238 P. 160 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
Certiorari. During the years 1922 to 1924, inclusive, petitioner was duly licensed in this state in the business of "acting as a broker for corporate securities." On December 6, 1924, he filed with the Corporation Commissioner his application for a renewal of his state license to continue in such business. Thereupon the Corporation Commissioner caused to be served on petitioner a "citation" requiring him to attend before the Corporation Commissioner at a specified time and place "in the matter of an investigation and examination of" petitioner's "affairs," for the purpose of ascertaning whether or not a broker's certificate should be issued to him. Pursuant thereto and in accordance with the requirements of the "citation," an "investigation and examination" was had, with the result that on "findings of fact" to the effect that petitioner was of "bad business repute," and on "conclusions of law" therefrom "that the application of M.A. Leach for a broker's certificate should be denied," it was ordered by said Corporation Commissioner that petitioner's said application be denied, and the issuance of the certificate applied for was accordingly refused.
The proceedings upon which such order was based are alleged by petitioner to have been in excess of the jurisdiction of respondent as such Corporation Commissioner, and by a writ of review an adjudication is sought from this court that the order issued by such Corporation Commissioner denying petitioner's application for a broker's certificate, is illegal and void.
[1] Section 6 of the Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917. p. 673; as amended by Stats. 1919, p. 231, Stats. 1921, *85 pp. 1009, 1114, and Stats. 1923, p. 87) provides that "the commissioner shall examine such application, and shall make such further investigation of the applicant . . . as he shall deem advisable. If, from such examination, the commissioner shall be satisfied of the good business reputation of the applicant . . . he shall issue such certificate. Otherwise, he shall refuse the same and deny the application and notify the applicant of his decision. . . ."
The principal point made by petitioner, as to which there is any controversy by the parties hereto, in substance, is that the provisions of said section 6 of the Corporate Securities Act which authorized the Corporation Commissioner to refuse to grant a broker's certificate on the ground that the Corporation Commissioner may not be satisfied of the good business reputation of the applicant are unconstitutional "in that no rules, regulations or specifications are set forth in the said Corporate Securities Act defining what shall constitute good business reputation"; and that such power, attempted to be conferred upon the Corporation Commissioner, is an unauthorized delegation of legislative authority.
Considering such objection, it would appear that the leading case of Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co.,
"We turn back, therefore, to consider the more specific objections to the law. The basis of them is, as we have seen, the power conferred upon the commissioner, which is asserted to be arbitrary. The objection is somewhat difficult to handle. It centers in the provision that requires the *86 commissioner, as a condition of a license, `to be satisfied of the good repute in business of such applicant and named agents,' and in the power given to revoke the license or refuse to renew it upon ascertaining that the licensee `is of bad business repute, has violated any provision of the act, or has engaged or is about to engage, under favor of such license, in illegitimate business or fraudulent transactions.' It is especially objected that, as to these requirements, no standard is given to guide or determine the decision of the commissioner. Therefore, it is contended that the discretion thus vested in the commissioner leaves `room for the play and action of purely personal and arbitrary power.'
"We are a little surprised that it should be implied that there is anything recondite in a business reputation or its existence as a fact which should require much investigation. . . .
"Besides, it is certainly apparent that, if the conditions are within the power of the state to impose, they can only be ascertained by an executive officer. Reputation and character are quite tangible attributes, but there can be no legislative definition of them that can automatically attach to or identify individuals possessing them, and necesasrily the aid of some executive agency must be invoked. The contention of appellees would take from government one of its most essential instrumentalities, of which the various national and state commissions are instances. But the contention may be answered by authority. In Gundling v. Chicago,
[2] It is a well-settled principle of law in this state that by legislative act a commission or board may be empowered to ascertain the existence of facts, upon the finding of which may depend the right to continue in the practice of a profession or a regulated business. (Ex parte Whitley,
The so-called Real Estate Brokers' Act (Stats. 1919, p. 1272) is analogous to the statute here under consideration in that one of the provisions of the former act in substance requires that any person desiring to engage in business as a real estate broker shall make application for a license so to do, and which application shall be accompanied by the recommendation of two real estate owners, certifying to the moral character of the applicant. The act further empowers the Real Estate Commissioner to require "such other proof as he may deem advisable of the honesty, truthfulness, and good reputation of any applicant for a license."
In the case of Riley v. Chambers,
The case of Brecheen v. Riley,
Petitioner cites several cases in support of his contention, including: Abrams v. Daugherty,
[3] Incidentally, it is urged that because of the fact that the "citation" which was served upon petitioner contained no direct charge or complaint against him, the Corporation Commissioner was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the question of petitioner's "good reputation"; and the case ofAbrams v. Daugherty,
[4] It is also suggested by petitioner that the findings are not supported by the evidence; but an examination of the reporter's transcript of the proceedings had at the hearing discloses the fact that several witnesses testified in substance that petitioner's business reputation was bad. To quote from petitioner's brief herein, the authorities are *90 harmonious to the effect that "the exercise of the power given to the Corporation Commissioner under the Corporate Securities Act to investigate an applicant for a broker's license is judicial or at least quasi-judicial." So much being conceded, the commissioner's finding of fact based upon the evidence is conclusive upon this court.
It follows that the order of the commissioner should be affirmed; and it is so ordered.
Conrey, P.J., and Curtis, J., concurred.