Defendants John W. Brooks and John C. Roger appeal from a judgment for $5,000, plus interest and costs, rendered against them upon the basis of a sale and assignment to plaintiffs, without a permit from the Commissioner of Corporations, of a half interest in an oil leаse upon 46 acres of land near Firebaugh, in Fresno County, California. The question on appeal is whether the court properly held this transaction to be a sale of “a security” within the Corporate Securities Law, which defines “security” as including “аny certificate of interest in an oil, gas, or mining title or lease” (Corp. Code, § 25008).
The objective of the statute is shown in
People
v.
Syde,
Concerning the true extent of the term "security” as used in the act, the court said in
People
v.
Syde, supra,
Austin
v.
Hallmark Oil Co.,
People
v.
Rankin,
The facts are these: Defendant Brooks, an attorney whose practice consisted mainly of matters concerning oil properties and oil leases, had obtained from Arvin Miller, a “lease hound," the assignment of an oil lease from one Biancucci to Miller, which reserved an owner’s royalty of 12% per cent and an overriding royalty to Miller of 4 1/6 per cent. It conveyed 206 acres and 160 acres thereof wеre assigned to Highland Oil Corporation which had been organized by Brooks and Roger for the purpose of drilling a wildcat well; the lease permitted severance and the other 46-aere parcel was assigned to Brooks who held it for the benefit of Roger and himself. Highland Oil Corporation was sufficiently financed to put down a well and did drill a dry hole about a mile from the 46-acre parcel (a fact which was never disclosed to plaintiff Craft or to plaintiff Carolyn C. McMaster or her husband and agent, Fred A. McMaster). Highland started another well offsetting the 46 acres. The sale of the half interest in that lease was made to plaintiffs on April 7, 1955. Mr. McMaster had lost a substantial amount of money in a dry hole drilled near Bakersfield some months before April 1955. Rogеr was the drilling contractor on that job and told McMaster that when he found something good he would let McMaster in on it. So Roger approached him on this deal and recommended that he buy a half interest in the 46-acre lease for $5,000. McMaster testified that he relied wholly upon Roger, informed him that he knew nothing about oil leases, and that he relied upon him 100 per cent.
The value of the 46 acres lay in the fact that an offset well was being drilled or about to be drilled by Highland Oil Corporation on its adjoining рarcel. That well technically was started on February 28, 1955, with a light drilling rig; after two or three days it was shut down and work not resumed until April 10th, after the deal was made with McMaster who represented both his wife and Mr. Craft in the transaction ; neither of them had any talk with either of thе defendants about it. Brooks and Roger had purchased this lease as a speculation, not expecting to drill but to sell or sublet. McMaster had no money to sink a well and no expectation of doing so; those facts were known to defendants. MсMaster *191 and Ms principals also bought as a speculation. He said in his testimony, “I purchased no real property. ... I was not negotiating to purchase any property. An interest in a lease is not the purchase of property.” Roger told him it wаs an excellent opportunity as a well was being drilled by Highland Oil on an adjoining parcel and both defendants said that if the oil drilling was successful the lease would be worth more money; that if the well came in “we” could sell at a substantial profit; but they made no guaranty of any return from the investment. Brooks testified that he told McMaster that there always was a risk in drilling any wildcat well, and “it was our desire to hedge our investment” by selling a half interest. Roger testified that he told McMaster that if Highland got production the “property would become of great value”; also that “it would be as good a speculator as you could get in the oil fields.” McMaster testified: “Q. Mr. McMaster, at no time prior to the execution of the assignment of April 7, 1955, did you believe that you were to participate with Highland Oil in any venture, isn’t that true? A. I was not to participate with Highland Oil. Q. And what you bargained for on behalf of your wife, as you have described it, and Mr. Craft, was an interest in an oil lease, isn’t that correct? A. I did not bargain for it. Q. You bought it? A. They bought it. ’ ’
So far as appears defendants had full control of Highland Oil Corporation. Three days after the sale of the lease interest to plaintiffs through Mr. McMaster, drilling with a heavy rig started, it worked for 12 days, then the well was shut down and abandoned as a dry hole. Highland Oil Corporatiоn had not made any agreement with plaintiffs to sink a well. Rescission and the instant action followed in due course.
It is clear that plaintiffs were not buying into Highland’s drilling venture and only in a sense did they “look only to the thing bought” for returns on their investment, for without Highland’s drilling on its own adjоining land there was no reason to expect any profit. But plaintiffs did contemplate “receipt of profits from activities of other persons, such as . . . drilling an oil well” (in the language of
People
v.
Rankin, supra,
The adjudged cases have given the phrase “from activities of other persons” a broad meaning and application extending to situations in which the buyer of the oil interest expected to reap his reward through participating in the excite
*192
ment arising from bringing in a wildcat well upon property in the genеral area, especially upon an adjacent parcel. Such cases are
People
v.
Daniels,
The case of
People
v.
Jackson,
*193 In a “comment” upon “The Applicability of the California Corporate Securities Law to Transactions in Oil and Gas” appearing in 5 U.C.L.A. Law Review (supra), at page 491 et seq., the author expresses the following conclusion (p. 497) : “In analyzing the particular interest to determine whether it falls within the definition of a security, the test to be used is not whether the assignor is to have control over operations, despite dicta to this effect in many cases. The interest is a security so long as the assignee is not to control oрerations, regardless of whether the assignor or some presently unidentified stranger to the transaction is to conduct operations. ’ ’
A public offering is not of the essence of a prohibited sale of a security
(Domestic & Foreign Petr. Co., Ltd.
v.
Long, supra,
Certainly this “opportunity” was the type of offering which the Legislature intended to be approved and authorized by the Commissioner of Corporations or not sold at all. We сonclude that the assignment to plaintiffs of the half interest in the oil lease on the 46 acres was the sale of a security within the meaning of the act and voidable because it was not authorized by a permit from the Commissioner of Corporations.
It is unnecessary to discuss respondents’ claim that the sale was made through concealment of a material fact or facts. What we have just said is sufficient to dispose of the case for it rests upon a finding of an unlawful sale of a security.
Judgment affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 21, 1962, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 25, 1962. Dooling, J., * participated in place of Traynor, J.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
