|
Page 582
411 U.S. 582
93 S.Ct. 1736 36 L.Ed.2d 503 KERN COUNTY LAND COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM CORPORATION.
No. 711059
Argued Dec. 5 and 6, 1972.
Decided May 7, 1973.
Syllabus
During a tender-offer campaign,
respondent bought more than 10% of the
outstanding stock of petitioner's
predecessor (Old Kern). Respondent was
blocked in its takeover efforts by a
defensive merger between Old Kern and
Tenneco, in which Old Kern stockholders were
to receive new Tenneco stock on a
share-for-share basis. Less than a month
after its initial tender offer, respondent
thereupon negotiated a binding option to
sell to Tenneco at a date over six months
after the tender offer expired all the new
Tenneco stock to which respondent would be
entitled when the merger took place. Sale of
the postmerger stock yielded respondent a
profit of some $19 million, which petitioner
sought to recover by a suit under § 16(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
prohibiting profitable short-swing
speculation by statutory insiders. The
District Court's summary judgment for
petitioner was reversed by the Court of
Appeals. Held: The transactions, which were
not based on a statutory insider's
information and were not susceptible of the
speculative abuse that § 16(b) was designed
to prevent, did not constitute 'sales'
within the meaning of that provision. Pp.
591604.
(a) There was nothing in
connection with respondent's tender-offer
acquisition of Old Kern stock or the
exchange thereof for the Tenneco stock that
gave respondent 'inside information,' and
once the merger, which respondent did not
engineer, was approved the Old Kern-Tenneco
stock exchange was involuntary. Pp. 596600.
(b) The option agreement was
not of itself a 'sale'; the option was
grounded on the mutual advantages to
respondent as a minority stockholder that
wanted to terminate an investment it had not
chosen to make and Tenneco whose management
did not want a potentially troublesome
minority stockholder; and the option was not
a source of potential speculative abuse,
since respondent had no inside information
about Tenneco or its new stock. Pp. 601604.
450 F.2d 157, affirmed.
Page 583
David R. Hyde, New York City,
for petitioner.
Whitney North Seymour, New York
City, for respondent.
Mr. Justice WHITE delivered
the opinion of the Court.
Section 16(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 896, 15
U.S.C. § 78p(b),1 provides that
officers,
Page 584
directors, and holders of more than 10%
of the listed stock of any company shall be
liable to the company for any profits
realized from any purchase and sale or sale
and purchase of such stock occurring within
a period of six months. Unquestionably, one
or more statutory purchases occur when one
company, seeking to gain control of another,
acquires more than 10% of the stock of the
latter through a tender offer made to its
shareholders. But is it a § 16(b) 'sale'
when the target of the tender offer defends
itself by merging into a third company and
the tender offeror then exchanges his stock
for the stock of the surviving company and
also grants an option to purchase the latter
stock that is not exercisable within the
statutory six-month period? This is the
question before us in this case.
I
On May 8, 1967, after
unsuccessfully seeking to merge with Kern
County Land Co. (Old Kern),2
Occidental Petroleum Corp. (Occidental)3
announced an offer, to expire on June 8,
1967, to purchase on a first-come,
first-served basis 500,000 shares of Old
Kern common stock4 at a price of
$83.50 per share plus a broker-
Page 585
age commission of $1.50 per share.5
By May 10, 1967, 500,000 shares, more than
10% of the outstanding shares of Old Kern,6
had been tendered. On May 11, Occidental
extended its offer to encompass an
additional 500,000 shares. At the close of
the tender offer, on June 8, 1967,
Occidental owned 887,549 shares of Old Kern.7
Immediately upon the
announcement of Occidental's tender offer,
the Old Kern management undertook to
frustrate Occidental's takeover attempt. A
management letter to all stockholders
cautioned against tender and indicated that
Occidental's offer might not be the best
available, since the management was engaged
in merger discussions with several
companies. When Occidental extended its
tender offer, the president of Old Kern sent
a telegram to all stockholders again
advising against tender. In addition, Old
Kern undertook merger dis-
Page 586
cussions with Tenneco, Inc. (Tenneco),8
and, on May 19, 1967, the Board of Directors
of Old Kern announced that it had approved a
merger proposal advanced by Tenneco.9
Under the terms of the merger, Tenneco would
acquire the assets, property, and goodwill
of Old Kern, subject to its liabilities,
through 'Kern County Land Co.' (New Kern),10
a new corporation to be formed by Tenneco to
receive the assets and carry on the business
of Old Kern. The shareholders of Old Kern
would receive a share of Tenneco cumulative
convertible preference stock in exchange for
each share of Old Kern common stock which
they owned. On the same day, May 19,
Occidental, in a quarterly report to
stockholders, appraised the value of the new
Tenneco stock at $105 per share.11
Page 587
Occidental, seeing its tender
offer and takeover attempt being blocked by
the Old Kern-Tenneco 'defensive' merger,
countered on May 25 and 31 with two mandamus
actions in the California courts seeking to
obtain extensive inspection of Old Kern
books and records.12 Realizing
that, if the Old Kern-Tenneco merger were
approved and successfully closed, Occidental
would have to exchange its Old Kern shares
for Tenneco stock and would be locked into a
minority position in Tenneco, Occidental
took other steps to protect itself. Between
May 30 and June 2, it negotiated an
arrangement with Tenneco whereby Occidental
granted Tenneco Corp., a subsidiary of
Tenneco, an option to purchase at $105 per
share all of the Tenneco preference stock to
which Occidental would be entitled in
exchange for its Old Kern stock when and if
the Old Kern-Tenneco merger was closed.13
The premium to secure the option at $10 per
share, totaled $8,866,230 and was to be paid
immediately upon the signing of the option
agreement.14 If the option were
exercised option were exercised, the premium
was to be applied to the purchase price. By
the terms of the option agreement, the
option could not be exercised prior to
Decem-
Page 588
ber 9, 1967, a date six months and one
day after expiration of Occidental's tender
offer. On June 2, 1967, within six months of
the acquisition by Occidental of more than
10% ownership of Old Kern, Occidental and
Tenneco Corp. executed the option.15
Soon thereafter, Occidental announced that
it would not oppose the Old Kern-Tenneco
merger and dismissed its state court suits
against Old Kern.16
The Old Kern-Tenneco merger
plan was presented to and approved by Old
Kern shareholders at their meeting on July
17, 1967. Occidental refrained from voting
its Old Kern shares, but in a letter read at
the meeting Occidental stated that it had
determined prior to June 2 not to oppose the
merger and that it did not consider the plan
unfair or inequitable.17 Indeed,
Occidental indicated that, had it been
voting, it would have voted in favor of the
merger.
Meanwhile, the Securities and
Exchange Commission had refused Occidental's
request to exempt from possible § 16(b)
liability Occidental's exchange of its Old
Kern stock for the Tenneco preference shares
that would take
Page 589
place when and if the merger transaction
were closed. Various Old Kern stockholders,
with Occidental's interests in mind,
thereupon sought to delay consummation of
the merger by instituting various lawsuits
in the state and federal courts.18
These attempts were unsuccessful, however,
and preparations for the merger neared
completion with an Internal Revenue Service
ruling that consummation of the plan would
result in a tax-free exchange with no
taxable gain or loss to Old Kern
shareholders, and with the issuance of the
necessary approval of the merger closing by
the California Commissioner of Corporations.
The Old Kern-Tenneco merger
transaction was closed on August 30. Old
Kern shareholders thereupon became
irrevocably entitled to receive Tenneco
preference stock, share for share in
exchange for their Old Kern stock. Old Kern
was dissolved and all of its assets,
including 'all claims, demands, rights and
choses in action accrued or to accrue under
and by virtue of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 . . .,' were transferred to New
Kern.
The option granted by
Occidental on June 2, 1967, was exercised on
December 11, 1967. Occidental, not having
previously availed itself of its right,
exchanged certificates representing 887,549
shares of Old Kern stock for a certificate
representing a like number of shares of
Tenneco preference stock. The certificate
was then endorsed over to the
optionee-purchaser, and in return
$84,229,185 was credited to Occidental's
accounts at various banks. Adding to this
amount the $8,886,230 premium paid in June,
Occidental received $93,905,415 for its Old
Kern stock (including the 1,900 shares
acquired prior to issuance of its tender
offer). In addition, Occidental received
dividends totaling $1,793,439.22.
Occidental's
Page 590
total profit was $19,506,419.22 on the
shares obtained through its tender offer.
On October 17, 1967, New Kern
instituted a suit under § 16(b) against
Occidental to recover the profits which
Occidental had realized as a result of its
dealings in Old Kern stock. The complaint
alleged that the execution of the
Occidental-Tenneco option on June 2, 1967,
and the exchange of Old Kern shares for
shares of Tenneco to which Occidental became
entitled pursuant to the merger closed on
August 30, 1967, were both 'sales' within
the coverage of § 16(b). Since both acts
took place within six months of the date on
which Occidental became the owner of more
than 10% of the stock of Old Kern, New Kern
asserted that § 16(b) required surrender of
the profits realized by Occidental.
19
New Kern eventually moved for summary
judgment, and, on December 27, 1970, the
District Court granted summary judgment in
favor of
New Kern. Abrams v. Occidental Petroleum
Corp., 323 F.Supp. 570 (SDNY 1970). The
District Court held that the execution of
the option on June 2, 1967, and the exchange
of Old Kern shares for shares of Tenneco on
August 30, 1967, were 'sales' under § 16(b).
The Court ordered Occidental to disgorge its
profits plus interest. In a supplemental
opinion, Occidental was also ordered to
refund the dividends which it had received
plus interest.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals
reversed and ordered summary judgment
entered in favor of Occidental.
Abrams v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 450
F.2d 157 (CA2 1971). The Court held that
neither the option nor the exchange
constituted a 'sale' within the purview of
Page 591
s 16(b).20 We granted
certiorari. 405 U.S. 1064, 92 S.Ct. 1498, 31
L.Ed.2d 793 (1972). We affirm.
II
Section 16(b) provides, inter
alia, that a statutory insider21
must surrender to the issuing corporation
'any profit realized by him from any
purchase and sale, or any sale and purchase,
of any equity security22 of such
issuer . . . within any period of less than
six months.' As specified in its
introductory clause, § 16(b) was enacted
'(f)or the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by (a statutory insider) . . . by
reason of his relationship to the issuer.'
Congress recognized that shortswing
speculation by stockholders with advance,
inside information would threaten the goal
of the Securities Exchange Act to 'insure
the maintenance of fair and honest markets.'
Page 592
15 U.S.C. § 78b. Insiders could exploit
information not generally available to
others to secure quick profits. As we have
noted, 'the only method Congress deemed
effective to curb the evils of insider
trading was a flat rule taking the profits
out of a class of transactions in which the
possibility of abuse was believed to be
intolerably great.'
Reliance Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric
Co., 404 U.S. 418, 422, 92 S.Ct. 596, 599,
30 L.Ed.2d 575 (1972). As stated in the
report of the Senate Committee, the bill
aimed at protecting the public 'by
preventing directors, officers, and
principal stockholders of a corporation . .
. from speculating in the stock on the basis
of information not available to others.'
S.Rep.No.792, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 9 (1934).23
Page 593
Although traditional
cash-for-stock transactions that result in a
purchase and sale or a sale and purchase
within the six-month, statutory period are
clearly within the purview of § 16(b), the
courts have wrestled with the question of
inclusion or exclusion of certain
'unorthodox' transactions.24 The
statutory definitions of 'purchase'
Page 594
and 'sale' are broad and, at least
arguably, reach many transactions not
ordinarily deemed a sale or purchase.
25 In deciding whether borderline
transactions are within the reach of the
statute, the courts have come to inquire
whether the transaction may serve as a
vehicle for the evil which Congress sought
to preventthe realization of short-swing
profits based upon access to inside
information26thereby endeavoring
to implement con-
Page 595
gressional objectives without extending
the reach of the statute beyond its intended
limits. The statute requires the inside,
short-swing trader to disgorge all profits
realized on all 'purchases' and 'sales'
within the specified time period, without
proof of actual abuse of insider
information, and without proof of intent to
profit on the basis of such information.
Under these strict terms, the prevailing
view is to apply the statute only when its
application would serve its goals. '(W)here
alternative constructions of the terms of §
16(b) are possible, those terms are to be
given the construction that best serves the
congressional purpose of curbing short-swing
speculation by corporate insiders.' Reliance
Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric Co.,
404 U.S., at 424, 92 S.Ct., at 600.
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507 (CA2 1966),
cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1002, 87 S.Ct. 707,
17 L.Ed.2d 542 (1967). Thus, '(i)n
interpreting the terms 'purchase' and
'sale,' courts have properly asked whether
the particular type of transaction involved
is one that gives rise to speculative
abuse.' Reliance Electric Co. v. Emerson
Electric Co., supra,
404 U.S., at 424 n. 4,
92 S.Ct., at 600.27
In the present case, it is
undisputed that Occidental became a
'beneficial owner' within the terms of §
16(b) when, pursuant to its tender offer, it
'purchased' more than 10% of the outstanding
shares of Old Kern. We must decide, however,
whether a 'sale' within the ambit of the
statute took place either when Occidental
became irrevocably bound to exchange its
shares of Old Kern for shares of Tenneco
pursuant to the terms of the merger
agreement between Old Kern and Tenneco or
Page 596
when Occidental gave an option to Tenneco
to purchase from Occidental the Tenneco
shares so acquired.28
III
On August 30, 1967, the Old
Kern-Tenneco merger agreement was signed,
and Occidental became irrevocably entitled
to exchange its shares of Old Kern stock for
shares of Tenneco preference stock.
Concededly, the transaction must be viewed
as though Occidental had made the exchange
on that day. But, even so, did the exchange
involve a 'sale' of Old Kern shares within
the meaning of § 16(b)? We agree with the
Court of Appeals that it did not, for we
think it totally unrealistic to assume or
infer from the facts before us that
Occidental either had or was likely to have
access to inside information, by reason of
its ownership of more than 10% of the
outstanding shares of Old Kern, so as to
afford it an opportunity to reap
speculative, short-swing profits from its
disposition within six months of its
tender-offer purchases.
It cannot be contended that
Occidental was an insider when, on May 8,
1967, it made an irrevocable offer to
purchase 500,000 shares of Old Kern stock at
a price substantially above market. At that
time, it owned only 1,900 shares of Old Kern
stock, far fewer than the 432,000 shares
needed to constitute the 10% ownership
required by the statute. There is no basis
for find-
Page 597
ing that, at the time the tender offer
was commenced, Occidental enjoyed an
insider's opportunity to acquire information
about Old Kern's affairs.
It is also wide of the mark to
assert that Occidental, as a sophisticated
corporation knowledgeable in matters of
corporate affairs and finance, knew that its
tender offer would either succeed or would
be met with a 'defensive merger.' If its
takeover efforts failed, it is argued,
Occidental knew it could sell its stock to
the target company's merger partner at a
substantial profit. Calculations of this
sort, however, whether speculative or not
and whether fair or unfair to other
stockholders or to Old Kern, do not
represent the kind of speculative abuse at
which the statute is aimed, for they could
not have been based on inside information
obtained from substantial stockholdings that
did not yet exist. Accepting both that
Occidental made this very prediction and
that it would recurringly be an accurate
forecast in tender-offer situations,29
we nevertheless fail to perceive how the
fruition of such anticipated events would
require, or in any way depend upon, the
receipt and use of inside information. If
there are evils to be redressed by way of
deterring those who would make tender
offers,
Page 598
s 16(b) does not appear to us to have
been designed for this task.
By May 10, 1967, Occidental had
acquired more than 10% of the outstanding
shares of Old Kern. It was thus a statutory
insider when, on May 11, it extended its
tender offer to include another 500,000
shares. We are quite unconvinced, however,
that the situation had changed materially
with respect to the possibilities of
speculative abuse of inside information by
Occidental. Perhaps Occidental anticipated
that extending its offer would increase the
likelihood of the ultimate success of its
takeover attempt or the occurrence of a
defensive merger. But, again, the
expectation of such benefits was unrelated
of the use of information unavailable to
other stockholders or members of the public
with sufficient funds and the intention to
make the purchases Occidental had offered to
make before June 8, 1967.
The possibility that Occidental
had, or had the opportunity to have, any
confidential information about Old Kern
before or after May 11, 1967, seems
extremely remote. Occidental was, after all,
a tender offeror, threatening to seize
control of Old Kern, displace its
management, and use the company for its own
ends. The Old Kern management vigorously and
immediately opposed Occidental's efforts.
Twice it communicated with its stockholders,
advising against acceptance of Occidental's
offer and indicating prior to May 11 and
prior to Occidental's extension of its
offer, that there was a possibility of an
imminent merger and a more profitable
exchange. Old Kern's management refused to
discuss with Occidental officials the
subject of an Old Kern-Occidental merger.
Instead, it undertook negotiations with
Tenneco and forthwith concluded an
agreement, announcing the merger terms on
May 19. Requests by Occidental for
inspection of Old Kern records were
sufficiently frus-
Page 599
trated by Old Kern's management to force
Occidental to litigate to secure the
information it desired.
There is, therefore, nothing in
connection with Occidental's acquisition of
Old sought to be classified a 'sale' under §
to indicate either the possibility of inside
information being available to Occidental by
virtue of its stock ownership or the
potential for speculative abuse of such
inside information by Occidental. Much the
same can be said of the events leading to
the exchange of Occidental's Old Kern stock
for Tenneco preferred, which is one of the
transactions that is wought to be classified
a 'sale' under § 16(b). The critical fact is
that the exchange took place and was
required pursuant to a merger between Old
Kern and Tenneco. That merger was not
engineered by Occidental but was sought by
Old Kern to frustrate the attempts of
Occidental to gain control of Old Kern.
Occidental obviously did not participate in
or control the negotiations or the agreement
between
Old Kern and Tenneco. Cf. Newmark v. RKO
General,
425 F.2d 348 (CA2), cert.
denied, 400 U.S. 854, 91 S.Ct. 64, 27
L.Ed.2d 91 (1970);
Park and Tilford v. Schulte,
160 F.2d 984
(CA2), cert. denied, 332 U.S. 761, 68 S.Ct.
64, 92 L.Ed. 347 (1947). Once agreement
between those two companies crystallized,
the course of subsequent events was out of
Occidental's hands. Old Kern needed the
consent of its stockholders, but as it
turned out, Old Kern's management had the
necessary votes without the affirmative vote
of Occidental. The merger agreement was
approved by a majority of the stockholders
of Old Kern, excluding the votes to which
Occidental was entitled by virtue of its
ownership of Old Kern shares.
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342 (CA6 1958),
cert. denied, 359 U.S. 927, 79 S.Ct. 606, 3
L.Ed.2d 629 (1959);
Roberts v. Eaton,
212 F.2d 82 (CA2 1954).
Occidental, although registering its opinion
that the merger would be beneficial to Old
Kern shareholders, did not in fact vote at
the
Page 600
stockholders' meeting at which merger
approval was obtained. Under California law,
its abstention was tantamount to a vote
against approval of the merger. Moreover, at
the time of stockholder ratification of the
merger, Occidental's previous dealing in Old
Kern stock was, as it had always been, fully
disclosed.
Once the merger and exchange
were approved, Occidental was left with no
real choice with respect to the future of
its shares of Old Kern. Occidental was in no
position to prevent the issuance of a ruling
by the Internal Revenue Service that the
exchange of Old Kern stock for Tenneco
preferred would be tax free; and, although
various lawsuits were begun in state and
federal courts seeking to postpone the
merger closing beyond the statutory
six-month period, those efforts were futile.
The California Corporation Commissioner
issued the necessary permits for the closing
that took place on August 30, 1967. The
merger left no right in dissenters to secure
appraisal of their stock. Occidental could,
of course, have disposed of its shares of
Old Kern for cash before the merger was
closed. Such an act would have been a §
16(b) sale and would have left Occidental
with a prima facie § 16(b) liability. It was
not, therefore, a realistic alternative for
Occidental as long as it felt that it could
successfully defend a suit like the present
one.
Petteys v. Butler, 367 F.2d 528 (CA8 1966),
cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1006, 87 S.Ct. 712,
17 L.Ed.2d 545 (1967); Ferraiolo v. Newman,
supra;
Lynam v. Livingston, 276 F.Supp. 104
(Del.1967);
Blau v. Hodgkinson, 100 F.Supp. 361 (SDNY
1951). We do not suggest that an
exchange of stock pursuant to a merger may
never result in § 16(b) liability. But the
involuntary nature of Occidental's exchange,
when coupled with the absence of the
possibility of speculative abuse of inside
information, convinces us that § 16(b)
should not apply to transactions such as
this one.
Page 601
IV
Petitioner also claims that the
Occidental-Tenneco option agreement should
itself be considered a sale, either because
it was the kind of transaction the statute
was designed to prevent or because the
agreement was an option in form but a sale
in fact. But the mere execution of an option
to sell is not generally regarded as a
'sale.'
Booth v. Varian Associates, 334 F.2d 1 (CA1
1964), cert. denied, 379 U.S. 961, 85
S.Ct. 651, 13 L.Ed.2d 556 (1965);
Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co. v. Gulf & Western
Industries, 309 F.Supp. 75 (ED Wis.1970);
Marquette Cement Mfg. Co. v. Andreas,
239 F.Supp. 962 (SDNY 1965). And we do not
find in the execution of the
Occidental-Tenneco option agreement a
sufficient possibility for the speculative
abuse of inside information with respect to
Old Kern's affairs to warrant holding that
the option agreement was itself a 'sale'
within the meaning of § 16(b). The mutual
advantages of the arrangement appear quite
clear. As the District Court found,
Occidental wanted to avoid the position of a
minority stockholder with a huge investment
in a company over which it had no control
and in which it had not chosen to invest. On
the other hand, Tenneco did not want a
potentially troublesome minority stockholder
that had just been vanquished in a fight for
the control of Old Kern. Motivations like
these do not smack of insider trading; and
it is not clear to us, as it was not to the
Court of Appeals, how the negotiation and
execution of the option agreement gave
Occidental any possible opportunity to trade
on inside information it might have obtained
from its position as a major stockholder of
Old Kern. Occidental wanted to get out, but
only at a date more than six months thence.
It was willing to get out at a price of $105
per share, a price at which it had publicly
valued Tenneco preferred on May 19 when the
Tenneco-Old Kern agreement was announced.
Page 602
In any event, Occidental was dealing with
the putative new owners of Old Kern, who
undoubtedly knew more about Old Kern and
Tenneco's affairs than did Occidental. If
Occidental had leverage in dealing with
Tenneco, it is incredible that its source
was inside information rather than the fact
of its large stock ownership itself.
Neither does it appear that the
option agreement, as drafted and executed by
the parties, offered measurable
possibilities for speculative abuse. What
Occidental granted was a 'call' option.
Tenneco had the right to buy after six
months, but Occidental could not force
Tenneco to buy. The price was fixed at $105
for each share of Tenneco preferred.
Occidental could not share in a rising
market for the Tenneco stock.
Silverman v. Landa, 306 F.2d 422 (CA2 1962).
If the stock fell more than $10 per share,
the option might not be exercised, and
Occidental might suffer a loss if the market
further deteriorated to a point where
Occidental was forced to sell. Thus, the
option, by its very form, left Occidental
with no choice but to sell if Tenneco
exercised the option, which it was almost
sure to do if the value of Tenneco stock
remained relatively steady. On the other
hand, it is difficult to perceive any
speculative value to Occidental if the stock
declined and Tenneco chose not to exercise
its option. See generally Note, Put and Call
Options Under Section 16 of the Securities
Exchange Act, 69 Yale L.J. 868 (1960); H.
Filer, Understanding Put and Call Options
96111 (1959); G. Leffler, The Stock Market
363378 (2d ed. 1957).
The option, therefore, does not
appear to have been an instrument with
potential for speculative abuse, whether or
not Occidental possessed inside information
about the affairs of Old Kern. In addition,
the option covered Tenneco preference stock,
a stock as yet unissued, unregistered, and
untraded. It was the value of this
Page 603
stock that underlay the option and that
determined whether the option would be
exercised, whether Occidental would be able
to profit from the exercise, and whether
there was any real likelihood of the
exploitation of inside information. If
Occidental had inside information when it
negotiated and signed the option agreement,
it was inside information with respect to
Old Kern. Whatever it may have known or
expected as to the future value of Old Kern
stock, Occidental had no ownership position
in Tenneco giving it any actual or presumed
insights into the future value of Tenneco
stock. That was the critical item of
intelligence if Occidental was to use the
option for purposes of speculation. Also,
the date for exercise of the option was over
six months in the future, a period that,
under the statute itself, is assumed to
dissipate whatever trading advantage might
be imputed to a major stockholder with
inside information. See Comment, Stock
Exchanges Pursuant to Corporate
Consolidation: A Section 16(b) 'Purchase or
Sale?,' 117 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1034, 1054 (1969);
Silverman v. Landa, supra. By enshrining the
statutory period into the option, Occidental
also, at least if the statutory period is
taken to accomplish its intended purpose,
limited its speculative possibilities. Nor
should it be forgotten that there was no
absolute assurance that the merger, which
was not controlled by Occidental, would be
consummated. In the event the merger did not
close, the option itself would become null
and void.
Nor can we agree that we must
reverse the Court of Appeals on the ground
that the option agreement was in fact a sale
because the premium paid was so large as to
make the exercise of the option almost
inevitable, particularly when coupled with
Tenneco's desire to rid itself of a
potentially troublesome stockholder. The
argument has force, but resolution of the
question is very much a matter of judgment,
economic and otherwise, and the
Page 604
Court of Appeals rejected the argument.
That court emphasized that the premium paid
was what experts had said the option was
worth, the possibility that the market might
drop sufficiently in the six months
following execution of the option to make
exercise unlikely, and the fact that here,
unlike the situation
Bershad v. McDonough,
428 F.2d 693 (CA7
1970), the optionor did not surrender
practically all emoluments of ownership by
executing the option. Nor did any other
special circumstances indicate that the
parties understood and intended that the
option was in fact a sale.30 We
see no satisfactory basis or reason for
disagreeing with the judgment of the Court
of Appeals in this respect.31
The judgment of the Court of
Appeals is affirmed.
So ordered.
Page 605
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, with whom
Mr. Justice BRENNAN and Mr. Justice STEWART
concur, dissenting.
The Court, in resorting to an
ad hoc analysis of the 'possibility for the
speculative abuse of inside information,'
charts a course for the interpretation of §
16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b), that in my mind
undermines the congressional purpose. I
respectfully dissent.
I
'The statute is written
broadly, and the liability it imposes is
strict.'
Reliance Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric
Co., 404 U.S. 418, 431, 92 S.Ct. 596, 603,
30 L.Ed.2d 575 (Douglas, J.,
dissenting). Except for narrowly drawn
exceptions, it is all-inclusive.1a
The operative language provides:
'(A)ny profit realized by (a
beneficial owner, director, or officer) from
any purchase and sale, or
Page 606
any sale and purchase, of any
equity security of such issuer (other than
an exempted security) within any period of
less than six months, unless such security
was acquired in good faith in connection
with a debt previously contracted, shall
inure to and be recoverable by the issuer,
irrespective of any intention on the part of
such beneficial owner, director, or officer
in entering into such transaction of holding
the security purchased or of not
repurchasing the security sold for a period
exceeding six months.' (Emphasis added.)
By its own terms, the section
subsumes all transactions that are
technically purchases and sales and applies
irrespective of any actual or potential use
of inside information to gain a trading
advantage.
Feder v. Martin Marietta Corp., 406 F.2d
260, 262 (CA2 1969). The conclusion
seems inescapable that Occidental Petroleum
Corp. (Occidental) purchased and sold shares
of Kern County Land Co. (Old Kern) within a
six-month period and that this 'round trip'
in Old Kern stock is covered by the literal
terms of § 16(b).
Occidental, pursuant to a cash
tender offer, acquired in excess of 880,000
shares of Old Kern during May and June 1967.
It is undisputed that these acquisitions
were purchases within the meaning of the
section.2a On Au-
Page 607
gust 30, 1967, Old Kern sold its assets
to a newly formed subsidiary of Tenneco
Corp., Kern County Land Co. (New Kern), in
exchange for cumulative convertible
preference stock of Tenneco, Inc. (Tenneco),
Tenneco Corporation's parent. Old Kern was
dissolved in October 1967 (within six months
of the tender offer), and each shareholder
became irrevocably entitled to receive,
share for share, for his Old Kern stock the
cumulative convertible preference stock of
Tenneco.
The question presented to us is
whether this exchange of shares constituted
a 'sale' of the Old Kern shares. The term
'sale,' as used in the Securities Exchange
Act, includes 'any contract to sell or
otherwise dispose of.' 15 U.S.C. §
78c(a)(14). Clearly, Occidental 'disposed'
of its Old Kern shares through the Old
Kern-Tenneco consolidation. Its status as a
shareholder of Old Kern terminated, and it
became instead a shareholder of Tenneco,
privy to all the rights conferred by the
Tenneco shares.3a
Newmark, v. RKO General,
425 F.2d 348 (CA2
1970);
Park & Tilford v. Schulte,
160 F.2d 984 (CA2
1947).
4a In my view, we
Page 608
need look no further. As my Brother
Blackmun, then Circuit Judge, stated in
dissent
Petteys v. Butler, 367 F.2d 528, 538 (CA8
1966):
'My own reaction is that either
the statute means what it literally says or
that it does not; that if the Congress
intended to provide additional exceptions,
it would have done so in clear language; and
that the recognized purpose and aim of the
statute are more consistently and
protectively to be served if the statute is
construed literally and objectively rather
than non-literally and subjectively on a
case-by-case application. The latter
inevitably is a weakening process.'
The majority finesses the
literal impact of § 16(b) by examining
Occidental's willfulness and its access to
inside information. It concludes: 'But the
involuntary nature of Occidental's exchange,
when coupled with the absence of the
possibility of speculative abuse of inside
information, convinces us that § 16(b)
should not apply to transactions such as
this one.' Ante, at 600. This approach is
plainly contrary to the legislative purpose.
The purpose of § 16(b) is
stated in its preamble: 'preventing the
unfair use of information which may have
been obtained by such beneficial owner,
director, or officer by reason of his
relationship to the issuer . . ..' The
congressional investigations that led to the
enactment of the Securities Exchange Act
revealed widespread use of confidential
information by corporate insiders to gain an
unfair advantage in trading their
corporations' securities.
5a
Unlike other remedial provisions
Page 609
of the Act, the most noteworthy being §
10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), Congress drafted
§ 16(b) as an objective rule, designed to
have a clearly 'prophylactic' effect.
Blau v. Lehman,
368 U.S. 403, 414, 82 S.Ct.
451, 457, 7 L.Ed.2d 403.
Heli-Coil Corp. v. Webster,
352 F.2d 156, 165166 (CA3 1965);
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., 136 F.2d 231, 235
(CA2 1943). As Thomas Corcoran, a
principal drafts man of the Act, explained
to Congress:
'You hold the director,
irrespective of any intention or expectation
to sell the security within 6 months after,
because it will be absolutely impossible to
prove the existence of such intention or
expectation, and you have to have this crude
rule of thumb, because you cannot undertake
the burden of having to prove that the
director intended, at the time he bought, to
get out on a short swing.'6a
In Reliance Electric, supra,
the Court noted that 'the only method
Congress deemed effective to curb the evils
of insider trading was a flat rule taking
the profits out of a class of transactions
in which the possibility of abuse was
believed to be intolerably great.'
404 U.S., at 422, 92 S.Ct. at 599 (emphasis added).
Certainly, mergers are such a class of
transactions.7a In Newmark v. RKO
General, supra, for example, RKO signed an
option contract to purchase shares of the
company which was to be merged into a
subsidiary of RKO. When the merger was
approved by the necessary parties, RKO
exercised its option and the merger was
consummated. The court found that RKO 'not
only acquired knowledge of what would tran-
Page 610
spire but also could exercise substantial
influence over the course of events.'
425 F.2d, at 353. 'In sum,' the court concluded,
'the purchase and subsequent exchange of
Central shares were fraught with
opportunities for the kind of speculative
abuse section 16(b) was intended to abort.'
Id., at 354.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission has resisted a rule that would
exempt mergers as a class from the operation
of § 16(b). It responded as follows to a
proposal of the Special Committee on
Securities Regulation of the Association of
the Bar of the City of New York:8a
'We concluded, however, that
removing the 'teeth' of Section 16(b) to
discourage the use of inside information
would allow insiders to create and take
advantage of speculative opportunities
during the time surrounding such significant
corporate events which outweighed this
potential conflict. Also, we know that some
persons are unwittingly caught by the
section in these as in other situations
falling within the provisions of Section
16(b), but in our opinion the public
interest and the interest of investors are
better served in this area by the
unrestricted operation of the section.'
It is true that in some cases
an insider may be required to disgorge
profits even though his transactions do not
lend themselves to the abuses that underlay
the enactment of § 16(b). The draftsmen
carefully weighed this eventuality and opted
for a bright-line rule. As Thomas Corcoran
stated: 'You have to have a general rule. In
particular transactions it might work a
hardship, but those transactions that are a
hardship represent the sacrifice to the
necessity of having a general rule.'9a
Page 611
The very construction of §
16(b) reinforces the conclusion that the
section is based in the first instance10a
on a totally objective appraisal of the
relevant transactions.11a See
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., supra, at 236. Had
the draftsmen intended that the operation of
the section hinge on abuse of access to
inside information it would have been
anomalous to limit the section to purchases
and sales occurring within six months.12a
Indeed, the purpose of the six-month
limitation, coupled with the definition of
an insider, was to create a conclusive
presumption that an insider who turns a
short-swing profit in the stock of his
corporation had access to inside information
and capitalized on that information by
speculating in the stock. But, the majority
departs from the benign effects of this
presumption when it assumes that it is
'totally unrealistic to assume or infer from
the facts before us that Occidental either
had or was likely to have access to inside
information . . ..' Ante, at 596. The
majority abides by this assumption even for
that period after which Occidental became a
10% shareholder and then extended its tender
offer in order to purchase additional Old
Kern shares.
The majority takes heart from
those decisions of lower federal courts
which endorse a 'pragmatic' approach to
Page 612
s 16(b). Many involved the question
whether a conversion of one security of an
issuer into another security of the same
issuer constituted a purchase or a sale.13aIt
would serve no purpose to parse their
holdings because, as Louis Loss describes,
they have a 'generalization-defying nature.'
14aIn 1966 the Securities and
Exchange Commission exercised its exemptive
power under § 16(b) to adopt Rule 16b9,
15a which under specified
conditions excludes a conversion from the
operation of § 16(b). This rule will relieve
the courts of much of the burden that had
developed from ad hoc analyses in
this narrow area. But, by sanctioning the
approach of these cases, the majority brings
to fruition Louis Loss' prophecy that they
will 'continue to rule us from their
graves,'16a for henceforth they
certainly will be applied by analogy to the
area of mergers and other consolidations.
Thus, the courts will be caught
up in an ad hoc analysis of each
transaction, determining both from the
economics of the transaction and the modus
operandi of the insider whether there exists
the possibility of speculative abuse of
inside information. Instead of a section
that is easy to administer and by its
clearcut terms discourages litigation, we
have instead a section that fosters
litigation because the Court's decision
holds out the hope for the insider that he
may avoid § 16(b) liability. In short, the
majority destroys much of the section's
prophylactic effect. I would be the first to
agree that '(e)very transaction which can
reasonably be defined as a purchase (should)
be so defined, if the transaction is of a
kind
Page 613
which can possibly lend itself to the
speculation encompassed by Section 16(b).'
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342, 345
(CA6, 1958) (Stewart, J., then Circuit
Judge). See also Reliance Electric Co. v.
Emerson Electric Co.,
404 U.S., at 424, 92
S.Ct., at 600. Certainly we cannot allow
transactions which present the possibility
of abuse but do not fall within the classic
conception of a purchase or sale to escape
the confines of § 16(b). It is one thing to
interpret the terms 'purchase' and 'sale'
liberally in order to include those
transactions which evidence the civil
Congress sought to eliminate; it is quite
another to abandon the bright-line test of §
16(b) for those transactions which clearly
fall within its literal bounds. Section
16(b), because of the six-month limitation,
allows some to escape who have abused their
inside information. It should not be
surprising, given the objective nature of
the rule, if some are caught unwillingly.
In Reliance Electric, supra, at
422, 92 S.Ct. at 599, the Court quoted with
approval the following language from
Bershad v. McDonough, 428 F.2d 693, 696 (CA7
1970):
'In order to achieve its goals,
Congress chose a relatively arbitrary rule
capable of easy administration. The
objective standard of Section 16(b) imposes
strict liability upon substantially all
transactions occurring within the statutory
time period, regardless of the intent of the
insider or the existence of actual
speculation. This approach maximized the
ability of the rule to eradicate speculative
abuses by reducing difficulties in proof.
Such arbitrary and sweeping coverage was
deemed necessary to insure the optimum
prophylactic effect.'
It is this 'objective standard'
that the Court hung to so tenaciously in
Reliance Electric, but now apparently would
abandon to a large extent. In my view, the
Court
Page 614
improperly takes upon itself the task of
refashioning the contours of § 16(b)17a
and changing its essential thrust.
II
Although I conclude that the
judgment below should be reversed on the
grounds that the exchange of shares
constituted a sale, I could not conclude
that it was proper for the Court of Appeals
to direct entry of summary judgment in favor
of Occidental even if I accepted the
majority approach to § 16(b). It did this
notwithstanding the failure of Occidental to
move for summary judgment in the District
Court. To say the least, this is an
extroardinary procedure.
18a Even
if it can be justified in the most limited
circumstancesfor example, where the record
below left no doubt whatsoever that the
nonmoving party was entitled to summary
judgment as a matter of lawthis is not such
a case.
The District Court concluded
that '(i)n consequence of the option
agreement, Occidental disposed of its
holdings in Old Kern stock at a profit of
about $20 per share . . .. This profit falls
within the meaning and purview of Section
16(b) . . ..' 323 F.Supp. 570, 579580.
Since the actual sale pursuant to the
exercise of the option did not occur within
the six-month period, the only reasonable
interpretation of this conclusion of law is
that the District Court found that the
execution of the option was in fact and
substance a sale. The majority does not
contest that an option agreement may
Page 615
be in economic reality a sale. See
Bershad v. McDonough, supra. It
distinguishes but does not reject Bershad.
Rather, the majority can 'see no
satisfactory basis or reason for
disagreeing' with the Court of Appeals,
which concluded that there is 'no basis' for
a finding that Occidental's Old Kern stock
was 'sold' upon execution of the option.19a
I cannot agree.
In Bershad, the defendants, who
had purchased approximately 18% of the
outstanding shares of Cudahy Co. at $6.75
per share, executed an option obligating
themselves to sell the shares at $9 per
share. The market price of the shares was
then $9.125. The optionee paid $350,000 (14%
of the purchase price) for the option, to be
applied against the purchase price in the
event of exercise and forfeited in the event
of nonexercise. In addition, defendants gave
the optionee an irrevocable proxy with
respect to the optioned stock, and defendant
McDonough and his colleagues resigned from
the Cudahy board of directors. The Court of
Appeals also found that '(t)he circumstances
of the transactions clearly indicate that
the stock was effectively transferred, for
all practical purposes, long before the
exercise of the option.'
428 F.2d, at 698.
By comparison, the exercise
price here was $105, and the premium to
secure the option was $10 per share, or
$8,866,230, also to be credited against the
purchase price if the option were exercised
and forfeited in the event of nonexercise if
the merger was consummated. Thus, the
effective exercise price was nearly 10%
below the estimated value of the Tenneco
shares to be received in
Page 616
the consolidation.20a When the
option was executed, Occidental's attorney
was authorized to vote Occidental's Old Kern
shares in favor of the Tenneco acquisition,
and it was not until it was apparent that
Occidental's vote was not needed that
Occidental's attorney was relieved of his
obligation. Occidental also abandoned its
demand for two seats on Old Kern's board, as
well as its litigation for inspection of Old
Kern's books and records.
In concluding that this case
was not controlled by Bershad, the Court of
Appeals emphasized the undisputed testimony21a
that the forfeitable down payment was a
reasonable, noncoercive price. The basis for
this was the deposition of one of
Occidental's vice presidents stating that a
New York investment firm had advised him
that $9 to $12 per share was a reasonable
premium for an option on stock selling at
$95. This deposition should not suffice to
support summary judgment. First, it is not
clear what assumptions the investment firm
had made in giving this advice. Second,
while it may be that $10 per share premium
was a reasonable price for an option based
upon factors available to the general
investing public, it is by no means clear
that an option
Page 617
executed by two parties privy to inside
information should be judged on the same
terms.22a It may be that under the
circumstances present here the eventual
exercise of the option was a 'sure thing.'
In short, Occidental may have known that it
was 'locked into' a $17 million profit.23a
Finally, it has not been determined what
effect, if any, the very size of the down
paymentnearly $9 millionhad on the
eventual exercise. With these uncertainties
and in view of the holding of the District
Court that the option agreement constituted
a sale, at the very least the case should
have been remanded to the District Court for
a hearing on whether the terms of the option
'compelled' its exercise.
Mourning v. Family Publications Service,
Inc., 411 U.S. 356, at 383, 93 S.Ct.
1652, at 1667, 36 L.Ed.2d 318, (Douglas, J.,
dissenting);
White Motor Co. v. United States, 372 U.S.
253, 263, 83 S.Ct. 696, 702, 9 L.Ed.2d 738;
6 J. Moore, Federal Practice 56.12, p. 2243
(2d ed. 1972).
1 'For the purpose of
preventing the unfair use of information
which may have been obtained by such
beneficial owner, director, or officer by
reason of his relationship to the issuer,
any profit realized by him from any purchase
and sale, or any sale and purchase, of any
equity security of such issuer (other than
an exempted security) within any period of
less than six months, unless such security
was acquired in good faith in connection
with a debt previously contracted, shall
inure to and be recoverable by the issuer,
irrespective of any intention on the part of
such beneficial owner, director, or officer
in entering into such transaction of holding
the security purchased or of not
repurchasing the security sold for a period
exceeding six months. Suit to recover such
profit may be instituted at law or in equity
in any court of competent jurisdiction by
the issuer, or by the owner of any security
of the issuer in the name and in behalf of
the issuer if the issuer shall fail or
refuse to bring such suit within sixty days
after request or shall fail diligently to
prosecute the same thereafter; but no such
suit shall be brought more than two years
after the date such profit was realized.
This subsection shall not be construed to
cover any transaction where such beneficial
owner was not such both at the time of the
purchase and sale, or the sale and purchase,
of the security involved, or any transaction
or transactions which the Commission by
rules and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection.' 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b).
2 Old Kern was a California
corporation having substantial real estate
holdings, including oil-producing lands,
oil-exploration activities, cattle ranching,
cattle-feeding operations, and interests in
the manufacture of automotive parts,
electronic systems and devices, and farm
machinery and construction equipment. After
the reorganization described in the text,
Old Kern became known as the 600 California
Corporation until its eventual dissolution
under California law on October 6, 1967.
3 Occidental is the
respondent in this Court. A California
corporation with its principal place of
business in California, Occidental is
engaged in the production and sale of oil,
gas, coal, sulphur, and fertilizers.
4 The Old Kern stock was
registered pursuant to § 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 78l. The stock was a nonexempt,
equity security for purposes of § 16(b).
5 The Old Kern stock closed
at 63 5/8 on Friday, May 8, 1967, the last
trading day prior to the announcement of the
tender offer. It had reached a high of 64
7/8 and a low of 57 3/8 in 1967, a high of
76 1/4 and a low of 51 3/4 in 1966, a high
of 71 5/8 and a low of 56 in 1965, and a
high of 70 3/8 and a low of 56 5/8 in 1964.
Thus, the $85-per-share tender-offer price
represented a substantial profit for
shareholders of Old Kern.
6 On May 10, Old Kern had
4,328,000 shares outstanding.
7 On May 18, 1967, Occidental
filed a Form 3, Initial Statement of
Beneficial Ownership of Securities, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
indicating direct ownership of 507,055
shares of Old Kern stock; on June 9, 1967,
Occidental filed a Form 4, Statement of
Changes in Beneficial Ownership of
Securities, for the month of May, indicating
the purchase of an additional 376,326 shares
of Old Kern stock, for a total ownership as
of May 31, 1967, of 883,381 shares. An
additional, 4,168 shares were purchased by
June 8, 1967, so that as of June 30, 1967,
Occidental held 887,549 shares of Old Kern
stock. This figure included 1,900 shares
which Occidental purchased on the open
market in April 1967. Section 16(b)
liability is not asserted with respect to
these shares, because these purchases did
not make Occidental a 'beneficial owner' for
purposes of § 16(b).
8 Tenneco, a Delaware
corporation, is a diversified industrial
company with operations in natural gas
transmission, oil and gas, chemicals,
packaging, manufacturing, and shipbuilding.
Tenneco is not a party to this litigation.
9 Although technically a sale
of assets, the corporate combination has
been consistently referred to by the parties
as a 'merger' and will be similarly
denominated in this opinion. The only
significance of the characterization is the
fact that a sale of assets required, under
California law, approval of only a majority
of the Old Kern shareholders and provided no
appraisal rights for dissenters.
10 New Kern, a Delaware
corporation with its principal place of
business in California, is the petitioner in
this Court and is a wholly owned subsidiary
of Tenneco Corp. Tenneco Corp. is, in turn,
a wholly owned subsidiary of Tenneco and
owns all of the capital stock or controlling
interests in most of Tenneco's nonpipeline
operating subsidiaries. When first
incorporated, New Kern was known as KCL
Corp.
11 The annual dividend of
$5.50 per share on the new Tenneco stock
would be more than double the current annual
dividend of $2.60 per share on the Old Kern
stock. Each share of the new Tenneco
preference stock was convertible into 3.6
shares of Tenneco common stock. During 1967,
Tenneco common stock had sold at a high of
32 1/2 and a low of 20 7/8. Moreover, in
contrast to Occidental's cash offer, the
Tenneco exchange was expected to be, and was
ultimately approved by the Internal Revenue
Service as, free of capital gains tax.
12 Prior to any court ruling
on Occidental's mandamus petitions, Old Kern
voluntarily permitted inspection of Old
Kern's general ledger, consolidated
financial statements, consolidated journal
entries, details of cash receipts from oil
operations, supporting trial balances, and
other records over a six-day period. A list
of stockholders, however, was withheld.
13 The agreement covered
886,623 shares. This figure is 926 shares
less than the number of Old Kern shares
ultimately owned by Occidental. This
discrepancy apparently results from
uncertainty as to the number of shares
tendered.
14 An outside investment
banking firm in New York had determined that
between $9 and $12 per share was a fair
premium on an option on the Old Kern stock.
15 On that date, and on the
date of the exercise of the option, Old Kern
common stock was selling at approximately
$95 per share.
16 Seeking to prevent its
acquisition of Tenneco shares pursuant to
the merger from being matched with the sale
of those shares upon exercise of the option
for purposes of establishing § 16(b)
liability, Occidental asked that the new
Tenneco stock not be immediately registered
pursuant to § 12 of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78l. See 450 F.2d
157, 160 n. 6.
17 The letter indicated that
Occidental 'did not consider it to be in its
best interest, or the best interest of its
shareholders, or the best interest of KCL
Shareholders generally for it to (oppose)
the transaction.' However, Occidental stated
that '(i)n view of the fact that we would
rather have worked out our own transaction
with KCL, we shall not vote our KCL shares
at the KCL Shareholder's Meeting on July 17,
1967.' Under applicable California law, the
abstention from voting was tantamount to
opposing the merger.
18 This history of this
litigation is reviewed in 600
California Corp. v. Harjean Co., 284 F.Supp.
843 (N.D.Tex.1968).
19 Occidental answered
asserting various affirmative defenses and
counterclaims. Two suits had already been
instituted by Old Kern shareholders, and one
was subsequently begun. The four suits were
consolidated.
20 In view of its
disposition, the Court of Appeals did not
reach Occidental's contentions that only the
purchases in excess of 10% of Old Kern's
stock, rather than all purchases made
pursuant to the tender offer, should be
included in calculating liability and that
the awards of prejudgment interest and
dividends were improper. Occidental also
appealed from the dismissal of its
counterclaims. The Court of Appeals
dismissed Occidental's appeal as moot.
21 For purposes of § 16(b), a
statutory insider includes a 'beneficial
owner, director, or officer.' 15 U.S.C. §
78p(b). The term 'beneficial owner' refers
to one who owns 'more than 10 per centum of
any class of any equity security (other than
an exempted security) which is registered
pursuant to section 75l (§ 12) of this
title.' 15 U.S.C. § 78p(a).
22 The term 'equity security'
is defined to include 'any stock or similar
security; or any security convertible, with
or without consideration, into such a
security, or carrying any warrant or right
to subscribe to or purchase such a security;
or any such warrant or right; or any other
security which the Commission shall deem to
be of similar nature and consider necessary
or appropriate, by such rules and
regulations as it may prescribe in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors, to treat as an equity security.'
15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(11).
23 The legislative history of
§ 16(b) reveals a congressional effort to
curb short-swing trading by insiders whose
position gives them access to information
not available to the investing public and
the ability to influence corporate policy.
'Among the most vicious practices
unearthed at the hearings before the
subcommittee was the flagrant betrayal of
their fiduciary duties by directors and
officers of corporations who used their
positions of trust and the confidential
information which came to them in such
positions, to aid them in their market
activities. Closely allied to this type of
abuse was the unscrupulous employment of
inside information by large stockholders
who, while not directors and officers,
exercised sufficient control over the
destinies of their companies to enable them
to acquire and profit by information not
available to others.' S.Rep.No.1455, 73d
Cong., 2d Sess., 55 (1934).
See also 10 S.E.C.Ann.Rep. 50 (1944);
S.Rep.No.792, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 9 (1934).
'The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 aims
to protect the interests of the public
against the predatory operations of
directors, officers, and principal
stockholders of corporations by preventing
them from speculating in the stock of the
corporations to which they owe a fiduciary
duty. . . . By this section (16(b)) it is
rendered unlawful for persons intrusted with
the administration of corporate affairs or
vested with substantial control over
corporations to use inside infor- mation for their own advantage.'
S.Rep.No.1455, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 68
(1934).
The purpose and operation of § 16(b) were
explained as follows by one of its
draftsmen.
'(Section 16(b)) is to prevent directors
receiving the benefits of short-term
speculative swings on the securities of
their own companies, because of inside
information. The profit on such transaction
under the bill would go to the corporation.
You hold the director, irrespective of any
intention or expectation to sell the
security within 6 months after, because it
will be absolutely impossible to prove the
existence of such intention or expectation,
and you have to have this crude rule of
thumb, because you cannot undertake the
burden of having to prove that the director
intended, at the time he bought, to get out
on a short swing.' Hearings on Stock
Exchange Practices before the Senate
Committee on Banking and Currency, 73d
Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 15, p. 6557 (1934).
See generally Hearings on H.R. 7852 and
H.R. 8720 before the House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 73d Cong.,
2d Sess., 85 (1934); Hearings on Stock
Exchange Practices, supra, at 64636581
(1934); S.Rep.No.792, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
79 (1934); S.Rep.No.1455, 73d Cong., 2d
Sess., 5568 (1934); H.R.Rep.No.1383, 73d
Cong., 2d Sess., 1314 (1934).
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507 (CA2 1966),
cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1002, 87 S.Ct. 707,
17 L.Ed.2d 542 (1967);
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp.,
136 F.2d 231 (CA2
1943), cert. denied, 320 U.S. 751, 64
S.Ct. 46, 88 L.Ed. 446 (1943); Yourd,
Trading in Securities by Directors, Officers
and Stockholders: Section 16 of the
Securities Exchange Act, 38 Mich.L.Rev. 133
(1939); Meeker & Cooney, The Problem of
Definition in Determining Insider
Liabilities Under Section 16(b), 45
Va.L.Rev. 949 (1959); Comment, Stock
Exchanges Pursuant to Corporate
Consolidation: A Section 16(b) 'Purchase or
Sale?,' 117 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1034 (1969).
24 The term, see 2 L. Loss,
Securities Regulation 1069 (2d ed. 1961),
has been applied to stock conversions,
exchanges pursuant to mergers and other
corporate reorganizations, stock
reclassifications, and dealings in options,
rights, and warrants.
25 'When used in this
chapter, unless the context otherwise
requires
'(13) The terms 'buy' and 'purchase' each
include any contract to buy, purchase, or
otherwise acquire.
'(14) The terms 'sale' and 'sell' each
include any contract to sell or otherwise
dispose of.' 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(13), (14).
26 Several decisions have
been read as to apply a so-called
'objective' test in interpreting and
applying § 16(b). See, e.g., Smolowe v.
Delendo Corp., supra;
Park and Tilford v. Schulte,
160 F.2d 984
(CA2), cert. denied, 332 U.S. 761, 68 S.Ct.
64, 92 L.Ed. 347 (1947);
Heli-Coil Corp. v. Webster,
352 F.2d 156
(CA3 1965). Under some broad language in
those decisions, § 16(b) is said to be
applicable whether or not the transaction in
question could possibly lend itself to the
types of speculative abuse that the statute
was designed to prevent. By far the greater
weight of authority is to the effect that a
'pragmatic' approach to § 16(b) will best
serve the statutory goals. See, e.g.,
Roberts v. Eaton,
212 F.2d 82 (CA2),
cert. denied, 348 U.S. 827, 75 S.Ct. 44, 99
L.Ed. 652 (1954);
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342 (CA6 1958),
cert. denied, 359 U.S. 927, 79 S.Ct. 606, 3
L.Ed.2d 629 (1959);
Blau v. Max Factor & Co., 342 F.2d 304
(CA9), cert. denied, 382 U.S. 892, 86 S.Ct.
180, 15 L.Ed.2d 150 (1965); Blau v. Lamb,
supra;
Petteys v. Butler, 367 F.2d 528 (CA8 1966),
cert. denied, 385 U.S. 1006, 87 S.Ct. 712,
17 L.Ed.2d 545 (1967). For a discussion and
critical appraisal of the various
'approaches' to the interpretation and
application of § 16(b), see Lowenfels,
Section 16(b): A New Trend in Regulating
Insider Trading, 54 Cornell L.Q. 45 (1968);
Comment, Stock Exchanges Pursuant to
Corporate Consolidation: A Section 16(b)
'Purchase or Sale?,' 117 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1034
(1969); Note, Reliance Electric and 16(b)
Litigation: A Return to the Objective
Approach?, 58 Va.L.Rev. 907 (1972); Gadsby &
Treadway, Recent Developments Under Section
16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 17 N.Y.L.F. 687 (1971).
27 Our differences with the
dissent as to the reach and scope of
congressional intent and purpose are clear.
If we are mistaken, or if Congress would now
mandate a different result, the statutory
remedy would not be difficult to fashion.
28 Both events occurred
within six months of Occidental's first
acquisition of Old Kern shares pursuant to
its tender offer. Although Occidental did
not exchange its Old Kern shares until
December 11, 1967, it is not contended that
that date, rather than the date on which
Occidental became irrevocably bound to do
so, should control. Similarly, although the
option was not exercised until December 11,
1967, no liability is asserted with respect
to that event, because it occurred more than
six months after Occidental's last
acquisition of Old Kern stock.
29 Although a 'defensive
merger' is one tactic available to incumbent
management in its arsenal of
antitender-offer weapons, it is by no means
a foregone conclusion that it is the
response that will be most often, much less
invariably, employed. Incumbent management
might, for instance, choose to exhort
shareholders not to tender, employ various
techniques to elevate the market price of
the company's stock in order to make the
tender offer less attractive, institute
legal proceedings, or increase the company's
outstanding stock. Any one of these devices
might prove more attractive to incumbent
management than a defensive merger which
could prove to be highly detrimental to the
enterprise. See Note, Defensive Tactics
Employed by Incumbent Managements in
Contesting Tender Offers, 21 Stan.L.Rev.
1104 (1969).
30
Bershad v. McDonough,
428 F.2d 693 (CA7
1970), the defendants were directors and
greater-than-ten-percent stockholders of
Cudahy Co. The defendants, within six months
of their acquisition of beneficial ownership
of Cudahy, granted an option to Smelting
Refining and Mining Co. to purchase their
Cudahy stock. The Seventh Circuit held that
the grant of the option was a § 16(b) 'sale'
of the Cudahy stock. The Court of Appeals in
the present case distinguished Bershad as
follows:
'That case came before the court of
appeals on a finding by the district court
that, under the circumstances there
presented, the stock had in fact been sold
within the six months period, although the
option was not formally exercised until
later. The district court had relied on a
number of circumstances, the most
significant being that the optionor gave the
optionee an irrevocable proxy to vote the
shares and that the optionor and one of his
associate directors resigned as directors
within a few days after the grant of the
option and were replaced by officers of the
optionee. In other words, the district court
found in effect that the 'option' was
accompanied by a wink of the eye, and the
court of appeals sustained this. Here there
is no such finding, and no basis for one.'
450 F.2d, at 165.
31 With respect to entering
judgment for Occidental, the dissent simply
has a different, but insufficiently
persuasive, view of the facts from that of
Judge Friendly and his colleagues.
1a Section 16(b) provides in
full:
'For the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by such beneficial owner, director,
or officer by reason of his relationship to
the issuer, any profit realized by him from
any purchase and sale, or any sale and
purchase, of any equity security of such
issuer (other than an exempted security)
within any period of less than six months,
unless such security was acquired in good
faith in connection with a debt previously
contracted, shall inure to and be
recoverable by the issuer, irrespective of
any intention on the part of such beneficial
owner, director, or officer in entering into
such transaction of holding the security
purchased or of not repurchasing the
security sold for a period exceeding six
months. Suit to recover such profit may be
instituted at law or in equity in any court
of competent jurisdiction by the issuer, or
by the owner of any security of the issuer
in the name and in behalf of the issuer if
the issuer shall fail or refuse to bring
such suit within sixty days after request or
shall fail diligently to prosecute the same
thereafter; but no such suit shall be
brought more than two years after the date
such profit was realized. This subsection
shall not be construed to cover any
transaction where such beneficial owner was
not such both at the time of the purchase
and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the
security involved, or any transaction or
transactions which the Commission by rules
and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection.' 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b).
2a The term 'purchase'
includes 'any contract to buy, purchase, or
otherwise acquire.' 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(13).
A 'beneficial owner' is one who owns 'more
than 10 per centum of any class of any
equity security (other than an exempted
security) which is registered pursuant to
section 78l (§ 12) of this title.' 15 U.S.C.
§ 78p(a). The District Court held that
'(t)he tender offer constituted a single act
of Occidental, whereby the company became a
beneficial owner of more than 10 percent of
Old Kern's capital stock.' 323 F.Supp. 570,
579. Thus, the District Court ruled that the
profit made on all stock purchased in the
tender offer, not only the profit on the
purchases in excess of 10%, would have to be
surrendered. The Court of Appeals did not
reach this issue.
3a This is not a case where
the stock surrendered and the stock received
in the exchange were economic equivalents.
Cf., e.g.,
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507, 523525 (CA2
1966);
Blau v. Max Factor & Co., 342 F.2d 304, 308309
(CA9 1965).
An exchange of securities in different
companies is a 'purchase' or 'sale' for
purposes of § 10(b). E.g.,
SEC v. National Securities, Inc., 393 U.S.
453, 89 S.Ct. 564, 21 L.Ed.2d 668;
Dasho v. Susquehanna Corp., 380 F.2d 262
(CA7 1967).
4a Judge Clark, in Park &
Tilford v. Schulte, adopted a
straightforward approach to defining
'acquisition': 'Defendants did not own the
common stock in question before they
exercised their option to convert; they did
afterward. Therefore they acquired the
stock, within the meaning of the Act.' 160
F.2d 984, 987. The same analysis holds for
'disposition.'
5a Examples of this practice
are chronicled elsewhere. See, e.g.,
Reliance Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric
Co.,
404 U.S. 418, 429430, 92 S.Ct.
596, 602603, 30 L.Ed.2d 575 and nn. 36
(Douglas, J., dissenting) and sources cited
therein. It would serve no purpose to
recount them here.
6a Hearings on Stock Exchange
Practices before the Senate Committee on
Banking and Currency, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
pt. 15, p. 6557 (1934).
7a See Recent Cases, 84
Harv.L.Rev. 1012, 1018 (1971).
8a Letter of Nov. 24, 1965.
9a Hearings, supra, n. 6, at
6558.
10a The objective approach may
have to yield to a more flexible
interpretation of the terms 'purchase' and
'sale' to include transactions which present
the evil Congress sought to eliminate or
transactions which are designed to evade §
16(b). See discussion, infra, at 612613.
11a The preamble of the
section, which expresses the purpose of the
section, was intended to aid in establishing
the constitutionality of the section and
guiding the Commission's rulemaking
authority.
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., 136 F.2d 231, 236
(CA2 1943); 2 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1041 (2d ed. 1961).
12a In addition, there would
have been no reason to exempt transactions
wherein the 'security was acquired in good
faith in connection with a debt previously
contracted . . ..'
13a See, e.g.,
Roberts v. Eaton,
212 F.2d 82 (CA2 1954);
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342 (CA6 1958);
Blau v. Max Factor & Co., 342 F.2d 304 (CA9
1965);
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507 (CA2 1966);
Petteys v. Butler, 367 F.2d 528 (CA8 1966).
14a 5 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 3029 (Supp. to 2d ed. 1969).
15a Securities Exchange Act
Release 7826.
16a 5 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 3029 (Supp. to 2d ed. 1969).
17a Occidental unsuccessfully
sought to have the Securities and Exchange
Commission adopt a rule which would have
exempted this exchange. No inferences should
be drawn from this refusal. But, I do
believe that, given the structure and
policies of § 16(b), any 'exempting' is best
left to the
Commission and Congress. See Heli-Coil Corp.
v. Webster,
352 F.2d 156, 165166 (CA3
1965).
18a See generally 6 J. Moore,
Federal Practice 56.12 (2d ed. 1972).
19a The Court of Appeals also
concluded that the District Court had made
no such finding. For the reasons indicated
above, I do not agree. In any event, I
presume that the Court of Appeals, had it
confronted such a finding, would have
determined that it was clearly erroneous.
20a Respondent argues that,
unlike Bershad, the effective exercise price
was not below the current market value
because the Old Kern shares never sold for
more than $94.75. It contends that this
trading price reflected the Kern board's
acceptance of the proposed consolidation.
But, it is common for a stock which may be
exchanged to sell at a discount from the
stock to be received until the exchange
becomes a certainty. This discount reflects
the risk that the exchange may not be
consummated. The option agreement provided
that the premium would be returned if there
were no exchange. Thus, we must appraise
this transaction on the assumption that the
consolidation would be approved and
accomplished.
21a Petitioner contends here
that it did not believe that it was
necessary to rebut this hearsay testimony in
order to prevail on its motion for summary
judgment; moreover, it was not faced with a
cross-motion.
22a Although Occidental may
not have been Tenneco's 'ally,' as the
majority indicates, it was in their mutual
interest to arrange for a satisfactory
option agreement.
23a Shortly after the option
was exercised, Armand Hammer, the President
of Occidental, commented on the profit of
$17 million that Occidental expected. In his
mind, it was 'not had for two weeks' work.'
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