10 N.W.2d 379 | Minn. | 1943
In 1932 plaintiff purchased 141 of defendant's shares, represented by three certificates, through Webb, Hemingway Company of Minneapolis, an independent dealer which had no connection with defendant as agent, employe, representative, or otherwise. In 1934, upon a forged endorsement of plaintiff's name upon the certificates, defendant transferred them from plaintiff's name to that of Hoit, Rose Troster of New York, to whom the forger had sold them.
At the time plaintiff purchased the certificates they were registered securities under a registration by defendant pursuant to the provisions of the blue sky law, Mason St. 1927, §§ 3996-4 to 3996-8. Pursuant to Id. § 3996-11, before having the certificates registered, defendant irrevocably appointed the commissioner of securities as its attorney for service of process "in any action or proceeding * * * in relation to or involving any transaction covered" by the blue sky law.
Defendant has not sold any securities and has not had any office, agent, or employe within the state. It is conceded that it was not doing business within the state and consequently was not subject to jurisdiction upon that ground. The sole ground upon which jurisdiction is claimed is that the appointment of the commissioner of securities as agent for service of process authorized the service of process in the instant case. The question, therefore, is: Does the appointment of the commissioner of securities as agent for service of process, pursuant to § 3996-11, by a nonresident issuer of securities, who is not engaged in the business of selling such securities within the state and who has no office, agent, nor employe therein, constitute the commissioner of securities the issuer's agent for service of process in an action to recover for the issuer's subsequent conversion of securities issued by it and purchased by a resident of the state from a dealer therein who is neither the agent, employe, nor representative of the issuer?
The statute, and the appointment of the commissioner of securities as agent for service of process executed pursuant thereto, authorize such service upon a nonresident making such appointment *487
only in an action or proceeding in relation to or involving a transaction covered by the act. Where the action or proceeding is not in relation to and does not involve a transaction covered by the act, neither the statute nor an appointment executed pursuant thereto authorizes service of process upon the commissioner of securities. In Dragon Motor Car Co. Ltd. v. Storrow,
The conversion of plaintiff's certificates by defendant approximately two years after he purchased them was not an act in relation to or involving a transaction covered by the statute. No provision of the blue sky law by its terms covers the instant case. The conversion did not arise out of the registration of the securities. Registration of securities is required in order to furnish the regulatory authority and to supply purchasers with information concerning securities sold and to qualify them for sale. Section 3996-4 provides: "No securities shall be sold within the state of Minnesota *488
unless or until such securities have been registered as herein provided." Registration involves procuring a right to sell after the securities have passed inspection by the commissioner. See State v. Gopher T. R. Co.
Plaintiff contends that service in the instant case upon the commissioner is authorized under our decision in Kaiser v. Butchart,
"* * * But the transaction now before us occurred in the business appellants were licensed to carry on in this state. Not alone §§ 3996-9 and 3996-11, but other provisions in the blue sky law in force when the deals occurred, upon which recovery is here sought, and when the service of summons was made, clearly show that appellants' business as brokers in securities was done under the provisions of that law."
Here, nothing wrongful occurred in respect to the registration, which was the only act of defendant in the state. The distinction is that in the Butchart case the wrong was in connection with the very business the defendants were licensed under the blue sky law to conduct, and in the instant case there was no wrong by defendant in connection with the registration of its securities, the only act done by it within the state. Hence the Butchart case is not controlling here.
Our conclusion is that service of process upon defendant by serving the commissioner of securities was unauthorized. Therefore the court should have granted defendant's motion to set aside the service of process and to dismiss the action.
Reversed with directions to set aside the service of process and to dismiss the action. *490