OPINION OF THE COURT
The 39-count indictment in this case arose out of an investigation by the Attorney-General of the investment promotional activities, commencing in 1982, of defendant First Meridian Planning Corp. (First Meridian), its officers and sales personnel. First Meridian portrayed itself to the investing public as
Appellant Roger V. Sala was president and chief operating officer of First Meridian. Appellants Roger C. Sala and Meridian Arts (a First Meridian subsidiary) worked with First Meridian in promoting investments in the works of a group of local artists they had assembled. All of those appellants will be collectively referred to as the First Meridian defendants. Appellants Donald Kagin and Neil Berman were principals in four corporate coin dealerships who were codefendants in the indictment (hereinafter the coin dealer defendants).
The first count of the indictment charged all but one of the defendants with the crime of scheme to defraud in the first degree (Penal Law § 190.65). * In addition, various defendants were charged with counts of fraud in the sale of securities (General Business Law § 352-c [6]), and grand larceny in the second or third degrees (in connection with sales of coins, artworks and condominiums to individual investors), failure to register as a commodity broker-dealer (General Business Law § 359-e [14] [k]) and failure to register as a commodity investment advisor (id..).
Following defense motions to dismiss, County Court dismissed the first count of the indictment as duplicitous. The court also dismissed all of the remaining counts of the indictment against the coin dealer defendants. It held that the evidence before the Grand Jury was insufficient to show their criminal responsibility for the larcenies allegedly committed against individual investors. County Court further held, as a
The Appellate Division reinstated count 1 of the indictment, concluding that it appropriately alleged and the Grand Jury could infer from the evidence, a single continuing scheme to defraud; thus, count 1 was not duplicitous (
I
We agree with the Appellate Division that count 1 of the indictment is not invalid for facial duplicity, that is, charging in a single count the commission of more than one offense
(see,
CPL 200.30 [1]). Duplicitous indictments are disallowed because of the danger that a jury may vote to convict on a count without having reached a unanimous verdict on the charges pleaded therein, and because it may undermine a subsequent double jeopardy defense
(see, People v Keindl,
Where, however, a crime by its nature as defined in the Penal Law may be committed either by one act or by multiple
We likewise reject appellants’ alternative contention that count 1 is fatally duplicitous because the evidence before the Grand Jury would not support the existence of a single scheme to defraud but, at most, the existence of disparate, multiple schemes to defraud involving unrelated participants (i.e., separate conspiracies to fraudulently induce investments in coins, artworks and condominiums, respectively). As the Appellate Division correctly recognized, the Legislature in amending the Penal Law to add crimes based on a scheme to defraud (Penal Law §§ 190.60, 190.65; L 1976, ch 384), modeled the offenses upon the Federal mail fraud statute (see, Donnino, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 39, Penal Law § 190.60, at 423). Therefore, we may look to Federal precedents applying similar statutory language which hold that, despite the presence of some diversity of criminal actors, modalities and victims, the evidence may yet support the existence of a single, unitary over-all scheme to defraud.
Thus, in
United States v Morse
(785 F2d 771 [9th Cir]), the court was presented with parallel facts to the instant case— the bilking of investors through the promotion of several different investment vehicles as income-producing tax shelters,
Under the foregoing precedents, the evidence before the Grand Jury in the instant case was prima facie sufficient to permit the Grand Jury reasonably to infer the existence of a unitary scheme to defraud. First, the proof disclosed, and the indictment alleged, common techniques, misrepresentations and omissions of material facts employed in all transactions. These included: the invariable sales methodology used with all First Meridian potential clients of a series of home visits in which investors were led to believe that an individualized investment plan was to be prepared; misrepresentations that leveraged purchases of numismatic coin portfolios, artworks and condominiums were each low-risk, high-yield, highly liquid investments (the coin dealer defendants participated in these misrepresentations as to coin portfolio purchases); assurances as to all three investment vehicles that the value of the investments would be monitored by experts in the field; the furnishing of false updated appraisals; and the concealment of material fact that First Meridian and the coin dealer defendants would be superimposing substantial commissions paid to them as additional transactional costs upon acquisition of the asset, making it even more remote that investors would ever realize a profit upon eventual resale. These common aspects of all transactions, through which some 800 First Meridian clients were induced to part with more than $64 million, strongly support the existence of a unitary scheme to defraud.
II
The Appellate Division, in our view, also correctly concluded that, based upon the evidence concerning the conduct of the promotions, the nature of the offers made and the promised results, the Grand Jury could find that the sale of numismatic coin portfolios here constituted the sale of securities so as to support the validity of the counts of the indictment charging the First Meridian and coin dealer defendants with fraud in the sale of securities. Under the Martin Act (General Business Law, art 23-A, § 352
et seq.)
criminal liability may be imposed upon "[a]ny person * * * who intentionally
engages
in fraud * * * while engaged in inducing or promoting the * * * sale * * * within or from this state of any
securities
* * * as defined in this article” (General Business Law § 352-c [6] [emphasis supplied]). The Martin Act defines securities as "stocks, bonds, notes, evidences of interest or indebtedness or
other securities”
(General Business Law § 352 [1] [emphasis supplied]). In
All Seasons Resorts v Abrams
(
The primary argument of the First Meridian defendants and defendants Kagin and Berman is that the sale of numismatic coins cannot be the sale of a security because the phrase "other securities” takes its meaning from the specific types of securities set forth in General Business Law § 352 (1), that is, "stocks, bonds, notes, evidences of interest or indebtedness”. They claim that "other securities” must therefore refer to some
document,
akin to a bond, note, etc., evidencing an interest in tangible or intangible property, and cannot refer to the property or commodity itself, in this case numismatic coins. We disagree. In
Securities & Exch. Commn. v Howey (supra),
the Supreme Court in articulating its three-fold functional test for an investment contract/security, specifically eschewed requiring the existence of some "paper” formally evidencing the interest offered or sold, "it being immaterial whether the shares in the enterprise
are evidenced by formal certificates or by nominal interests
in the physical asset employed in the enterprise” (
The Federal courts have repeatedly applied the teachings of
Howey
and
Joiner
to find that arrangements for the purchase of various tangible properties or commodities, under circumstances paralleling the sale of coin portfolios here, constituted the sale of securities
(see, Miller v Central Chinchilla Group,
494 F2d 414 [chinchillas];
Glen-Arden Commodities v Costantino,
493 F2d 1027 [casks of scotch whiskey];
Kemmerer v Weaver,
445 F2d 76 [beavers];
Jenson v Continental Fin. Corp.,
Moreover, in
People v Landes
(
The evidence here was sufficient to meet the three elements of the
Howey
test. Uncontestably, the First Meridian clients were induced to purchase numismatic coin portfolios for the purpose and in the expectation of making a profit from ultimate resale, an
investment of money
satisfying the first prong of
Howey.
That investment was in a
common enterprise,
as the second element of
Howey
has been construed by the courts. It is not required that the investor acquires a share in a common fund. Rather, the common enterprise factor can be established by proof that "the fortunes of all investors are inextricably tied to the efficacy [of those seeking the investment or a third party]”
(Securities & Exch. Commn. v Koscot Interplanetary,
497 F2d 473, 479;
see, Securities & Exch. Commn. v Turner Enters.,
474 F2d 476, 482, n 7,
cert denied
There was also evidence in the record before the Grand Jury to establish the final factor in the
Howey
definition of security, that the profits are expected to be derived "solely from the efforts of the promoter or a third party”
(id.,
at 299,
supra).
In applying this element of the Howey test, the courts have not construed it literally, but realistically. It is sufficient if the promoter’s (or third person’s) efforts are "the undeniably significant ones, those essential managerial efforts, which
To conclude on this issue, a prima facie case was established before the Grand Jury that the sales of numismatic coins by the coin dealer defendants, through First Meridian, constituted the sales of securities, thus supporting the validity of the counts of the indictment charging fraud in the sale of securities. The counter argument of defendants Kagin, Berman and First Meridian, that they merely sold a commodity, the tangible coin portfolio itself, is unpersuasive. The sales pitch used to induce these purchases offered a package which included not only the tangible coins but a spectrum of supposedly profit-enhancing services, all part of an investment plan. The Second Circuit’s rejection of a similar claim in
Glen-Arden Commodities v Costantino (supra)
is especially apt here: "it ill behooves appellants, after enticing their customers with fancy brochures, touting their investment plan, now to claim that there was no investment plan but the mere sale of an unadorned commodity” (493 F2d, at 1034-1035,
supra).
At the trial, of course, the People will have the burden of establishing beyond a reasonable doubt under jury instructions based on the criteria herein discussed, that defendants’ sales of coin portfolios constituted the sales of securities
(Securities & Exch. Commn. v Joiner Corp.,
We also reject defendant Kagin’s claim that, if General Business Law § 352-c (6) is so construed to include the sale of numismatic coins as a sale of securities for purposes of criminal prosecution, the statute is unconstitutionally vague. The "void for vagueness” doctrine requires that a penal statute "provide the ordinary citizen with adequate notice of the exact conduct prohibited”
(People v Bright,
As discussed above, well before defendants engaged in the conduct which is the subject of this indictment, the New York courts adopted the Howey test for determining whether the sale or offer to sell an interest in property constitutes the sale of a security. Moreover, as has been amply demonstrated, also well before defendants embarked on their investment promotion activities, an extensive body of precedent construing and applying the Howey definition of security had held that commodities and other forms of tangible personal property or even real property could constitute securities, if the circumstances of the offer or sale thereof met the three-pronged Howey test.
Thus, judicial construction of "other securities” was amply sufficient to meet the requirements of the void for vagueness doctrine in enforcing the Martin Act by providing adequate notice to the public, and objective standards for law enforcement officials. The vagueness doctrine is "not a principle designed to convert into a constitutional dilemma the practical difficulties in drawing criminal statutes both general enough to take into account a variety of human conduct and sufficiently specific to provide fair warning that certain kinds of conduct are prohibited”
(Colten v Kentucky,
We have considered the remaining contentions of the First Meridian defendants and defendants Kagin and Berman, including their claims regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to establish complicity in the larceny counts of the indictment, and the adequacy of the Grand Jury instructions, and find them also unpersuasive.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Titone, Bellacosa, Smith and Ciparick concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Defendant Donald Kagin, an officer of defendants Kagin’s Numismatic Investment Corp. and Kagin’s Numismatics Inc., was not charged under count 1 of the indictment. He, however, was named as a defendant in various counts charging fraud in the sale of securities in violation of General Business Law § 352-c (6) and grand larceny, third degree, in connection with the sale of numismatic coin portfolios to individual investors.
