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Page 44
386 F.Supp. 44
William M. SCOTT, III, and Charles
W. Puttkammer, Plaintiffs,
v.
MULTI-AMP CORPORATION, et al., Defendants.
Civ. No. 74-1382. United States District Court, D. New
Jersey. November 13, 1974. As Amended November 20, 1974.
Supplemental Opinion November 22,
1974. As Amended November 26, 1974.
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COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
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COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
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COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
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Riker, Danzig, Scherer & Brown by
Alvin Weiss, Dennis J. O'Grady, Newark, N.
J., for plaintiffs.
Clapp & Eisenberg by Jerome C.
Eisenberg, Newark, N. J., Edward Ross
Aranow, New York City, Armond D. Arnson,
Cleveland, Ohio, for defendants.
OPINION
LACEY, District Judge:
INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT
This matter is before the court
on the parties' cross motions for interim
injunctive and other relief, as hereinafter
detailed. Implicated by the pleadings and
the motions are certain provisions of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange
Act), 15 U.S.C. § 78a et seq., as amended by
the Williams Act of 1968.1
Plaintiffs' complaint charges defendants
with violating §§ 13(d) and 14(a) of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d), 15 U.S.C.
§ 78n(a), and relevant rules and regulations
of the Securities and Exchange Commission
(Commission) promulgated thereunder,
including Rule 13d-1, 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-1
(1974), and Rule 14a-9, 17 C.F.R. §
240.14a-9 (1974); and the statutes and
common law of the State of New Jersey.
Defendants' answer not only denies these
charges but counterclaims with charges of §§
13(d) and 14(a) violations by plaintiffs.2
Jurisdiction and
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PAGE CONTAINED FOOTNOTES
Page 50
venue are in this court under § 27 of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa, as to the
Exchange Act claims, and under pendent
jurisdiction principles on plaintiffs'
state-created claim.3
RELIEF SOUGHT
In their complaint, plaintiffs,
who sue in their own right and derivatively,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1; N.J.S.A. 14A:3-6, in the
right of Multi-Amp Corporation (M-A),
defendant herein, seek preliminary and
permanent injunctive relief which would
enjoin the defendants Lerner, Saltzman,
Redlhammer and Esquivel from utilizing as
soliciting material management's Proxy
Statement dated August 16, 1974, from
soliciting proxies from M-A shareholders,
from voting or otherwise exercising any
rights in connection with proxies heretofore
solicited or obtained, from committing any
violations of the Exchange Act, from voting
at the annual meeting, now set for October
30, 1974, any shares of M-A stock owned by
them or by L & S Investment Company (L & S),
and from implementing or consummating the
proposed sale of assets, by M-A to the
defendant MUL Company (MUL), which is at the
core of this proceeding. While challenging
the named plaintiffs' capacity to sue
derivatively, defendants do not challenge
their standing to sue individually, as
stockholders, for §§ 13(d) and 14(a)
violations. Cf.
GAF Corporation v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709, 719 n. 21 (2d Cir. 1971), cert. denied,
406 U.S. 910, 92 S.Ct. 1610, 31 L.Ed.2d 821
(1972);
Committee for New Man. of Butler Aviation v.
Widmark, 335 F.Supp. 146, 154 n. 9
(E.D.N.Y.1971); but see
Washburn v. Madison Square Garden Corp., 340
F.Supp. 504 (S.D.N.Y.1972). In this
regard, it is noted that given the liberal
application of the standing doctrine in the
area of securities law by this
Circuit, Landy v. Federal Deposit Ins.
Corp.,
486 F.2d 139 (3d Cir. 1973), this
court expressly finds that plaintiffs do
have standing to sue to vindicate §§ 13(d)
and 14(a) violations.
The defendants have
counterclaimed for preliminary and permanent
injunctive relief to bar plaintiffs from
utilizing their proxy material, and to
enjoin them from voting their own shares,
and the shares of others, at the annual
meeting.
THESE PROCEEDINGS
This court signed an Order to
Show Cause with temporary restraints on
September 6, 1974, later modified by its
order of September 13, 1974.
On the applications for interim
relief, the parties put before the court the
pleadings, various affidavits, the several
depositions taken to date, and lengthy
briefs. Following these submissions, oral
argument was heard on October 9, 1974. The
parties have agreed to waive an evidentiary
hearing on plaintiffs' claims.
Defendants, on the other hand,
request an evidentiary hearing on their §
13(d)-based counterclaim, which as been
held.
Before addressing the principal
issues involved, it is to be noted that
plaintiffs, having been given the list of
stockholders of M-A after commencing suit,
moved thereafter for the disclosure of (a)
the names of all persons whose M-A stock is
held in street-name, and (b) the
Page 51
names of those persons whose stock is
with Cede & Co., a certain stock depository.
At oral argument on October 9, 1970, I
denied application (a) but granted (b),
staying the latter ruling, however, to allow
defendants to make a written submission in
opposition thereto. That submission having
been made, and found unpersuasive, the stay
is now lifted, and an appropriate order is
to be submitted forthwith. The court's
determination is founded upon what it stated
at oral argument on October 9, 1970, and the
reasons immediately hereinafter expressed.
The New Jersey Business
Corporation Act, N.J.S.A. 14A:5-28(1),
provides in relevant part:
The corporation shall make
available for inspection . . . a record or
records containing the names and addresses
of all shareholders, the number, class and
series of shares held by each and the dates
when they respectively became the owners of
record thereof . . . .
Defendants would argue that this
statute, literally applied, would require
only that a list of all shareholders of
record on the corporate books be made
available for inspection. As previously
stated, M-A has already furnished a list of
shareholders of record to plaintiffs.
Since management now receives
from Cede & Co. a monthly list of
"participants", see letter of
defendants' counsel dated October 11, 1974,
fairness compels that management should make
available to plaintiffs the same information
so that this proxy solicitation campaign can
be waged on equal terms by both sides.
Regarding shareholders who have
shares in street-name, the court is not
inclined to give the restrictive
construction to N.J.S.A. 14A:5-28 defendants
urge. Cf. Rule 14a-7, 17 C.F.R. §
240.14a-7 (1974); and see § 14(c) of
the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(c), which
was added in 1964 and pursuant to which the
Commission, by Rule 14c-7, 17 C.F.R. §
240.14c-7 (1974) requires issuers subject to
the proxy rules to canvass the registered
owners of the securities known to be held in
street-name. Instead, its refusal to require
that the names of shareholders holding
shares in street-name be determined and
divulged is based not only upon policy
considerations, namely, that such owners
should have their desire for privacy
protected, but also because management,
unlike the Cede situation, is also without
the information plaintiffs seek. See
Cary, Corporations 311-12 (4th ed. 1969).
Although not relevant to the issue raised,
it should be noted that the court recognizes
that derivative suits can be brought by
shareholders who are equitable holders, and
not of record. N.J.S.A. 14A:3-6
(Commissioners' Comments);
Drachman v. Harvey, 453 F.2d 722 (2d Cir.
1972) (en banc).
THE PARTIES
Plaintiffs
Plaintiffs Scott and Puttkammer
are stockholders of defendant M-A, a New
Jersey corporation, with its principal place
of business in Texas, which, with its
subsidiaries, is engaged in various aspects
of the electrical testing industry.
Defendants
MUL is a recently organized
Delaware corporation, the stock of which is
entirely owned by defendants Lerner,
Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel, formed by
them to acquire M-A's assets. Lerner (M-A's
Board Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
and Saltzman each own beneficially 81,798
shares (8.99%) of M-A's common stock
(totalling in excess of 900,000 shares),
acquired on April 15, 1970, and registered
in the name of L & S, a partnership owned
fifty-percent by Lerner, with the other
fifty-percent owned by Saltzman and a
corporation (Lodar, Inc.) he controls.
Redlhammer (M-A's President) and Esquivel
(M-A's Vice President for Finance) own
respectively 28,471 (3.13%) and 196 (.02%)
shares of M-A common stock, and are, with
Lerner and Saltzman, directors of M-A, as is
Baker
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(who was elected on July 10, 1974).
Berick is also an M-A director and a partner
in the Cleveland, Ohio law firm of Burke,
Hahn & Berick, which has served as M-A's
general counsel; he owns 500 shares (.05%)
of M-A's common stock. Other M-A directors
were, until recently, Glenn Golenberg, whose
place was taken by Baker, and James
Hellmuth, an outside director whose
principal occupation is as a vice president
of Bankers Trust Company. Their resignations
were filed and accepted on July 10 and
August 1, 1974, respectively.
DISCUSSION
Generally, plaintiffs charge that
at a time prior to July 26, 1974, defendants
Lerner, Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel,
in addition to violating certain securities
laws, conspired to acquire M-A's assets "at
a grossly inadequate price [$5,494,965 or
$6.04 per share of M-A stock] and to
liquidate . . . [M-A], to the detriment of
the stockholders . . . and, pursuant to said
conspiracy, formed defendant MUL for the
purpose of acquiring the assets of
Multi-Amp." Complaint, para. 11. More
specifically, plaintiffs charge defendants
have acted illegally in the particulars
hereinafter set forth.
Plaintiffs' § 13(d)
Claims
Plaintiffs contend, first, that L
& S, Lerner and Saltzman, having acquired on
April 15, 1970 18% of M-A's stock
[registered pursuant to § 12 of the Exchange
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78l] from the Gross
family, then M-A's principal shareholders,
were by April 25, 1970 required to, but did
not, comply with the filing requirements of
§ 13(d).4
Plaintiffs further assert that the § 13(d)
filing requirement was triggered again when,
on or about July 10, 1974, Lerner and
Saltzman, then in control of M-A, were
joined "in concert" by Redlhammer and
Esquivel, M-A stockholders and Board
members, with the resultant "group" (i.e.,
Lerner, Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel),
see § 13(d)(3), 15 U.S.C. §
78m(d)(3), having as its new objective the
sale of M-A's assets to MUL, and the
subsequent liquidation of M-A. Pffs. Br. at
14; Pffs. Reply Br. at 27.5
It is undisputed that defendants made no §
13(d) filing whatever until August 5, 1974.
Pursuant to § 13(d)(1), the
Commission by Rule 13d-1, promulgated
Schedule 13D, 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-101
(1974), for those required to file
thereunder. This Schedule must be filed with
the Commission and the issuer's listing
exchanges
Page 53
(here the American Stock Exchange), and
served upon the issuer, within ten days
after the acquisition of more than
five-percent of the issuer's stock.6
Amendments thereto are required when
material changes occur in the facts stated
therein. § 13(d)(2), 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d)(2).
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), the
purpose of § 13(d) was explicated:
That the purpose of section 13(d)
is to alert the marketplace to every large,
rapid aggregation or accumulation of
securities, regardless of technique
employed, which might represent a potential
shift in corporate control is amply
reflected in the enacted provisions. Section
13(d)(1)(C) requires the person filing to
disclose any intention to acquire control.
If he has such an intention, he must
disclose any plans for liquidating the
issuer, selling its assets, merging it with
another company or changing substantially
its business or corporate structure. It is
of some interest, moreover, that section
13(d)(6)(D) empowers the Commission to
exempt from the filing requirements "any
acquisition . . . as not entered into for
the purpose of, and not having the effect
of, changing or influencing the control of
the issuer or otherwise as not comprehended
within the purpose of [section 13(d)]."
453 F.2d at 717. See also
H.R.Rep. No. 1711, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 8-9
(1968), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 1968,
p. 2811; Comment, Section 13(d) and
Disclosure of Corporate Equity Ownership,
119 U.Pa.L.Rev. 853 (1971).
Addressing the first of
plaintiffs' § 13(d) claims, defendants admit
they failed to file a Schedule 13D within
ten days of April 15, 1970, but argue that
they were under no obligation to do so; and,
further, that if they were guilty of a
statutory violation, it was somehow cured by
the several disclosures, both before and
after April 15, 1970, of the fact of their
control of M-A.
Thus they contend that they were
not obliged to file under § 13(d), since
their assumption of control, through L & S's
acquisition of M-A's shares from the Gross
family, was accomplished not covertly but
rather with the knowledge and cooperation of
the then management, personified by Mr.
Isidor Gross.7 The
evil intended to be cured by § 13(d),
non-disclosure to management and the market
place of a potential corporate "take-over,"
did not exist, they say, in the
circumstances attending their purchase.
Defendants succinctly argue: ". . . there
was no failure to alert management of the
shift in control since it was management
itself from whom the stock was purchased."
Defs. Br. at 41.
Next, defendants advance the fact
that the April 1970 acquisition was
heralded, first, a month in advance of, and
then on the day of closing, by widely
distributed press releases. Berick
Affidavit, paras. 5 and 6.
After acquisition of control,
defendants next contend that there was a
"continuous stream of public disclosure over
the last four and one-half (4) years" in
the 1970-1973 Proxy Statements and in the
various filings with the Commission.8
Defs. Br. at 41-42.
Page 54
Plaintiffs' response to the
defendants' disclaimers of § 13(d)'s
application to the 1970 events is
two-pronged. First, plaintiffs argue that no
matter how extensive the disclosure, the
defendants' non-filing of a Schedule 13D in
April 1970 served to conceal from M-A's
stockholders and the investing public for
over four years one vital fact required to
be stated under § 13(d) (1) (B), namely,
that Lerner and Saltzman had financed their
M-A stock purchase by borrowing $700,000, at
the same time granting their lenders an
option to purchase 19,000 shares of M-A
stock at the price paid by Lerner and
Saltzman.9
Shielding this information from disclosure,
plaintiffs claim, makes defendants'
violation not merely technical, but most
substantial.
More fundamentally, plaintiffs
claim that the mere fact that the replaced
management (here Gross) was aware of the new
"control" group's presence, does not excuse
compliance with the § 13(d) filing
requirement.
Plaintiffs have the better of the
dispute. First, the disclosure of the
"take-over" to the public and the
stockholders, while demonstrative of the new
owners' openness and candor, and supportive
of their claim of ignorantia legis,
Defs. Br. at 40, did not relieve the Lerner
group of its statutory obligation to file a
Schedule 13D. Second, § 13(d) was intended
to protect not only the old management, but,
as well, stockholders and the investing
public. See
Bath Industries v. Blot, 305 F.Supp. 526,
538 (E.D.Wisc.1969), aff'd,
427 F.2d 97
(7th Cir. 1970).
Dealing with the first of
plaintiffs' § 13(d) claims, then, the fact
that L & S, Lerner and Saltzman should have
filed initially under § 13(d) not later than
April 25, 1970 is self-evident. It is
equally obvious, as already stated, that
they did not do so until August 5, 1974,
thus violating the statutory mandate,
however innocent their oversight.
Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Rondreau, 500 F.2d
1011 (7th Cir. 1974).10
Page 55
Given the violation, what is the
remedy and what are the sanctions to be
applied by this court on plaintiffs'
application?
Plaintiffs' position is that, by
virtue of the aforesaid violation, they are
now entitled to the drastic interim relief
sought in their complaint.
The violation of § 13(d),
however, does not automatically cause the
invocation of the drastic sanctions
plaintiffs seek. The unusual circumstances
of this case require, in the interest of
justice and equitable principles, a careful
sifting of the facts before settling upon
the appropriate form of relief.
It is evident from the facts
heretofore related that L & S, and Lerner
and Saltzman did not, in the manner of the
feared corporate buccaneer, stealthily creep
up upon and dethrone M-A's management in
April 1970. Their control was achieved by
purchase from the dominant management
figure, Isidor Gross, then Chairman of the
Board and president of M-A, who, after the
purchase, remained as a director (see
1970 Proxy Statement, Exhibit C to Berick
Affidavit); and defendants broadcast widely
what they were about to do, and what they
did do. Furthermore, this court accepts the
unchallenged assertions of Lerner, Saltzman
and L & S that their counsel failed to
advise them of the filing requirement,
see Defs. Br. at 40; Berick Affidavit,
para. 4, and finds that the failure to file
a Schedule 13D in April 1970 was inadvertent
and devoid of any intent to violate the law
or conceal vital facts from management,
M-A's stockholders, or the investing public.
Cf. Cary, Corporations 548-49 (4th
ed. 1969).
Nor are there any facts involved
in the Lerner group's management of the
business, after April 15, 1970, which would
undercut the conclusion that the 1970
violation of § 13(d) was merely a technical
one, harming no significant interests
intended by that statute to be protected,
and depriving no one of information material
to their investment decisions. Certainly
plaintiffs, and Gross (who is substantially
financing this suit), knew in the post-1970
period that the Lerner group was in control.
Scott, since June 8, 1971, has been retained
by M-A as a "finder" of acquisitions
pursuant to written agreement; and Gross and
his wife each has an unexpired consulting
agreement with M-A which has 5 years
remaining, representing combined future
receipts of about $250,000. It is also
noteworthy that the plaintiffs nowhere
contend that they, or other stockholders or
the investing public, were unaware of the
persons who controlled M-A, and they offer
no complaint about the company's management
after April 1970. Additionally, the record
is bare of any issue having been
contemporaneously raised concerning the
accuracy or adequacy of M-A's Proxy
Statements in 1971, 1972 or 1973. Nor do the
plaintiffs now complain that the defendants
were guilty in or after 1970 of any
manipulative practices related to the price
of M-A's shares.
Continuing the detailing of the
company's affairs, in May 1973 M-A began
relocation of its facilities from Cranford,
New Jersey to Dallas, Texas, completing this
in April 1974. It remains a New Jersey
corporation, however, although it no longer
has any facilities here.
The New Jersey Business
Corporations Act having been amended in
1968, counsel advanced to M-A's management
in 1973 the existence, under the law as
amended, of the right to change the
certificate
Page 56
of incorporation (by a two-thirds vote)
to provide for stockholder approval by a
majority vote of mergers, consolidations,
liquidations, and bulk sales of assets out
of the ordinary course of business. Collier
Affidavit, para. 3, and Exhibit A thereto.
Management submitted this question and
others suggested by counsel to the
stockholders in its 1973 Proxy Statement
(Lerner Affidavit, para. 6), and it was
adopted at the September 1973 annual
meeting.11
As the Proxy Statement for the
upcoming meeting states (Complaint, Exhibit
A at 17), M-A's management entered into
merger discussions with research-Cottrell,
Inc. in November 1973. Discussions were
abandoned on February 25, 1974 because of
"the steady weakening in the market price
and trading volume of Research-Cottrell
shares."12 It
further appears that Combustion Engineering,
Inc., through one Kiamie, made a telephonic
inquiry in mid-August 1974 of Lerner which,
at most, was nothing more than an indication
of interest in acquiring M-A. Nothing came
of this. Defs. Br. at 34; Lerner Affidavit,
paras. 26-27.13
It thus can be said that from and
after April 1970, into June 1974, the Lerner
group's failure to file Schedule 13D when it
acquired control had caused no injury to
anyone to any substantial degree. As has
been stated, the replaced management
certainly cannot claim it was thereby
damaged. Stockholders and investors, even
including plaintiffs herein, do not and
cannot claim they were misled or deceived.
All were fully apprised of the change in
control. None
Page 57
can validly claim he was kept ignorant of
the potential for a shift in control which,
where it exists, may influence a decision to
buy or sell securities. Mosinee Paper Corp.
v. Rondreau, supra. No contention is
advanced upon any theory, tenuous or
otherwise, that the corporation, its
stockholders, or the investing public
suffered any harm, let alone the irreparable
injury requisite to the drastic remedy of
the injunctive relief plaintiffs herein
seek.14 Finally,
no explanation is given for delaying over
four years before asserting a complaint
grounded upon defendants' § 13(d) violation
in 1970.
Under the foregoing circumstances
the drastic relief of disenfranchisement of
Lerner, Saltzman and L & S, or the other
interim relief sought by plaintiffs, would
be grossly inappropriate. As has been said
in a more cheerful environment than
securities law:
My object all sublime
I shall achieve in time
To make the punishment fit the crime.
The Mikado, Act II.
That the remedies plaintiffs here
seek were granted in whole or in part in
Bath Industries, Inc. v. Blot, supra,
Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Rondeau, supra, and
by Chief Judge Whipple in Water & Wall
Associates Inc., note 14, supra, can
afford them no comfort. In those cases the
issuer, in stark contrast to the laxness of
these dilatory plaintiffs, had acted with
celerity and dispatch to achieve the
application of equitable sanctions to §
13(d) violations.
Therefore, the interim relief
sought, as grounded upon the April 1970 §
13(d) violation, is denied, for the
following reasons:
1. Plaintiffs have failed to show
they have sustained irreparable injury
causally related to the said violation.
Cf. Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Rondeau,
supra, where the majority would
seemingly waive the irreparable injury
requirement, and the dissent therein by
Judge Pell.
2. Plaintiffs have not
demonstrated a likelihood that on final
hearing they will prevail in obtaining the
relief they seek, principally because, on
what is before me, the doctrines of laches
and estoppel present formidable barriers to
their success, and particularly in view of
the broad power of this court, as a court of
equity, to frame a decree, and accord that
relief, which is under all the circumstances
best tailored for the wrong committed and
the injury done. See, e. g.,
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 411 U.S. 192, 200-201, 93
S.Ct. 1463, 36 L.Ed.2d 151 (1973);
Hecht Co. v. Bowles, 321 U.S. 321, 329-330,
64 S.Ct. 587, 88 L.Ed. 754 (1944);
Crane Co. v. American Standard, Inc., 490
F.2d 332, 345 (2d Cir. 1974).
3. The public interest in
securing adherence to the statutory mandate
of a § 13(d) filing is not served, under the
peculiar circumstances of this case, by
granting the relief sought.15
Thus, assuming
Page 58
that the proposed sale of assets is
fairly priced, should not all the
stockholders be given an opportunity, as
provided by law, to vote upon it? Moreover,
it can hardly be said that the aforesaid
public interest is served by the untimely
levying of equitable sanctions upon
stockholders whose management of M-A over a
four-year period had been publicly
proclaimed, and, so far as the record
currently reflects, conducted without
substantial criticism from anyone.16
It is noted in this regard that, on August
5, 1974, a Schedule 13D was filed, to be
effective as of April 25, 1970.
We now turn to the second of
plaintiffs' § 13(d)-based claims, founded
upon the Lerner group's failure to make a §
13(d) filing in July 1974. As has been noted
(note 5, supra), plaintiffs contend
that a new "group" had been formed not later
than July 10, 1974, consisting of Lerner,
Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel, which by
that date had fixed upon the objective of
acquiring, through their wholly owned
corporation, MUL, all of M-A's assets. Thus,
plaintiffs state, the filing requirement of
§ 13(d) was triggered, but was once again
ignored. Defendants reject these
propositions on two grounds:
1. Their "group" was not formed
in the § 13(d) sense, until on or about July
29, 1974, and thus defendants' filing on
August 5, 1974 of a Schedule 13D advancing
the group's existence and its objective was
a timely filing.
2. That there was no filing
requirement in any event, since after April
1970 the Lerner group, as then constituted,
had gained control, was "management", and
was not subject to § 13(d).
As to the first of defendants'
responses, it requires an examination of the
numerous submissions in order to resolve the
question of fact presented, to wit, when can
it be said, if at all, that the "group" was
formed for § 13(d) purposes?
GAF Corporation v. Milstein, 453 F.2d at 715;
§ 13(d)(3). In this regard, the parties have
waived an evidentiary hearing on this issue,
and have agreed to have it resolved through
the court's analysis of the several
depositions and affidavits.
Page 59
The court has carefully reviewed
the relevant materials upon which the
parties rely, specifically the affidavits
(including exhibits) of Messrs. Lerner,
Berick, Collier, Redlhammer and Helmuth; the
deposition testimony of Messrs. Lerner,
Saltzman, Esquivel and Redlhammer; and the
exhibits attached to the verified complaint.
From these materials the following facts
emerge.
On June 7, 1974, M-A's Board of
Directors by unanimous written consent,
without meeting (N.J.S.A. 14A:6-7), set
September 18, 1974 as the date of the annual
meeting of shareholders. It appears that
Lerner, shortly prior to June 7, had
preliminary discussions with counsel and
with Saltzman concerning not only the
acquisition of M-A's assets, but other means
as well of changing M-A into a private
entity. Lerner Affidavit, para. 7.
At a Board Meeting on July 10,
1974 Golenberg resigned from the Board. The
1974 Proxy Statement (Complaint, Exhibit A,
at 21) states why, that is, that he was
being retained by MUL in connection with the
proposed acquisition of M-A's assets. At
this meeting Lerner disclosed to the Board
that he, Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel
"were considering a proposed transaction
pursuant to which . . . [they] would acquire
all of the assets of the Corporation for a
price yet to be determined." Lerner
Affidavit, para. 8. The Board passed a
resolution authorizing continuation of
negotiations with Lerner, Saltzman,
Redlhammer and Esquivel, or any of them, for
the sale of M-A's assets, and also
authorized corporate counsel to prepare
appropriate preliminary proxy materials for
the proposed sale and a plan of liquidation.17
During the week of July 24, 1974,
M-A's counsel conferred with the Commission.
The Commission suggested that there be a
public announcement disclosing the proposed
transaction with MUL, even though no
purchase price had as yet been determined.
Lerner felt that such action, without a
purchase price stated, would be inadvisable
and accordingly consulted with Saltzman,
Redlhammer and Esquivel, counsel for M-A and
MUL, the other directors, and a proxy
solicitation firm, on July 27 and July 28,
1974. The objective of these conversations
was to arrive at a fair price, which would
not only exceed per share the book value but
also the market price on the American Stock
Exchange. Out of this came a proposed
purchase price of $5.5 million, and
thereafter, on July 29, 1974, M-A issued a
public announcement of the proposed offer by
MUL to acquire M-A's assets. See
Lerner Affidavit, paras. 12-13, and Exhibit
B to Lerner Affidavit.
Within a few days, and, more
specifically, by letter of August 1, 1974,
Hellmuth resigned as a Director. See
Lerner Affidavit, para. 14, and Exhibit C to
Lerner Affidavit. Hellmuth resigned because
he felt he could not vote for the proposed
purchase of assets at the announced price
"without an independent, well-known
investment banking firm with knowledge of
all the facts, giving its opinion that this
is a fair price." The fact of this
resignation, and the letter that Hellmuth
wrote, is set forth in the 1974 Proxy
Statement.
Prior to the final preparation of
the Proxy Statement, Lerner discussed with
counsel whether an independent appraisal in
connection with the proposed transaction was
required. He was advised that none was
necessary and so his initial determination
was to forego one. See Lerner
Affidavit, para. 15. However, once this suit
was commenced, and it became apparent that
plaintiffs' primary thrust was at the lack
of such an appraisal, Lerner decided to
obtain one; and the investment banking firm
of Edwards & Hanly Securities, Inc. was
retained to render a written opinion on the
fairness of the price of $6.04 per share.
See Lerner Affidavit, para. 16.
By letter dated September 18,
1974, Edwards & Hanly submitted its opinion
Page 60
(Lerner Affidavit, Exhibit D). This
letter concludes:
Based on the foregoing, it is our
opinion that the issuance of cash in the
amount of $6.04 per share in exchange for
the assets of Multi-Amp Corporation would be
fair and equitable to the shareholders of
Multi-Amp Corporation.
Thereafter, by letter of October
1, 1974, Edwards & Hanly submitted to the
Commission, at its request, a detailed
report in support of its opinion letter.
See Lerner Affidavit, para. 17, and
Exhibit E to Lerner Affidavit.
Notwithstanding defendants'
position that there was no requirement for
filing a Schedule 13D in connection with the
July-August 1974 matters, on August 5, 1974
a Schedule 13D, and Amendments 1, 2 and 3,
were filed with the Commission and served
upon the American Stock Exchange and M-A
itself, under the following circumstances.
There apparently was a certain
amount of doubt at the Commission as to
whether there was a necessity for filing a
Schedule 13D in respect of the proposed
assets transaction. Indeed, Lerner was
advised by his counsel that on July 25, 1974
Gerald Seigan, a Commission staff member,
had stated that no filing by MUL was
necessary since it was not proposing to
purchase any additional shares of M-A, but
rather its assets. He was also advised,
however, that the Commission was giving the
subject additional consideration. Thus, the
next day, counsel spoke with a Commission
representative to express counsel's view
that no Schedule 13D filing was required and
requested an opportunity of further
discussion with the staff. Lerner Affidavit,
paras. 19-20.
On July 30, 1974 this meeting
occurred, Lerner and his attorney (Arnson)
maintaining that no 13D filing was required.
Lerner Affidavit, para. 21. During this
meeting, which incidentally was focusing on
the necessity of MUL filing a Schedule 13D,
a staff member inquired whether a Schedule
13D had been filed in connection with the
April 15, 1970 acquisition of M-A stock.
Lerner said he was not aware of any such
filing. Seigan of the staff then suggested
that there be filed on behalf of the Lerner
group an original Schedule 13D for the April
15, 1970 transaction, along with any
amendments thereto "culminating in an
amendment relating to the proposed purchase
of the Corporation's assets by MUL." Lerner
Affidavit, para. 22. The recommended filing
followed.
On August 15, 1974, plaintiff
Scott demanded inspection of the
shareholders' list, which was at that time
denied to him (Complaint, Exhibits B and C).
However, after suit was commenced,
defendants delivered the list to plaintiffs'
counsel.
At the August 15, 1974 Board
meeting, the Board (Lerner, Saltzman,
Redlhammer, Esquivel, Berick and Baker)
unanimously approved the Proxy Statement and
the proposed transaction with MUL.
On or about August 16, 1974, M-A
sent out the Notice of Annual Meeting of
Shareholders with a Proxy Statement
soliciting the stockholders to grant proxies
to be voted in favor of the sale to MUL of
M-A's assets, followed by the latter's
liquidation, at the annual meeting to be
held on September 18, 1974. Annexed to the
Proxy Statements are copies of the pertinent
resolutions, the Plan of Complete
Liquidation, and the Agreement between M-A
and MUL. By court order the meeting date, as
has already been noted, has been changed to
October 30, 1974.
Based upon the foregoing factual
detail, with particular stress being placed
upon the minutes of the Board meeting of
July 10, 1974, the court concludes that the
Lerner, Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel
"group" was, for § 13(d) purpose, in being
as of July 10, 1974, and that it had, as of
that date, formulated the purpose to sell
M-A's assets to MUL. That the organizing of
the "group" was not evidenced by a written
agreement between its members, that
negotiations
Page 61
between the "group" and MUL were barely
under way, and that a purchase price was not
set until July 29, 1974, do not alter that
conclusion. These latter factors are not to
be regarded in the same light as the
conditions which
Nicholson File Co. v. H. K. Porter & Co.,
341 F.Supp. 508 (D.R.I.1972) tolled the
running of § 13 (d)'s 10-day filing period.
Cf. Water & Wall Associates v.
American Consumer Industries, Inc.,
supra.
Assuming that § 13(d) was
applicable, then, when should a filing have
been made? The statute requires that the
original § 13(d) filing be made within
10-days of the activating event. § 13(d)(1).
Plaintiffs contend that the July 1974 events
created the necessity for what would have
been an amendatory filing, had there been an
original filing in April 1970; and the
amendatory provision of the statute, § 13(d)
(2), sets no time limit for filing of
amendments, but simply requires filing of
"an amendment . . . in accordance with such
rules and regulations as the Commission may
prescribe . . . ." See note 2,
supra. The appropriate Rule, 13d-2,
simply requires that the amendment be filed
"promptly".18
Under all the circumstances, the court
considers that filing by August 5, 1974, was
a "prompt" filing within the meaning of the
Rule, although it has not been referred to,
nor has it found, any judicial
interpretation which would illuminate the
matter. The court considers, as going to the
issue of promptitude, the still remaining
uncertainty, based upon the aforesaid
discussions with the Commission, concerning
the necessity of filing a Schedule 13D at
all, the fact that MUL, even as of August 5,
1974, had not yet been finally incorporated,
and the fact that the price was not set
until July 29, 1974, when, in response to
the Commission's suggestion, the public
announcement of the proposed transaction was
made.
The immediately preceding
analysis is founded upon the premise that §
13(d) applies to a management "group." Now
to be examined is defendants' contention
that there is no such statutory requirement.
The question was raised, but not
expressly answered, in now Chief Judge
Kaufman's opinion for the court in GAF
Corporation v. Milstein, supra, 453
F.2d at 719 n. 20, as follows:
The more difficult question, and
a question we need not decide on this
appeal, is whether management groups which
expressly agree to pool their interests to
fight a potential takeover are subject to
section 13(d). Nor do we intimate any view
on whether an insurgent group which has
filed under section 13(d) and subsequently
is successful in its takeover bid remains
subject to the section. In any event, as we
have already indicated, the Commission can
forestall any untoward effects under the
exemptive power conferred upon it by section
13(d)(6)(D).
Elsewhere in his opinion,
however, Chief Judge Kaufman stated:
The history and language of
section 13(d) makes it clear that the
statute was primarily concerned with
disclosure of potential changes in
control resulting from new aggregations
of stockholdings . . . . (emphasis supplied)
Id. at 718. See also
Nicholson File Co. v. H. K. Porter Co., 341
F.Supp. at 517-518.
The question raised but not
decided in GAF Corporation v. Milstein,
supra, was presented
Corenco Corporation v. Schiavone & Sons,
Inc.,
362 F.Supp. 939
Page 62
(S.D.N.Y.), aff'd on part and remanded in
part,
488 F.2d 207 (2d Cir. 1973). There a
company the target of a tender offer brought
suit against the offeror on various grounds
under the securities laws. The defendant,
inter alia, counterclaimed and charged
the target company with violating § 13(d) by
having violated its filing requirements. The
district court wrote:
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.
362 F.Supp. at 951.
On appeal the Court of Appeals
stated:
Turning to the Schiavone
defendants' counterclaim that Corenco's
management and their affiliates were a
"group" within the meaning of § 13(d)(3) and
were required to file a Schedule 13D
statement by reason of their pooling of
their Corenco shares for the purpose of
defeating the tender offer, it is unclear
what "independent interest" protected by the
statute exists which gives the Schiavone
defendants standing to assert their
counterclaim.
Electronic Specialty Co. v. International
Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 944-946 (2d
Cir. 1969). Assuming they have standing,
however, we are satisfied that the members
of Corenco's management were not required to
file individual Schedule 13D statements when
they agreed to pool their interests to fight
the threatened takeover. Section 14(d)(4) of
the Exchange Act specifically requires the
disclosure of certain information when the
management of a company advises its
shareholders to reject a tender offer.
Corenco's management complied with this
section when it filed a form 14D. Since the
Exchange Act contains a specific provision
governing the disclosures required of a
target company's management, it would be
pointless to superimpose requirements found
in another section, which does not deal
specifically with management disclosures.
The reliance placed by the Schiavone
defendants on GAF v. Milstein, supra,
is misplaced. There the court expressly
declined to decide the question "whether
management groups which expressly agree to
pool their interests to fight a potential
takeover are subject to section 13(d)." 453
F.2d at 719 n. 20.
488 F.2d at 218. See also
Bath Industries, Inc. v. Blot, 427 F.2d at
113:
The purpose of the filing and
notification provisions is to give investors
and stockholders the opportunity to assess
the insurgents' plans before selling
or buying stock in the corporation. It
additionally gives them the opportunity to
hear from incumbent management on the merit
or lack of merit of the insurgents'
proposals. If the defendant-appellant's late
filing is sufficient, then no insurgent
group will ever file until news of their
existence and plan leaks out and prompts a
law suit. By that time it will be too late
to avoid the evils which the Williams Act is
designed to eliminate.
In the case at bar defendants had
to file [under § 14(a)] their proxy material
with the Commission. It would make no sense,
in view of the language and history of the
Williams Act, to hold that management, here
the L & S-Lerner, Saltzman group, had to
file a Schedule 13D, in original or amended
form, simply because they were joined by
Redlhammer and Esquivel who, as senior
officers and directors of M-A for several
years, were likewise "management." By the
same token, § 13(d) was hardly intended to
deal with a management which, after being in
control over the years, determines to sell
all assets and liquidate a company. The
proxy mechanism, and the pervasiveness of
the Commission's controls, through statute
and rule, over it, required no buttressing
by § 13(d)-imposed restraints; and, as
Page 63
the legislative history of the Williams
Act illustrates, it was not in the proxy
regulation area of securities law that ills
were sensed, or intended thereby to be
cured, when in 1968 that salutary
legislation was enacted.
Contemplating then, not only the
language of the statute, but the broad
congressional purpose,
Tcherpnin v. Knight, 389 U.S. 332, 336, 88
S.Ct. 548, 19 L.Ed.2d 564 (1967), and
for the reasons hereinabove expressed, this
aspect too of plaintiffs' § 13(d) claims
must be decided against them.19
Plaintiffs' § 14(a)
Claims
Plaintiffs also avow that
defendants' proxy material is materially
false and misleading, and hence violative of
§ 14(a) of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. §
78n), note 2 supra, which makes it
unlawful for any person to solicit any proxy
"in contravention of such rules and
regulations as the [Securities and Exchange]
Commission may prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors." Pursuant to
this grant of authority, the Commission
promulgated Rule 14a-9(a), 17 C.F.R. §
240.14a-9(a) (1974), prohibiting
solicitation by means of a proxy statement
"containing any statement which, at the time
and in light of the circumstances under
which it is made, is false or misleading
with respect to any material fact, or which
omits to state any material fact necessary
in order to make the statements therein not
false or misleading or necessary to correct
any statement in any earlier communication .
. . which has become false or misleading."20
Plaintiffs' standing to assert a
private right of action for an alleged §
14(a) violation is of course no longer in
doubt.
J. I. Case v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426, 431-432,
84 S.Ct. 1555, 12 L.Ed.2d 423 (1964).
The critical determination, in such
litigation, is whether a statement, or an
omission, is "material". "Materiality" for §
14(a) purposes has been defined
General Time Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc.,
403 F.2d 159, 162 (2d Cir. 1968),
cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1026, 89 S.Ct. 631,
21 L.Ed.2d 570 (1969):
The test, we suppose, is whether,
taking a properly realistic view, there is a
substantial likelihood that the misstatement
Page 64
or omission may have led a stockholder to
grant a proxy to the solicitor or to
withhold one from the other side, whereas in
the absence of this he would have taken a
contrary course.
See also Mr. Justice
Harlan's statement
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co., 396 U.S.
375, 384-385, 90 S.Ct. 616, 24 L. Ed.2d 593
(1970), citing with apparent approval
the test of materiality of General Tire
Corp. v. Talley Industries, Inc., supra.21
Plaintiffs' complaint (par. 16)
charges defendants with twelve § 14(a)
violations; however, in their Brief at
22-23, and at oral argument, they addressed
themselves to only five of these. Those not
advanced beyond the complaint stage have
been examined; they are without merit. The
remaining five, as set forth in plaintiffs'
Brief at 22-23, are:
(1) The failure to disclose that
the Directors, Lerner, Saltzman, Redlhammer
and Esquivel, have violated Section 13d of
the Exchange Act, 15 U.S. C. 78m(d);
(2) The failure to adequately
disclose the circumstances surrounding the
resignation of James G. Hellmuth as a
director;
(3) The failure to obtain and
disclose an independent outside review of
the fairness of the purchase price for
Multi-Amp's business;
(4) The failure to disclose
overtures by the Combustion Engineering
Corporation and other potential purchasers
of Multi-Amp's assets and the inclusion of
the misleading statement that, ". . . there
can be no assurance that other offers to
acquire the corporation will be forthcoming
in the future." (Complaint, Exhibit A, p.
17); and
(5) The failure to disclose that
the defendant director, James H. Berick,
whose occupation is listed as an attorney,
is also a trustee and officer of Realty
ReFund Trust (a real estate investment trust
controlled by Lerner) (Tr. 231-7), and a
director and Vice President of ReFund
Advisors, Inc. (the advisor of Realty ReFund
Trust, and also controlled by Lerner) (Tr.
231-8).
Defendants respond that their
counsel have not only had extensive
conferences with the Commission, but that
their initial draft of Proxy Statement,
submitted to the Commission on July 19,
1974, was substantially revised after the
Commission staff meticulously reviewed it
and directed numerous alterations and
additions. Collier Affidavit, paras. 4-19,
Exhibits B-E to Collier Affidavit. While
this is so, the court is required to make
its own appraisal of plaintiffs' charges.
See Rule 14a-9(b), 17 C.F.R. §
240.14a-9(b)(1974), and Rule 14a-6, 17
C.F.R. § 240.14a-6 (1974); cf.
General Tire Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc., 403 F.2d at 163;
Klastorin v. Roth, 353 F.2d 182, 183 n.
2 (2d Cir. 1965). It does so in the same
numerical sequence in which plaintiffs
advance them.
1. Defendants' failure to file
Schedule 13D in April 1974 and July 1974:
There is no need to advise the stockholders
of a four-year old violation of § 13(d), for
substantially all the reasons which led this
court to deny plaintiffs injunctive relief
in the portion of this opinion which dealt
with plaintiffs'
Page 65
§ 13(d) claims. As to the events of
July-August 1974, this court has found no
violation of § 13(d). Cf.
Missouri Portland Cement Co. v. Cargill,
Inc., 498 F.2d 851 (2d Cir. 1974).
2. The Hellmuth resignation:
Defendants' Proxy Statement adequately
discloses the facts of the Hellmuth
resignation.
Smallwood v. Pearl Brewing Co.,
489 F.2d 579
(5th Cir. 1974).22
3. The lack of an independent
appraisal: After commencement of suit
defendants in fact obtained "an independent
outside review of the fairness of the
purchase price for Multi-Amp's business."
This review, by Edwards & Hanly, has cleared
the Commission and was mailed to
stockholders on or about October 16, 1974.
Moreover, plaintiffs are guilty of a
misguided invocation of § 14(a) and Rule
14a-9a in any case. They are directed at
disclosure; they do not create a "fairness"
cause of action. Cf.
Popkin v. Bishop, 464 F.2d 714 (2d Cir.
1972). Thus, even if there had been no
independent appraisal, there would be no
infraction of the proxy statutes and rules.23
4. The Combustion Engineering
matter: There was no necessity to
disclose in the Proxy Statement the
"overture" by Combustion Engineering, Inc.
There was one telephone call, on or about
August 13, 1974, by a Mr. Kiamie, and there
was no follow-up whatever. It was but a
casual inquiry, and not in the "firm offer"
category of Research Cottrell or
Perkin-Elmer, both of which were disclosed.
See note 13, supra. Cf.
Gerstle v. Gamble-Skogmo, Inc., 478 F. 2d at
1291-1292.
Moreover, the statement that
there can be no assurances of other offers
"to acquire the corporation" in the future
is not misleading. The court accepts
defendants' statement that this was included
at the Commission's direction. Collier
Affidavit, paras. 16-17.
5. The Berick associations:
The failure to disclose the associations of
Mr. Berick with Lerner-controlled companies
is in a different category. It
Page 66
must be concluded that this omission is
material, in that the information might well
be considered important by a reasonable
shareholder who was weighing how to cast his
vote. As plaintiffs persuasively argue
(Brief at 29-30), Berick's position is
particularly sensitive because of the
"inherent conflicting interests" of Lerner,
Saltzman, Redlhammer and Esquivel (Proxy
Statement at 3), and the fact that Baker's
first Board meeting, on August 15, 1974, was
that which saw the Proxy Statement and
transaction with MUL approved by the Board.
In this regard it is noted that the
Commission's letter of August 6, 1974, at
para. 2(a), directed that the Proxy
Statement set forth "the affiliation of the
parties involved . . . ." Thus, it is
important for the stockholders to know not
only that Berick's firm is counsel for M-A (see
Proxy Statement, "Legal Matters"), but also
of his own affiliation with other Lerner
enterprises, including but not limited to
Realty ReFund Trust and ReFund Advisors,
Inc., both of which are listed under
Lerner's name in the 1974 Proxy Statement
(at 18).
Accordingly, this information
regarding Berick should be transmitted by a
"supplemental letter" (Defs. Br. at 37) to
M-A's shareholders. Cf.
Corenco Corp. v. Schiavone & Sons, Inc., 488
F. 2d at 214-215.24
In all other respects, the court
finds defendants' Proxy Statement to be in
compliance with § 14(a) and Rule 14a-9(a).
Plaintiffs' State-Created
Claims
Pendent to plaintiffs' Exchange
Act claims are their claims that the Lerner
group, as directors and controlling
stockholders, have violated their fiduciary
obligations to M-A and its other
stockholders by entering into a contract
with MUL for the sale of M-A's assets for an
inadequate and inequitable price, and by
soliciting proxies therefor by means of
false and misleading proxy materials.
The allegations addressed to
defendants' proxy materials have already
been discussed.25
Now the "fairness" issue must be confronted,
albeit in the restricted context framed by
the current procedural stage, wherein
plaintiffs seek the interim relief earlier
detailed.
Both as directors and as dominant
stockholders, Lerner, Saltzman, Redlhammer
and Esquivel stood in a fiduciary
relationship to M-A, their corporation, and
to its minority stockholders.
Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295, 306, 60
S.Ct. 238, 84 L.Ed. 281 (1939);
Southern Pac. Co. v. Bogert, 250 U.S. 483,
39 S.Ct. 533, 63 L.Ed. 1099 (1919).26
Their fiduciary obligations must be
determined from the law of New Jersey, M-A's
state of incorporation.
Rogers v. Guaranty Trust Co. of New York,
288 U.S. 123, 136, 53 S.Ct. 295, 77 L.Ed.
652 (1933).
As plaintiffs concede, and
defendants proclaim, the principle of a
century ago that any contract between a
director and his corporation was voidable at
the instance of the corporation or its
shareholders,
Page 67
without regard to the fairness of the
transaction, has been supplanted widely, and
in New Jersey by N.J.S.A. 14A:6-8, which in
pertinent part provides:
Effect Of Common Directorships
And Directors' Personal Interest. (1)
No contract or other transaction between a
corporation and one or more of its directors
. . . or . . . any . . . corporation . . .
in which one or more of its directors are
directors or are otherwise interested, shall
be void or voidable solely by reason of such
common directorship or interest, or solely
because such director or directors are
present at the meeting of the board or a
committee thereof which authorizes or
approves the contract or transaction, or
solely because his or their votes are
counted for such purpose, if
(a) the contract or other
transaction is fair and reasonable as to the
corporation at the time it is authorized,
approved or ratified; or
(b) the fact of the common
directorship or interest is disclosed or
known to the board or committee and the
board or committee authorizes, approves, or
ratifies the contract or transaction by
unanimous written consent, provided at least
one director so consenting is disinterested,
or by affirmative vote of a majority of the
disinterested directors, even though the
disinterested directors be less than a
quorum; or
(c) the fact of the common
directorship or interest is disclosed or
known to the shareholders, and they
authorize, approve or ratify the contract or
transaction.
While no New Jersey decision has
as yet addressed the subject, it is this
court's view that, notwithstanding the use
of "or" to connect the subdivisions of the
statute, the preferable construction is to
require that a particular transaction pass
muster under each subdivision. Israels, The
Corporate TriangleSome Corporate Aspects of
the New Jersey, New York and Delaware
Statutes, 23 Rutgers L.Rev. 615, 627 (1969);
and see,
Remillard Brick Co. v. Remillard-Dandine
Co., 109 Cal.App.2d 405, 241 P.2d 66 (1952),
applying a similar construction to § 820 of
the California Corporations Code, from which
14A:6-8 was derived. As the California court
states, the requirements of the fiduciary
obligation of a director are not lessened
because he may disclose to his co-directors
his interest in a transaction with the
corporation. See also
Kennerson v. Burbank Amusement Co., 120
Cal.App.2d 157, 260 P.2d 823 (1953).
Accordingly, the oft-stated duty of the
director is still applicable:
A director is a fiduciary.
(citation omitted) So is a dominant or
controlling stockholder or group of
stockholders. (citation omitted) Their
powers are powers in trust. (citation
omitted) Their dealings with the corporation
are subjected to rigorous scrutiny and where
any of their contracts or engagements with
the corporation is challenged the burden is
on the director or stockholder not only to
prove the good faith of the transaction but
also to show its inherent fairness from the
viewpoint of the corporation and those
interested therein. (citation omitted) The
essence of the test is whether or not under
all the circumstances the transaction
carries the earmarks of an arm's length
bargain. If it does not, equity will set it
aside. . . .27
Pepper
v. Litton, 308 U.S. at 306, 60 S. Ct. at 245.
The parties disagree over whether
the aforesaid statutory revision operates to
relieve a director of the burden of proving
the fairness of contracts
Page 68
between his corporation and himself.
Manifestly it does not. This court, like the
California courts in Remillard and
Kennerson, perceives nothing in the
revised enactment to suggest that the
legislature intended it to alter the
traditional doctrine that a fiduciary who
engages in self-dealing must endure the
burden of proving that a challenged
transaction is fair and equitable. Thus the
Commissioners' Notes accompanying the
statute are enlightening:
Subsections 14A:6-8(1) and
14A:6-8(2) of this section have been adapted
from section 820 of the California Act and
have no counterpart in Title 14.
Substantially similar provisions are
contained in the New York and Delaware Acts.
The rule presently in effect in New Jersey
is that any contract or other transaction
between a corporation and one or more of its
directors is voidable at the election of the
corporation unless the party seeking to
enforce the contract or transaction
demonstrates by clear and convincing
proof that it is honest, fair and
reasonable.
Abeles v. Adams Engineering Co. Inc., 35
N.J. 411, 428-429, 173 A.2d 246 (1961).
The Commission believed that this rule
operates harshly in many cases, and that the
rule stated in this section would eliminate
the inequities and uncertainties caused by
the present rule, leaving undisturbed the
power of the courts to deal with such
matters under general equitable principles.
(emphasis supplied).
The change worked by the statute,
then, does not relieve the directors of the
burden, as fiduciaries, of proving the
fairness of the transaction. It simply sets
a less stringent standard for the requisite
proof, substituting the "preponderance of
the evidence" test for the "clear and
convincing" requirement. No other conclusion
can be reasonably drawn from the underscored
portion of the aforesaid commentary.
Now to be considered is whether
the defendants have sufficiently
demonstrated, at this stage of the case, the
fairness of the challenged transaction, and
their compliance with the other provisions
of 14A:8-6.
On the issue of fairness, it is
noted that the amount per share a
shareholder will receive ($6.04) is 31% over
the closing market price of 4 5/8 on July
26, 1974; and is in excess of the per share
book value as at April 30, 1974 ($5.64) and
the per share net tangible asset figure
($5.22) as at the same date. Moreover, since
commencement of suit, defendants, as has
been recounted earlier, have obtained an
independent appraisal which styles as fair
the price set for M-A's assets.
Plaintiffs oppose this evidence
with none of their own. Their flimsy
reference to M-A's proposed transaction with
Research-Cottrell is unpersuasive. These
discussions were terminated, not only
because the Research-Cottrell shares had
greatly diminished in value, but because
they gave every indication of continuing
their plungewhich is exactly what occurred.
Accordingly, the court finds at this time
that defendants have made a prima facie
showing of the fairness of the challenged
transaction.
At oral argument plaintiffs'
counsel, in recognition of the weakness of
his position on the issue of fairness,
suggested that, if management wins the
election, he be allowed a brief period
thereafter to obtain "fairness" proof before
the M-A/MUL sale's culmination. This court
cannot put itself into the position of
favoring one side or the other in this case.
Thus it will not order defendants at this
time to defer consummation of the
transaction for any period after the
meeting, should defendants prevail in the
voting.
As to the other provisions of
14A:6-8, when the M-A Board voted on August
15, 1974 to approve the challenged
transaction, there was disclosure of the
interest in MUL of the Lerner group, there
was "unanimous written consent", and among
those consenting were Baker and Berick, who,
so far as the record presently stands, were
and are "disinterested
Page 69
directors" under N.J.S.A. 14A:6-8(b).
Furthermore, "the fact of the common
directorship or interest" [N.J.S.A.
14A:6-8(c)] is being disclosed in the Proxy
Statement; the shareholders will be thus
advised.
Under all the circumstances,
therefore, plaintiffs are not entitled to
interim relief on their state-based claims.28
Defendants' Claims
1. The derivative actions should
be dismissed since plaintiffs do not fairly
and adequately represent the shareholders of
Multi-Amp.
Rule 23.1 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, entitled "Derivative
Actions by Shareholders", provides in
relevant part as follows:
. . . The derivative action may
not be maintained if it appears that the
plaintiff does not fairly and adequately
represent the interests of the shareholders
or members similarly situated in enforcing
the right of the corporation . . . .
Defendants contend that the named
plaintiffs, and the alleged real parties in
interest who stand behind them, cannot,
because of their own unique private
interests, fairly and adequately represent
the remaining M-A shareholders.29
See Answer, Fifth Defense, para. 24.
The burden thus assumed by
defendants is a heavy one in view of the
law's regard for those who seek to vindicate
a corporation's rights. See
Surowitz v. Hilton Hotels Corp., 383 U.S.
363, 86 S. Ct. 845, 15 L.Ed.2d 807 (1965).30
On the basis of what is before
the court at this time, the interests of
Scott and Puttkammer are not such as would
justify dismissal of the derivative causes
of action herein at this early juncture.
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.S. 1683, 40 L.
Ed.2d 90 (1974);
Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45, 78 S.Ct.
99, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957).
Nolen v. Shaw-Walker Co., 449 F.2d 506, 509
(6th Cir. 1971), upon which defendants
rely, is inapposite.31
The fact of Gross' interest is not
overlooked. However, Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1
speaks of "plaintiff" it is he, not
someone who may be lending him financial
assistance, who is to be looked to in order
to determine if the interests of the
shareholders will be fairly represented.
2. Plaintiffs' violation of §
13(d).
Critical to defendants' charge
that plaintiffs have violated § 13(d) is
whether National Securities & Research Corp.
(NSRC), for purposes of that statute, is a
member of plaintiffs' "group". Defendants
requested and were granted an evidentiary
hearing on this question. Testimony before
the court, and in deposition, has been taken
from Lawrence Kahn and William Bradford of
NSRC; Messrs. Waldman and Graf, counsel for
NSRC; and Donald Goebert, a member of
plaintiffs' slate of nominees for directors.
Page 70
On November 11, 1974 a consent
order was entered which provides for
deferral of this issue until counsel for
NSRC have an opportunity to respond to
defendants' contentions. The order further
provides that the meeting will go forward on
November 14, 1974, with the shareholder
votes being appropriately separated until
the court rules on the defendants' § 13(d)
counterclaim.
3. Plaintiffs' violations of §
14(a).
In view of the parties' desire
that the meeting proceed, as provided in the
aforementioned order of November 11, 1974, I
will defer a decision on this claim as well.
Submit an appropriate order.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
The parties having completed
their submissions, my determination on the
reserved matters follows.
Defendants' § 13(d)
counterclaim
Defendants contend that by reason
of certain activity, including discussions
and meetings, plaintiffs and others became a
"group" under § 13(d)(3) and hence a
"person" for § 13(d)(1) purposes; therefore,
their argument runs, since the aggregate
shares held by this "group" exceeded five
percent of the outstanding M-A shares, it
had to make a timely filing of a Schedule
13D. Since there was no such filing by the
alleged "group", defendants would have me
enjoin the individuals in the group from
voting and exercising any rights at the
November 1974 annual meeting.
The shareholders claimed to
constitute the "group" are as follows: NSRC;
William M. Scott, III; Charles W.
Puttkammer; Isidor M. Gross; Drexel Equity
Fund, Inc. and Donald F. U. Goebert (Defs.
Exhibit "D", 11/19/74).
Defendants predictably have aimed
most of their fire at NSRC, investment
adviser to National Securities Growth Fund
(NSGF), a publicly held mutual fund, without
whose 89,000 shares (9.7% of the total
shares outstanding), the five percent
threshold for triggering the Schedule 13D
filing requirement would not be reached by
the total holdings of the balance of the
members of the alleged "group".1
After a most careful review of
the record of this proceeding, and the
voluminous submissions, I conclude that NSRC
cannot be viewed as a member of the alleged
"group".2
The requisites for finding that a
"group" exists under § 13(d) (3) have been
set forth
Texasgulf Inc. v. Canada Development Corp.,
366 F.Supp. 374, 403 (S.D.Tex.1973):
It takes more than the arithmetic
of adding up shares to determine that a
statutory group exists and that a filing
must be made. Two criteria must be met: (1)
The members must agree to act together for
the purpose of acquiring, holding, or
disposing of securities; and (2) once the
members agree to act, they must own
beneficially or acquire beneficially in
excess of 5% of a class of equity security.
Mere relationship, among persons or
entities, whether family, personal or
business, is insufficient to create a group
which is deemed to be a statutory person.
There must be agreement to act in concert.
See also GAF Corp. v.
Milstein, supra. As the following
facts demonstrate, NSRC's activity falls far
short of manifesting an agreement with
others, including plaintiffs, to acquire,
hold, or dispose of M-A's securities.
NSRC was convinced that M-A's
management, by its conceded self-dealing
Page 71
with MUL, had proposed a grossly
inadequate price ($6.04 per share) for all
of M-A's assets. Bradford, T 51. Thus, when
in late July 1974 NSRC representatives first
learned of the proposal, Mr. Kahn of NSRC
directed Mr. Bradford, NSRC's senior
securities analyst, to contact Mr. Lerner to
"find out what it was all about." Kahn Dep.,
14. Kahn and Bradford then met with Lerner
and told him the proposed transaction was
unfair to M-A's shareholders. Id.
15-17.
After his meeting with Lerner,
Kahn spoke by telephone with Mr. Gross.
Id. 18. Both felt that the management
proposal was unfair; and Gross suggested
they meet. Id. 19.
Their meeting occurred on August
19, 1974, with Mr. Scott accompanying Mr.
Gross, and NSRC represented by Messrs. Kahn,
Bradford and Ardizzone. All present were
still opposed to the proposed sale of
assets. Id. 23-24. Kahn stated NSRC
had referred the matter to its counsel for
advice; and Gross intimated he might
initiate suit in New Jersey. Id. 25.
Kahn "made it very clear" that NSRC would
not participate in forming a slate of
nominees for directors, that its only
interest was to protect its own
shareholders, and that it was awaiting its
counsel's advice. Id. 26.
On August 21, 1974 NSRC's
investment committee met. Because they "felt
that this looked like an inside steal and
that we shouldn't be a part of it", the
committee determined not only to vote
against the proposed transaction but also
against the reelection of the management
Board of Directors. Id. 34. At this
time NSRC was not certain whether there
would be a slate in opposition to
management's. Although Mr. Scott and Mr.
Gross mentioned "casually" that they might
put up a slate of directors in opposition,
NSRC had no knowledge that such a slate
would be advanced or who would be on such a
slate; and following the August 21, 1974
meeting NSRC, or NSGF, transmitted its
proxy. Id. 37.
No one at NSRC was thereafter in
communication with either Mr. Scott or Mr.
Puttkammer, "[o]r any other person in
opposition to the proposal with respect to
voting for an opposition slate". Id.
36.
A few days after receipt of the
management proxy, Mr. Kahn received a
telephone call from a representative of
Drexel Equity Fund, and later from another
M-A shareholder, a Mr. Shapiro. Both
announced they were opposed to the assets
sale and were advised by Kahn that he was as
well.
NSRC's counsel had withheld their
advice until they received management's
proxy material.
At a subsequent time in late
August 1974, Mr. Gross telephoned Mr. Kahn
again to advise him he was consulting
counsel, Everett M. Scherer, Esq., to which
Mr. Kahn responded that NSRC might
contribute up to $500 for legal expenses.
Id. 41-42. Neither Kahn, nor anyone else
on behalf of NSRC, ever firmed up this
offer, and no such contribution was ever
made.
On September 4, 1974 a meeting
was held at the offices of Riker, Danzig,
Scherer and Brown in Newark, the firm
retained by plaintiffs herein. Counsel for
NSRC were present. Discussion was had
regarding the assets transaction,
management's proxy material, and the
procedures intended to be followed by those
opposed to management's proposal. NSRC's
counsel left with Messrs. Scherer and Weiss,
Mr. Scherer's partner, a copy of a draft of
a proposed complaint, omitting plaintiffs'
names. Obviously there was reflected at this
meeting a feeling that the price offered for
the assets was not fair. Waldman Dep. 9.
Plaintiffs were at this meeting.
Scott and Puttkammer stated they were going
to be plaintiffs; Gross, also present,
stated he would not be. Mr. Waldman, an
attorney for NSRC, stated NSRC would not be
a plaintiff. Mr. Waldman also stated, when
asked if NSRC would contribute to litigation
expenses, that
Page 72
the answer was "no" but he "would talk to
his client." Id. 26. Thereafter NSRC
confirmed for Mr. Waldman that it would make
no contribution.
Subsequent to the meeting of
counsel, Mr. Weiss transmitted to NSRC's
counsel copies of documents by the parties
to this suit. There were no further meetings
between counsel, and there was no
participation in or advice about the ensuing
litigation, or plaintiffs' proxy preparation
or solicitation, by NSRC or anyone on its
behalf.
Defendants tender no decisional
authority, nor has this court's independent
research disclosed any, which would warrant
expanding the concept of a § 13(d)(3)
"group" to include NSRC within the orbit of
plaintiffs and their allies. Water & Wall
Associates Inc. v. American Consumer
Industries, Inc., supra. The
meetings, conferences and telephone calls
reflect little more than that concerned
shareholders were communicating with NSRC to
ascertain its views as a 10% shareholder.
Given NSRC's joinder with the Lerner group,
the proposal would have been almost
impossible to defeat. To the extent that
plaintiffs sought to have NSRC form a common
and active front they were unsuccessful.
NSRC contributed no funds, provided no
advice (other than the draft of a
complaint), furnished no support to the
opposition's solicitation of proxies, did
not join in the lawsuit, and, in all
respects, did nothing more than would be
required to represent its own interest.
Thus, on the facts before me at this time,
defendants' request for preliminary
injunctive relief on their § 13(d)
counterclaim must be denied.
Defendants' § 14(a)
counterclaim
Defendants also urge a
construction of Rule 14a-11 that would bring
the activities of plaintiffs and those
opposing the sale of assets within the ambit
of federal proxy regulation. This claim
implicates Rule 14a-11(c)(1), 17 C.F.R. §
240.14a-11(c)(1) (1974):
No solicitation subject to this
rule shall be made by any person other than
the management of an issuer unless at least
five business days prior thereto, or such
shorter period as the Commission may
authorize upon a showing of good cause
therefor, there has been filed, with the
Commission and with each national securities
exchange upon which any security of the
issuer is listed and registered, by or on
behalf of each participant in such
solicitation, a statement in duplicate
containing the information specified by
Schedule 14B.
In conformity with the broad
definition given to the term "solicitation",3
defendants argue that meetings and
communications among plaintiffs and other
individuals for the purpose of arousing
opposition to the transaction constitute a
proxy solicitation. They contend that
plaintiffs' filing of Schedule 14B on
September 30, 1974 was untimely since an
opposition slate of directors had been
selected in early September and attempts by
shareholders challenging the transaction to
consolidate support to defeat the proposal
at the annual meeting began several months
before the filing. It is arguable that when
the activities of a group are part of "a
continuous plan" intended to result in
solicitation, the filing requirements of the
proxy rules may be actuated before the
actual solicitation occurs. See, e. g.,
Studebaker Corp. v. Gittlin,
360 F.2d 692, 696 (2d Cir. 1966).
Thus, defendants essentially
contend that communications among
shareholders opposing the sale of assets
either
Page 73
constituted solicitation or were part of
a continuous plan intended to culminate in a
solicitation of all voting shareholders.
This argument is rejected.
As hereinbefore indicated, this
court does not view the discussions between
NSRC and other shareholders opposed to the
transaction in question as substantial
enough to trigger the filing requirements of
the Williams Act. The same considerations
apply with equal force to the proxy
regulations. The primary concern among
shareholders who opposed the transaction
herein was to block management from selling
M-A's assets to MUL for an inadequate
consideration. There is evidence to indicate
that these shareholders were contemplating
litigation to forestall approval of the sale
at the annual meeting. This, however, does
not prove that a solicitation in opposition
to the proposal was in the offing. This
court does not believe that the term
"solicitation" was intended to apply to
communications from one stockholder, who is
opposed to a transaction, to another, who is
also opposed, or to meetings among
shareholders who are of all the same mind
that M-A's directors are acting unfairly in
connection with the sale of assets and
liquidation of the corporation. Persons who
have invested money in a corporate entity
should be free to express their mutual
concern among themselves when there exists a
plan to liquidate the corporation. The mere
fact that these persons are shareholders
does not raise such communications to the
level of proxy solicitation. Cf.
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. v. Lewis,
334 F.Supp. 1398, 1401 (S.D. N.Y. 1971).
Furthermore, the evidence is
inadequate to establish that plaintiffs and
the other persons named in the counterclaim
were involved in a continuous plan intended
to result in a proxy solicitation to all
shareholders of M-A.
On September 30, 1974, Goebert,
Puttkammer, Scott, Gross and the Multi-Amp
Shareholders Protective Committee filed
their solicitation materials as required by
Rule 14a-11(c)(1). Defendants have failed to
show that this filing was untimely. The
proxy statement of the Multi-Amp
Shareholders Protective Committee is dated
October 14, 1974 (Defendants' Exhibit,
Goebert # 1). Goebert has testified that he
spent October 14, 15 and 16, 1974, putting
the opposition's proxy statements in the
mail. (Goebert Dep. at 27, L. 14 to 28, L.
6). The defendants have not rebutted this
evidence. Therefore, those contesting the
sale of assets complied with the filing
requirements of Rule 14a-11(c)(1) since they
filed their proxy statements more than five
days prior to the actual solicitation.
Defendants also allege that the
Schedules 14B filed by members of the
opposition are materially deficient and
misleading. Since defendants have not
submitted these documents for examination by
the court, this contention is rejected.
Moreover, giving full credence to the
arguments made in defendants' submissions, I
would deny the claim on its merits if it
were properly before me.
Finally, it is noted that the
Commission has reviewed the Schedules 14B
and amendments thereto which have been filed
by pertinent members of the opposition.
While this court is not bound by the
Commission's response to these filings, the
fact that the Commission has not sought to
enjoin the use of the opposition's proxies
at the annual meeting certainly suggests
that the schedules adequately comply with
proxy rules and regulations. See, e. g.
General Time Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc.,
403 F.2d 159, 163 (2d Cir. 1968),
cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1026, 89 S.Ct. 631,
21 L.Ed.2d 570 (1969);
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. v. Lewis,
334 F.Supp. at 1402;
McConnell v. Lucht, 320 F.Supp. 1162, 1166
(S.D.N.Y.1970).
Hence, defendants' § 14(a)
counterclaim is also undeserving of
injunctive relief.
An appropriate order should be
submitted on 3-days notice.
Notes:
1. Act of July 29, 1968, Pub.L. No.
90-439, 82 Stat. 454, amending 15 U.S.C. §§
78m-78n (1964) [codified at 15 U.S.C. §§
78m(d), (e), 78n(d)-(f) (Supp. V, 1965-69),
as amended, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d), (e),
78n(d)-(f) (1970)].
2. Sec. 13(d) states:
(d)(1) Any person who, after
acquiring directly or indirectly the
beneficial ownership of any equity security
of a class which is registered pursuant to
section 12 of this title, or any equity
security of an insurance company which would
have been required to be so registered
except for the exemption contained in
section 12(g) (2) (G) of this title, or any
equity security issued by a closed-end
investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, is directly
or indirectly the beneficial owner of more
than 5 per centum of such class shall,
within ten days after such acquisition, send
to the issuer of the security at its
principal executive office, by registered or
certified mail, send to each exchange where
the security is traded, and file with the
Commission, a statement containing such of
the following information, and such
additional information, as the Commission
may by rules and regulations prescribe as
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors
(A) the background and identity
of all persons by whom or on whose behalf
the purchases have been or are to be
effected;
(B) the source and amount of the
funds or other consideration used or to be
used in making the purchases, and if any
part of the purchase price or proposed
purchase price is represented or is to be
represented by funds or other consideration
borrowed or otherwise obtained for the
purpose of acquiring, holding, or trading
such security, a description of the
transaction and the names of the parties
thereto, except that where a source of funds
is a loan made in the ordinary course of
business by a bank, as defined in section
3(a)(6) of this title, if the person filing
such statement so requests, the name of the
bank shall not be made available to the
public;
(C) if the purpose of the
purchases or prospective purchases is to
acquire control of the business of the
issuer of the securities, any plans or
proposals which such persons may have to
liquidate such issuer, to sell its assets to
or merge it with any other persons, or to
make any other major change in its business
or corporate structure;
(D) the number of shares of such
security which are beneficially owned, and
the number of shares concerning which there
is a right to acquire, directly or
indirectly, by (i) such person, and (ii) by
each associate of such person, giving the
name and address of each such associate; and
(E) information as to any
contracts, arrangements, or understandings
with any person with respect to any
securities of the issuer, including but not
limited to transfer of any of the
securities, joint ventures, loan or option
arrangements, puts or calls, guaranties of
loans, guaranties against loss or guaranties
of profits, division of losses or profits,
or the giving or withholding of proxies,
naming the persons with whom such contracts,
arrangements, or understandings have been
entered into, and giving the details
thereof.
(d)(2) If any material change
occurs in the facts set forth in the
statements to the issuer and the exchange,
and in the statement filed with the
Commission, an amendment shall be
transmitted to the issuer and the exchange
and shall be filed with the Commission, in
accordance with such rules and regulations
as the Commission may prescribe as necessary
or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors.
(d) (3) When two or more persons
act as a partnership, limited partnership,
syndicate, or other group for the purpose of
acquiring, holding, or disposing of
securities of an issuer, such syndicate or
group shall be deemed a "person" for the
purposes of this subsection.
(d)(4) In determining, for
purposes of this subsection, any percentage
of a class of any security, such class shall
be deemed to consist of the amount of the
outstanding securities of such class,
exclusive of any securities of such class
held by or for the account of the issuer or
a subsidiary of the issuer.
(d)(5) The Commission, by rule or
regulation or by order, may permit any
person to file in lieu of the statement
required by paragraph (1) of this subsection
or the rules and regulations thereunder, a
notice stating the name of such person, the
number of shares of any equity securities
subject to paragraph (1) which are owned by
him, the date of their acquisition and such
other information as the Commission may
specify, if it appears to the Commission
that such securities were acquired by such
person in the ordinary course of his
business and were not acquired for the
purpose of and do not have the effect of
changing or influencing the control of the
issuer nor in connection with or as a
participant in any transaction having such
purpose or effect.
(d) (6) The provisions of this
subsection shall not apply to
(A) any acquisition or offer to
acquire securities made or proposed to be
made by means of a registration statement
under the Securities Act of 1933;
(B) any acquisition of the
beneficial ownership of a security which,
together with all other acquisitions by the
same person of securities of the same class
during the preceding twelve months, does not
exceed 2 per centum of that class;
(C) any acquisition of any equity
security by the issuer of such security;
(D) any acquisition or proposed
acquisition of a security which the
Commission, by rules or regulations or by
order, shall exempt from the provisions of
this subsection as not entered into for the
purpose of, and not having the effect of,
changing or influencing the control of the
issuer or otherwise as not comprehended
within the purposes of this subsection.
Sec. 14(a) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any
person, by the use of the mails or by any
means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce or of any facility of a national
securities exchange or otherwise, in
contravention of such rules and regulations
as the Commission may prescribe as necessary
or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors, to solicit or
to permit the use of his name to solicit any
proxy or consent or authorization in respect
of any security (other than an exempted
security) registered pursuant to section 12
of this title.
3. So far as here pertinent, § 27
provides:
The district courts of the United
States, and the United States courts of any
Territory or other place subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States shall have
exclusive jurisdiction of violations of this
chapter or the rules and regulations
thereunder . . .. Any criminal proceeding
may be brought in the district wherein any
act or transaction constituting the
violation occurred. Any suit or action to
enforce any liability or duty created by
this chapter or rules and regulations
thereunder, or to enjoin any violation of
such chapter or rules and regulations, may
be brought in any such district or in the
district wherein the defendant is found or
is an inhabitant or transacts business, and
process in such cases may be served in any
other district of which the defendant is an
inhabitant or wherever the defendant may be
found.
4. Isidor Gross, one of the sellers, was
at the time Chairman of the Board and
President of M-A. Berick Affidavit, para. 3.
5. Thus, plaintiffs argue that (Pffs. Br.
at 13-14):
. . . at least by the directors'
meeting of July 10, 1974 Redlhammer and
Esquivel were joining Lerner and Saltzman as
part of a group negotiating for the purchase
of Multi-Amp's assets. (Ex. P. 2 id; Tr.
9-7; 60-10; 63-2; 121-9; 209-19; 241-9).
Whether they can be considered part of the
group earlier in view of Lerner's testimony
that in thinking about the plan Redlhammer
and Esquivel would be part of the group (Tr.
241-17) we need not get involved with on
this application. . . .
See also Pffs. Reply Br.
at 27, where it is stated that Redlhammer
and Esquivel, "on or prior to July 10, 1974
. . . agreed to act in concert [with Lerner
and Saltzman] in relation to their stock
holdings in Multi-Amp. This necessitates the
filing of an amendment to what should have
been the prior filings by Lerner and
Saltzman . ." In this regard it is noted
that § 13(d) (2) requires amendment to a
previously filed Schedule 13D where "any
material change occurs in the facts set
forth in the . . . [Schedule 13D]." See
note 2, supra. It is obvious that if
L & S, Lerner and Saltzman had filed a
Schedule D in April 1970 it would not have
named Redlhammer and Esquivel as being in
their group, and it would not have stated
that it was the purpose of those acquiring
control to "liquidate . . . [the] issuer,
[or] to sell its assets . . .." See §
13(d)(1)(C). Thus, plaintiffs continue, the
Lerner group, even if it had filed in April
1970, would be in violation of § 13(d) when
it failed to file an Amended Schedule 13D
within 10 days after July 10, 1974.
6. In April 1970 the reporting amount was
10%. It was reduced to 5% on December 22,
1970.
7. Plaintiffs do not deny that the Gross
family (including Isidor Gross) were the
sellers of the M-A stock purchased by L & S,
Lerner and Saltzman. Neither do they deny
that Isidor Gross at the time was Board
Chairman and President.
8. Because M-A's securities are listed on
the American Stock Exchange it is required
by Section 13(a) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. 78m(a), and Rules
13a-1, 13a-13 and 13a-11, to file annual
reports with the Commission on Form 10-K,
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and current
reports of material corporate |