OPINION
The appellant James A. Brewer was convicted of fourteen counts and the appellant C. Donald Frost of sixteen counts, respectively, of violating the securities laws of the State of Tennessee. Both appellants were also convicted of four counts of obtaining money by false pretenses. Each appellant received an effective sentence of seven and one half years, being ordered to serve one hundred days in confinement in the Davidson County Workhouse with the balance of the sentences to be served on probation. The appellant Brewer was ordered to pay fines in the sum of $3,600.00 and the appellant Frost was ordered to pay fines in the sum of $4,200.00. In addition, both appellants were required to perform two hundred fifty hours of community service work and to make restitution to the victims of their crimes.
In this appeal, the appellants raise the following issues:
(1) Whether the trial court properly instructed the jury concerning the definition of an “investment contract” under the Tennessee Securities Act;
(2) Whether the trial court’s instructions to the jury in defining an “investment contract” violated the appellant Frost’s due process rights;
(3) Whether the trial court erred in refusing to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the Tennessee Securities Act of 1980 as codified in Title 48, Chapter 2 of the Tennessee Code Annotated is unconstitutionally ambiguous, thereby denying the appellant Brewer of his right to a fair trial;
(4) Whether the trial court properly charged the jury on the elements of the offense of misrepresenting or omitting material facts in connection with the sale of a security;
(5) Whether the trial court properly prevented the appellants from presenting a defense based upon a good faith reliance on the advice of counsel that the enterprise was not subject to securities laws;
(6) Whether the trial court erred in its refusal to bifurcate the trial in the lower court;
(7) Whether the evidence adduced at trial was sufficient to sustain the jury’s determination that the appellant Frost was guilty of obtaining money by means of false pretenses;
(8) Whether the evidence adduced at trial was sufficient to sustain the jury’s determination that the appellant Frost was guilty of fraud in the sale of securities to Faron Young;
(9) Whether the convictions on all of the counts other than Count One merged with Count One;
(10) Whether the trial court erred in permitting the State to introduce evidence of the appellant Frost’s prior criminal conviction and civil injunctions levied against him;
(11) Whether the trial court erred in failing to require the state to disclose to the appellant Frost certain statements made by witnesses for the State which were potentially exculpatory;
(12) Whether the trial court improperly failed to grant a mistrial due to the introduction of testimony concerning a recent bankruptcy by the appellant Frost;
(13) Whether testimony that an individual named Mr. Stanley had made threats of physical violence toward one of the victims in this case was irrelevant and unduly prejudicial to the appellant Frost;
(14) Whether the combination of errors which occurred in the lower court denied the appellant Frost a fair trial.
FACTS
In September of. 1987, appellants and others undertook to establish a private wholesale store, whereby the initial capital for purchasing and stocking the building was to be secured by the selling of items of merchandise to individuals who sought to join their wholesale club. After consulting with an attorney as to the legality of. the business under Tennessee law, a corporate charter was secured for the enterprise under the name “U.S.A. Wholesale Club, Inc.” The appellant Brewer was the president and a director of the corporation. The appellant Frost was the national sales director of the corporation. At the time the business was terminated, each appellant owned 27.5% of the corporation’s stock.
Prior to beginning the enterprise, the appellants consulted with an attorney regarding the legality of their proposed business under Tennessee law. 1 They were advised that the venture would not violate the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act, but were not advised concerning securities laws because the attorney did not believe that the appellant’s proposed business activity involved securities. The appellants testified that they relied upon this advice in deciding to engage in the enterprise.
The appellants planned to initially establish a wholesale store in Nashville and then expand by opening stores in Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Jackson. The Nashville, Knoxville, and Memphis stores were to be limited to 6,500 associate and executive members and the Jackson and Chattanooga stores were to be limited to 5,500 associate and executive members. The appellants told prospective members that they planned to
To raise the initial capital necessary for the opening of the store in Nashville, the appellants and others began to hold promotional meetings in which they sold specialty products and attempted to convince individuals to join the club. The specialty products included a water purification system, cookware, a vacuum cleaner, various items of jewelry, and other items. The price of these products as offered to the public varied at times but was announced, at least initially, as $995.00 per item. However, each product had a wholesale value of approximately two hundred dollars. 2 The proceeds from the sale of each $995.00 product was distributed as follows: $438.00 went for operating expenses, $182.00 went to “overrides,” $175.00 went to commissions, and approximately $200.00 went to cover the cost of the product.
The appellants told potential purchasers that the price of the specialty products had been greatly marked up in order to facilitate the purchase of a building and inventory for the wholesale store. Individuals could become members of the club through facilitating the sale of specialty products by inviting their friends to sales meetings conducted by the appellants 3 or by purchasing the products themselves. 4 The motivating factors for becoming a member of the club were the attainment of (a) commissions from the sale of specialty products to individuals that the member brought to the sales meetings and (b) the right to distribute buyer cards to be used at the wholesale store when it opened. The appellants told potential members that the buyer cards distributed by a member would entitle that member to a commission on every item purchased at the wholesale store with one of the cards. The potential for hard working members to make enormous commissions was heavily stressed. 5
The program had three levels of participation. The first level, called a “temporary associate,” was obtained by a person who registered with the club by paying a twenty-five dollar fee and began attending training meetings. Once a temporary associate either brought a guest to a meeting who then purchased a specialty product or the temporary associate himself bought a - specialty product under a fabricated name, he became locked in as one of the 6,500 “permanent associates.” Permanent associates were entitled to receive a one hundred dollar commission on the sale of any specialty product to an individual the associate invited to a sales meeting. In addition, permanent associates were to receive twenty-five buyer cards which they could distribute to family members, friends, and others. Once the wholesale store opened, permanent associates were to receive a four percent commission on all merchandise sold to a holder of one of their buyer cards.
Once five specialty product sales were credited to a permanent associate, the associate was upgraded to “executive member” status. Executive members of the club were to receive commission in the amount of $175.00 on the sale of any specialty product to one of their invitees. They also were to receive a $75.00 commission on sales of any
Although some members of U.S.A. "Wholesale Club were pleased with the enterprise, many others were not. Some members testified that they never received commissions that they were due from their sales. Others testified that the appellants had misrepresented information about the enterprise and failed to disclose certain material information about their past business activities. The facts of several of these misrepresentations merit more detailed explanation.
First, the appellants told people at sales meetings that a substantial portion of the purchase price of the specialty products would be set aside for the acquisition of a building and inventory. Securities Division investigators subsequently discovered that those statements were untrue. Bank records revealed that the appellants had deposited $758,436.00 into the wholesale club’s corporate account and had withdrawn $756,000.00 therefrom. 6
There was also evidence at trial that the appellants made several misrepresentations concerning the old John F. Lawhon budding which was supposed to be the location of the wholesale store. For example, one witness testified that the appellant Frost told her that certain supporters of the wholesale club, namely country music artist Faron Young and an individual from Texas, would purchase the building for the store and pay the utilities. The witness further testified that the appellant Frost represented to her that an inventory of refrigerators for the wholesale store was in the upstairs of the old Lawhon building. Another witness testified that she was told at a sales meeting in August 1988 that U.S.A. Wholesale Club owned the old Lawhon budding. Moreover, even when the appedants did disclose at some of the sales meetings that they had only contracted to purchase the budding, they stdl faded to disclose that they did not have the requisite capital to close the purchase or that the earnest money for the purchase had to be borrowed. 7 Further evidence adduced at trial revealed that U.S.A. Wholesale Club never owned the budding, had the financial resources to purchase it, or had particular investors who were willing to purchase the budding for the club.
The appedants also represented at sales meetings that they had experienced prosperity with similar wholesale club enterprises in other states. As an example of their prior successes, the appedants often showed a film that depicted a successful wholesale club store in Ohio with which they were involved. Although there was some testimony at trial that the appedants acknowledged that they had incurred some “problems” with the Ohio store and that it was no longer in operation, numerous witnesses testified that they were never told about any of the cease and desist orders, civd injunctions, bankruptcies, or criminal convictions that arose out of their ventures in other states, including Ohio. 8
The remaining evidence of misrepresentations can be discussed more briefly. First, in the promotion of their company, the ap-pedants represented that country music artist Faron Young was a member of the board of directors of the corporation. At trial, however, Mr. Young testified that he refused to become a director when he was offered
In or shortly before July 1988, the Securities Division of the State of Tennessee initiated an investigation regarding the legitimacy of the club. On September 2, 1988, the Tennessee Commissioner of Commerce and Insurance issued an administrative order finding that the appellants’ activities in connection with U.S.A Wholesale Club constituted the sale of unregistered securities under the Tennessee Securities Act and ordered that they cease such activities until they were registered as required by the Act. Subsequently, the appellants continued with their usual business practices and continued to make sales in violation of the administrative order. The matter was referred by the Securities Division to the District Attorney for prosecution on April 27, 1989. This appeal was taken from the prosecution and convictions which thereafter resulted.
I
The appellants’ initial contention in this appeal is that the trial court improperly instructed the jury concerning the definition of an “investment contract” under the Tennessee Securities Act of 1980 and that such error constituted reversible error. We disagree. 10
At the outset we note that the appellant Frost argued at trial that an “investment contract” should be defined in accordance with the test stated in
SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.,
“An appellant cannot change theories from the trial court to the appellate court.”
State v. Banes,
Sixteen of the twenty-one counts in the indictment charge the appellants with various
(A)ny note, stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate of interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement, collateral-trust certificate, preorganization certificate or subscription, transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate, certificate of deposit for a security, certificate of interest or participation in an oil, gas, or mining title or lease or in payments out of production under such a title or lease; or any certificate of interest or participation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing.
Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-102(12) (emphasis added). Thus there is no question that an “investment contract” is a “security.” The question remains, however, as to what constitutes an “investment contract.” This issue is one of first impression in this State given that neither the legislature nor the judiciary has previously promulgated a definition.
This Court is not without some guidance in its endeavor to formulate a definition. In
DeWees v. State,
In the pursuance of a definition of “investment contract” at trial, both appellants argued for the application of the so-called strict Howey test, whereas the State advocated usage of the Howey-Forman test. After fully reviewing these standards, the trial court rejected both and adopted a definition espoused by the Hawaii Supreme Court. We will consider each of the definitions.
A. The Development of a Definition
Considerable scholarly debate has ensued concerning the proper definition of an investment contract security. In SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., the United States Supreme Court, interpreting section 2(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(l), proffered the following definition:
[A]n investment contract ... means a contract, transaction or scheme whereby a person invests his money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits solely from the efforts of the promoter or a third party ... The test is whether the scheme involves [1] an investment of money [2] in a common enterprise [3] with profits [4] to come solely from the efforts of others. If that test be satisfied, it is immaterial whether the enterprise is speculative or nonspeculative or whether there is a sale of property with or without intrinsic value.
In subsequent years, the
Howey
test was criticized by both courts and scholars as being too rigid and thus easily circumvented.
See e.g., SEC v. Koscot Inter., Inc.,
In
State v. Hawaii Market Center, Inc.,
supra, the Hawaii Supreme Court became one of the first courts to openly criticize the
Howey
test and reject strict application of it. The ease involved a business enterprise that was substantially similar to the one now before this Court. In that case a corporation
Prospective founder-members were asked to attend recruitment meetings where a speaker explained how members would be eligible to earn (1) immediate income before the store became operational, and (2) future income after the store became operational. Id. Members were to earn income in a variety of ways, including commissions based upon bringing in new members or the purchase of items at the retail store with a purchase authorization card given out by the member. Id. A person became a founder-member by purchasing from the corporation either a sewing machine or cookware, each with a wholesale value of $70.00, for $320.00. Id.
Declining to apply the
Howey
test, the Hawaii Supreme Court noted that “[t]he primary weakness with the
Howey
formula is that it has led courts to analy[z]e investment projects mechanically, based on a narrow concept of investor participation.”
Id.
One method employed by the Hawai Supreme Court was to interpret the “solely” part of the
Howey
definition as referring to the “managerial” efforts of the franchisor or member.
Hawaii Market,
The second procedure the Hawai court utilized for extending
Howey
was the introduction of concepts from the risk capital theory which originated with the California Supreme Court in an opinion authored by Justice Roger Traynor.
See Silver Hills Country Club v. Sobiesky
Attempting to establish a flexible formula which would protect the pubic from the vast array of alluring investment schemes, the court held that an “investment contract,” and thence a “security,” exists when:
(1) An offeree furnishes initial value to an offeror, and (2) a portion of this initial value is subjected to the risks of the enterprise, and (3) the furnishing of the initial value is induced by the offeror’s promises or representations which give rise to a reasonable understanding that a valuable benefit of some kind, over and above the initial value, will accrue to the offeree as a result of the operation of the enterprise, and (4) the offeree does not receive the right to exercise practical and actual control over the managerial decisions of the enterprise.
Id.
Under the facts of the case, the Hawaii court found that the business enterprise and the attendant agreements between the corporation and the founder-members constituted
The terms of the offer and the inducements held out to the prospects clearly indicate that the substantial premiums paid by founder-members to [the corporation] are given in consideration for the right to receive future income from the corporation. These overcharges constitute the offerees’ investments or contributions of initial value, such value being subjected to the risks of the enterprise.
It is uncontested that the recruitment of founder-members was motivated by the need to raise capital to finance the opening of the proposed [members-only retail] store. Inextricably bound to the success of this enterprise is the ability of the founder-members to recoup their initial investment and earn income. The recruitment fee paid to distributors and supervisors, during the pre-operational phase of the plan, rests upon the promoters’ ability to sell the success of the plan to prospective members. In addition, those members who choose to rely solely on the second method of earning income, the payment of commissions based on sales, receive no return at all on their investment unless the store functions successfully_ [S]ince membership is limited to five thousand, a very large percentage of founder-members will be totally dependent on sales commissions to recover their initial investment plus income. It is thus apparent that the security of the founder-members’ investments is inseparable from the risks of the enterprise. The success of the plan is the common “thread on which everybody’s beads [are] strung.”
Id. at 110. “In order to negate the finding of a security the offeree should have practical and actual control over the managerial decisions of the enterprise. For it is this control which gives the offeree the opportunity to safeguard his investment, thus obviating the need for state intervention.” Id., at 111, citing Coffey, supra, at 396-98. In addition, founder-members had none of “the indicia of managerial control which would preclude the finding of a security” and allow them to “influence the utilization of the accumulated capital” or exercise any authority over the operation of the proposed retail store. Id. at 111.
A few years after the
Hawaii Market
decision, the United States Supreme Court revisited the question of what constitutes an investment contract under federal security laws in
United Hous. Found., Inc. v. Forman,
To this end, the Court stated that “[t]he touchstone is the presence of an investment in a common venture premised on a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the
entrepreneurial or managerial efforts
of others.”
Forman,
From our review of the case law of other jurisdictions, it appears that the Howey-For-man test is the majority rule in the United States. However, the definition pronounced in Hawaii Market is also not without support. Its combined Howey -risk capital test, or forms substantially similar thereto, has been adopted by at least seventeen jurisdictions. 13 In his treatise on state securities laws, Professor Long states that “it is arguable that this test will eventually replace How-ey [-Forman] as the leading test for investment contracts, at least at the state level.” Joseph C. Long, Blue Sky Law § 2.04(4), at 2-146 (1992). In addition, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission has also expressed approval of the combined Howey -risk capital formula as applied in Hawaii Market. See Applicability of the Securities Laws to Multi-level Distributorship and Pyramid Sales Plans, Securities Act Release No. 33-5211, 36 Fed.Reg. 23289, 17 C.F.R. § 231.5211, Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 1048 (Nov. 30,1971).
Citing
Stanley v. Commercial Courier Serv., Inc.,
The first prong of the
Hawaii Market
test is nothing more than the investment concept of the
Howey-Forman
test. The second prong adopts the concept of risk capital, whereas
Howey-Forman
focuses on the existence of a common venture, i.e., vertical or horizontal commonality.
15
The third prong
The
DeWees v. State,
supra, mandate to liberally construe the securities laws in order to protect the public is, standing alone, very persuasive authority for the adoption of the •slightly more liberal combined Howey-risk capital test enunciated in
Hawaii Market,
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court properly instructed the jury concerning the definition of an investment contract under Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-102(12). We commend the trial court in taking this action of instructing the jury in light of the fact that “simply reading a statute to a jury when the statute contains words requiring clarification does not satisfy ‘the demands of justice’ or the defendant’s constitutional right to trial by jury.”
State v. Teel,
II
The appellant Frost argues that, even assuming the
Howey-risk
capital test as stated in
Hawaii Market,
The appellant Frost’s position is flawed. Although it is true that no case from this State has ever specifically suggested that the Howey-risk capital test formulated in
Hawaii Market
would be adopted,
DeWees,
Other jurisdictions have found that the broadening of the definition of an investment contract does not violate the due process rights of the offender.
E.g., State v. Duncan,
We further find that the absence of a statutory or common law definition of an investment contract at the time the offenses were committed does not render Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-102(12) unconstitutionally vague. 16 In Burrow, this Court stated:
Finally, Mr. Ward contends that the term “security” is so vague that dismissal of the charges is required. He contends that the dearth of Tennessee eases interpreting the term requires dismissal.
We note that there are numerous cases from other jurisdictions, both state and federal, cited in the briefs of the parties interpreting various statutory definitions of the term “security.” The fact that there are no Tennessee cases does not preclude the prosecution of the appellees for alleged violations of the statutes. It is only after someone is prosecuted that the appellate courts have the opportunity to write opinions interpreting the statutes. Taken to its logical extreme, this argument would produce a “Catch 22” situation that would preclude the prosecution of anyone under any new criminal statute, since no one could be prosecuted until the statute was interpreted and the statute could not be interpreted until someone was prosecuted.
Id. at 514.
Given the facts and circumstances of this case and these particular appellants, we find that there was no impingement upon the due process rights of either of the appellants. Therefore, this issue is without merit.
Ill
The appellant Brewer asserts that the trial judge erroneously refused to include in his instructions to the jury the language in the definition of a security which excludes “a note or other evidence of indebtedness issued in a mercantile or consumer, rather than an investment, transaction.” See Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-102(12)(C). He contends that the ordinary construction of the Tennessee Securities Act in defining an investment contract would have to consider the “debt factor.” Based upon the record in this case, we disagree.
For the sake of context, we mention that the definition of a security under the Tennessee Securities Act includes any “note” or “evidence of indebtedness” unless it was “issued in a mercantile or consumer, rather than an investment, transaction.” See Id. at § 48-2-102(12). This exclusion is simply the codification of a long recognized distinction between notes issued in the context of an investment and those issued to finance the purchase of mercantile or consumer goods.
The difficulty with the appellant Brewer’s argument, however, is that this exclusion is inapposite to the facts of the present case. The State charged the appellants with selling “investment contracts,” not “notes” or “evidences of indebtedness.” No evidence was offered by any party to the effect that the appellants were issuing “notes” or “evidences of indebtedness,” much less that they were issuing such notes or evidences of indebtedness “in a mercantile or consumer transaction.” The trial court had no obligation to instruct the jury concerning issues not fairly raised by the evidence presented at trial.
Lester v. State,
Even assuming that evidence which would justify the proposed instruction was presented at trial, the appellant Brewer has failed to make any references thereto in his brief on appeal. This failure constitutes waiver of the issue. Tenn.Cr.Crim.R. 10(b);
State v. Killebrew,
supra;
see also
Tenn.R.App.Proc. 27(a)(7) and (g). Furthermore, the appellant Brewer cannot raise this issue since he did not submit a written special request for an instruction on this issue to the trial court at the appropriate time.
State v. Dulsworth,
IV
The appellant Frost next contends that the trial court erroneously failed to instruct the jury concerning the requirement of reliance by the victims on the misrepresentations for which the appellants were convicted. The appellant Frost, however, during the trial in the court below, neither objected to the trial court’s failure to charge the jury that reliance was an element of the offense nor submitted a special request for a jury instruction on the issue of reliance.
Generally, “[i]n the absence of an objection or a special request, a defendant may not later raise an issue regarding an omission in the court’s charge.”
State v. Norris,
However, Frost contends that reliance is an essential element of securities fraud. Whether requested or not, the trial court has the duty of instructing the jury with respect to essential elements of the offenses charged.
See State v. Teel,
The statutory provisions concerning misrepresentations upon which the appellant Frost was convicted provide as follows:
It is unlawful for any person, in connection with the sale or purchase of any security in this state, directly or indirectly:
(1) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud; [or]
(2) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, or the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading[.]
Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-121(a)(l)-(2). Upon even a cursory reading of that provision, it is evident that proof of reliance is not expressly mandated by the statute. We must assume, therefore, that the appellant Frost is advocating that this Court impose such an element in our interpretation and application of the statutory provision.
In support of his contention that reliance on the misrepresentations by the victims is an element of the offense, the appellant Frost cites two cases,
Diversified Equities, Inc. v. Warren,
Cases from other jurisdictions have uniformly illustrated that the requirements of proof in private actions and criminal cases are not identical. For example, in
Kramas v. Security Gas & Oil, Inc.,
which involved a private action concerning violations of federal securities laws, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated: “Prosecutions and enforcement actions involve interests and procedures different from those involved in private damage suits. The Government is not ‘required to prove that anyone was defrauded or that any investor sustained loss,’ ... but such proof is essential to
Based upon the unambiguous language of the statutory provisions and the foregoing cases, we decline to find reliance by victims is an element to the offense of omitting or misrepresenting a material fact in connection with the sale or purchase of securities. This issue is without merit.
V
In the next assertion of error, the appellant Brewer contends that the trial court erred by declining to rule that his reliance on the advice of his attorney that his undertaking was not in violation of the law was a defense to all charges. Brewer has failed to cite any authority from this jurisdiction in support of his proposition, instead relying solely upon persuasive authority from numerous other fora. This approach would be meritorious and even commendable if not for the fact that the Supreme Court of Tennessee has already spoken on this issue. 20
In Hunter v. State, the Tennessee Supreme Court, in upholding a jury instruction that acting upon the advice of counsel is not a defense to embezzlement, stated:
The fact that a person honestly believes that he has a right to do what the law declares to be illegal will not affect the criminality of the act. The advice of counsel furnishes no excuse to a person for violating the law, and cannot be relied upon as a defense in a criminal action.
Several more recent authorities exhibit a continued adherence to this rule.
State v. Smith,
VI
Prior to trial the appellant Brewer filed a motion entitled “Motion to Strike All References to the Tennessee Securities Act,
On appeal, he contends that the refusal by the trial court to bifurcate the trial was error. In support of his argument, he relies exclusively on the Supreme Court case of
Hodges v. S.C. Toof & Co.,
In short, the appellant Brewer has failed to cite any case from this or any other jurisdiction that requires a bifurcated trial under facts similar to the facts in this case. We believe that this failure to city authority is because none exists. Furthermore, we are certainly not inclined to create such a rule of criminal procedure by judicial fiat.
VII
The appellant Frost contends that the evidence adduced at trial was not sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict that he was guilty of four counts of obtaining money by means of false pretenses. 21 We disagree.
The offense of “false pretense” was defined in Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-3-901 (repealed) and was punishable as in cases of larceny. In
State v. Arnold,
(1) the making, with intent to defraud of a false representation of a past or existing fact;
(2) the representation was calculated to deceive the person to whom it was made and did in fact deceive that person;
(3) the false pretense was capable of defrauding;
(4) the defendant obtained something of value from the injured person without giving just compensation;
(5) the thing obtained was valued at more than or less than ... $200.00 ... (as for larceny, the value will determine the punishment).
Id.
at 546 (citing
State v. Smith,
The principles which govern this court’s review of a conviction by a jury are well settled. This court must review the record to determine if the evidence adduced at trial was sufficient “to support the finding of the trier of fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” Tenn.R.App.P. 13(e). This rule is applicable to determinations of guilt predicated upon direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, or a combination thereof.
State v.
In examining the sufficiency of the evidence, this court does not reevaluate the weight or credibility of the witnesses’ testimony as those are matters entrusted exclusively to the jury as the finders of fact.
State v. Sheffield,
A jury verdict of guilty, approved by the trial judge, accredits the testimony of the state’s witnesses and resolves all conflicts in favor of the theory of the state.
State v. Williams,
Where the sufficiency of the evidence is at issue, the relevant question on appeal is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have determined that the essential elements of the crime were established beyond a reasonable doubt. Tenn.R.App.P. 13(e);
Jackson v. Virginia,
In the present case, the appellants induced prospective investors to pay inflated prices for specialty items by representing to them that a substantial portion of the excess money from the sales would be set aside for the establishment and stocking of the wholesale club store. Testimony at trial revealed that one of the primary purposes of the product purchasers was indeed to contribute capital toward the wholesale club store, the opening of which they hoped would provide them with sizeable profits.
Bank records of the corporation, however, exhibited that the money that individuals had paid for their products was deposited into the general bank account of the company. It was then utilized to pay operating expenses and undisclosed commissions, as well as “overrides” and royalties to the appellants, their families, and their individual creditors. In short, none of the proceeds from the sales of specialty products were ever set aside for the opening or stocking of the store.
In addition, as part of a scheme to project an air of success, the appellants told prospective members that Faron Young was a director of the corporation when, in fact, he was not. They told stories of success with similar ventures in other states, but failed to disclose the legal difficulties encountered in the other jurisdictions. Through the use of these tactics, many individuals were ensnared.
Thus, there was ample, indeed overwhelming, evidence from which any rational finder of fact could determine that the appellants were guilty of all of the elements of obtaining personal property under false pretense beyond a reasonable doubt. Tenn.R.App.Proc. 13(e); Jackson v. Virginia, supra. The issue is without merit.
VIII
As previously noted, one of the victims of the investment scheme established by the appellants was Faron Young, a world-famous country music artist. The appellant Frost was charged in Counts 19, 20, and 21 of the indictment in connection with the sale of securities to Mr. Young. At trial, Mr. Young testified that he dealt exclusively with an individual named Bobby Fraizer in his purchase of stock in the corporation, and that he
After stating that there was no proof that the appellant Frost participated in or had any knowledge of the sale of stock to Mr. Young, the trial judge granted a judgment of acquittal concerning Counts 19 and 20. However, the trial judge permitted Count 21 to be presented to the jury and the appellant Frost was convicted on that count. He now contends that it was error for the trial court to refuse to grant a judgment of acquittal concerning Count 21 which charged him with omitting to state material facts in the sale of the securities to Mr. Young. The appellant Frost presents his contention in the form of a sufficiency of the evidence challenge. 22
Review of the record reveals that counsel for the appellant Frost failed to point out to the court the relation between Count 21 and Counts 19 and 20. Under some circumstances this could have constituted waiver. However, given the trial court’s finding that no proof was introduced that the appellant Frost participated in or had knowledge of the transaction with Mr. Young, the trial court’s failure to grant a judgment of acquittal on Count 21 rose to the level of plain error.
See State v. Ogle,
IX
Count One of the indictment charged the appellant Frost with engaging in a scheme to defraud in connection with the sale of securities. The appellant contends that Count One was comprehensive of all of his participation in the enterprise, both before and after the Commissioner of Insurance ordered the appellants to cease and desist. He asserts that all of the remaining counts of the indictment were simply restatements of particular portions of Count One. Having been convicted on Count One, the appellant Frost argues that all of the remaining counts on which he was found guilty were multiplicitous and, therefore, all counts except Count One should have been dismissed by the trial court.
The anti-fraud provisions of the Tennessee Securities Act provide that:
It is unlawful for any person in connection with the sale or purchase of any security in this state, directly or indirectly:
(1) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud;
(2) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading; or
(3) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person.
Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-121(a). In Count One, the appellant Frost was charged with violating Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-121(a)(l). In Counts 5, 8, 11, 14, 17, and 21, the appellant Frost was charged with violating Tenn. Code Ann. § 48-2-121(a)(2). While there are no Tennessee cases holding that the three subdivisions of Tenn.Code Ann. § 48-2-121 (a) constitute separate and distinct offenses, other jurisdictions with similar provisions have so held.
For example, the provisions in § 77(q) of the federal Securities Act of 1933 are nearly identical in all relevant aspects to the anti-fraud provisions of the Tennessee Securities
Because the three subdivisions of § 77(q)(a) express the statutory purpose of making the acts specified in those subdivisions separate and distinct, there is strong logic to the view that each of the different acts defined in those subdivisions can serve as an “allowable unit of prosecution.” ... The distinctions between the three subdivisions may seem esoteric because they entail hairline differences of proof. But Congress, who deliberately made the distinctions, evidently did not think them so. And experience with criminal trials demonstrates that the unexpected frequently happens.
United States v. Birrell,
Where the same actions or transactions constitute a violation of two or more distinct statutory provisions, the standard for determining “whether there are [multiple] offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not.”
Blockburger v. United States,
Here, in Count One the appellant Frost was convicted of employing a scheme to defraud in connection with the sale of securities. The existence of a “scheme to defraud” had to be proven to establish that the offense had been committed. Counts 5, 8,11,14,17 and 21 did not require proof of a scheme to defraud. Instead, those six counts which charged that the appellant Frost omitted to state material facts in connection with the sale of a security required proof of specific omissions and also that the omissions occurred concerning the particular victim named in each count. Conversely, Count One did not require proof of those particular omissions or those victims in order to establish that the appellant Frost employed a scheme to defraud.
See United States v. Stull,
Similarly, in Count Two the appellant Frost was convicted of selling securities without a license. Evidence that the appellant Frost was selling securities without a license, while essential to Count Two, was unnecessary for conviction under Count One. Furthermore, proof of any type of scheme to defraud was not required for a guilty verdict under Count Two, since even one selling securities otherwise legitimately could be convicted of that offense if not properly licensed.
In Count Three the appellant Frost was convicted of violating an Order of the Commissioner of Commerce and Insurance.
The appellant Frost was convicted on Counts 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 for selling unregistered securities. Evidence establishing that the securities which were sold were unregistered was a requisite element of each of those counts. Such proof was not, on the other hand, necessary for conviction under Count One. Likewise, none of those counts required a showing of a scheme to defraud in connection with the sale of securities, whereas such proof was paramount to a conviction under Count One.
Lastly, all of the above securities-related counts, including Count One, require proof that the appellant Frost sold a “security” in Tennessee. However, that is not a fact that needed to be proven under the false pretenses counts, 4,10,13 and 16. The false pretenses counts require proof that the appellant Frost obtained money through the false representation of a past or existing fact, whereas Count One does not. Further, proof that the false representation was capable of defrauding is necessary for conviction on the false pretenses counts, but is not an element under the Securities Act, which Count One alleged was violated.
In short, each of the various counts on which the appellant Frost was convicted required proof of facts which were unnecessary for conviction under other counts of the indictment.
See Blockburger,
We conclude by noting that the appellant Frost’s reliance upon the case of
State v. O’Guin,
This issue has no merit.
X
During the ease-in-ehief of the prosecution, the State introduced evidence concerning prior financial, legal and regulatory difficulties previously experienced by the appellant Frost in other states. This evidence included proof of financial failures which ended in bankruptcies, civil injunctions, and criminal convictions concerning ventures substantially similar to the one involved in the present case.
25
The general rule concerning such evidence is that it is inadmissible even when the previous crimes or acts are of the same character as the charged offense because such evidence is irrelevant and invites the “finder of fact to infer guilt from propensity.”
State v. Hallock,
There are, however, exceptions to this general prohibition,
26
two of which the trial court
A
In the first portion of a bifurcated relevancy challenge, the appellant Frost contends that the civil injunctions and criminal conviction are too remote in time to have been relevant to this ease in that all of the injunctions and the criminal conviction occurred at least ten years prior to this case. In support of his theory he cited several cases in his brief in which evidence of prior crimes that occurred between two and eleven years before the charged offense were excluded on grounds of remoteness.
28
Moreover, because such evidence is inherently prejudicial, its admission often requires the reversal of the conviction and a new trial.
State v. Parton,
Fraud assumes many shapes, disguises and subterfuges, and is generally so secretly hatched that it can only be detected by a consideration of facts and circumstances, which are frequently trivial, remote and disconnected, and which cannot be interpreted without bringing them together, and contemplating them all in one view. In order to do this it is necessary to pick one fact or circumstance here, another there, and a third yonder, until the collection is complete ... A wide latitude of evidence is allowed; and if a fact or circumstance relates directly, or indirectly, to the transaction, it is admissible, however weak or slight it may be, its relevance depending not upon its weight or force, but upon its bearing or tendency.
The evidence of the prior injunctions and criminal convictions was significant and reasonably necessary to proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellants violated the securities laws with the requisite intent. Specifically, the evidence was relevant to show that the appellants had guilty knowledge that the interests they were selling were securities; that the appellants knew they were required to register with the Securities Division; and that the appellants knew they were required to fully disclose and intentionally failed to disclose to potential participants their prior civil injunctions and criminal convictions when representing their prior successes. In such circumstances, it is well settled that “evidence of other crimes or acts of misconduct may be introduced for ... limited purposes, such as to show guilty knowledge or intent.”
State v. Frazier,
Other jurisdictions have held that evidence of similar crimes and other wrongs may be admitted to establish intent in cases involving the sale of securities.
E.g., Hardcastle v. State,
B
The appellant Frost alternatively contends that even if the prior civil injunctions and the criminal conviction are relevant, the probative value of the evidence was outweighed by the unfair prejudice to him in having the evidence before the jury. In his brief, he states that the prejudice in this case is “self-evident.” Relying on
Harrison v. State,
Pursuant to Tenn.R.Evid. 404(b)(3), a court must exclude “evidence if its probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.”
Accord State v. Partan,
In regard to the second ground on which the trial court admitted the evidence, it is clear that if the lower court had not admitted the evidence, the counts alleging that the appellants failed to disclose material facts to potential and actual investors would have had to be dismissed. This is due to the fact that the prior conviction and civil injunctions were the primary facts that the State claimed the appellants had a duty to reveal in order to avert misrepresenting their prior successes in similar ventures.
In short, although the admission of the evidence could have caused some quantum of prejudice to the appellant Frost,
See; Bunch v. State,
C
In a second alternative argument, the appellant Frost insists that even if the evidence was admissible, the procedural method by which it was presented to the jury was improper. Specifically, he contends that the trial should have bifurcated the trial so that evidence of prior wrongs would come in only in the second phase, after the jury had made a determination in the first phase that the enterprise involved the sale of securities. In support of his contention, he cites
Harrison v. State,
Harrison
deals with habitual criminal statutes and involves the enhancement of punishment for the triggering offense in light of prior crimes.
Moreover, nothing in Tenn.R.Evid. 404(b) requires courts to bifurcate trials when evidence of prior wrongs is admitted. Instead, the Supreme Court and the legislature, relying heavily upon the Tennessee Supreme Court’s holding in
State v. Parton,
These issues are without merit.
XI
Next the appellant Frost argues that he was denied due process by the failure of the trial court to require the State to disclose certain exculpatory statements to him.
31
In
Brady v. Maryland,
Before an accused is entitled to relief under this theory, he must establish several prerequisites: (a) the prosecution must have suppressed the evidence; (b) the evidence suppressed must have been favorable to the accused; and (c) the evidence must have been material.
See United States v. Bagley, Id.,
Examination of the suppressed evidence revealed information concerning three individuals or situations. First, there was an affidavit from an attorney explaining his withdrawal from representation due to the surfacing of conflicting interests between two defendants he was representing in the case. Next, there was a tape recording of a conversation that took place in the trial judge’s chambers in which a defendant in the case explained to the judge why he intended to conduct a pro se defense for the remainder of the trial. Neither of those items of information were favorable, or even relevant, to the guilt or innocence of the appellant Frost. The final undisclosed material consisted of a petition for divorce filed against a witness for the prosecution, the final decree of divorce, and a civil action for damages concerning injuries sustained by the witness’ child at school. The only portion of those documents that could possibly have been subject to the
Brady
rule was found in the petition for divorce where it was alleged that the witness for the prosecution had previously had her
While this Court can envision how such information, if substantiated, could have been valuable impeachment evidence, the appellant Frost’s due process rights were not violated under a
Brady
theory unless he can establish the prerequisites heretofore set forth. We believe that such is not possible. First, concerning whether the prosecution suppressed the evidence, it is significant that the allegations were levied in a document filed in a court. Such documents are a matter of public record and may be obtained by anyone. Where impeachment evidence is equally available to the accused and the prosecution, the responsibility for the failure of the accused to discover it must be borne by the accused.
Workman,
The evidence is material only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.
XII
The appellant Frost next asserts that the trial court erroneously refused to grant him a mistrial when one of the witnesses for the State testified about a recent bankruptcy petition filed by him. The testimony in question was as follows:
WITNESS: Well, after the meeting that day with my boss and I, something just bothered me, and it just didn’t sit right. I don’t know but it was just something that bothered me. . And for some crazy reason I went to the Customs House.
PROSECUTOR: What is the Customs House?
WITNESS: Over — I don’t know if anything else is in that building, but I did know that bankruptcies were in that building. And I went over and had them pull C. Donald Frost—
At this point counsel for the appellant Frost interrupted and a bench conference outside of the presence of the jury ensued. This reference to a bankruptcy in connection with the appellant Frost was made in violation of a prior ruling by the trial court which prohibited such references.
During the jury-out conference, counsel for the appellant Frost argued that the testimony was so highly prejudicial to him that a mistrial should be granted. The trial court ruled adversely on the motion but offered to instruct the jury to disregard the remark and to use it for no purpose whatsoever in the trial. The appellant Frost consented to the offer and the limiting instruction was given to the jury. The jury is presumed to have followed the judge’s instruction.
State v. Johnson,
On appeal, the State argues not only that the limiting instruction was adequate protection of the rights of the appellant Frost, but that evidence was actually admissible to show that the appellants had failed to state material facts to purchasers of the investment contracts. This Court need not reach that issue, however, because it is clear that in light of the plethora of other evidence of prior crimes and bad acts that the jury was properly allowed to consider, including other bankruptcies filed by the appellants, that this incident did not justify the granting of a mistrial.
The appellant Frost contends that the trial court erroneously permitted one of the victims to testify concerning threats made to her by an individual named Bob Stanley, who was an officer of the corporation and a co-conspirator of the appellants. The appellant Frost asserts that the admission of such testimony was in violation of Tenn.R.Evid. 404 in that it was not relevant to the prosecution of him and its prejudicial effect clearly outweighed the probative value of the evidence.
The appellant apparently is of the belief that the victim testified as to Mr. Stanley’s threats of physical violence in the presence of jury. Review of the record, however, reveals that the victim did not testify before the jury as to any threats levied against her by Mr. Stanley. Instead, the entire discussion concerning threats of violence made by Mr. Stanley took place in a jury-out offer of proof. It is true that the victim testified before the jury as to a meeting that she had with Mr. Stanley in which less than amicable words were uttered by Mr. Stanley. However, none of his words or actions at that meeting constituted any sort of threat.
The only threat against the victim that was presented in the presence of the jury was the appellant Brewer’s threat to name the victim in a civil lawsuit. Even though this threat was made in the presence of Mr. Stanley, the appellant Frost has not proffered any argument that this action was attributable to Mr. Stanley. Moreover, the appellants made no objection to this testimony at trial.
Since no threats made by Mr. Stanley were discussed in the presence of the jury and the appellants have made no effort to attribute the threats of civil litigation made by the appellant Brewer to Mr. Stanley, it is patently obvious that the victim s testimony did not cause the appellant Frost to suffer any prejudice whatsoever. This issue is without merit.
XIV
In the final issue of this appeal, the appellant Frost argues that the combination of errors committed in the trial of this case denied him a fair trial. We disagree.
It is well recognized that while individual errors may not require relief, the combination of multiple errors may necessitate the reversal of a conviction.
See State v. Zimmerman,
The judgment is affirmed as modified herein.
Notes
. The appellants previously had encountered regulatory or legal difficulties in the form of cease and desist orders, civil injunctions, and criminal convictions for operating similar enterprises in four other states, to-wit: Ohio, Florida, Texas, and Oklahoma.
. Records furnished to an investigator for the enforcement section of the Securities Division of the State of Tennessee revealed that the water purifier cost U.S.A. Wholesale Club $181.85. The vacuum cleaner cost ranged from $216.00 to $220.00 and the cookware cost ranged from $206.96 to $220.00. Evidence of the actual price paid by U.S.A. Wholesale Club for other specialty products was not introduced at trial.
. In their attempts to become a member of the club, individuals were only required to bring guests to the meetings. The appellants were responsible for all of the marketing of the specialty products. This principle also applied to members who invited potential buyers to sales meetings.
. Although individuals could not become members of the club by purchasing specialty products in their own name, several individuals were told that they could evade this rule by simply making up a hypothetical name under which they could purchase the product.
. Potential members were told that they could work diligently for one year and then retire, that some members would become millionaires, and that a member could make $500,000.00 per year just by bringing in more potential buyers than any other member for one month.
. One witness, who was employed as a controller at U.S.A. Wholesale Club, testified that the appellant Frost refused his suggestion that a separate account be established to hold the purchase money for the wholesale store.
. The failure to disclose this information is relevant, in that, the appellants routinely represented at sales meetings that a significant portion of the purchase price of the specialty products was being set aside for the purchase of the building for the wholesale store.
.See supra note one.
. Mr. Young testified that when he saw his photograph in a promotional brochure wherein he was identified as a director, he questioned how that occurred and was told that he was elected by the other principals.
. Although the appellant Brewer lists the trial court's definition of "investment contract” as an issue on appeal in his brief, he has failed to proffer any argument whatsoever in conjunction with the issue. Therefore, the issue is waived and shall not be considered further in regard to the appellant Brewer.
See State v. Killebrew,
. Both of those states subsequently rejected strict application of the
Howey
test. Ga.Code Ann. § 10-5-2(26) (Michie 1994);
Burke v. State,
. A year prior to the
Forman
decision, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, referring to the “solely” requirement of
Howey
held that "[a] literal application of the
Howey
test would frustrate the remedial purposes of the [federal Securities] Act.”
SEC v. Koscot Interplanetary, Inc.,
.The hybrid
Howey-risk
capital test has been adopted by judicial decision in at least six jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Casali v. Schultz,
At least six states have adopted the test by statute. See Alaska Stat. § 45.55.130(12) (1980); Ga.Code Ann. § 10-5-2(26) (1981); Mich.Comp. Laws § 451.801(1); N.D.Cent. Code § 10-04-02(12) (1985); Okla.Stat. tit. 71, § 2(20)(P) (1981); Wash.Rev.Code § 21.20.005(12) (1979).
At least five states have adopted the test by regulatory rule. See 14 IlI.Reg. § 130.200 (1984); N.M. Sec. Bureau Reg. 603(D) (1984); N.C.Admin.Code tit. 18, r. 6. 1104(h)(2) (1984);
. The first phrase quoted by the
Stanley
court is from
Mitzner v. Cardet Int’l, Inc.,
. The concept of risk capital, simply put, is the public solicitation of capital from investors which will be subject to the risks of the enterprise.
Hawaii Market,
. The appellant Brewer joined the appellant Frost in this contention. Our analysis applies equally to the rights of each appellant.
. Additional authority on this issue may be found in
Rule v. Empire Gas Corp.,
. Of course, procedural default that rises to the level of plain error is not waived. Tenn. R.Crim.P. 52(b). A plain error analysis is unnec-essaiy in the present case.
. This rule is also applied in civil enforcement proceeding initiated by the .Securities and Exchange Commission. In such cases, ‘‘the Commission is not required to prove that any investor actually relied on the misrepresentations or that the misrepresentations caused any investor to lose money.”
SEC
v.
Blavin,
. This Court does not possess the authority or power "to revise, alter, modify, modernize or otherwise change a common law rule created by the Supreme Court.”
State v. Braden,
. The appellant Frost was charged with several counts of obtaining money through false pretenses during the period beginning on or about May 19, 1987 and ending on December 31, 1988. During that period, the statutory prohibition of obtaining money by false pretense was codified at Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-3-901 (1982). That offense is now merged into the offense of theft. Sentencing Commission Comments to Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-14-101.
. The rules regarding the appellate examination of the sufficiency of the evidence which supports a guilty verdict were presented in the discussion of the previous issue and for the sake of brevity shall not be repeated.
. Although the conviction on Count 21 is reversed and dismissed, the appellant Frost’s effective sentence remains unaffected in that his sentence on Count 21 was to run concurrently with the sentences resulting from his convictions on Counts 17 and 18.
. The anti-fraud provisions of the federal Securities Act of 1933 provide that:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person in the offer or sale of any securities by the use of any means or instruments of transportation or communication in interstate commerce or by the use of the mails, directly or indirectly:
(1)to employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud, or
(2) to obtain money or property by means of an untrue statement of a material fact or any omission to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, or
(3) to engage in any transaction, practice or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the purchaser. 15 U.S.C. § 77(q)(a).
. Specifically, the jury heard evidence against the appellant Frost concerning an Ohio civil injunction dated March 28, 1972; another injunction in Ohio in 1977; a bankruptcy in Ohio in 1978; a related bankruptcy in Ohio in 1979; a conviction for securities violations in Ohio on or about August 16, 1978; and a civil injunction in Florida filed on or about February 20, 1978.
. In
State v. Parton,
.
See State v. Hallock,
. Specifically, the appellant Frost's brief discusses
State v. Davis,
.The argument concerning remoteness contained in the appellant Frost’s brief also mentions that the remoteness in time of the prior wrongs destroys the "materiality” of such acts and events insofar as the State alleges that the appellants were required to disclose them to potential and actual participants. We summarily reject this contention, finding that a reasonable trier of fact could deem information concerning the prior conviction and civil injunctions "material” in a case of this nature.
. Shappley has been superseded by statute on other grounds unrelated to the proposition for which the case is cited herein.
. In his brief, the appellant Frost states that he is unable to fully argue the favorableness or materiality of the undisclosed evidence because he was unable to view it. He contends that this was due to the trial court’s failure to identify or place into the record the suppressed material after the trial court had agreed to do so. As the State correctly points out, however, the undisclosed material was placed in the record in a large envelope marked “Exhibits Under Seal.” Because of the appellant Frost's mistaken belief concerning the record, he failed to make any references to the record or citation to legal authority concerning the specific items of undisclosed information. At least in a technical sense, this constitutes waiver of the issue on appeal.
State v. Killebrew;
supra;
State v. Smith,
Furthermore, pursuant to Tenn.R.App.P. 27(a)(7), a brief submitted to this court is required to contain "citations to the authorities and appropriate references to the record ... relied on.” Moreover, Rule 10(b) of this court’s rules requires that ”[i]ssues which are not supported by argument, citation to authorities, or appropriate references to the record will be treated as waived in this court.” Tenn.Ct.Crim. App.R. 10(b). However, because of the circumstances under which this technical waiver occurred, we choose to address the merits of the issue.
. This Court is aware that the statements contained in the petition for divorce are merely allegations and not proven facts. However, the obligation of the prosecutor to disclose is not limited in scope to competent or admissible evidence, but extends to all information that is both favorable and material.
Workman v. State,
