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Page 939
362 F.Supp. 939
CORENCO CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
SCHIAVONE & SONS, INC., et al., Defendants,
and
Chester K. Twiss et al., Additional
Defendants to Counterclaim. No. 73 Civ. 3272. United States District Court, S. D.
New York. August 9, 1973.
Page 940
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 941
Cahill, Gordon & Reindel, Demas &
Hall, New York City, for plaintiff; Jerome
Doyle, Leonard A. Spivak, George Wailand,
Allen S. Joslyn, New York City, Eric Harris,
David H. Hall, New York City, Richard L.
Brickley, Boston, Mass., of counsel.
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, New York City, for defendants
Schiavone & Sons, Inc., Michael Schiavone &
Sons, Inc., Joel Schiavone; Robert W. Sweet,
Thomas J. Schwarz, Edward Yodowitz, William
Alesi, Blaine V. Fogg, New York City, of
counsel.
Lord, Day & Lord, New York City,
for defendant Reed Rubin; William E.
McCurdy, Jr., New York City, of counsel.
Borden & Ball, New York City, for
defendant Singer & Mackie, Inc.; Joel S.
Hanover, New York City, of counsel.
Webster, Sheffield, Fleischmann,
Hitchcock & Brookfield, New York City, for
defendant D. F. King & Co., Inc.; Donald J.
Cohn, New York City, of counsel.
Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam &
Roberts, New York City, for defendant Bear,
Stearns & Co.; Stephen A. Weiner, New York
City, of counsel.
OPINION
ROBERT J. WARD, District Judge:
Prior Proceedings
Plaintiff Corenco Corporation
("Corenco") instituted this action on July
25, 1973, in an attempt to block a cash
tender offer for Corenco stock announced by
defendant Schiavone & Sons, Inc.
("Schiavone") on July 17, 1973. Corenco
seeks to enjoin Schiavone, its parent,
Michael Schiavone and Sons, Incorporated
("Michael Schiavone"), and Joel Schiavone
(together "the Schiavone defendants") and
anyone acting on their behalf from
soliciting the tender of any Corenco shares;
acquiring any Corenco shares as a result of
the tender offer; further soliciting proxies
of Corenco common stock stockholders; voting
any shares of Corenco common stock or
proxies; and otherwise utilizing such stock
as a means of gaining control of Corenco.
Corenco alleges violations of §§ 13(d),
14(a), 14(d), and 14(e) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d)
and 78n(a)(d), and (e) and Rules promulgated
pursuant thereto. Corenco also alleges
violations of § 7 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 18, and §§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman
Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 and 2.
By order to show cause dated July
26, 1973, Corenco moved for a preliminary
injunction and for expedited discovery.
The Schiavone defendants in their
amended answer and counterclaims seek
judgment, inter alia, dismissing the
complaint; enjoining Corenco and its
officers and directors (named as additional
defendants in the counterclaim and called
"Corenco's management" herein) from making
false and misleading
Page 942
statements to Corenco's shareholders in
an attempt to defeat the tender offer; and
directing them as a group to file a Schedule
13D with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC"). By order to show
cause dated August 2nd, the Schiavone
defendants moved for a preliminary
injunction on their claims.1
On August 3rd, pursuant to
agreement among the parties, the Court
ordered an accelerated trial on the merits.
The evidence introduced at the trial on
August 3rd and 4th consisted of live
testimony, as well as deposition testimony
and documentary evidence. The parties have
also extensively briefed the factual and
legal issues involved.
The Parties
Plaintiff Corenco is a
publicly-held corporation organized and
existing by virtue of the laws of Maine. Its
principal place of business is Tewksbury,
Massachusetts. Corenco has 378,567 shares of
common stock issued and outstanding. Its
stock is traded over-the-counter. Corenco's
principal business is the rendering of fats
resulting in the production of tallow.
Seventy-five to 80 percent of this
production is exported. Within the last few
years the plaintiff has also entered the
fertilizer business and more recently has
begun the production of shortening and of
industrial oils.
Defendant Schiavone, a subsidiary
of Michael Schiavone, is a closely-held
corporation organized and existing by virtue
of the laws of Massachusetts and has its
principal place of business in Boston,
Massachusetts. Schiavone's shares are
neither registered pursuant to § 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §
78l, nor publicly traded. Schiavone's
business is processing and merchandising
scrap metals. Schiavone exported between 55
and 60 percent of its production in 1972 and
between 80 and 85 percent in 1973.
Michael Schiavone is a
Connecticut corporation with its principal
place of business in that state. It is the
parent corporation of defendant Schiavone &
Sons, Inc. The parent is also a closely-held
corporation engaged in the scrap metal
business.
Joel Schiavone is vice president
and a shareholder of Michael Schiavone and
president, chief operating officer, and a
director of Schiavone, the subsidiary.
Reed Rubin is engaged in the
brokerage business. He arranged the
introduction of Corenco management to
Schiavone management in the hope that some
form of merger or acquisition could be
consummated between the two corporations.
This, in turn, would result in his earning a
finder's fee. Plaintiff also alleges that
Rubin with Schiavone formed a "group" within
the meaning of § 13(d)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d)(1).
Singer & Mackie, Inc. is the
brokerage firm employing defendant Rubin and
for whom, plaintiff alleges, he carried out
the attempt to bring Corenco and Schiavone
together.
Bear, Stearns & Co. is
dealer-manager for the tender offer. D. F.
King and Co., Inc. has been stipulated out
of the case.
The defendants on the
counterclaim are all officers and/or
directors of Corenco.
The Facts Surrounding the Tender
Offer and Counterclaim
On July 17, 1973, Schiavone
announced a tender offer to purchase shares
of Corenco common stock for cash at a price
of $33 net per share. The bid price of
Corenco stock was reported as $26 per share
and the asked price as $28 per share on July
16, 1973. Immediately prior to the
announcement, Schiavone filed with the SEC,
pursuant to Section 14(d) of the
Page 943
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, a
Statement on Schedule 13D and an Offer to
Purchase dated July 17, 1973. An
announcement of the tender offer appeared in
The Wall Street Journal on July 18th
and in other newspapers subsequently. The
announcement stated, among other things,
that the announcement itself did not
constitute an offer and that the tender
offer was being made only by Schiavone's
July 17th Offer to Purchase and the related
Letter of Tender.
Schiavone's July 17th Offer to
Purchase stated that Schiavone would not be
obligated to purchase fewer than 90,000 nor
more than 130,000 Corenco shares although
Schiavone reserved the right to purchase
fewer than 90,000 shares if less were
tendered or more than 130,000 shares if more
were tendered. Schiavone's Offer was to
expire on August 2, 1973, unless extended by
Schiavone. Shares tendered could be
withdrawn prior to July 25th, or, unless
previously purchased by Schiavone, after
September 15th. Shares tendered prior to
August 2nd and purchased by Schiavone were
to be purchased on a pro rata basis.
Schiavone's July 17th Offer also
disclosed that Michael Schiavone owned
18,300 Corenco shares, approximately 4.8% of
the 378,567 outstanding shares of Corenco
common stock, and that Michael Schiavone and
Schiavone together would own approximately
28.6% of the outstanding Corenco shares if
90,000 shares were purchased pursuant to the
Offer or approximately 39.2% of the
outstanding Corenco shares if 130,000 shares
were purchased. The July 17th Offer also
contained disclosures concerning the terms
and conditions of Schiavone's Offer;
Schiavone's purpose in making the Offer,
i. e., to obtain control of Corenco with
a view to a possible merger or other
combination of the two companies; the market
prices for Corenco's common stock during the
period from January 1, 1971 through July 16,
1973, the day prior to the announcement of
the Offer; financial and other information
concerning Corenco, including per share
earnings and book value figures; the
officers and directors of Schiavone and
Michael Schiavone; the financing
arrangements relating to the source of the
funds required by Schiavone to purchase
Corenco shares pursuant to the Offer; and
other matters. The July 17th Offer did not
contain any financial information about
Schiavone and Michael Schiavone.
Shortly after the announcement of
Schiavone's tender offer, the directors of
Corenco unanimously voted to oppose the
tender offer.
On July 19, 1973, Corenco's
management sent a letter to all Corenco
stockholders urging them to take no action
with respect to Schiavone's Offer pending a
"thorough study" and a further report by
management.
On July 20th, Corenco's
management sent to all Corenco stockholders
a second letter stating, among other things,
that the Schiavone Offer is "inadequate";
that management did not intend to tender to
Schiavone "even a single share"; that the
$33 price being offered by Schiavone is only
"slightly above the current market price";
and that Schiavone is offering $33 per share
because it believes Corenco is worth more.
On July 23rd, Corenco's Board of
Directors declared a regular quarterly
dividend of 30 per Corenco share and an
extra cash dividend of 25 per share,
payable August 13th to stockholders of
record on August 3rd, and a 10% stock
dividend, payable August 31st to
stockholders of record on August 21st, and
issued a press release disclosing the
dividend declarations.
On July 24th, a story appeared in
The Wall Street Journal under the
headline "Corenco Urges Holders to Reject
Tender Offer by Schiavone & Sons, Inc." In
addition, on July 24th, Corenco issued a
press release summarizing the results of
Corenco's operations for the second quarter
of 1973.
On July 25th, Corenco's
management instituted this action. Corenco
issued a
Page 944
press release summarizing its claims of
defendants' violations of the federal
antitrust and securities laws, and on July
27th The Wall Street Journal
published a story under the headline
"Corenco Seeks Order Barring Schiavone Bid
for Block of Its Stock" and the sub-caption
"Suit Alleges Antitrust Violations
Schiavone to Extend Proposal Till After
Hearing Set Aug. 6."
On July 26th, Corenco's
management distributed a third letter to the
Corenco shareholders repeating, in
abbreviated form, the statements made in the
July 20th letter; discussing Corenco's
charges of antitrust and securities law
violations by Schiavone; summarizing the
results of Corenco's operations for the
second quarter of 1973; stating that the
second quarter results were not adversely
affected by an embargo placed by the federal
government on the export of certain Corenco
products during the second quarter; and
announcing the dividend declarations and
stating that, under the terms of Schiavone's
Offer, the dividends would have the effect
of reducing the $33 price offered by
Schiavone.
In addition, Corenco's officers
and employees have telephoned "hundreds of
[Corenco] shareholders" to urge them to
reject Schiavone's Offer.
At the same time that Corenco's
management was waging this publicity
campaign against Schiavone's Offer, they
were resisting efforts by Schiavone in the
Superior Court of Maine to obtain a list of
Corenco shareholders.
On July 30, 1973, Schiavone
announced an extension of its Offer to
August 9th and, immediately prior to the
announcement, filed with the SEC an
amendment to its Schedule 13D and an
Extension and Amendment of Offer.
Schiavone's July 30th Extension
and Amendment of Offer extended the period
during which tendered shares might be
withdrawn from August 1st through August
6th; and provided that shares tendered prior
to August 9th and purchased by Schiavone
would be purchased on a pro rata basis.
The July 30th amendment set forth
Corenco's claims in this action, and also
set forth some of the information which
Corenco alleges should have been contained
in Schiavone's July 17th Offer to Purchase.
It did not contain financial information
about the Schiavone defendants.
Burden of Proof
At a trial on the merits for a
permanent injunction, the party seeking
relief is required to prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that a
threatened violation of some legal right
will result in irreparable injury to him.
C. Tennant & Sons, Inc. v. New York Terminal
Conference, 299 F.Supp. 796, 799
(S.D.N.Y.1969). It is not sufficient, as
it is on a motion for a preliminary
injunction, for the party requesting relief
merely to show "probable success on the
merits and possible irreparable
injury," or to raise questions going to the
merits so serious as "to make them a fair
ground for litigation and a balance
of hardships tipping decidedly toward the
party requesting the preliminary relief."
Sonesta International Hotels Corp. v.
Wellington Associates, 483 F.2d 247 (2d Cir.
1973). (Emphasis in original.) As set
forth below, the Court has concluded that
Corenco has proved by a preponderance of the
evidence that Schiavone's tender offer
violates Section 14(e) and, if not enjoined,
will result in irreparable injury to it and
its shareholders.
Violations of the Antitrust Laws
In order to prove a violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. §
18, on the theory that an acquisition would
prevent a potential entrant from competing
in a market, it is necessary to establish
that entry by the potential competitor is
probable.
Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co. v. White
Consolidated Indus., Inc., 294 F.Supp. 1263
(D.Del.), rev'd and remanded on other
grounds, 414 F. 2d 506 (3d Cir. 1969), cert.
denied, 396
Page 945
U.S. 1009, 90 S.Ct. 567, 24 L.Ed.2d 501
(1970); cf.
United States v. Penn-Olin Co., 378 U.S.
158, 173-174, 84 S.Ct. 1710, 12 L.Ed.2d 775
(1964). This requires more than
self-serving statements by management of the
alleged potential entrant. There must be
objective evidence which shows that the
alleged entrant intends to enter or is
objectively capable of entering the market.
Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co. v. White
Consolidated Indus., Inc., 414 F.2d 506, 532
n. 11 (dissenting opinion).
Thus, in Allis Chalmers,
supra, the District Court found that
Allis-Chalmers could not be considered a
likely entrant into the electrical appliance
market where the evidence consisted
"entirely of statements by key members of
Allis-Chalmers management"; there was no
evidence that Allis-Chalmers had made "cost
or competition studies" of the industry; and
Allis-Chalmers had made no public mention of
an intention to enter the industry prior to
suing to block White's tender offer. 294
F.Supp. at 1267.
Although the Third Circuit
reversed the District Court's dismissal of
Allis-Chalmers' claim of potential entry
into the metal rolling mill market, the
Third Circuit based its decision on the
likelihood of reciprocal dealing that a
White takeover of Allis-Chalmers would
create. Judge Aldisert, who would have
affirmed the District Court's decision in
all respects, in a separate dissenting
opinion stated:
"[T]he instant case is atypical
in that the alleged potential entrant is not
the acquiring company, as in the usual case,
but the acquired company. This presents a
more difficult burden of proof problem: the
motivation to prove a future intention to
enter and thereby block the merger via the
antitrust laws becomes obvious. Because of
this, it is of even greater importance that
the alleged potential entrant be judged in
terms of its objective capabilities
[emphasis by the Court] .... it is
one thing for Allis-Chalmers to allege its
intention to enter any of a given number of
market areas presently occupied by White or
one of its subsidiaries, in order to prevent
the takeover, but it is quite another to
present objective evidence of this
intention, and to demonstrate the capability
to do so." 414 F.2d at 532, n. 11.
The necessity of objective
evidence is apparent in Kennecott Copper
Corporation v. F.T.C., 467 F.2d 67 (10th
Cir. 1972), petition for cert. filed, 41
U.S.L. W. 3332 (U.S. Oct. 25, 1972) (No.
637), where the acquisition of the nation's
largest coal producer by Kennecott, the
nation's largest copper producer, was held
to be a violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act. There, the Court relied on
documentary evidence to establish a
potential competition theory, including a
long-range study of the coal business by
Kennecott, numerous expressions by
high-level Kennecott management of a desire
to enter the coal business, and Kennecott's
actual purchase and operation of a small
coal producer in Utah.
Corenco has not demonstrated that
it is a probable entrant into the scrap
metal business. At most, it presented some
evidence that it contemplated such a move
and that entry is possible. Corenco's
President, Chester K. Twiss, testified that
no proposal to enter the scrap metal
business has ever been submitted to
Corenco's Board of Directors, nor has the
Board approved such a course of action.
Furthermore, Twiss, who is in charge of
acquisitions for Corenco, has made no formal
studies of the scrap metal industry
whatsoever. The ignorance of the scrap metal
business displayed by Twiss is most telling.
He was unaware of the amount of return an
investment in the scrap metal industry might
bring, and he spoke only in vague
generalities when talking about this
industry.
Corenco is not currently engaged
in negotiations with any scrap metal
company. In fact, Corenco has only been in
contact with one scrap metal company other
than Schiavone, and that contact
Page 946
was initiated by a third party. Corenco
has only a general plan to diversify. At one
time or another Twiss has considered the
acquisition of companies in the rendering
industry, the fertilizer industry and the
food industry, and has even considered
acquiring a seaweed company. Twiss has not
made an analysis of the amount of capital
Corenco could invest in any such
acquisition, nor has he considered the
return on investment in any specific
industry. In short, Corenco has not shown
the requisite probability that
Corenco will enter the scrap metal business.
Moreover, there are no economic
factors present here to suggest that Corenco
is a likely entrant into the scrap metal
industry. Corenco's business is totally
unrelated to that of Schiavone. Furthermore,
Corenco's raw materials (animal by-products)
and Schiavone's raw materials (scrap metals)
are not purchased from the same sources;
Corenco's products (edible and inedible fats
and oils, and fertilizer) and Schiavone's
products (processed scrap) are not sold to
the same customers; and the manufacturing
processes of Corenco and Schiavone are
totally dissimilar. Twiss' theory that the
companies are both in one industry dealing
with the recycling of solid waste is
imaginative but totally unpersuasive. No
relationship exists between the companies to
give weight to Corenco's potential
competition theory.
Finally, there is no evidence
that Corenco is recognized by scrap metal
processors and exporters as a likely entrant
into the scrap metal business. Thus, there
is no showing that Corenco, a renderer of
animal by-products and a producer of
fertilizer, is hovering on the periphery of
the scrap metal business exerting a
restraining influence on leading scrap metal
companies.
Even if it could be said that
Corenco is a probable entrant into the scrap
metal industry in the same part of the
country where Schiavone is engaged in
business, Shiavone's acquisition of control
over Corenco could not. substantially lessen
competition because of the competitive
structure of the scrap metal industry.
All cases where a violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act has been based
on the removal of a potential competitor
have involved leading firms in concentrated
industries and other economic factors not
present here. As stated in Davidow,
Conglomerate Concentration and Section
Seven: The Limitations of the Anti-Merger
Act, 68 Colum.L.Rev. 1231, 1244-45 (1968):
"In the space of a few years, and
a handful of cases, the standards for a
merger case involving the issue of
elimination of a potential entrant have
become relatively clear. The acquired firm
must be a `significant factor' in a market
so concentrated that potential competition
provides one of the few checks on
oligopolistic pricing. The acquiring firm
when judged in terms of its objective
capability, its rational economic interest,
and its evidenced interest should be a
likely direct competitor of the acquired
firm at some time in the future. Finally,
... the consolidation of a significant firm
in a concentrated market and a potential
competitor is not violative of Section 7
unless it appears that the outside firm was
one of the most likely or most important
potential entrants, or that there were very
few other firms in a similar position."
The general nature of the scrap
metal industry was described by Herschel
Cutler, Ph.D. (Economics), Executive
Director of the Institute of Scrap Iron and
Steel. He said that it was "an industry
exhibiting intense competitive
characteristics." He also testified:
"I think one of the major reasons
why you have fragmentation, if you will, or
the competitiveness, is the relative ease
with which you can get into [the scrap
metal] business or into a segment of the
business and obviously this introduces a
restraint to any concentrated effort."
Page 947
Furthermore, there is undisputed
testimony in the record by Dr. Cutler and
James P. Donovan, President, New England
Chapter of the Institute of Scrap Iron and
Steel, and by Mr. Schiavone at the trial
that it is relatively easy to get into scrap
metal processing and exporting. While some
of the equipment used by processors can cost
several hundred thousand dollars if
purchased new, there is "a constant flow of
secondhand processing equipment available
for sale." Similarly, Mr. Donovan recognized
that if one was to enter the scrap
processing business, he could do so with
leased equipment or secondhand equipment and
could use public facilities, which would
enable him to enter the business at a
substantial saving over the purchase of new
equipment. Moreover, Dr. Cutler pointed out
that in the scrap metal industry "there are
no licenses to acquire, no franchises to
acquire; none of those monopolitical,
obligopolistical requirements such as
franchises or areas or zones ...."
It has been recognized that where
there is ease of entry into a market, there
are many potential competitors who will
enter the market, and the elimination of
only one of them will not substantially
lessen competition. See, Beatrice
Foods Co. [1970-1973 Transfer Binder] CCH
Trade Reg. Rep. 20,121 (1972). Corenco has
not made a sufficient showing that it is one
of only a few potential competitors in the
scrap metal industry. To the contrary, there
is clear evidence that the scrap metal
industry exhibits ease of entry by many
firms.
Finally, Corenco has failed to
prove any relevant markets or Schiavone's
share of any relevant market. For example,
the evidence would support the conclusion
that the scrap export market is a world
market, and there is no reliable evidence as
to the percentage of the export market held
by Schiavone Corenco attempts to compare
1971 Schiavone figures from a promotional
brochure with 1972 preliminary figures of
the Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel.
Furthermore, the relevant domestic market
could include, in addition to the six New
England States, at least New York, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio. But what
Schiavone's share of the domestic market may
be remains a matter of conjecture.
In short, Corenco has failed to
prove its claim that Schiavone's proposed
acquisition of control over Corenco would
violate the antitrust laws. There is no
evidence that entry by Corenco into the
scrap metal business is probable or
that Corenco is recognized as a probable
entrant. Moreover, even if Corenco were
viewed as a probable entrant, the
competitive characteristics of the scrap
metal industry and the ease of entry into
the industry are such that the elimination
of Corenco as a potential competitor would
not substantially lessen competition.
Finally, Corenco has failed to show relevant
markets and market shares.
Violations of Section 13(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. § 78m(d)
It is essential to Corenco's
claim under Section 13(d) of the 1934 Act
that Corenco prove an agreement or
conspiracy between the Schiavone defendants
and defendant Reed Rubin to acquire Corenco
stock.
GAF Corporation v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709
(2d Cir. 1971), cert. denied, 406 U.S.
910, 92 S.Ct. 1610, 31 L.Ed.2d 821 (1972);
Bath Industries, Inc. v. Blot,
427 F.2d 97
(7th Cir. 1970); Water & Wall
Associates, Inc. v. American Consumer
Industries, Inc., [Current] CCH
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. 93,943 (D.N.J.1973).
As stated in the Senate and House
Reports accompanying the Williams Act:
"This provision [Section
13(d)(3)] would prevent a group of persons
who seek to pool their voting or other
interests in the securities of an issuer
from evading the provisions of the statute
because no one individual owns more than 10
percent of the securities. The group would
be deemed to have
Page 948
become the beneficial owner, directly or
indirectly, of more than 10 percent of a
class of securities at the time they agreed
to act in concert. Consequently, the group
would be required to file the information
called for in section 13(d)(1) within 10
days after they agree to act together,
whether or not any member of the group had
acquired any securities at that time."
S.Rep. 550, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. 8 (1967);
H.R.Rep. 1711, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 8-9
(1968); 2 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News, 90th
Cong., 2d Sess. (1968), 2811, 2818.
The following facts were
developed in the depositions and at the
trial:
Rubin first met Joel Schiavone in
the fall of 1972 in connection with a
transaction unrelated to this litigation.
Subsequently, Rubin asked Mr. Schiavone if
he would meet with representatives of
Corenco. On October 18, 1972, Rubin met with
Chester K. Twiss, President of Corenco, and
inquired whether Twiss would be interested
in looking at a scrap metal business. Twiss
said that he would. Several meetings
followed at which the possibility of
Corenco's acquiring Schiavone was discussed.
During the course of these
meetings, Twiss knew Rubin was interested in
acting as a finder to bring acquisitions to
Corenco and also admitted that he knew Rubin
was seeking a fee for his work. On the other
hand, there is no evidence of any agreement
that Rubin would get a fee if Schiavone
acquired control of Corenco by means of a
tender offer. Nor is there evidence that
Singer & Mackie, Rubin's employer, would
receive a fee from a Schiavone acquisition
of Corenco through a tender offer. Prior to
the tender offer, Schiavone never advised
Rubin of the tender offer and never knew of
Rubin's interests in Corenco stock.
Corenco, in seeking to establish
the "group", has called into question three
of Reed Rubin's accounts which held Corenco
stock during portions of the period
discussed above: the Vera Rubin Trust, the
Institute for the Study of Man, and the
account of Samuel Rubin, Reed Rubin's
father.
It is not disputed that during
this period Singer & Mackie was a market
maker in Corenco stock, or that Corenco was
a financially sound company. Accordingly, it
is not surprising that certain other of
Rubin's customers had a position in Corenco
stock both before and during the so-called
"relevant" times prior to this litigation.
It should be noted that the records of these
accounts show that they contained
approximately the same amounts of Corenco
stock just prior to the tender offer as they
did prior to the time that the Schiavone
defendants met Reed Rubin. Moreover, these
accounts show no unusual purchases after the
alleged conspiracy began. On the contrary,
sales of Corenco stock from these accounts
were made prior to the announcement of the
tender offer.
Inasmuch as Corenco has not met
its burden of proving an agreement or
conspiracy between the Schiavone defendants
and defendant Reed Rubin to acquire Corenco
stock, Corenco's claims of Section 13(d)
violations must be dismissed.
Violations of Section 14(e) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. § 78n(e)
Schiavone's original Schedule 13D
and Letter of Tender and amended Schedule
13d and Letter of Tender fail to provide the
shareholders of Corenco with any financial
information whatsoever regarding Schiavone.
This information, not otherwise available to
the investing public, is under the
circumstances of this case, of such
importance to the Corenco shareholder
desiring to make an informed decision on the
tender offer that its nondisclosure
constitutes a material omission. Faced with
the following alternatives, the lack of such
information makes the shareholder's choice a
mere guess. He can tender his shares for $33
per share if the tender
Page 949
offer is successful. He can hold his
shares either because he believes that
Corenco's stock is worth more than $33 or as
a result of his desire to hold stock in a
corporation to be controlled by Schiavone
and which may be merged into Schiavone. He
can sell on the market. He can purchase
additional Corenco shares. Finally, he can
tender some of his Corenco shares and retain
the rest.
The importance of financial
information to these investment decisions is
demonstrated by the testimony of Joel
Schiavone both at the trial on August 4,
1973, and in his deposition which was
introduced at the trial. In his deposition
Mr. Schiavone testified that he did not
provide Mr. Saba, a stockbroker with Merrill
Lynch, with financial or other information
regarding the company "[s]imply [because] we
want people to tender their stock ...," and
if he supplied financial information about
his company the stockholders might not make
tenders. One such example of financial
information about the Schiavone defendants
which would be material to a Corenco
shareholder is the source of funds available
to repay the bank loan taken by Schiavone to
finance the tender offer. This information
would only be available in the financial
statements of the Schiavone defendants.
Furthermore, Mr. Schiavone stated that as an
investor he would want such financial
information.
Defendants' response to Corenco's
argument that, under the circumstances of
this case, the total unavailability of any
financial information regarding Schiavone to
the holders of Corenco common stock
constitutes a violation of Section 14(e) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, is that
the section does not require that such
financial information be provided. It is
defendants' position that because financial
information is not specifically enumerated
in Section 14(d)(1) of the Securities Act of
1934 and Schedule 13D, it cannot constitute
a violation of Section 14(e) to fail to
provide such information. In the Court's
view, this narrow construction of the
statute would frustrate the end which the
statute was designed to achieve, maximum
shareholder protection.
In two recent decisions,
Sonesta International Hotels Corp. v.
Wellington Associates, 483 F.2d 247 (2d Cir.
1973) and
Gulf & Western Industries, Inc. v. Great A.
& P. Tea Co., Inc., 476 F.2d 687, 696 (2d
Cir. 1973), violations of Section 14(e)
were found where the information omitted
from the Schedule 13D and tender offer was
not specifically enumerated within Section
14(d)(1). In Sonesta, the information
consisted of failure to disclose the size of
a debt owed by the tender offeror to the
target corporation and that the tender
offer, if successful, might result in the
loss of listing privileges on the New York
Stock Exchange. In Gulf & Western,
the Court found violations of Section 14(e)
because the tender offeror failed to
disclose whether it intended to replace A. &
P.'s management and to disclose the
underlying facts which may have presented
substantial antitrust obstacles to the
acquisition of control of A. & P. by Gulf &
Western. Thus, any argument that an
obligation to disclose material facts is
limited to the specific requirements of
Schedule 13D does not comport with recent
case law.
Defendants also assert that this
is a case of first impression. Most cases in
this area are cases of first impression
because the Williams Act is relatively new,
having become law on July 29, 1968.
Furthermore, tender offers by closely-held
companies or individuals with respect to
whom financial information is totally
unavailable are extremely rare. That this
issue has not previously been the subject of
judicial determination is not, therefore,
surprising and certainly not dispositive. As
the Second Circuit observed
Chasins v. Smith, Barney & Co., 438 F.2d
1167, 1171 (2d Cir. 1970):
"However, even where a defendant
is successful in showing that it has
followed a customary course in the industry,
the first litigation of such a
Page 950
practice is a proper occasion for its
outlawry if it is in fact in violation."
Defendants also appear to be
arguing that to require the disclosure here
in question would turn every tender offer
into an exchange offer (which requires a
registration statement). This argument
ignores Section 14(e) which requires that
the materiality of the information must be
judged separately in every case. Here, the
following are relevant: (1) no financial
information concerning Schiavone is
available; (2) Schiavone seeks control; (3)
Schiavone contemplates a merger; and (4)
less than all shares are sought. To require
the disclosure of sufficient information
here to enable a Corenco shareholder to make
an informed judgment does not mean that a
Section 12 company making a tender offer,
about whom abundant information is
available, must supplement the information
relating to its financial position and
management record. Moreover, Schiavone need
not provide such information to the extent
required under the 1933 Act; but only that
Corenco shareholders be provided with enough
information to reach an informed decision.
In light of Schiavone's stated
reason for not disclosing financial
information, i. e., that Corenco
stockholders may not have tendered had this
information been available to them, one of
the primary purposes of the Williams Act
the requirement of full disclosure will be
served by enjoining Schiavone's tender offer
because of Schiavone's failure to disclose
material financial information. To rule
otherwise would be inconsistent with the
mandate of the Supreme Court that the
Exchange Act be liberally and not
technically or restrictively construed.
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 151, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 31 L.
Ed.2d 741 (1972).
Congress, in passing the Williams
Act indicated that:
"It has been argued that a cash
tender offer is a straightforward business
proposition which can be rejected or
accepted by a shareholder like any other bid
for his securities. But where no information
is available about the persons seeking
control, or their plans, the shareholder is
forced to make a decision on the basis of a
market price which reflects an evaluation of
the company based on the assumption that the
present management and its policies will
continue.
"The persons seeking control,
however, have information about themselves
and about their plans which, if known to
investors, might substantially change the
assumptions on which the market price is
based. This bill is designed to make the
relevant facts known so that shareholders
have a fair opportunity to make their
decision."
* * * * * *
"The bill avoids tipping the
balance of regulation either in favor of
management or in favor of the person making
the takeover bid. It is designed to require
full and fair disclosure for the benefit of
investors while at the same time providing
the offeror and management equal opportunity
to fairly present their case.
"While the bill may discourage
tender offers or other attempts to acquire
control by some who are unwilling to expose
themselves to the light of disclosure, the
committee believes this is a small price to
pay for adequate investor protection. In
fact, experience under the Securities Act of
1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
has amply demonstrated that the disclosure
requirements of the Federal securities acts
are an aid to legitimate business
transactions, not a hindrance." 2 U.S. Code
Cong. & Admin. News, 90th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1968) at, pp. 2813-14.
In view of the holdings of the
Supreme Court and of the clear Congressional
intent, the Court concludes that Schiavone's
tender offer violates § 14(e).
Defendants' Counterclaims
Defendants have asserted by way
of counterclaims alleged violations
Page 951
of the federal securities laws by
Corenco's letters to stockholders including
the following:
Inadequacy of price.
In Gulf & Western Indus., Inc. v. Great A. &
P. Tea Co., Inc., 356 F.Supp. 1066
(S.D.N.Y.), aff'd, 476 F.2d 687 (2d
Cir.1973), Judge Duffy refused to find that
the statement by management that the tender
offer price was inadequate constituted a
false and misleading statement or an
omission. Judge Duffy said, "The term
`inadequate' when used in connection with
the price of a stock is a highly subjective
one." 356 F.Supp. at 1071. As evidence of
subjectivity of the adequacy of price, Bear
Stearns, a defendant in this action and
dealer-manager for the tender offer,
recommended a price of $34-$35 per share for
the tender offer; defendant's Schedule 13D
discloses that the offering price is below
book value and the amended Schedule 13D
further reveals that book value, because of
the carrying of real estate at cost, is
understated by several dollars per share.
Schiavone further alleges that
Corenco violated Section 14(e) by failing to
disclose such facts, inter alia, as
the price of Corenco stock immediately prior
to the offer and that dividends have been
declining. Judge Duffy in Gulf & Western,
supra, considered allegations like these
not material, stating:
"In effect G & W complains that A
& P did not reemphasize facts which might
have been helpful to G & W in its tender
offer although such facts would have been
known to the ordinary investor in A & P
either through the company's annual and
quarterly statements or through papers of
general circulation. For example, it is
assumed that the ordinary investor would
check the market price of his stock on the
day before the tender offer before deciding
whether to tender his shares. Similarly, it
is assumed that the ordinary investor in A &
P would have read the reports supplied to
him by the company and would have known that
A & P dividends were in a decline; that A &
P had passed a dividend and that A & P had
lost money." 356 F.Supp. at 1071.
Information regarding the
embargo on the export on certain of Corenco
products. Defendants allege that
plaintiff and counterclaim defendants should
have disclosed that the new export embargo
had no effect upon plaintiff's six months
1973 earnings figure because the embargo was
not effective during the second quarter. The
statement with respect to the embargo was
inserted in plaintiff's letter to its
shareholders to disclose the existence of
the newly announced embargo and to indicate
that earnings for the second half of 1973
might not be as high as earnings for the
first half of 1973. At the time the letter
was written the only licenses which had been
applied for by plaintiff had been granted.
Plaintiff's earnings for the first six
months of 1973 were in fact not affected by
the embargo and the letter so states.
The claim that plaintiff's
Board of Directors and Management should
have filed a Schedule 13D. Plaintiff has
filed a Schedule 14D, the only statement it
is required to file under the 1934 Act. The
statement filed by plaintiff contains all of
the information required under the
applicable statutory provisions.
The purpose of Section 13(d) is
to disclose changes in corporate control.
This purpose would not be furthered in the
present case by requiring the filing of a
Schedule by a management which resists a
tender offer when the Schedule would only
duplicate information already disclosed.
The remainder of the statements
pointed out by defendants as violative of
the securities laws do not, in the Court's
view, constitute false or misleading
statements or omissions in violation of law.
Conclusion
Accordingly, plaintiff is granted
a permanent injunction enjoining the
Schiavone defendants, Bear Stearns &
Page 952
Co., and anyone acting on their behalf
from soliciting the tender of any Corenco
shares; acquiring any Corenco shares as a
result of the tender offer; further
soliciting proxies of Corenco common stock
stockholders; voting any shares of Corenco
common stock or proxies; and otherwise
utilizing such stock as a means of gaining
control of Corenco unless and until the
Schiavone defendants make full disclosure of
financial information about Schiavone and
Michael Schiavone. In all other respects,
plaintiff's complaint is dismissed.
Defendants' counterclaims are dismissed.
The foregoing constitutes the
findings of fact and conclusions of law of
the Court for the purposes of Rule 52, Fed.
R.Civ.P.
Settle judgment on one day's
notice.
Notes:
1. The counterclaim was not served on
Louis K. Adler. In addition, Corenco did not
serve defendant Samuel Rubin.
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