. Pepe, 747 F.2d 632, 675-76
(11th Cir. 1984); United States v. Boylan, 620 F.2d 359, 361-62
(2nd Cir. 1980), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 833 (1980). The defendants cite no federal RICO cases
holding to the contrary.
Consistently
with the federal case law, the notes to the pattern RICO jury instructions
state
The RICO statute itself contains no specific mens rea
or mental state requirement beyond that called for in statutes outlawing the
predicate act itself. Although the
specific racketeering acts must be accompanied by the mental state required by
the statute prohibiting that act, the RICO statute requires no other evidence
of mental state to support a finding that a defendant engaged in a pattern of
racketeering activity.
2 Edward J. Devitt, Charles B.
Blackmar, Kevin F. O'Malley, Federal Jury Practice and Instructions,
Criminal, § 48.03 at 703 (4th ed. 1990).
Similarly,
the pattern instructions for a WOCCA violation do not include a separate intent
element. See Wis J I--Criminal 1883. We infer that the criminal jury instructions
committee has concluded that an intent or knowledge that an act is unlawful is
not an element of a WOCCA violation.
The work of the criminal jury instructions committee can be persuasive, State
v. Schambow, 176 Wis.2d 286, 299, 500 N.W.2d 362, 367 (Ct. App. 1993),
and here it buttresses our conclusion.
We
conclude that WOCCA does not require proof of intent or knowledge beyond that
required for the underlying predicate offenses.
V.
EVIDENCE
SUSTAINING VERDICT
A. Notes As Securities
The
defendants contend that the State failed to establish that the promissory notes
FLS issued to its farm-auction customers were securities as defined in
§ 551.02(13)(a), Stats.[12] Defendants assert that because the record
shows that FLS issued the notes to its customers as consideration for the
purchase of their properties, the notes are not securities.
The
trial court instructed the jury
Security means any note, evidence of indebtedness,
investment contract or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known
as or having the incidents of a security or offered in the manner in which
securities are offered. Not all
promissory notes are securities under Wisconsin law. You may consider this statute and any other evidence in this case
in determining whether or not these notes constitute securities.
The instruction closely tracks the pertinent parts of
the statute defining "security," § 551.02(13)(a). Neither the State nor the defendants objected
to the instruction.
When
we review the sufficiency of the evidence, we may not reverse a conviction
unless the evidence, viewed most favorably to the State, is so insufficient in
probative value and force that it can be said as a matter of law, that no trier
of fact acting reasonably could have found guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt. State v. Poellinger,
153 Wis.2d 493, 501, 451 N.W.2d 752, 755 (1990).
We
review the evidence without relying on the State's argument that the jury could
find that the FLS notes were securities on the basis of the factors established
in Reves v. Ernst & Young, 494 U.S. 56 (1990).[13] The Reves court developed
those factors to determine whether a note is a security as defined in the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(10). But the case against Mueller and Stopple was
not tried on the basis of the Reves factors. Our review and analysis rest solely on the
evidence the jury heard.
The
defendants argue the jurors could not find, under the instructions to them,
that the notes are securities. We
disagree.
A
prosecution witness from the Wisconsin Security Commissioner's Office testified
that the definition of a security in § 551.02(13)(a), Stats., includes promissory notes. He agreed on cross-examination that what is
a security under Wisconsin law is often debatable and that a court frequently
must interpret the law to determine whether a particular instrument is a
security. The State offered no other
testimony directly touching the question whether the FLS notes are securities.
However,
the defense produced such testimony by an attorney who specializes in
securities law. He testified that all
notes are presumed to be securities and that in determining whether a note is a
security four factors are taken into account:
whether the note is offered to raise capital, as opposed to being issued
to facilitate a commercial transaction; whether the note was issued in an
isolated commercial transaction; whether the note was issued as an investment
opportunity; and whether the note is accompanied by a risk-reducing factor such
as being insured, as opposed to being uninsured, unsecured and uncollateralized.
The
jury was entitled on the basis of the attorney's testimony and their
instructions to find that the FLS notes are securities. First, the record shows that FLS offered the
notes to raise capital. The defendants
wrote to FLS employees, stating
For
many years the installment sale program has been an excellent source of
financing the lending operations of Farm Loan Service.... We are eager at this time to increase this
source of funds within our corporate structure, thus reducing our reliance on
the commercial banking system....
In order to facilitate the raising of new capital for
our operation, we are instituting an incentive program for those direct
employees of Farm Loan Service who are able to generate non-guaranteed
installment sales for the company.
The
jury could infer that the notes were issued as part of a marketing program, and
were not isolated commercial transactions.
FLS issued the notes in single transactions with its farm-auction
customers, but from 1981 to 1985 the defendants sold forty-six notes and paid
off twenty-one. As of 1985 an
additional thirty-five notes were outstanding that had been sold before
1981. When FLS filed bankruptcy, some
sixty to seventy farmers holding outstanding notes totaling $1.5 million were
unsecured creditors of FLS. At one time
the outstanding notes totaled about $3.5 million.
The
jury heard evidence that defendants offered the notes to its farm-auction
customers as investment opportunities.
FLS used a standard letter to farmers stating that it had available
"an opportunity to invest in our company" at a "very competitive
interest rate." FLS regularly used
the letter beginning before 1983, according to defendant Mueller. The record contains many examples of
noteholders who were advised that the notes would earn a higher rate of
interest than was available at a bank, or through a money market account.
Finally,
because the jury heard other evidence that the notes were unsecured by any form
of collateral and were uninsured, the jurors could reasonably conclude that the
notes were unaccompanied by a risk-reducing factor.
B. Transfer of Worthless
Assets to FLS in
Fraud of Noteholders
Count
18 in the information alleged as a separate predicate crime under WOCCA, that
on or about April 30, 1985, the defendants transferred substantially worthless
accounts and notes receivable to FLS in exchange for the elimination of a debt
in the same amount owed by FLS to DAS.
The information alleges the transfer operated as a fraud or deceit on
named noteholders, contrary to §§ 551.41(3) and 551.58, Stats.
The
defendants do not seriously contest the State's position that the assets
transferred to FLS were substantially worthless. They assert, however, that the State failed to prove that the
value of the DAS debt FLS cancelled was greater than the value of the
receivables DAS transferred to FLS.
Since the State put in no direct evidence going to the value of the DAS
debt to FLS, defendants argue that the jury could only speculate regarding the
comparative values in the exchange between FLS and DAS. For that reason, defendants argue, a fraud
under § 551.41(3), Stats.,
was not proved. We reject the argument.
A
former FLS bookkeeper testified that in March 1985 the FLS books showed DAS's
debt to FLS was $1,541,833.36. In April
1985 she made the accounting entries reflecting the transfer by DAS of notes
and accounts having an ostensible value of $1,320,868 to FLS in the
exchange. Because the jury heard
testimony that the assets DAS transferred to FLS were substantially worthless,
the jury was entitled to infer that those assets were substantially less
valuable than DAS's debt to FLS, and therefore the State proved a fraud under
§ 541.41(3), Stats.
VI.
CONCLUSION
We
recapitulate. The prosecution is not
barred by the statute of limitations.
The State did not have to prove defendants acted with intent to defraud
or to knowingly violate the law. WOCCA
does not require proof of knowledge or intent beyond that required for the
predicate acts that constitute racketeering.
Sufficient evidence existed for the jury to find that the FLS notes were
securities and that defendants replaced corporate assets with substantially
less valuable assets. We affirm the
judgments of conviction.
By
the Court.—Judgments affirmed.
Nos. 93-3227-CR(D)
93-3228-CR(D)
SUNDBY,
J. (dissenting). Each defendant is subject
to fines of $90,000 and imprisonment for ninety years. Such severe sanctions may not be imposed on
innocent but negligent defendants. See
State v. Collova, 79 Wis.2d 473, 486, 255 N.W.2d 581, 587-88
(1977). I dissent.
Defendants
were convicted of racketeering for issuing promissory notes through
misrepresentation and fraud, in violation of § 551.41(2) and (3), Stats.
For purposes of deciding whether the trial court correctly instructed
the jury, we must assume that any misrepresentations or omissions defendants
made to induce purchasers to accept the notes were innocent, although
negligent. We propose to hold that the
trial court correctly instructed the jury that it could find defendants guilty
even though they acted innocently. This
cannot be the law.
Over
defendants' objection, the trial court instructed the jury:
Wilful ... means
only that the defendant knowingly committed the act charged. Wilful does not mean that the defendant had
an intent to defraud or that the defendant had knowledge that the law was being
violated.
I
understand and accept that I may be guilty of a crime if I injure someone by my
criminal negligence. Section 939.25(1),
Stats., provides: "`[C]riminal negligence' means ordinary
negligence to a high degree, consisting of conduct which the actor should
realize creates a substantial and unreasonable risk of death or great bodily
harm to another." There is nothing
unconstitutional about punishing negligent conduct which the actor should
realize creates a substantial and unreasonable risk of death or great bodily
harm to another. See State
v. Barman, 183 Wis.2d 180, 196-200, 515 N.W.2d 493, 501-02 (Ct. App.
1994). The key to constitutionality of
reckless behavior statutes is that the actor "should realize" that
his or her conduct is unlawful.
However, we propose to allow the jury to find the defendants in this
case guilty of crimes because their conduct, viewed retrospectively, may have
been negligent.
Section 551.58(1), Stats., provides in part: "Any person who wilfully[14]
violates any provision of this chapter ... may be fined not more than $5,000 or
imprisoned not more than 5 years or both." (Emphasis added.)
Defendants were convicted of eighteen predicate acts.
Section
551.41, Stats., provides in part:
It is unlawful for any person, in connection
with the offer, sale or purchase of any security in this state, directly or
indirectly:
....
(2) To make any untrue statement of a material
fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they are made,
not misleading; or
(3) To engage in
any act, practice or course of business which operates or would operate as a
fraud or deceit upon any person.
"`[Wilful]'
... is a `word of many meanings,' and `its construction [is] often ...
influenced by its context.'" Ratzlaf
v. United States, 114 S. Ct. 655, 659 (1994) (quoting Spies v.
United States, 317 U.S. 492, 497 (1943)).
The
seminal case in Wisconsin construing the word "wilful" is State
v. Preston, 34 Wis. 675, 683-85 (1874). According to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, Preston
continues to be "a leading authority on the nuances of the word,
`wilful.'" Department of
Transp. v. Transportation Comm'n, 111 Wis.2d 80, 88-89, 330 N.W.2d 159,
163 (1983). Preston
points out that "the word is pregnant with ambiguity, and that its meaning
varies in accordance with its context."
Id. In Preston,
the court said:
The word [wilfully], as used to denote the intent
with which an act is done, is undoubtedly susceptible of different shades of
meaning or degrees of intensity according to the context and evident purpose of
the writer. It is sometimes so modified
and reduced as to mean little more than plain intentionally, or designedly. Such is not, however, its ordinary
signification when used in criminal law and penal statutes. It is there most frequently understood, not
in so mild a sense, but as conveying the idea of legal malice in greater or
less degree, that is, as implying an evil intent without justifiable excuse.
34 Wis. at 683-84 (emphasis added). The court said that the "fullest and
most satisfactory discussion" it had found of the word
"[wilfully]" was in United States v. Three Railroad Cars,
1 Abbott's U.S. Rep. 196, where the court, in differentiating between the words
"knowingly," "[wilfully]" and "maliciously," as
used in criminal and penal statutes, said:
The first of these words does not, in common parlance,
or in legal construction, necessarily and per se imply a wicked purpose
or perverse disposition, or indeed any evil or improper motive, intent or
feeling; but the second is ordinarily used in a bad sense to express something
of that kind, or to characterize an act done wantonly, or one which a man of
reasonable knowledge and ability must know to be contrary to his duty.
34 Wis. at 685.
Sections
551.41 and 551.58, Stats., are
set in the context of subch. IV of ch. 551, entitled "Fraudulent
Practices." While the title of a
subchapter or subdivision of a statute is not part of the law, it may be
indicative of legislative intent. See
Pulsfus Poultry Farms, Inc. v. Town of Leeds, 149 Wis.2d 797,
805-06, 440 N.W.2d 329, 333 (1989).
Plainly, the purpose of subch. IV is to proscribe fraudulent
practices. "A statement ... is
`fraudulent' if it was falsely made ... with the intent to deceive." Black's
Law Dictionary 662 (6th ed. 1990) (emphasis added).
Where
a statute makes fraud unlawful, the Criminal Jury Instruction requires
"scienter," or knowledge that the act is unlawful. See Wis
J I-Criminal 1850 (welfare fraud:
making false representations); Wis
J I-Criminal 1852 (welfare fraud:
failure to report income or assets); Wis
J I-Criminal 1854 (welfare fraud:
failure to notify authorities of change of facts); and Wis J I-Criminal 1862 (food stamp
fraud: misstating facts). Even where the statute does not use the term
"wilful" or "intentional" or "knowingly," the
Criminal Jury Instructions Committee has concluded that a statute which
proscribes fraud requires that the State prove an intent to violate the
law. See Wis J I-Criminal 1852, Comment 4; Wis J I-Criminal 1854, Comment 3.
The
majority relies on State v. Temby, 108 Wis.2d 521, 528-30, 322
N.W.2d 522, 526-27 (Ct. App. 1982), where we stated that intent to defraud is
not an element of a violation of §§ 551.41 and 551.58, Stats.
However, that statement is gratis dictum. We are bound by our holding in the later
case of State v. Swift, 173 Wis.2d 870, 878, 496 N.W.2d 713, 716
(Ct. App. 1993), where we held:
One element of the
offense of theft by securities fraud is that the defendant knowingly made false
representations with the intent to defraud.
See Wis J I-- Criminal 1453.
Section 551.41, Stats.,
makes it unlawful to defraud a person in connection with the sale of any
security by making untrue statements of material fact or omitting a material
fact.
The
majority rejects our holding in Swift because the issue of
scienter was not briefed. The clear
reason is that it never occurred to the State that a defendant could innocently
defraud another. I have found no case
in Wisconsin criminal jurisprudence in which "wilful" has been
construed to permit the conviction of a defendant who had no knowledge that his
or her act was unlawful and had no intent to commit an unlawful act.
In
Temby, the court in announcing its gratis dictum
erroneously relied on Aaron v. Securities and Exchange Comm'n,
446 U.S. 680 (1980), which was not a criminal action but a civil enforcement
action. The Aaron Court
construed § 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, which is virtually
identical to § 551.41, Stats. It concluded that Congress required scienter
to find a violation of § 17(a)(1) [§ 551.41(1)] because it used the
words "device," "scheme," and "artifice." 446 U.S. at 695-96. The Court concluded, however, that Congress
did not intend to require scienter to find a violation of § 17(a)(2) or
17(a)(3) [§ 551.41(2) and (3)].
446 U.S. at 696-97. Aaron
is therefore persuasive in construing § 551.59, Stats., which provides for civil enforcement of
§ 551.41, but not in construing § 551.58, Stats.
The
legislative history of the Securities Act of 1933 clearly shows that Congress
understood that scienter would be required to convict a person of a criminal
offense of making a false representation in a securities transaction. When questioned about civil liability, one
of the drafters of the 1933 Act stated:
"Criminal liability is based only on knowingly making a false
statement. But civil liability
exists even in the case of an innocent mistake...." Statement of Judge Alexander Holtzoff, then
Special Assistant to the Attorney General, Securities Act, Hearings on § 875,
Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 73d Congress, 1st Sess., 207 (1933), quoted
in Aaron, 446 U.S. at 716 n.7 (Blackmun, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part) (emphasis added).
I
suggest we be guided not only by Swift, where the court
considered the law self-evident, but by Ratzlaf. The Ratzlaf Court did not
construe securities law but a distant cousin, the Bank Secrecy Act (31 U.S.C.
§§ 5311-5322). The Act requires banks
and other financial institutions to report to the Secretary of the Treasury
cash transactions exceeding $10,000, and prohibits a person from
"wilfully" evading the reporting requirement by breaking up a single
transaction into smaller transactions. Ratzlaf
was indicted by a grand jury for structuring a $100,000 cash payment to a
Nevada casino through a series of cashier's checks, each of which was for less
than $10,000. He was convicted after
the district court instructed the jury that the Government did not have to
prove that Ratzlaf knew he was violating the anti-structuring law. 114 S. Ct. at 657. The Supreme Court reversed, concluding that because the Act
proscribed "wilful" conduct, the Government had to prove that Ratzlaf
acted with knowledge that his act was unlawful.
Ratzlaf establishes that where a statute proscribes
"wilful" conduct, the Government must prove not only that the
defendant knew what he was doing but knew that his or her act was
unlawful. The Court noted that federal
courts had consistently construed "wilfulness" as used in related
statutes to require a purpose to disobey the law. Id. at 656.
Wisconsin appellate courts have consistently construed
"wilful" to require guilty intent.
See, e.g., Collova, 79 Wis.2d at 486, 255 N.W.2d at
587-88.
The
Ratzlaf Court found it unnecessary to resort to legislative
history because the statutory text was clear.
114 S. Ct. at 662. However, if
it had found that the word "wilful" was ambiguous, the Court would
have resolved any doubts in favor of the defendant, under the rule that
"lenity principles `demand resolution of ambiguities in criminal statutes
in favor of the defendant.'" Id.
at 662-63 (quoting Hughey v. United States, 495 U.S. 411, 422
(1990)). Wisconsin follows the same
rule. See State v. Frey,
178 Wis.2d 729, 745, 505 N.W.2d 786, 792-93 (Ct. App. 1993).
A
properly instructed jury may have found that defendants made false
representations as to material facts and concealed material facts from those to
whom they transferred securities, knowing that their acts violated § 551.41(2)
and (3), Stats. The jury was not permitted to decide whether
defendants were charlatans or merely optimists. The jury was instructed that they were not to find whether
defendants committed an unlawful act but simply whether they did the act. Under that incorrect instruction, defendants
had no defense. However, the jury could
have found that defendants, in good faith, believed that Farm Loan Services
could redeem its unsecured notes upon maturity, even though the company had
financial problems.
It
is clear from Ratzlaf and Department of Transp. v.
Transportation Comm'n that the legislative body may choose to regulate
an industry or activity by imposing both civil and penal sanctions. In the latter case, the court construed the
statute regulating finance companies, auto dealers, adjustment companies and
collection agencies. The State charged
an automobile dealership, its president and its sales manager with violating a
statute which made unlawful the wilful failure to perform a written agreement
with a buyer. 111 Wis.2d at 83, 330
N.W.2d at 160. Doucas Oldsmobile
discovered an error in its agreement to sell an automobile. The buyer refused to pay the increased price
which Doucas insisted on. The parties
agreed that the omission was a good-faith mistake. Id. at 85, 330 N.W.2d at 161. The transportation commission sought to
enjoin Doucas Oldsmobile from future violations of the statute. Doucas argued that the statute required a finding
that its acts were made with evil intent, malice or without justifiable
excuse. Id. at 87, 330
N.W.2d at 162. The court held that
because this was a regulatory, non-penal statute, strict construction was
inappropriate. Id. at 92,
330 N.W.2d at 164. However, the court
made clear that if the statute had been penal, it would have construed
"wilful" strictly, thereby requiring an evil or malicious
intent. Id. at 90, 330
N.W.2d at 163. Department of
Transp. v. Transportation Comm'n is especially instructive because the
court construed the principal case relied on by defendants--State v.
Collova--in the context of regulatory statutes not greatly dissimilar
from those involved in this case. In Collova,
the court held that defendant could not be convicted of operating a motor
vehicle after revocation without proof that the operator knew that his driver's
license might have been revoked or suspended.
Department of Transp., 111 Wis.2d at 101, 330 N.W.2d at
168 (citing Collova, 79 Wis.2d at 487, 255 N.W.2d at 588). The court pointed out that in Collova
the sanctions were relatively severe while the penalties for violating the
automobile dealership regulations were, by comparison, nominal. Id. The court concluded:
"No element of malicious or evil intent is required by either the
statute itself or the rationale utilized in Collova which compels
the element of mens rea in respect to offenses which carry substantial
and mandatory penal sanctions." Id.
at 102, 330 N.W.2d at 169.
The
Collova court expressed succinctly my view of this case: "To inflict substantial punishment on a
person who is innocent of any intentional or negligent wrongdoing offends the
sense of justice and is ineffective."
79 Wis.2d at 486, 255 N.W.2d at 588.
The majority concludes that the Collova rationale does not
apply because any person who makes an untrue statement of a material fact or
omits to state a material fact "is not innocent of wrongdoing." Maj. op. at 17. This is a tragic misstatement not only of the law but of human
experience. I may in good faith tell my
wife I will be home for dinner at 6:30 p.m. but miss the 5:55 bus. My statement was untrue but I do not believe
my wife would find me guilty of wrongdoing.
In Reda v. Sincaban, 145 Wis.2d 266, 426 N.W.2d 100 (Ct.
App. 1988), a real estate agent innocently misrepresented the size of a
lot. We refused to allow the real
estate agent to incorporate intentional deceit into his strict responsibility
for his misrepresentation. Id.
at 271, 426 N.W.2d at 103. We said that
as between innocent parties, the person having the means of determining the
pertinent facts is strictly responsible for his or her representations,
irrespective of knowledge or negligence.
Id. at 269, 426 N.W.2d at 102. The securities laws make defendants strictly responsible for
their misrepresentations in a civil action.
However, to make them liable for criminal penalties of $90,000 and
ninety years' imprisonment offends my sense of justice.
The
majority invades the province of the jury when it concludes that defendants are
cheaters and "should, without more, have guilty knowledge." Maj. op. at 17. I agree with the majority that a cheater is engaged in
wrongdoing. However, a
"cheater" is a swindler:
"[A] person who acts dishonestly, deceives, or defrauds: He is a cheat and a liar." The
Random House Dictionary of the English
Language 351 (2d ed. 1987).
Typical synonyms are:
"swindler, trickster, sharper, dodger, charlatan, fraud, fake,
phony, mountebank." Id. In this case, the State presents a strong
case of guilty knowledge. It is
tempting to conclude: "Oh well,
the jury would probably have found defendants guilty anyway." The next case may, however, be
different. The jury instruction which
the trial court gave will become the law as to the meaning of
"wilful." Numerous jury
instructions will have to be rewritten to reflect that the word
"wilful" as used in criminal statutes no longer requires that
defendant have knowledge that he or she was violating the law. The consequences of our decision are
frightening. I therefore dissent.
[1] Cases from other jurisdictions are consistent
with our view. See Nave v.
Bell, 180 F.2d 198, 199 (6th Cir. 1950) (holding that an arrest warrant
had issued when it was signed and mailed, even though it was not delivered to
the officer who was to execute it until after the limitation period had
expired). See also People
v. Hentkowski, 397 N.W.2d 255, 258 (Mich. Ct. App. 1986) (magistrate
issues warrant when he signs an appropriate document and turns it over to the
proper person).
[2] The dissent does not refer to the opinions in
other states which have enacted the Uniform Securities Act or to our statutory
duty to construe ch. 551, Stats.,
to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law of those states which
enact the Uniform Securities Act.
[3] The Alaska Supreme Court held in a sale of
unregistered securities case under the Uniform Act, Hentzner v. State,
613 P.2d 821, 826 (Alaska 1980), that the crime is "malum prohibitum, not
malum in se," and therefore "criminal intent in the sense of consciousness
of wrongdoing should be regarded as a separate element of the offense
...." The Missouri Court of
Appeals referred to Hentzner as "an aberration; the
overwhelming weight of existing case law reaches an opposite result." Dumke, 901 S.W.2d at 104. It could be argued that the wilfulness
requirement in the penalties provision § 409 of the Uniform Act (our
§ 551.58, Stats.), should
apply differently to different offenses under the Uniform Securities Act. But see Ratzlaf, 510
U.S. 135, ___, 114 S.Ct. 655, 660 (1994), noting that when
"wilfulness" in a single penalty provision applicable to various
statutory violations should be construed "the same way each time it is
called into play," citing United States v. Aversa, 984 F.2d
493, 498 (1st Cir. 1993), vacated sub nom. Donovan v. United
States, ___ U.S. ___, 114 S.Ct. 873 (1994), and remanded for further
consideration in light of Ratzlaf, (the usefulness of a single
penalty section for group of related code sections will otherwise be
eviscerated). We need not enter the
debate. The predicate acts charged
against Mueller and Stopple are for securities fraud.
[4] The construction of wilfully under a prior
statute occurred in Boyd v. State, 217 Wis. 149, 258 N.W. 330
(1935). The Boyd court
construed § 189.23(2)(h), Stats.,
1929, which contained criminal sanctions for "wilfully" violating or
failing to comply with any of the provisions of ch. 189, Stats., 1929. The Boyd court said,
It was recently stated by this court in Hobbins v.
State, 214 Wis. 496, 505, 253 N.W. 570, that "if one knowingly
commits an act prohibited by a criminal statute he necessarily commits that act
wilfully. He is not exempted from
criminal responsibility because he considered the prohibition not
wrongful. The legislature, in enacting
the statute, determined the quality of the act in that respect." So here, as the defendant knowingly
committed the acts charged as violations of the sections of the Blue Sky Law
involved, his acts were done wilfully, and the intent he entertained when he
committed the acts, other than an intent not to commit them, cannot excuse his
violation of the statute. Where the
legislature has prohibited, under a penalty, the doing of a specific act,
"the doing of the inhibited act constitutes the crime, and ... the only
fact to be determined in these cases is whether the defendant did the
act." (Citations omitted.) Boyd, 217 Wis. at 163, 258
N.W. at 335-36.
[5] The dissent erroneously asserts that we later
held in State v. Swift, 173 Wis.2d 870, 496 N.W.2d 713 (Ct. App.
1993), that scienter is an element of § 551.41, Stats. In Swift
we said
One element of the offense of theft by securities fraud
is that the defendant knowingly made false representations with the intent to
defraud. See Wis J I--Criminal 1453. Section 551.41, Stats., makes it unlawful to defraud a person in connection
with the sale of any security making untrue statements of material fact or
omitting a material fact.
Id. at 878, 496 N.W.2d
at 716.
The
appellant's brief in Swift discloses that the jury was instructed
that "fraud or deceit" in § 551.41(3), Stats., requires that the defendant "knowingly made
false representations ...." Appendices and Briefs, 173 Wis.2d 870,
Appellant's Brief at 6, State Law Library.
But whether scienter is indeed an element of § 551.41(3) was not an
issue and was not briefed in the court of appeals. Moreover, neither the appellant's brief nor the State's brief
made any reference whatever to the penalty provision in the Wisconsin version
of the Uniform Securities Law, § 551.58(1), Stats., and to its "wilful" element. A statement by a court regarding an issue
never briefed is not a holding. See
Power Systems Analysis, Inc. v. City of Bloomer, 197 Wis.2d 817,
827, 541 N.W.2d 214, 218 (Ct. App. 1995) (judicial discussion of issues not
raised or briefed on appeal is dicta).
Thus, we did not hold in State v. Swift that to
"knowingly make a false representation" is an element of
§ 551.41.
[6] Other state courts have found our Temby
dictum persuasive. See People
v. Mitchell, 437 N.W.2d 304, 308 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989); State v.
Larsen, 865 P.2d 1355, 1358 (Utah 1993).
[7] In Temby we addressed the
intent issue in the interests of judicial economy, having reversed and ordered
a new trial on another issue. A
decision on an issue unnecessary to a disposition is dictum. State ex rel. Schultz v. Bruendl,
168 Wis.2d 101, 112, 483 N.W.2d 238, 241 (Ct. App. 1992).
[8] The Collova court equated the
issue of "state of mind" with "mens rea, criminal intent,
guilty knowledge or scienter." Id.
at 479, 255 N.W.2d at 584. We have
avoided where possible the use of such terms as "mens rea" and
"scienter."
[9] The fraud provisions of the Uniform
Securities Law were modeled after 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a). Uniform Securities Act § 101 cmt., 7B
U.L.A. 516 (1985).
[10] Section 78o(b) authorizes the Securities
Exchange Commission to suspend or revoke the registration of brokers or dealers
who have wilfully violated federal securities laws.
[11] Section 946.82(3), Stats., uses the phrase "the same or similar
intents." We construe
"intents" in that context to mean "an end or object
proposed." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1176 (1993).
[12] Section 551.02(13)(a), Stats., provides in relevant part:
"Security" means any ... note ... evidence of
indebtedness; ... investment contract; ... or, in general, any interest or
instrument commonly known as or having the incidents of a security or offered
in the manner in which securities are offered ....