On February 10, 1937, Ira S. Hatch, an attorney at law, was found guilty by the court sitting without a jury on 52 counts in two informations charging violations of the Corporate Securities Act in that he knowingly participated in the issuance and sale of securities without first having obtained a permit from the commissioner of corporations ; also that he engaged in the purchase of securities for the purpose of reselling them without first having obtained a broker’s license from the commissioner of corporations. The record of his convictions was filed with this court pursuant to the provisions of sections 287, 288, 289 and 299 of *149 the Code of Civil Procedure. Under those sections an attorney who has been convicted of a felony or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude must be suspended upon the receipt by the court of the record of conviction, and when the judgment of conviction has become final he must be permanently disbarred.
The question was raised whether the offenses of which Hatch was convicted were crimes involving moral turpitude. The matter is submitted on the record of conviction and the briefs filed on behalf of the attorney and The State Bar.
Upon his own application to the trial court, Hatch, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was granted probation. The order of the court was that the “proceedings herein be suspended and defendants placed on probation as follows: Defendant Hatch is placed on probation for a period of ton years under the following conditions: Defendant shall not engage in any investment business or handle the money of others. Defendant is ordered released forthwith”.
The record in each of the two criminal proceedings against the defendant presents the numerous counts based upon the complaint of the persons therein named, the finding by the court of the guilt of the defendant on specified counts, and the orders of the court on the motions to dismiss certain other counts and on the application for probation. Under the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure above cited the offense or crime, whether a felony or a misdemeanor, must be one involving moral turpitude, otherwise the court is not called upon to carry out the requirements of the statute.
The defendant contends that the violations of the Corporate Securities Act, of which he was convicted, constitute merely technical violations and do not indicate that they were committed with moral turpitude; that the act of issuing and selling securities without a permit is not inherently bad, but is merely
malum prohibitum,
inasmuch as prior to the adoption of the act the issuance and sale of securities
without a permit
did not involve any question of right or wrong in human conduct. The defendant therefore stresses the view that wherever suspension or disbarment pursuant to section 299 of the Code of Civil Procedure is concerned, moral turpitude must connote baseness, vileness or depravity, such as is inherently a part of murder and other crimes
malum in se, .
However, the courts of this state have
*150
rejected such a test as exclusive in determining whether an attorney has been guilty of conduct requiring disciplinary action or disbarment. Conduct involving moral turpitude has been defined as “everything done contrary to justice, honesty, modesty or good morals”.
{Matter of Coffey,
This court is not called upon to consider the question of the defendant’s guilt. Section 287, subdivision 1, Code of Civil Procedure, makes the record of conviction conclusive on that point.
Conceivably not in every case of the conviction of violations of the Corporate Securities Act will the face of the record of conviction indicate conclusively whether the offense involved moral turpitude. No doubt attaches to the conviction of such crimes as murder, embezzlement, extortion and many others. But convictions of violations of police regulations, or of simple assault or battery, may indicate without further inquiry that moral turpitude was not involved.
There is necessarily a field of doubtful eases where the determination as to whether moral turpitude was involved may fall on one or the other side of the line, depending upon the circumstances of the particular case. That certain violations of the Corporate Securities Act may fall into this class of doubtful cases is evident from the fact that in the criminal prosecution of a person so charged the question of good or bad faith is not necessarily an element for consideration.
{El Claro Oil etc. Co.
v.
Daugherty,
11 Cal. App. (2d) 274, 281 [
“The concept of moral turpitude depends upon the state of public morals, and may vary according to the community or the times.”
(hi re Bartos,
13 Fed. (2d) 138.) In
Beck
v. Stitzel,
In sustaining legislation of the character of the Corporate Securities Act, it has been held that the general purpose and tenor of the act is to “protect the public against the imposition of unsubstantial schemes and the securities based upon them” and against “fraudulent or unlawful stock
*152
a,nd investment schemes and enterprises”.
[Hall
v.
Geiger-Jones Co.,
The defendant claims that the failure to obtain the permit was in this ease merely a technical omission, for which he should not be disbarred or suspended from the practice of the law relying on
In re Kling,
It is therefore ordered that the defendant be suspended from the practice of the law in this state for the period of his probation in the action herein referred to and until the further order of this court.
