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Page 544
332 F.Supp. 544
Dudley FEIT, Plaintiff,
v.
LEASCO DATA PROCESSING EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
et al., Defendants. No. 69 Civ. 1329. United States District Court, E. D.
New York. August 26, 1971.
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Sidney B. Silverman, New York
City, for plaintiff; Joan T. Harnes, Jewel
H. Bjork, New York City, of counsel.
Willkie, Farr & Gallagher, New
York City, for Leasco Data; Anthony
Phillips, L. Robert Griffin, New York City,
of counsel.
Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett, New
York City, for Lehman Brothers; Rogers
Doering, Charles Edelman, Dean C. Rohrer,
New York City, of counsel.
Shearman & Sterling, New York
City, for White Weld; Robert F. Dobbin,
Joseph McLaughlin, New York City, of
counsel.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
WEINSTEIN, District Judge.
This case raises the question of
the degree of candor required of issuers of
securities who offer their shares in
exchange for those of other companies in
take-over operations. Defendants'
registration statement was, we find,
misleading in a material way. While
disclosing masses of facts and figures, it
failed to reveal one critical consideration
that weighed heavily with those responsible
for the issuethe substantial possibility of
being able to gain control of some hundred
million dollars of assets not required for
operating the business being acquired.
Using a statement to obscure,
rather than reveal, in plain English, the
critical elements of a proposed business
deal cannot be countenanced under the
securities regulation acts. The defense that
no one could be certain of precisely how
much was involved in the way of releasible
assets is not acceptable. The prospective
purchaser of a new issue of securities is
entitled to know what the deal is all about.
Given an honest and open statement,
adequately warning of the possibilities of
error and miscalculation and not designed
for puffing, the outsider and the insider
are placed on more equal grounds for arms
length dealing. Such equalization of
bargaining power through sharing of
knowledge in the securities market is a
basic national policy underlying the federal
securities laws.
I. PROCEEDINGS
In this class action plaintiff
seeks damages resulting from alleged
misrepresentations and omissions in a
registration statement prepared in
conjunction with a 1968 offering of a
"package" of preferred shares and warrants
of Leasco Data Processing Equipment
Corporation (Leasco) in exchange for the
common stock of Reliance Insurance Company
Page 550
(Reliance). He is a former shareholder of
Reliance who exchanged his shares for the
Leasco package. Suit was commenced in
October 1969 on behalf of all Reliance
shareholders who accepted the exchange offer
between August 19, and November 1, 1968.
It is alleged that Leasco (1)
failed to disclose an approximate amount of
"surplus surplus" held by Reliance and (2)
failed to fully and accurately disclose its
intentions with regard to reorganizing
Reliance or using other techniques for
removing surplus surplus after it had
acquired control. These failures, it is
claimed, represented material
misrepresentations or omissions in violation
of Sections 11, 12(2), and 17(a) of the
Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. §§ 77k, 77l(2),
and 77q(a)), Sections 10(b) and 14(e) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C.
§§ 78j(b), 78n(e)), and Securities and
Exchange Commission Rule X-10B-5 (17 C.F.R.
§ 240.10b-5).
Defendants are Leasco, the
issuer; Saul P. Steinberg, Leasco's chief
executive officer; Bernard L. Schwartz,
Leasco's President; Robert B. Hodes,
Leasco's general counsel and a director; and
White, Weld & Co. and Lehman Brothers, the
dealer-managers. In addition to denials, the
answers raise a number of defenses.
II. THE EXCHANGE OFFER
During the period August 19,
through November 1, 1969 Leasco offered one
share of convertible preferred stock and
one-half warrant of Leasco in exchange for
each share of Reliance common stock
tendered. The preferred shares offered
carried a $2.20 annual dividend and a
conversion value of $55 if converted into
common stock. The warrants permitted the
holder to purchase Leasco common stock for
$87 per share at any time up to June 4,
1978.
Reliance common shares had a
market value of approximately $30 in
December of 1967. As word of an impending
takeover attempt spread, the price rose
gradually to a high of $99 7/8 during the
tender offer period. The price of Leasco
common shares was also rising during this
period. On August 16, 1968, the last trading
day before the exchange offer was effective,
Leasco common stock closed at $87 5/8 while
its warrants were listed at a high bid of
$43. Reliance shares were then selling at
$66.
By September 13, 1968, 3,994,042
shares of Reliance, amounting to 72% of
those outstanding, had been tendered and
Leasco had obtained control of Reliance.
Leasco ultimately acquired 97% of Reliance's
common stock by the termination of the
tender offer on November 1, 1968.
III. SURPLUS SURPLUS
A. Definition of Surplus Surplus
Reliance's surplus surplus is the
central element in this litigation. Leasco's
desire to acquire it provided much of the
original impetus for the exchange offer.
Lack of disclosure of facts relating to the
amount of surplus surplus and Leasco's
intentions concerning its use, as well as
the materiality of those omissions provide
the basis of plaintiff's complaint. Finally,
the method and difficulty of ascertaining
its amount is critical to the defendants'
affirmative defense. We cannot proceed
without examining the concept.
Reliance is a fire and casualty
insurance company subject to stringent
regulation by the Insurance Commissioner of
Pennsylvania. Such a company is required by
the regulatory scheme to maintain sufficient
surplus to guarantee the integrity of its
insurance operations. Such "required
surplus" cannot be separated from the
insurance business of the company. That
portion of surplus not required in insurance
operations has been referred to as surplus
surplus. In a widely relied upon report to
the New York Insurance Department, the
matter was summed up as follows:
"The `required surplus' is one
that will be adequate to cover for a
reasonable period of time any losses and
expenses larger than those predicted and any
declines
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in asset values, including all chance
variations in the crucial factors of the
operation. Any surplus beyond this cover is
`surplus surplus' which, by definition, is
unneeded; it may be treated quite
differently in the process of regulation."
State of New York Insurance Department,
Report of the Special Committee on Insurance
Holding Companies at 43 (Feb. 15, 1968)
(hereinafter referred to as Insurance
Department Report).
Simply put, surplus surplus is
the highly liquid assets of an insurance
company which can be utilized in
non-regulated enterprises. While the
importance of the concept has only recently
received full recognition the idea is not
new; it was previously referred to as
"redundant capital."
Insurance companies are not
generally permitted to engage in
non-insurance business activities. If,
therefore, surplus surplus is to be of any
practical use it must be separated from the
insurance operation with its concomitant
regulatory restrictions.
In 1967 Carter, Berlind & Weill
undertook a study of fire and casualty
companies. The result was a report by Edward
Netter submitted in August 1967. It develops
the concept of "The Financial Services
Holding Company," envisioning modification
of the corporate structure of the typical
fire and casualty company to permit more
flexible utilization of its
resourcesparticularly surplus surplus.
Netter postulated a one-stop, comprehensive
financial institution servicing virtually
all of the consumer's financial needs.
Aggressive use of capital redundancy
(surplus surplus) was a critical element in
Netter's analysis. He estimated Reliance's
capital redundancy at $80,000,000 as of
December 31, 1966.
Leasco's interest was aroused by
the Netter Report. Michael Gibbs, Leasco's
Vice President for Corporate Planning,
subsequently prepared a "Confidential
Analysis Of A Fire And Casualty Company"
based "to a large extent" on Reliance. He
worked from the Netter Report to illustrate
the specific benefits to Leasco of increased
earnings per share and leverage potential in
acquiring and reorganizing a fire and
casualty company with large surplus surplus.
His initial idea was to establish a parent
holding company to which the fire and
casualty company (Reliance) could transfer
its surplus surplusfreeing it from
regulatory restrictionwhile continuing to
operate as an insurance subsidiary. In his
opinion such an acquisition was potentially
extremely valuable to Leasco. As he noted:
"II. SPECIFIC ADVANTAGES FOR LEASCO
If Leasco could acquire control
of an F & C * * * (3) large sums of capital
for computer leasing would be available, (4)
an aggressive acquisition and investment
company (the holding company) would
initially have a large sum of available
capital in addition to potential debt
leverage. * * (6) Leasco can create a true
financial services company."
Gibbs estimated Reliance's
surplus surplus at $125,000,000 as of June
30, 1967 or $100,000,000 as of the end of
1967.
These two documents, along with
the Insurance Department Report, provided
the impetus for Leasco's take-over bid.
Steinberg considered surplus surplus
"important to Leasco" and A. Addison
Roberts, Reliance's President, came away
from negotiations with the impression that
"one important aspect of Reliance that
commended itself to Leasco was Reliance's
surplus surplus." Leasco protected its
interest in the surplus surplus by including
a provision in an August 1, 1968 agreement
with Reliance requiring its management to
provide the maximum amount then available to
the holding company Leasco would form.
B. Disclosures Concerning Surplus
Surplus
The only statements in the
prospectus with regard to surplus surplus
appears on page five. It neither mentions
the amounts that Leasco's management had
Page 552
in mind nor suggests the importance of
Reliance's possible surplus surplus. It
reads:
"The Company [Leasco] believes
that this Exchange Offer is consistent with
the announced intention of the Reliance
management to form a holding company to
become the parent of Reliance. That
intention was communicated to Reliance
stockholders on May 15, 1968 by A. Addison
Roberts, the president of Reliance, who
wrote that the holding company concept would
serve the interests of Reliance and all its
stockholders `by providing more flexible
operations, freedom of diversification and
opportunities for more profitable
utilization of financial resources.' The
Company supports those objectives and
intends to do all it can to promote their
realization as soon as practicable. * * *
Reliance will diligently pursue its
previously announced intention to form a
holding company which Reliance will provide
with the maximum amount of funds legally
available which is consistent with
Reliance's present level of net premium
volume. * * *"
C. Parties' Contentions With
Regard To Surplus Surplus
Plaintiff contends that anything
as important to the overall transaction as
the amount of surplus surplus should have
been disclosed by some sort of
approximation. He asserts that such a
computation could, in fact, have been made
by the techniques used by Netter and Gibbs
with information in Leasco's possession or
that sufficient additional data could have
been obtained to arrive at a reliable
estimate. He further claims that while
Leasco disclosed its intention to form a
holding company to make use of Reliance's
resources, it should also have disclosed
that Leasco was considering other plans for
separating surplus surplus from the
insurance operation by reorganization and
liquidation of Reliance or by declaration of
a special dividend.
Defendants, in contrast, maintain
that such omissions were not material
because
"* * * the stockholders who
exchanged Reliance shares for the Leasco
package would not have been deterred from
doing so by an estimate of surplus surplus,
but rather would have been made all the more
anxious to tender."
This belief stems from their
perception that a large block of liquid
assets in the hands of an aggressive
acquisition-oriented company like Leasco
would have made the Leasco package even more
attractive than Reliance shares. They also
assert that such an inclusion would have
been "bullish" in violation of SEC standards
it would have made the prospectus a selling
document.
Defendants' second principal
argument is that surplus surplus could not
have been calculated by Leasco because an
accurate estimate required (1) access to
Reliance's financial data, (2) the judgment
of its management, and (3) the opinion of
the insurance commissioner, all of which
were denied Leasco by the hostility of
Reliance's management and its attempts to
obstruct the take-over bid.
Finally, defendants contend that
any other proposals for removing surplus
surplus from Reliance were simply matters
being considered by counsel. They never
reached the level of a specific plan by
Leasco during the pendency of the exchange
offer.
D. Computation of Surplus Surplus
The problem and the variety of
methods of determining surplus surplus were
discussed in the New York Insurance
Department Report in the context of how an
insurance department should determine what
is "required surplus." A variety of
techniques were set out:
"The `required surplus', which
should be assured by regulation, is easy to
state in the abstract, but difficult to
implement in practice. It calls for analysis
of the variables that the surplus
Page 553
to policyholders is expected to cover.
Essentially they are three. First the
surplus must absorb any basic insurance
costs (losses and expenses) which are in
excess of the premiums charged. Second, the
surplus must absorb any under-valuation of
loss or claim reserves. Third, the surplus
must absorb any declines in asset values. To
this should be added any surplus required to
finance necessary growth.
* * * * * *
"Well-known rules-of-thumb for
making approximations have been developed.
The so-called `two-to-one' rule constitutes
an approximation to the specification of
required surplus, and can be applied in the
absence of anything better. Under most
circumstances it is surely too stringent
when used as a test of solidity. The rule is
based on a theory developed by a former New
York Insurance Department Chief Examiner and
was utilized in the first draft of the 1939
Recodification of the Insurance Law as a
yardstick for payment of dividends.
"A similarly rough, but probably
much too liberal, approximation is found in
the English statutes. A non-life insurer
must have a surplus of at least 50,000 if
the general premium income of the company in
the previous year did not exceed 250,000, a
fifth of that income if it exceeded 250,000
but not 2,500,000, or the aggregate of
500,000 and a tenth of the amount by which
that income exceeded 2,500,000.
"The insurance regulatory
personnel of some states have concluded that
premium writings of three times
policyholders' surplus is safe but that four
times is risky. Sometimes this is made a
little more sophisticated by adding common
stock investments to premium writings, in
recognition of the fact that surplus must
cover not only bad operational experience
but also a stock market decline. In actual
administration in a department as competent
as New York's actual application can be
still more refined and discriminating,
though New York, like the others, relies
more on judgment than on precise
quantitative standards."
The difficulties set out by the
New York Insurance Department Report were
also perceived as realistic problems by the
insurance industry. Roberts, President of
Reliance, and a cooperative witness of
defendants was of the opinion that what
needed consideration was: (1) the
relationship of premium writings to surplus;
(2) underwriting results; (3) investment
policy of the company; (4) its re-insurance
arrangements or treaties; (5) exposure to
catastrophies; (6) adequacy of loss and
premium reserves; (7) quality and
characteristics of the agency plan or
company; and (8) the quality of management.
He indicated that some of the data
pertaining to these criteria were not
matters of public record.
He concluded that the evaluation
of these factors was largely a matter of
judgment and nearly impossible without full
access to company data.
Similarly, Steinberg, Chief
Executive Officer of Leasco, considered the
rules of thumb method discussed by the
Insurance Department Report and used in both
the Netter and Gibbs memoranda to be
"unreliable" methods of determining surplus
surplus given the lack of access to Reliance
management. Consequently, he considered the
estimates contained in these documents to be
inaccurate and undependable. He testified
that he himself had never arrived at an
estimate he considered accurate with any
degree of certainty throughout the
preliminary stages and even through the
exchange offer period. Thus, he stated, when
the question of including such an estimate
in the prospectus arose it was decided on
the advice of counsel not to include one.
According to defendants, the
result of this pervasive feeling of
uncertainty about the accuracy of the
estimates put forward by Netter and Gibbs,
or any estimate, was that none of the
principals in the exchange offer ever
calculated surplus
Page 554
surplus, commissioned anyone to compute
it, or even attempted to estimate it. Nor
did the underwriters attempt at any time to
obtain an estimate from Reliance. In fact,
they did not even communicate with Reliance.
This is not to suggest that no
estimate of surplus surplus was available to
Leasco during the negotiations and exchange
offer periodthe Netter Report had estimated
it at $80 million and Gibbs had indicated
$100 and $125 million as his approximations.
A range of $50-$125 million was discussed at
meetings between Reliance and Leasco in
October 1968. Leasco simply, according to
defendants' testimony, considered these
estimates speculative in light of their then
state of knowledge of Reliance.
Nor should it be inferred that an
estimate could not have been obtained at
least by Roberts, who was, of course, privy
to Reliance's data. He stated bluntly that
he could have made such a calculation "damn
quickly" if given a reason to do it. He had
not calculated it because he was never
presented with a specific need to do so. No
one from either Leasco or the underwriters
ever asked him to calculate surplus surplus
during the pendency of the exchange offer,
but he could have done so if asked.
Whether he might or would have
is one of the subsidiary issues in this
litigation.
IV. BACKGROUND OF THE EXCHANGE OFFER
A. January to August 1, 1968.
Following the submission of the
Gibbs memorandum on January 11, 1968, Leasco
developed an active interest in acquiring
Reliance. By April 3rd of that year it had
taken a substantial position in Reliance
stock132,000 shares, roughly 3%, worth over
four million dollars.
As early as February 9, 1968
Roberts received word from a partner in a
Philadelphia brokerage firm that Leasco was
interested in buying Reliance. Accordingly,
he sent a letter to his stockholders on May
15, 1968 indicating that Reliance intended
to form a holding company to become the
parent company of Reliance. This would
benefit Reliance and its stockholders "* * *
by providing more flexible operations,
freedom of diversification and opportunities
for more profitable utilization of financial
resources through the Holding Company
concept." While this document implies
recognition of surplus surplus and indicates
an intention to aggressively utilize it, the
term itself was not used nor did Roberts
calculate it because "[t]his was more or
less a public relations maneuver" to
demonstrate Reliance's progressive attitude
and forestall a takeover bid. This letter
was subsequently referred to by Leasco on
page five of its prospectus, quoted above.
Representatives of Leasco and
Reliance met in early June, 1968 to discuss
the possibility of a merger between the two
companies. Steinberg tried to convince
Roberts of the potential for creating new
opportunities in the financial service
company area. He believed that a merger of a
sound insurance company with a company like
Leasco which had a strong technological base
"would make an exciting combination."
Reliance was not particularly interested in
the prospect, but Roberts said he would
present any specific proposal to his board;
none was suggested at that time. Because of
the general nature of these discussions,
surplus surplus was never specifically
discussed and apparently no calculations
were made.
Leasco announced a tender offer
for Reliance shares on June 22, 1968. At
that time it offered one convertible
debenture having a principal amount of $110
and paying annual interest of $4.00 and one
warrant for every two Reliance shares
tendered. The Reliance management wrote to
its shareholders on June 24, advising them
not to act in haste with regard to the
offer.
Hodes, a member of Leasco's board
and a partner in its counsel's law firm, by
telegram dated June 24, 1968 requested
Reliance's cooperation in the preparation of
a registration statement on SEC Form S-1 in
conjunction with
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the registration of the Leasco shares
into which the debentures were convertible
and promised to promptly furnish Reliance
with proofs of the registration statement
for its comments. Roberts replied, by
telegram dated July 1, 1968, that:
"* * * the Reliance Executive and
Finance Committee is studying Leasco's
proposal. Reliance cannot incur the expense
and potential liability of preparing and
supplying the information requested until
the Board of Directors has determined
whether the Leasco proposal is in the best
interests of Reliance and its stockholders."
A copy of the preliminary
registration statement filed with the SEC on
July 8, 1968 was sent to Roberts on July 9,
along with a request for advice as to its
accuracy. Similarly, a copy of an actuarial
consultant's report on Reliance was
forwarded to Reliance with a request for
comments on July 12. Roberts responded on
July 15 that "[w]e are studying the requests
made in your letter of July 9th and will
advise you in due course." Reliance
apparently never complied with these
requests for information.
During the greater part of July
the posture of the Reliance officers toward
the exchange offer and Leasco was one of
hostility, apparently motivated by the
conviction that the offer was not in the
best interests of Reliance and its
shareholders and further by its concern with
regard to Leasco's intentions toward them
personally should the offer succeed.
Speaking of the first meeting
between Leasco and Reliance in June, Roberts
testified: "I was less than friendly about
it because I was not interested, and they
were pursuing it rather vigorously." He
similarly characterized a subsequent meeting
held in Philadelphia in late July:
"* * * [T]he discussion was about
whether we can make an amicable arrangement,
an affiliate [sic] or merger, and
discussion was rather abrasive. I guess
I was the leading character in that
respect." (emphasis added).
Perhaps the best expression of
this relationship was provided at trial by
Saul Steinberg:
"It is somewhat hard for me to
characterize it, but, I think that Mr.
Roberts viewedhe constantly has
characterized this as he was a king and we
were about to make him a baron, and the
relationship was always on a personal basis,
cordial, but I think that I certainly had a
lot of respect for him and I still do * *
*but it was cold. It * * * wasn't
friendly, we were taking over his company."
(emphasis added).
Reliance filed a lawsuit against
Leasco in mid-July, the purpose being "to
inhibit the tender offer." Subsequently, on
July 23, 1968, Roberts wrote a strong letter
to his shareholders expressing opposition to
the proposed exchange offer:
"Your Board of Directors has very
carefully weighed the pros and cons of the
Leasco offer in the preliminary prospectus
and strongly recommends that you reject
the proposed exchange of Leasco Debentures
and Warrants for your Reliance Stock."
(emphasis in original).
He listed the following as the
reasons for not tendering: (1) the exchange
was a taxable transaction; (2) Leasco was
small and was spending large fees on the
exchange offer itself; (3) the debentures
would be subordinated to other debts; (4)
Reliance stockholders would be contributing
a disproportionate share of earnings and
assets in the combined company; (5) Leasco
common stock had never paid a dividend; (6)
the debentures and warrants had no voting
power; (7) any tender was irrevocable and
eliminated the Reliance shareholder's
ability to take advantage of favorable
market changes during the exchange period;
and (8) if earnings were to drop off the
highly leveraged capitalization of Leasco
might cause "financial stringencies."
Indicating that the Board of
Directors did not believe Leasco's long term
prospects
Page 556
were as good as its high price-earnings
ratio would suggest, he summed up
management's position:
"[W]e are recommending that you
do not accept the Leasco paper. The other
alternatives presently available are that
you hold your investment or sell your shares
on the open market."
This document is particularly
significant because of the insight it
provides regarding the depth of opposition
to the exchange offer as late as July 23.
Viewed in conjunction with the failure to
provide information and the filing of the
law suit, it is clear that Roberts' group
was prepared to employ a full panoply of
defensive techniques in an attempt to bust
the exchange offer. Such resolve in late
July becomes crucial in light of conduct on
and after August 1, 1968.
The final paragraph of the July
23 letter relates directly to the problem of
the alleged omissions to state an amount of
surplus surplus. Reliance management
informed its shareholders that Leasco might
not be the only possible tenderor and
impliedly suggested that they not accept the
first offer made.
"In considering these
alternatives you should know that in the
last several weeks Reliance management has
negotiated with several other companies and
has received a number of offers. In the
judgment of your Board, all of these were,
like Leasco's proposal, not sufficiently
attractive to warrant recommendation to you
at this time. We are continuing to have
talks with several other interested
companies and your management promises to
take all possible steps to consummate an
affiliation with an investment quality
company and insure that your long term
investment remains sound, secure and
profitable."
In short, they implied a better
deal if the tender offer were frustrated.
This promise to actively seek an
alliance was made more credible by the fact
that the Netter report had been distributed
on Wall Street so that the attractiveness of
fire and casualty companies was known to
security analysts. Roberts' testimony was
that many of his shareholders believed that
the company was "going to be raided"; he was
aware as early as May, 1968 that "many
mutual funds were buying this stock" in
anticipation of takeover bids.
Shortly after this letter was
sent to Reliance shareholders, its
management once again met with Leasco to
discuss a possible affiliation or merger. It
was this meeting which was described as
"abrasive" by Roberts. It accomplished
nothing and the relationship between the two
apparently did not improve until later in
July when representatives of Leasco and
Reliance met. They worked out the substance
of an agreement which modified the offer
somewhat and gave Reliance management very
substantial personal benefits in exchange
for withdrawal of active opposition to the
exchange offer and assurances of cooperation
in setting up a holding company. The results
of these discussions were confirmed in a
contract executed August 1, 1968.
B. August 1 to August 19, 1968.
The August 1st agreement
represents the end of open hostility, tacit
acceptance of a Leasco takeover, and at
least the beginning of a rapprochement
between the two management groups.
Thereafter, an effective working
relationship commenced between what was to
be parent and subsidiary. While the personal
relationships may not have warmed
immediately, the business associations
improved considerably to the point that
Reliance's management "co-operated with them
within reason" after around mid-September
and actively after October 18, 1968.
The avowed purpose of entering
into the August 1st agreement was that
"Reliance has heretofore expressed
opposition to Leasco's proposed Exchange
Offer, and * * * Leasco desires that
Reliance withdraw such opposition". Leasco
agreed that if it should acquire a majority
of Reliance shares it would
Page 557
nevertheless vote its shares for at least
five years to maintain a majority of the
existing Reliance Board of Directors. It
bound itself not to elect more than
one-third plus one of the directors of
Reliance. In effect it reposed a voting
trust in the old management.
Roberts was guaranteed his
position as director and chief executive
officer of Reliance. His associates
covenanted to cooperate in setting up a
holding company to release from insurance
operations "the maximum amount of funds
available"i. e., Reliance's surplus
surplus.
As is apparent, a primary
function of the agreement was to protect
Leasco's interest in Reliance's surplus
surplus. Because the voting trust
arrangement denied Leasco day-to-day control
of Reliance for five years, it required that
Roberts and his associates do nothing to
diminish profitability and thus limit its
financial resources and that they form a
holding company to make the maximum amount
of surplus surplus available to the Leasco
controlled holding company.
The contract protected Reliance
management from liability arising from the
tender offer itself:
"Nothing contained herein shall
be deemed to require Reliance or its
management or the stockholders to recommend
to the stockholders of Reliance that they
accept the Exchange Offer or to oblige
Reliance to cooperate in the preparation of
any Registration Statement in connection
therewith or to assume or take any
liabilities or responsibility in connection
therewith."
While Roberts was willing to
withdraw his opposition and even cooperate,
he clearly did not wish to incur any
liability for a registration statement which
he was not preparing. He thus avoided any
affirmative duty to formally involve himself
in the registration process and denied
Leasco the use of his name on the
registration statement.
The critical significance of this
document arises from the assurances it
provided the Reliance management that (1)
the ordinary insurance business of the
company would not be interfered with by
non-insurance interests and (2) there would
be no major disruption of the prerogatives
of Reliance's management team as a result of
a successful exchange offer. Thus, the two
principal reasons for anxiety and opposition
by Reliance officials were resolved
favorably.
In addition to the security
guaranteed by the August 1, 1968 contract,
Roberts reaped a number of substantial
personal benefits. His salary was increased
from $80,000 to $100,000 a year shortly
thereafter. He was granted an option to
purchase 5,000 shares of Leasco at 30% of
the market price when granted$27.15 which
he exercised on October 23, 1968 when Leasco
shares were selling at $114.25. Thus, during
the pendency of the exchange offer Roberts
was the recipient of an $87.10 per share
discount, or a bonus of approximately
$435,000. He also received a future option
on 10,000 additional shares. Finally, he was
accorded a position on the Leasco Board of
Directors. Roberts took further pains to
protect and preserve his own financial well
being. He kept his substantial holdings of
Reliance shares without tendering. Whatever
happened to Reliance shareholders, he was to
be well taken care of.
Immediately after the August 1st
reconciliation, Reliance withdrew the
lawsuit it had filed against Leasco. It
mailed its shareholders a letter stating
that whether to exchange was a decision they
would have to make and indicating that
Leasco had increased the offer and granted
management a voting trust. Roberts
apparently also furnished Leasco with a
stockholders list enabling it to transmit
the prospectus and formal tender offer.
Prior to the withdrawal of
Reliance's opposition Leasco had offered one
debenture and one warrant for each two
Reliance shares tendered. Leasco finally
offered one preferred share and one-half
warrant for each share tendered. Whether the
final package was in fact
Page 558
more advantageous than the original offer
is not clear. What is clear, however, is
that while the original package was taxable
to the tenderor on an installment basis only
as he realized gain, the final offer was
taxable immediately.
The Reliance management group
realized the tax disadvantage to the
Reliance shareholders, who might have to pay
tax on the exchange before receiving any
proceeds with which to pay it. Nevertheless,
it dutifully maintained the neutrality
bargained and paid for in the August 1st
contract. Having accepted the imminent
takeover on August 1st, Roberts was no
longer concerned with details such as tax
consequences to his own shareholders to whom
he owed a fiduciary duty.
Roberts' withdrawal of
opposition, acceptance of Leasco's takeover,
and subsequent cooperation during the
pendency of the exchange offer, when viewed
in light of his own poor opinion of the
package offered, provides important insight
into the state of his mindan issue critical
to defendants' contention that he would not
have cooperated in helping compute surplus
surplus. True to his own evaluation of the
merits of the Leasco exchange offer, Roberts
refused to tender his own shares. It is
clear that the neutral posture taken by
Roberts after August 1, 1968 was not that of
an elected corporate officer who believed
that the exchange offer was necessarily in
the best interests of his shareholders, but
rather the stance of a pragmatic business
man who perceived that a tender of shares at
a premium over market price was likely to be
successful and that it was better to
acquiesceadvancing his personal fortune in
the process than to incur the displeasure
of the raiders.
Roberts also made it clear that
nothing occurred between July 23, and August
1, to change any of the eight specific
reasons stated in his letter of opposition
dated July 23. The August 1st agreement did
not make these factors any less compelling.
Shortly after the August 1st
agreement was consummated, a revealing
exchange of letters occurred between the
Deputy Insurance Commissioner of
Pennsylvania and Roberts. On August 2nd the
Deputy Commissioner inquired about the
Leasco takeover, the existence and extent of
surplus surplus, and the position of
Reliance's management on the takeover and
its future course of action.
Roberts' reply on August 6th
expressed the belief that the activity in
Reliance stock foretold a takeover bid and
that "* * * the rumors had turned into
reality in that we were receiving calls from
companies interested in acquiring Reliance,
commencing several months ago." He further
stated that in his opinion Reliance did have
surplus surplus which could be removed from
the insurance operation but that it was very
"difficult to measure with exactness"a
somewhat disingenuous reply in view of his
testimony at the trial that he could have
computed it quickly. Most revealing,
however, is his attitude toward the Leasco
exchange offer.
"The Reliance management did not
seek the affiliation with Leasco. In fact,
our Board of Directors much preferred that
our Company not be owned by non-insurance
interests; however, in the light of what has
taken place we have accepted the fact that
Leasco will probably obtain control of the
Company. If so, we have agreed * * *
"(b) That Leasco will receive our
cooperation in forming a holding company
with their having the right to withdraw any
surplus funds of Reliance within the
framework of satisfying the regulatory
authorities that sufficient funds are kept
in the business for it to be operated with
at least its present premium income.
* * * * * *
"If the answers to these
questions are not sufficient for your
purpose, will you please advise us as we
will be very happy to elaborate on any
points or
Page 559
questions you might wish to present to
us."
At this date Roberts still had
not expressed in writing a specific opinion
regarding surplus surplus. He had, however,
indicated his resignation to the Leasco
takeover, his intention to cooperate with
Leasco, and his willingness to answer any
inquiry by the insurance department
regarding surplus surplus and its
disposition. Roberts' state of mind
reflected that of other members of the
Reliance board as of August 19, 1968 when
the Leasco registration statement became
effective and the exchange offer commenced.
C. The Exchange Offer Period
August 19, to November 1, 1968.
The exchange offer was so
successful in the early days that by
September 13, 72% of the shares had been
tendered and Leasco had acquired control.
The offer was extended for the second time
on September 16, with a supplement to the
prospectus indicating the success of the
takeover. Between August 1, and
mid-September, Roberts had, according to
defendants' testimony, not been in direct
contact with Leasco as he awaited the
outcome of the exchange offer. But as it
became certain that Leasco would be his
employer, he abandoned his neutral stance.
"Q Now then, Mr. Roberts, during
the changeover period, you and other members
of Reliance's management team cooperated
with Leasco, did you not?
"A Well, let's put it this way,
August the first we stopped opposition of
keeping the agreement [sic]. The next time I
talked to people from Leasco or anyone in
the Reliance management to my knowledge,
there may have been other talks but I am not
aware of them, the first time I did was the
middle of December [sic] [September], when
Leasco got control of over 80% of the stock.
From that time we cooperated with them
within reason.
"Q * * * you and the management
team cooperated in good faith after
mid-September of 1968?
"A That's correct."
The exchange offer was extended
four more times. As Roberts became more
accustomed to the takeover his cooperation
"within reason" became "active cooperation"
by October 18the date of the last
extension.
On that date Roberts himself
mailed a letter to the remaining Reliance
shareholders describing the exchange offer,
indicating the recent performance of Leasco
securities on the market, and informing them
that Leasco intended to declare a dividend
of 48 cents on December 1, 1968 which they
would not receive if they did not tender by
November 1st. He concluded:
"Although the Reliance management
makes no recommendation as to the Leasco
Exchange Offer, we do wish to point out that
in view of Leasco's having over 90% of the
Reliance stock, you will be a minority
stockholder if you retain the Reliance
stock. We strongly recommend that you
reconsider you position and consult your
financial advisor or broker as to whether
you should accept the Leasco offer or take
other possible courses of action."
Roberts purpose in writing this
letter was admittedly to induce intransigent
stockholders to tender their shares though,
as already noted, he himself never tendered.
During the exchange period
discussions were carried on between Hodes,
Leasco's counsel, and Peter Korsan, counsel
for Reliance, regarding methods of
ultimately separating Reliance from its
surplus surplus, and, if possible, effecting
a tax savings for Leasco. Roberts was aware
of these discussions. In the course of these
meetings a range of $50-$125 million of
surplus surplus was discussed. The figure
was, however, apparently not Korsan's.
During this period each of the principals
was conducting an independent legal and
factual investigation of reorganization
schemes,
Page 560
holding company concepts, and tax
consequences to Leasco. In at least one
instance Korsan had discussions with the
general counsel for the Pennsylvania
Insurance Department in connection with
formation of a holding company. In a
memorandum to Roberts dated September 27,
1968 Korsan estimated the maximum surplus
which could be distributed to a holding
company by way of dividend under
Pennsylvania law would be $125 million, but
Leasco was not, according to defendants'
testimony, made privy to this estimate.
So far as relevant to this
litigation, the major Leasco concern during
this tender period was how Reliance might be
reorganized to accomplish tax savings. While
several legal variations were explored
during September and October they remained
merely matters for consideration by counsel
and never rose to the level of corporate
plans.
Plaintiff, Dudley Feit, tendered
his shares on October 14, 1968long after it
was clear that the tender offer would be
successful and after Roberts and his
associate Korsan were actively cooperating
with Leasco. At no time was the discussion
of surplus surplus in the prospectus
changed, despite the fact that a number of
supplements were issued. The exchange offer
terminated on November 1, 1968.
V. THE POST EXCHANGE OFFER PERIOD
After November 1, both management
teams continued their studies of
alternatives for reorganizing Reliance.
Korsan met with a representative of the
Insurance Department on November 14 and
discussed a range of surplus surplus. On
December 20, 1968, however, the Insurance
Department was as yet uncertain as to how
determination of surplus surplus related to
actuarial studies. Reliance had not obtained
approval for separation of a specific
amount.
A. The January 1969
Registration Statement
Highly significant with respect
to Leasco's claims that it could give no
estimate of surplus surplus was the fact
that it did just that a few months after the
tender period ended. It did so with no more
data than it had during the exchange offer
period.
Leasco filed a Form S-1
Registration Statement with the SEC on
January 31, 1969 with a prospectus dated
February 3, 1969. This registered various
securities to be issued in the future among
which were the common shares which could be
obtained upon exercise of the warrants
contained in the exchange package. The
prospectus quite properly discussed Leasco's
recently acquired insurance business and the
plan for reorganizing Reliance to Leasco's
benefit:
"Reliance and the Company are in
the process of seeking to cause a
reorganization of Reliance, subject to
regulatory approvals, the effect of which
will be to eliminate minority interests and
to make available to the Company, for use in
its various business and acquisition
activities, approximately $125,000,000 of
excess surplus of Reliance. It is the
opinion of Leasco that this amount
represents funds which Reliance has on hand
in excess of the legal requirements of its
business. No assurance can be given that
such excess funds will ultimately be made
available to the Company in such amount or
that if so made available that such funds
will be profitably utilized by the Company."
(emphasis added).
This paragraph was also included
in a draft of a preliminary prospectus
prepared in June of 1969, but never made
effective.
Barely three months after the
termination of the exchange offer when
Leasco sought to sell its own shares, rather
than acquire Reliance's, it included the
type of qualified approximation of surplus
surplus which plaintiff contends was
material to the August 19, 1968 exchange
offer. Leasco's lawyer, Hodes, sought to
justify this surprising change in position
by testifying that the inclusion resulted
from the development of a "decent working
relationship." He further testified that
this new relationship had
Page 561
conferred previously denied access to
Reliance and the Insurance Commissioner and
that both were consulted before including
the estimates.
The Court has concluded, however,
that Hodes' recollection is not accurate.
Roberts was not consulted. He acquiesced
after the paragraph on surplus surplus had
been written by the same Leasco personnel
who had participated in drafting the
exchange offer prospectus. Roberts'
deposition on the point was, at best,
equivocal:
"Q Who brought up the subject of
surplus-surplus?
A As I recall, I became aware of
it because there was a $125 million figure
put in the prospectus.
Q What did you say about this?
A I asked where the figure came
from.
Q Who did you ask?
A One of the people who was
working on the prospectus.
`Q What did they say?
A I don't recall that they had
any definite answer. Maybe it came from Mike
Gibbs. I don't know. Nobody knew. They
haven't asked me about it. That's why I was
rather curious."
It is clear that the Insurance
Commissioner had not been consulted about
the use of this $125,000,000 figure.
VI. THE DEALER MANAGERS' ROLE
The dealer managers, White, Weld
& Co. and Lehman Brothers, played a somewhat
limited role in the exchange offer. Leasco's
attorneys accepted primary responsibility
for preparation of the registration
statement with the brokerage houses
performing only the "due diligence"
function. This function as described by
representatives of the firms Fred D. Stone
of White, Weld and Sidney Kahn of Lehman
Brothersincluded a line by line review of
the prospectus accompanied by demands for
documentation of particular statements
included in the draft by Leasco as well as
independent investigation of books and
records. These "due diligence" meetings were
held on June 28 and 29 and July 1, 2, 3, and
5, 1968 at Leasco's attorney's office in New
York.
White, Weld and Lehman are not
precisely in pari materia in this case.
White, Weld had representation on Leasco's
board after June 17, 1968 and had
participated in four prior offerings by
Leasco, while this was Lehman's first
experience with Leasco.
White, Weld had accumulated data
gathered as part of the prior offerings.
They thoroughly reviewed Leasco's audit
statements with Leasco's accountant, Touche,
Ross & Company. They also examined the
report of an actuary firm hired to examine
Reliance.
With regard to surplus surplus,
Stone, for White, Weld, was well informed.
As early as 1965 he worked with the concept
then known as "redundant capital" in
conjunction with staving off a tender offer
and later, in 1968, he participated in
forming a holding company. He received the
Netter Report and the Gibbs Memorandum in
January or February of 1968 and requested a
copy of the New York Insurance Department
Report sometime after June 22. When Leasco
raised the question of including an estimate
of surplus surplus, he concluded that
surplus surplus could not be computed
accurately because there was no factual
basis for such a computation in the absence
of access to Reliance's management and the
insurance commissioner.
Stone had in mind Leasco's
requests for information and the lack of
response when he gave this opinion. He was
at no time disabused of the notion that
Reliance would not provide data to assist in
an approximation of surplus surplus. Since,
based on his own experience, he had high
regard for the competence of both Leasco's
representatives and its law firm, there was
no reason for him to suspect that they would
be withholding relevant information. For
this reason he relied on their
representation, implied
Page 562
and actual, that the situations with
regard to access to Reliance management
remained unchanged. This accorded with his
usual practice of relying upon the issuer or
its counsel to produce relevant material
from its files rather than to personally
inquire into corporate developments such as
negotiations between target and acquiring
companies. Consequently, he made no effort
to directly contact either Reliance or the
Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner about
surplus surplus.
Counsel for the dealer managers,
Bell, Boyd, Lloyd, Haddad & Burns of
Chicago, examined the corporate records of
Leasco, its corporate minutes, director
actions and basic contracts. Jack M.
Whitney, II, a former SEC Commissioner, was
the lawyer primarily in charge of the dealer
manager's duties. He participated in the
extensive "due diligence meetings" conducted
in New York where the preliminary prospectus
was examined. When the subject of Reliance's
intention to form a holding company arose
during these meetings Whitney became
involved in a discussion of surplus surplus.
He was admittedly uninformed about the
concept and those present at the meeting,
particularly Stone of White, Weld, undertook
to edify him. Following intensive
exploration of the concept and the
limitations inherent in attempting to
approximate it, he rendered an opinion that
an estimate could not properly be included
in the prospectus.
On August 13, 1968barely six
days before the registration statement
became effectiveWhitney received yet
further confirmation of his opinion of July
in the form of a copy of a letter from
Wilkie, Farr & Gallagher to the SEC. It
reads:
"Certified financial statements
of Reliance Insurance Company are not
included in the Amendment since that
company has continued to refuse to cooperate
in the making of the Exchange Offer.
Although the Reliance Insurance Company
management is not actively opposing the
Exchange Offer they have expressly declined
to support or recommend it and have
accordingly declined to furnish information
in connection with this Registration
Statement." (Emphasis supplied.)
On August 21 and September 18,
1969, Whitney sent a written favorable
opinion to the dealer managers regarding the
accuracy and completeness of the
registration which became effective August
19, 1968.
The position of the
dealer-managers that surplus surplus should
not be estimated was, the Court concludes,
based upon information furnished by Leasco
that Reliance continued to refuse to
cooperate. This was not true. Roberts and
Reliance had not been asked to confirm
estimates after August 1st when the
probabilities of a successful takeover
became increasingly great. But the
dealer-managers were not aware that such
cooperation was available.
VII. THE SECURITIES STATUTES
Plaintiff seeks relief under
three separate sections of the 1933
Securities Act. Section 11 creates civil
liability for material misstatements and
omissions contained in a registration
statement. 15 U.S.C. § 77k. Section 12(2)
imposes civil liability on a seller who uses
such misrepresentations in any sale whether
or not by registration statement. 15 U.S.C.
§ 77l(2). Section 17(a) makes it
unlawful to sell securities by the use of an
"untrue statement of a material fact" or any
omission of a material fact (15 U.S. C. §
77q(a); civil liability is arguably also
available to an injured buyer under this
section, but the issue has not been
definitely resolved. See
Globus v. Law Research Service, 418 F.2d
1276, 1283-1284 (2d Cir. 1969), cert.
denied, 397 U.S. 913, 90 S.Ct. 913, 25
L.Ed.2d 93 (1970); VI L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 3913-3914 (1969).
Plaintiff also asserts that the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 provides
relief under both Section 10(b)pursuant to
Rule X-10b-5and Section 14(e). 15 U.S.C. §
78j(b); 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5; 15 U.S.C. §
78n(e). The former makes it unlawful "to
make any untrue statement of a material
fact" in connection with the
Page 563
purchase or sale of "any security", while
the latter creates the same illegality "in
connection with any tender offer or request
or invitation for tenders." Civil liability
has been established for violation of Rule
10b-5. See
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur,
401 F.2d 833 (2d
Cir. 1968), cert. denied sub nom, Coates
v.
SEC & Kline v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct.
1454, 22 L.Ed.2d 756 (1969) (liability
under Rule 10b-5);
Fischman v. Raytheon,
188 F.2d 783 (2d Cir.
1951) (establishes civil remedy under
Rule 10b-5). It also can be based on Section
14(e). See
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Company, 396
U.S. 375, 90 S.Ct. 616, 24 L.Ed.2d 593
(1970) (Section 14(a) and Rule 14a-9 use
the same operative language found in Section
14(e));
J. I. Case v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426, 84 S.Ct.
1555, 12 L.Ed.2d 423 (1964) (same).
The case before us involves
misrepresentations included in a
registration statement. While liability
might well lie under the other broader
provisions urged by plaintiff, we will focus
on Section 11. It deals exclusively with
registration statements such as the one
before us. Before turning to our discussion
of Section 11 a few comments on the
disclosure philosophy of the federal
securities laws are necessary in order to
establish the setting in which the
requirements of Section 11 must be applied.
VIII. DISCLOSURE
A. Disclosure Policy
The keystone of the Securities
Act of 1933, and of the entire legislative
scheme of the securities laws, is
disclosure. Knauss, A Reappraisal of the
Role of Disclosure, 62 Mich.L.Rev. 607
(1964). The 1933 Act is almost exclusively
preoccupied with accurate disclosure of
facts, favorable and unfavorable. Folk,
Civil Liabilities Under the Federal
Securities Acts: The BarChris Case, 1
Securities L.Rev. 3, 13, 16-17 (1969)
(reprinted from 55 Va.L.Rev. 1 (1969)). "All
the Act pretends to do is to require the
`truth about securities' at the time of
issue". Douglas and Bates, The Federal
Securities Act of 1933, 43 Yale L.J. 171
(1933). See also F. Wheat, Disclosure
to Investors 10, 46 (1969) (hereinafter
referred to as The Wheat Report); Comment,
BarChris: Due Diligence Refined, 68
Colum.L.Rev. 1411 (1968).
"The emphasis on disclosure rests
on two considerations. One relates to the
proper function of Federal government to
investment matters. Apart from the
prevention of fraud and manipulation, the
draftsmen of the '33 and '34 Acts viewed
that responsibility as being primarily one
of seeing to it that investors and
speculators had access to enough information
to enable them to arrive at their own
rational decisions. The other, less direct,
rests on the belief that appropriate
publicity tends to deter questionable
practices and to elevate standards of
business conduct." The Wheat Report at 10.
See Douglas and Bates, The
Federal Securities Act of 1933, 43 Yale L.J.
171, 172 (1933).
A primary objective is to place
potential securities purchasers on a parity
with their vendors to the extent
practicable. Folk, Civil Liabilities Under
the Federal Securities Acts: The BarChris
Case, 1 Securities L.Rev. 3, 20 (1969)
(reprinted from 55 Va.L.Rev. 1 (1969)). The
Act's "fundamental purpose * * * was to
substitute a philosophy of full disclosure
for the philosophy of caveat emptor
and thus to achieve a high standard of
business ethics in the securities industry."
SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, 375
U.S. 180, 186, 84 S.Ct. 275, 280, 11 L.Ed.2d
237 (1963). See also In re
Investors Management Company, et al.,
Sec.Exch.Act Release No. 9267, S.E.C. No.
3-1680, memorandum at 6-9 (SEC July 29,
1971). The focus on disclosure reflects the
insight gained by experience that without
complete, accurate and intelligible
information about a company, investors
cannot make intelligent investment decisions
with regard to its securities. The Wheat
Report conceives of the information
requirement as an effort to assure
Page 564
the integrity of the free market for
securities:
"A classic statement of the
purposes of provisions designed to inform
the trading markets is found in the report
of the House Committee on the '34 Act:
`No investor, no speculator can
safely buy and sell securities * * * without
having an intelligent basis for forming his
judgment as to the value of the securities
he buys or sells. The idea of a free and
open public market is built upon the theory
that competing judgments of buyers or
sellers as to the fair price of the security
brings about a situation where the market
price reflects as nearly as possible a just
price. Just as artificial manipulation tends
to upset the true function of an open
market, so the hiding and secreting of
important information obstructs the
operations of the markets as indices of real
value. There cannot be honest markets
without honest publicity.'" The Wheat Report
at 50.
Another commentator views
disclosure as a prerequisite to accurate
determination of intrinsic value:
"Because of the nature of
securities, a buyer cannot make an immediate
value judgment, as he would with tangible
items. He must look behind the piece of
paper and examine the merits of the company
which has issued the security. The buyer
must of necessity rely on the information
given to him and on material generally
available from the company. The less
information available, the less the market
price will be representative of the
security's true value and the greater will
be the opportunity for fraud." Knauss, A
Reappraisal of the Role of Disclosure, 62
Mich.L.Rev. 607, 610 (1964).
Cf.
Ratner v. Chemical Bank New York Trust
Company, 329 F.Supp. 270, 276 (S.D.N.Y.1971)
("Truth in Lending Act", 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et
seq., requires disclosure of interest rates
in order "to put the borrower in possession
of the pertinent information before the
plunge * * *").
The secondand for our purposes
less importantgoal of the full disclosure
policy is deterrence. This consideration
arose from excesses of the 1920's and the
havoc subsequently wreaked on investors. The
drafters accepted as an article of faith and
common sense that if management must bare
all on pain of civil and criminal liability
its dirty intra-corporate linen will be
cleaned before the registration statement is
filed. Concomitantly, such disclosure has
the prophylactic effect of promoting general
business integrity.
"Brandeis, to whom many give
credit for being the strongest advocate for
full disclosure, also directed his principal
fire against the big companies. His famous
quotation, `sunlight is said to be the best
of disinfectants; electric light the most
efficient policeman,' was made in relation
to the amount of underwriting commissions
received by J. P. Morgan & Co. for their
role in selling securities of major
companies." Knauss, A Reappraisal of the
Role of Disclosure, 62 Mich.L.Rev. 607, 614
(1964).
See also The Wheat Report
at 50-51.
B. Effective Disclosure
The ultimate goal of the
Securities Act is, of course, investor
protection. Effective disclosure is merely a
means. The entire legislative scheme can be
frustrated by technical compliance with the
requirements of the Securities and Exchange
Commission's Form S-1 for preparation of
registration statements in the absence of
any real intent to communicate. It is for
this reason that the SEC, through its rule
making power, has consistently required
"clearly understandable" prospectuses. The
Wheat Report at 78.
Unfortunately, the results have
not always reflected these efforts. "[E]ven
Page 565
when an investor [is] presented with an
accurate prospectus prior to his purchase,
the presentation in most instances tend[s]
to discourage reading by all but the most
knowledgeable and tenacious." Knauss, A
Reappraisal of the Role of Disclosure, 62
Mich.L.Rev. 607, 618-619 (1964). These
documents are often drafted so as to be
comprehensible to only a minute part of the
investing public.
"There are also the perennial
questions of whether prospectuses, once
delivered to the intended reader, are
readable, and whether they are read. The
cynic's answer to both questions is `No';
the true believer's is `Yes'; probably a
more accurate answer than either would be:
`Yes'by a relatively small number of
professionals or highly sophisticated
non-professionals; `No'by the great
majority of those investors who are not
sophisticated and, within the doctrine of
SEC v. Ralston Purina Co. [346 U.S. 119, 73
S.Ct. 981, 97 L.Ed. 1494], are not `able to
fend for themselves' and most `need the
protection of the Act.'" Cohen, "Truth in
Securities" Revisited, 79 Harv.L.Rev. 1340,
1351-1352 (1966).
See also The Wheat Report
at 77-78.
In at least some instances, what
has developed in lieu of the open disclosure
envisioned by the Congress is a literary art
form calculated to communicate as little of
the essential information as possible while
exuding an air of total candor. Masters of
this medium utilize turgid prose to enshroud
the occasional critical revelation in a
morass of dull, andto all but the
sophisticatesuseless financial and
historical data. In the face of such
obfuscatory tactics the common or even the
moderately well informed investor is almost
as much at the mercy of the issuer as was
his pre-SEC parent. He cannot by reading the
prospectus discern the merit of the
offering.
The instant case provides a
useful example. Ignoring, for the moment,
the alleged omissions which are the subject
of the plaintiff's complaint, the passage in
which Leasco's intentions with regard to
surplus surplus are "disclosed" in the short
excerpt set out at page 552, supra.
This revelation, while probably technically
accurate with regard to Leasco's then
intentions respecting surplus surplus, was
hardly calculated to apprise the owner of
shares of Reliance common stock that
Reliance held a large pool of cash or
near-cash assets which were legally and
practically unnecessary for the efficient
operation of the insurance business, and
that Leasco intended to remove those assets
"as soon as practicable." More important, it
does not reveal Leasco's estimates of the
extent of those assets. A conscientious
effort by the issuer and its counsel would
have produced a more direct, informative and
candid paragraph about Leasco's intended
reorganization of Reliance. They might have
effectively disclosed, in understandable
proseas they did in January of 1969 the
essence of the plan to the shareholders they
were soliciting.
C. Disclosure to Whom?
The view that prospectuses should
be intelligible to the average small
investor as well as the professional
analyist, immediately raises the question of
what substantive standard of disclosure must
be maintained. The legal standard is that
all "material" facts must be accurately
disclosed. But to whom must the fact have
material significance?
In an industry in which there is
an unmistakable "trend toward a greater
measure of professionalism * * * with the
accompanying demand for more information
about issuers" "a pragmatic balance must be
struck between the needs of the
unsophisticated investor and those of the
knowledgeable student of finance." The Wheat
Report at 9-10. There are three distinct
classes of investors who must be informed by
the prospectus: (1) the amateur who reads
for only the grosser sorts of disclosures;
(2) the professional advisor and manager who
studies the prospectus closely and makes his
decisions based on the insights he
Page 566
gains from it; and (3) the securities
analyst who uses the prospectus as one of
many sources in an independent investigation
of the issuer.
The proper resolution of the
various interests lies in the inclusion of a
clearly written narrative statement
outlining the major aspects of the offering
and particularly speculative elements, as
well as detailed financial information which
will have meaning only to the expert.
Requiring inclusion of such technical data
benefits amateurs, as well as experts,
because of the advice many small investors
receive and the extent to which the market
reflects professional judgments. The Wheat
Report at 52. Such "[e]xpert sifters,
distillers, and weighers are essential for
an informed body of investors". Cohen,
"Truth in Securities" Revisited, 79
Harv.L.Rev. 1340, 1353 (1966).
Mr. Justice Douglas, then
teaching at Yale, commented in 1933 that:
"[T]hose needing investment
guidance will receive small comfort from the
balance sheets, contracts, or compilation of
other data revealed in the registration
statement. They either lack the training or
intelligence to assimilate them and find
them useful, or are so concerned with a
speculative profit as to consider them
irrelevant. * * * [E]ven though an investor
has neither the time, money, nor
intelligence to assimilate the mass of
information in the registration statement,
there will be those who can and who will do
so, whenever there is a broad market. The
judgment of those experts will be reflected
in the market price. Through them investors
who seek advice will be able to obtain it."
Douglas, Protecting The Investor, 23 Yale
Rev. (N.S.) 508, 523-524 (1933) (quoted in
The Wheat Report at 53).
The Wheat Report further notes:
"that a fully effective
disclosure policy would require the
reporting of complicated business facts that
would have little meaning for the average
investor. Such disclosures reach average
investors through a process of filtration in
which intermediaries (brokers, bankers,
investment advisors, publishers of
investment advisory literature, and
occasionally lawyers) play a vital role."
The Wheat Report at 52.
"The significance of disclosures
which have an initial impact at the
professional level has been heightened by
recent changes in the securities business.
Most important of these is the enormous
growth of intermediation in investment. The
relative importance of such professional
money managers as bank trust departments,
pension fund managers, investment counseling
firms and investment advisors to mutual
funds and other investment companies is
greater than ever before." The Wheat Report
at 54.
The significance of these
observations is that the objectives of full
disclosure can be fully achieved only by
complete revelation of facts which would be
material to the sophisticated investor or
the securities professional not just the
average common shareholder. But, at the same
time, the prospectus must not slight the
less experienced. They are entitled to have
within the four corners of the document an
intelligible description of the transaction.
D. Enforcement.
The Securities Act provides a
full panoply of enforcement procedures.
A considerable in terrorem
effect is generated by the SEC's examination
of registration statements and its use of
orders refusing to permit registration
statements to become effective (15 U.S. C. §
77h(b)) and stop orders when uncorrected
misrepresentations appear (15 U.S.C. §
77h(d)). "A stop order may not be merely a
death warrant for the particular financing;
it may also be a severe or even fatal blow
to the registrant and, at very least, is
likely to touch off the civil liability
provisions if securities have been sold."
Cohen, "Truth In Securities" Revisited, 79
Harv.L.Rev. 1340, 1355 (1966). Section 20(b)
of the 1933
Page 567
Act authorizes injunctive relief against
any person who is about to violate any of
the provisions of the Actin this context
anyone who proposes to distribute a
prospectus containing material misstatements
or omissions. 15 U.S.C. § 77t(b).
Furthermore, the Commission may transmit
evidence of such violation to the Attorney
General for criminal prosecution (15 U.S.C.
§ 77t(b)) and anyone who wilfully violates
the disclosure requirements of the statute
or SEC rules is subject to a $5000 fine or
five years imprisonment or both. 15 U.S.C. §
77x. "Moreover, the SEC may suspend or expel
those who violate the securities acts or
suspend trading in a particular stock."
Globus v. Law Research Service, 418 F. 2d
1276, 1285 (2d Cir. 1969), cert. denied,
397 U.S. 913, 90 S.Ct. 913, 25 L.Ed.2d 93
(1970).
But this power of the SEC to
intercede is, as a practical matter, limited
to more flagrant misstatements and omissions
obvious on the face of the prospectus or
from other information at hand. To expect
the hard pressed SEC staff to conduct an
independent field study of every prospectus
is unrealistic. Cf. Douglas and
Bates, The Federal Securities Act of 1933,
43 Yale L.J. 171, 212 (1933).
The civil liability sections of
the 1933 Act, when properly applied, act as
independent and effective enforcement
provisions. A "class action under Fed.R.Civ.
P. 23 could be particularly effective and
appropriate in remedying violations of the
securities acts * * * compensatory damages,
especially when multiplied in a class
action, have a potent deterrent effect."
Globus v. Law Research Service, 418 F.2d
1276, 1285 (2d Cir. 1969), cert. denied,
397 U.S. 913, 90 S.Ct. 913, 25 L.Ed.2d 93
(1970). Cf.
Ratner v. Chemical Bank New York Trust
Company, 329 F.Supp. 270, 280 (S.D.N.Y.
1971) (private attorney general in
"Truth in Lending Act"). The principal
purpose of civil liability in the 1933 Act
is, in fact, deterrent rather than
compensatory.
"There is a danger in discussing
civil liability in connection with the
Securities Act that both the purpose of the
Act and the emphasis of the discussion will
be misunderstood. It is not the object of
the Act simply to provide a legal remedy for
the investor who has bought securities upon
a false representation, to compensate him
for a loss incurred. Even the provisions for
civil liability are calculated to be largely
preventive rather than redressive. Both in
the extent of liability imposed the variety
of persons to whom the liability is
attached, the bases of the liability, and
the persons in whose favor it runsand in
the limitation of the amounts recoverable,
the in terrorem function of the Act
is evidenced. But even this purpose of
securing preventive vigilance and caution on
the part of the persons concerned is only
coordinate with, or probably subordinate to,
another object. The Act seeks not only to
secure accuracy in the information that is
volunteered to investors, but also, and
perhaps more especially, to compel the
disclosure of significant matters which were
heretofore rarely, if ever, disclosed. Civil
liability is imposed largely as one
appropriate means of accomplishing these
ends, not as the end itself, or, on the
other hand, as the only means. While, then,
discussion of the Act may properly be
directed to the different provisions
separately, it is apt to be misleading, and
more covertly disingenuous, if the principal
objectives are not constantly pushed to the
front." Shulman, Civil Liability and the
Securities Act, 43 Yale L.J. 227 (1933).
The Second Circuit has recently
adopted this early view of the in
terrorem function of Section 11:
"Civil liability under section 11
and similar provisions was designed not so
much to compensate the defrauded purchaser
as to promote enforcement of the Act and to
deter negligence by providing a penalty for
those who fail in their duties." Globus v.
Law Research
Page 568
Service, 418 F.2d 1276, 1288 (2d Cir.
1969), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 913, 90 S.Ct.
913, 25 L.Ed.2d 93 (1970).
See also III L. Loss,
Securities Regulation 1831 (1969); Cohen,
"Truth in Securities" Revisited, 79
Harv.L.Rev. 1340, 1355 (1966); Douglas and
Bates, The Federal Securities Act of 1933,
43 Yale L.J. 171, 173 (1933); Comment,
BarChris: Due Diligence Refined, 68 Colum.
L.Rev. 1411 (1968).
Criminal liability is necessarily
predicated on proof of specific intent to
violate the Act, while civil liability is
established after a showing of failure to
exercise reasonable care in preparing
registration statements. Only primary
reliance on civil liability can protect
investors from the "climate of laxity" or
"lethargy" which has characterized the
preparation of some registration statements.
Folk, Civil Liabilities Under the Federal
Securities Acts: The BarChris Case, 1
Securities Law Rev. 3, 8-9 (1969) (reprinted
from 55 Va.L.Rev. 1 (1969)).
The courts face a dual
responsibility when presented with a claim
for civil relief. They must adjudicate the
particular claim for relief presented by the
plaintiff, and simultaneously vindicate the
full disclosure policy of the Securities Act
for the protection of the entire investing
public.
IX. SECTION 11
Section 11(a) of the Securities
Act of 1933 provides for civil liability for
misstatements and omissions in a
registration statement. 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a).
It reads:
"(a) In case any part of the
registration statement, when such part
became effective, contained an untrue
statement of a material fact or omitted to
state a material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary to make the statements
therein not misleading, any person acquiring
such security (unless it is proved that at
the time of such acquisition he knew of such
untruth or omission) may, either at law or
in equity, in any court of competent
jurisdiction, sue"
A. The Alleged Omissions
(1) Failure to Disclose
Methods of Reorganization Other Than the
Holding Company Concept
During the exchange offer period
several memoranda and letters were exchanged
between Hodes, Leasco's counsel, and various
other attorneys for Reliance and Leasco. It
is apparent that various methods of
reorganization were being seriously
investigated by a number of attorneys for
Leasco and Reliance. Leasco's president,
Schwartz, was kept apprised of the progress
of these inquiries by Hodes.
Despite this research activity,
none of these investigations ever
crystallized during the exchange offer
period sufficiently to be characterized as
"plans" of Leasco. They were never presented
to the Leasco Board nor were they even
discussed in any detail with members of
Leasco's management. They were, rather,
merely possible alternatives for
consideration by counsel. Such preliminary
contingency planning need not be included in
the prospectus under the circumstances of
this case.
(2) Failure to Include an
Estimate of Surplus Surplus
The failure to include an
estimate of surplus surplus raises a more
serious question. There is no doubt that
Leasco had in its possession at least three
estimates of Reliance's surplus surplus
$80,000,000 as of December 31, 1966
contained in the Netter Report and
$125,000,000 or $100,000,000, at June 30th
and December 31, 1967 respectively, both
approximated in the Gibbs Memorandum. In
addition they had available the rules of
thumb for calculation contained in the New
York Insurance Department Report. Leasco
could have used these estimates or
commissioned an independent computation
based on public information. This figure
could have been included with the sort of
qualifying statement included
Page 569
in the January, 1969 prospectus. Whether
the failure to do so places liability on the
defendants under Section 11 is the question
now presented.
B. Materiality.
Only if the omission complained
of is "material" within the meaning of
Section 11 can liability be found. The SEC
has defined the term by looking to what a
reasonably prudent investor reasonably ought
to know before buying a security. It reads:
"The term `material', when used
to qualify a requirement for the furnishing
of information as to any subject, limits the
information required to those matters as to
which an average prudent investor ought
reasonably to be informed before purchasing
the security registered." 17 C.F.R. §
230.405(l).
Speaking of this definition in
one of the few reported Section 11 cases,
Judge McLean summed the matter up succinctly
by emphasizing the need to know "facts which
have an important bearing upon the nature or
condition of the issuing corporation or its
business."
Escott v. BarChris Construction Corp.,
283 F.Supp. 643, 681 (S.D.N.Y.1968).
Judge McLean quite properly
placed emphasis on the need to disclose
those facts which revealed the "condition"
of the issuer because the facts omitted in
BarChris related to the stability of
the issuing company and the continuing
security of the investment. It is clear,
however, that facts other than the condition
of the issuer bearing on the value, qua
price, of the securities in question must be
disclosed with the same scrupulousness. The
issuer must disclose any fact "which in
reasonable and objective contemplation
might affect the value of the
corporation's stock or securities".
Kohler v. Kohler Co., 319 F.2d 634, 642 (7th
Cir. 1963) (emphasis added). See
Chasins v. Smith, Barney & Co., 438 F.2d
1167, 1171 (2d Cir. 1971);
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur, 401 F.2d 833, 849
(2d Cir. 1968), cert. denied sub nom.
Coates v.
SEC and Kline v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct.
1454, 22 L. Ed.2d 756 (1969);
List v. Fashion Park, 340 F.2d 457, 462
(2d Cir.), cert. denied sub nom.
List v. Lerner, 382 U.S. 811, 86 S.Ct. 23,
15 L.Ed.2d 60 rehearing denied, 382 U.S.
933, 86 S.Ct. 305, 15 L.Ed.2d 344 (1965).
BarChris cannot be read as permitting
exclusion of important facts merely because
they involve the condition of the company
being taken over rather than the issuer
since these facts will bear on the relative
value of the issuer's securities.
Some probability that the
investor's decision would be affected by
disclosure is a prerequisite to a finding of
materiality. The degree of probability that
it would have such an impact has been
differently stated by the courts. They have
focused on the effect on the reasonable
purchaser, variously asking whether he
"might" or "would" or "might well have been"
affected by the information; they have asked
whether it is "reasonably certain" that the
information would have had a "substantial
effect" or whether it "might" have had a
"significant propensity" to affect him.
List
v. Fashion Park,
340 F.2d 457 (2d
Cir.), cert. denied sub nom.
List v. Lerner, 382 U.S. 811, 86 S.Ct. 23,
15 L. Ed.2d 60, rehearing denied, 382
U.S. 933, 86 S.Ct. 305, 15 L.Ed.2d 344
(1965), the Second Circuit used the word
"would" to suggest the applicable level of
probability.
"The basic test of `materiality'
* * * is whether `a reasonable man would
attach importance [to the fact
misrepresented] in determining his choice of
action in the transaction in question.'"
List, supra at 462 (quoting from
Restatement, Torts § 538(2) (a)) (emphasis
added).
"The proper test is whether the
plaintiff would have been influenced
to act differently * * *." List, supra
at 463 (emphasis added).
See
SEC v. Great American Industries, Inc., 407
F.2d 453, 459-460 (2d Cir.
Page 570
1968), cert. denied, 395 U.S. 920, 89
S.Ct. 1770, 23 L.Ed.2d 237 (1969); III L.
Loss, Securities Regulation 1431 (1969).
This test implies a fairly high probability.
Subsequently, in the leading case
of SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur,
401 F.2d 833 (2d Cir. 1968), cert. denied
sub nom. Coates v.
SEC and Kline v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct.
1454, 22 L.Ed.2d 756 (1969), the Second
Circuit used several different verbal
formulations of materiality. Discussing an
"insider's" obligation to disclose under
Rule 10b-5, it indicated that the duty
"arises only in `those situations
which are essentially extraordinary in
nature and which are reasonably certain
to have a substantial effect on the market
price of the security * * *.'" SEC v.
Texas Gulf Sulphur, supra at 848
(emphasis added).
The Court also mentions the tests
quoted above from List and Kohler
v. Kohler, 319 F.2d 634, 642 (7th
Cir. 1963). It shifted from the "would" of
List to the standard of "may":
"Thus, material facts include not
only information disclosing the earnings and
distributions of a company but also those
facts which affect the probable future of
the company and those which may affect
the desire of investors to buy, sell, or
hold the company's securities.
"In each case, then, whether
facts are material within Rule 10b-5 when
the facts relate to a particular event and
are undisclosed by those persons who are
knowledgeable thereof will depend at any
given time upon a balancing of both the
indicated probability that the event will
occur and the anticipated magnitude of the
event in light of the totality of the
company activity." SEC v. Texas Gulf
Sulphur, supra, 401 F.2d at 849
(emphasis added).
Discussing materiality in the
context of Section 14(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 the Supreme Court
utilized an even less stringent test than
Texas Gulf, indicating that a "material
fact" was one
"of such a character that it
might have been considered important by
a reasonable shareholder who was in the
process of deciding how to vote. This
requirement [is] that the defect have a
significant propensity to affect the
voting process * * *"
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Company, 396
U.S. 375, 384, 90 S.Ct. 616, 621, 24 L.Ed.2d
593 (1970) (emphasis added in part).
The use of "propensity" in the
context of a proxy situation is particularly
significant to the instant case since the
Reliance shareholders were, in effect, being
asked to "vote" a merger with Leasco by
accepting the exchange offer.
Just this year the Second Circuit
has once again employed "might" as the
applicable standard of probability, further
reducing the force of the word by adding to
it "well have." Applying the test
articulated in List, Kohler, Texas Gulf
Sulphur, and Mills v. Electric
Auto-Lite, the court held that "the
question of materiality becomes whether a
reasonable man in [the investor's] position
might well have acted otherwise than
to purchase if he had been informed * * *."
Chasins v. Smith, Barney & Co., 438 F.2d
1167, 1171 (2d Cir. 1971) (emphasis
added). The issue, it was said, is whether
the disclosure "could well influence" the
decision of the investor. Id. at
1172. See also
Gilbert v. Nixon,
429 F.2d 348, 355-356
(10th Cir. 1970);
Johns Hopkins University v. Hutton,
422 F.2d 1124, 1128-1129 (4th Cir. 1970);
Demarco v. Edens, 390 F.2d 836, 840-841 (2d
Cir. 1968).
Most recently the Securities and
Exchange Commission indicated that certain
information "was material because it `was of
such importance that it could be expected
to affect the judgment of investors
whether to buy, sell or hold * * * stock
[and, i]f generally known, * * * to affect
materially the market price of the stock.'"
In re Investors Management Company, et al.,
Sec. Exch. Act Release No. 9267, S.E.C. No.
3-1680,
Page 571
memorandum at 9 (SEC July 29, 1971)
(emphasis added).
While these verbal formulations
by the courts and the SEC taken individually
fail to prescribe a precise standard, they
do evince a trend toward broadening the
definition of materiality and concomitantly
raising the requirement of disclosure where
the law requires full disclosure. Cf.
Wiesen, Disclosure of Inside
InformationMateriality and Texas Gulf
Sulphur, 1 Securities L.Rev. 267,
288-290, 310-311 (1969) (reprinted from 28
Md.L.Rev. 189 (1968)); 2 A. Bromberg,
Securities Law; Fraud SEC Rule 10b-5 § 8.3,
p. 199 (1970) ("Rule is applied to subtler
or milder cases").
Commentators have not been much
more successful than the courts in precisely
defining the concept of materiality. Thus,
an early writer concluded that "a material
fact is any piece of information having
fairly predictable results either on the
value of the securities or on the outsider's
estimate of that value." Comment, The
Prospects for Rule X-10B-5: An Emerging
Remedy for Defrauded Investors, 59 Yale L.J.
1120, 1145 (1950) (emphasis added). It was
later suggested that materiality "be limited
to those situations which are essentially
extraordinary in nature and which are
reasonably certain to have a substantial
effect on the market price of the security
if disclosed." Fleischer, Securities Trading
and Corporate Information Practices: The
Implications of the Texas Gulf Sulphur
Proceeding, 51 Va.L.Rev. 1271, 1289 (1965)
(emphasis added).
What is called for is "[s]ome
sort of reasonable-man, objective test of
investment, judgment, intrinsic value, or
(in the case of a publicly traded security)
significant market effect". 2 A. Bromberg,
Securities Law: Fraud SEC Rule 10b-5 § 8.3,
p. 199 (1970).
A fair summary of the rule stated
in terms of probability is that a fact is
proved to be material when it is more
probable than not that a significant number
of traders would have wanted to know it
before deciding to deal in the security at
the time and price in question. What is
statistically significant will vary with the
legal situation. Cf.
Rosado v. Wyman, 322 F.Supp. 1173, 1180-1181
(E.D.N.Y.1970), aff'd, 437 F. 2d 619 (2d
Cir. 1970). Being a formal and legally
required document, a prospectus must satisfy
a high standard of disclosure i.e.,
disclosure is required when only a
relatively small percentage of traders would
want to know before making a decision.
Anything in the order of 10% of either the
number of potential traders or those
potentially making 10% of the volume of
sales would seem to more than suffice.
Putting the test in mathematical
terms may, perhaps, be useful in permitting
surveys and quantification of results in
future litigation. But even if mathematical
models buttressed by valid sampling
techniques for determining trader reactions
were possible and economically feasible in
litigations of this sort, no such approach
was attempted by the parties in this case.
Since no data except the
unpersuasive suppositions of opposing
experts were produced at the trial to show
how potential traders would have viewed the
information at issue, we are forced to
analyze the facts in terms of alternative
courses of conduct available to a
hypothetical reasonably prudent shareholder
constructed by the Court. In nonquantitative
terms a fact is "material" in a registration
statement whenever a rational connection
exists between its disclosure and a viable
alternative course of action by any
appreciable number of investors. Materiality
is then a question of fact to be determined
in the context of a particular case. Cf.
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur, 401 F.2d 833, 849
(2d Cir. 1968), cert. denied sub nom.
Coates v.
SEC and Kline v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct.
1454, 22 L.Ed.2d 756 (1969);
Escott v. BarChris Construction Corp., 283
F.Supp. 643, 682 (S.D.N.Y.1968);
Painter, Inside Information: Growing Pains
for the Development of Federal Corporation
Law Under Rule 10b-5, 65 Colum. L.Rev. 1361,
1379 (1965); Fleischer, Securities
Page 572
Trading and Corporate Information
Practices: The Implications of the Texas
Gulf Sulphur Proceeding, 51 Va.L.Rev.
1271, 1289-1290 (1965); Ruder, Pitfalls in
the Development of a Federal Law of
Corporations by Implication Through Rule
10b-5, 59 Nw.U.L.Rev. 185, 195 (1964).
The information with respect to
the availability of tens of millions of
dollars of surplus surplus is so significant
that under any test proposed it is material.
A substantial percentage of the reasonable
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