The section of the statute with a violation of which the appellee was charged reads as follows:
“Sec. 1641-g. Every director, officer or agent of any corporation or joint-stock association, who knowingly concurs in making, publishing or posting, either generally or privately to the stockholders or other persons, any written report, exhibit, or statement of its affairs or pecuniary condition, or book or notice containing any material statement which is false, or any untrue or wilfully or fraudulently exaggerated report, prospectus, account, statement of operations, values, business, profits, expenditures, or prospects, or any other paper or document 'intended to produce or give, or having. a tendency to produce or give, the shares of stock in such corporation a greater value or a less apparent or market value than they really possess, is guilty of a felony, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not to exceed one year, or by imprisonment in the county jail not to exceed six months or. a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars.”
Stated briefly, the facts are as follows: The petitioner, as secretary of the Modern Brotherhood, prepared a statement of the financial operations and condition of that organization
It follows of necessity that, even if we assume that the statute in question has any application to a case such as the state here attempts to make, there is such a manifest failure of proof that the court below was clearly and unquestionably right in sustaining the writ of habeas corpus and ordering the petitioner discharged.
The petitioner was properly discharged, and the order and ruling of the trial court are — Affirmed.