| Page 773 477 F.Supp. 773
BRASCAN LIMITED, Brascan Holdings
Inc., and Brascan U. S. A. Inc., Plaintiffs,
v.
EDPER EQUITIES LTD., Peter Bronfman, Edward
Bronfman, J. Trevor Eyton, Edper Investments
Ltd., Patino, N. V., Balfour Securities Co.,
John Does and Richard Roes, Defendants.
No. 79 Civ. 2288 (PNL). United States District Court, S. D.
New York. May 25, 1979. Revised June 7, 1979.
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COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
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Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett, New
York City, for plaintiffs; Roy L. Reardon,
New York City, of counsel.
Cahill, Gordon & Reindel, New
York City, for defendants Edper Equities
Ltd., Peter Bronfman, J. Trevor Eyton and
Edper Investments Ltd.; Raymond L. Falls,
Jr., New York City, of counsel.
Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside &
Wolff, New York City, for defendant Patino;
Donald I. Strauber, New York City, of
counsel.
Securities and Exchange
Commission as Amicus Curiae, John Huber,
Washington, D. C.
GENERAL NARRATIVE
LEVAL, District Judge.
Brascan Ltd. ("Brascan") is a
Canadian publicly held company whose
26,100,000 common shares are held by some
50,000 stockholders and are traded on the
Toronto, Montreal, London and American Stock
Exchanges.
In late 1978 Brascan announced
the sale of its principal subsidiary, an
electric utility in Brazil, for $380 million
(U.S.) cash. Shortly thereafter Edper
Investments Ltd. ("Edper Investments"), a
privately held Canadian venture capital
company, became interested in acquiring
Brascan shares. Edper Investments made some
purchases in late 1978 and early 1979. In
March, 1979 Edper Investments joined with
Patino, N.V. ("Patino"), a privately held
Netherlands company, to create Edper
Equities Ltd. ("Edper"), a corporate entity
formed for the purpose of attempting to
obtain either control, or a major portion,
of Brascan shares. Edper is the principal
defendant in this action. At the end of
March, 1979 Edper owned approximately 5% of
the outstanding Brascan shares.
Edper approached Brascan on April
5 with a proposal for a friendly
acquisition. The next day the Brascan board
resolved to make a tender offer for all the
outstanding shares of F. W. Woolworth Co.
("Woolworth"). Edper's overtures were
rebuffed.
In the days which followed, Edper
embarked on an intensive examination of
Brascan's position. Edper concluded that an
acquisition of Woolworth by Brascan would be
detrimental to Brascan's interests. Several
courses of action were considered by Edper
with a view to acquiring a dominant stake in
Brascan. Among these were an offer on the
Toronto Stock Exchange for a controlling
interest in Brascan shares, conditioned on
Brascan's abandoning its offer for Woolworth
stock and purchases of Brascan's shares on
the American Stock Exchange (the "AMEX").
Edper also considered disposing of its
interest in Brascan in view of the Woolworth
offer. Edper's Toronto conditional offer was
abandoned April 20 when the Ontario
Securities Commission ("O.S.C.") denied
permission to proceed. A few days after the
O.S.C.'s decision, Edper began to give more
serious consideration to purchases over the
AMEX. At a meeting on April 29 a tentative
decision was made to proceed in this
fashion. Edper's initial objective was to
increase its holding to 10%, for three
reasons. First, a 10% holder is entitled
under Section 103(1) of the Canada
Corporations Act to cause a stockholders
meeting to be summoned. Second, Edper
believed that with a position of this size
it might induce Brascan's management to take
its opposition seriously and drop the
Woolworth offer. Third, Edper thought it
needed more stock in order to carry more
weight in expressing its views at a hearing
which the New York Attorney General had set
for May 10 on the Brascan Woolworth
offering. However, no firm decision to
purchase Brascan shares on the AMEX was made
until the early morning of April 30.
During the period already
discussed, nothing which Edper had stated or
done was false, misleading, manipulative or
violative of any law.
On April 30, Edper, through,
Balfour Securities Co. ("Balfour" or
"Balfour Securities"), a New York broker,
purchased in excess of three million Brascan
shares on
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the AMEX. That evening, in response to
requests from the O.S.C. and the Toronto
Stock Exchange, Edper issued a press release
identifying itself as the purchaser.
Answering a press inquiry on that release,
an Edper representative said that Edper did
not then plan to buy more Brascan shares.
The statement was accurate when made and
reflected a decision made by Edper's
management after trading closed on April 30.
This statement was published the morning of
May 1 in the Wall Street Journal.
On the morning of May 1 Edper's
management reconsidered their decision,
recognizing that additional purchases of
Brascan stock were necessary to protect
their investment. Observing that Brascan's
management was undeterred by Edper's April
30 acquisitions and hearing that more stock
was available at prices comparable to those
of the prior day, Edper decided to resume
purchasing. Without issuing a further public
statement, Edper reentered the market and on
May 1 again acquired more than three million
shares of Brascan on the AMEX.
During April, Edper had
occasionally consulted with James Connacher,
a Canadian broker who was knowledgeable
about Brascan shares, about the possibility
of Edper's acquiring a major position in
Brascan shares. On April 29 at Edper's
request, Connacher accompanied Price, an
Edper man who was sent to New York to
execute Edper's purchasing strategy, and
gave Price help and advice concerning the
selection of a broker, negotiating
commissions and the hedging of foreign
exchange in order to make payment.
During April 30 and May 1,
Connacher and his firm, Gordon Securities,
acting independently of Edper, contacted
between 30 and 50 large (mostly
institutional) shareholders of Brascan and,
as broker for these holders, brought to the
market a large percentage of the stock
purchased by Edper on those two days. Gordon
Securities also purchased Brascan shares for
its own account in Canada and resold them to
Edper on the floor of the AMEX.
On the evening of May 1 Brascan
obtained an ex parte temporary
restraining order in Part I of this court,
barring Edper, inter alia, from
exercising stockholders' rights with respect
to any of its shares and from making any
further purchases. A hearing was held on May
16, 17 and 18 on Brascan's motion for a
preliminary injunction. Briefs were filed on
May 21 and argument was held May 22.
Jurisdiction, Venue and Relief
Sought.
Brascan alleges violations of
Sections 10(b), 13(d), 14(d), and 14(e) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
"Exchange Act"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b),
78m(d), 78n(d), and 78n(e), and moves for a
preliminary injunction barring all
defendants, other than Balfour Securities,
Gordon Securities Inc., Gordon Securities
Limited and James Connacher, from acquiring
any further Brascan shares; soliciting any
proxy or other authorization or agreement to
vote Brascan shares; voting any Brascan
stock which they now own; or exercising any
incidents of ownership with respect to the
Brascan stock they own as a means of
affecting Brascan's management. Brascan also
seeks an order directing Edper to divest
itself of all Brascan stock which it has
purchased on April 30 and May 1, 1979.
Jurisdiction of this action and
venue in this District lie under Section 27
of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa.
The Parties and Others Involved.
Plaintiff Brascan is a publicly
held corporation organized and existing
under the laws of Canada with its principal
place of business located in Toronto,
Province of Ontario, Canada. Plaintiffs
Brascan Holdings Inc. ("Brascan Holdings")
and Brascan U.S.A. Inc. ("Brascan U.S.A.")
are organized and existing under the laws of
Delaware, with their principal places of
business located in New York, New York.
Brascan Holdings is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Brascan and Brascan U.S.A. is
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Brascan
Holdings. Both were formed for the purpose
of facilitating the making of a tender offer
by
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Brascan for all the outstanding shares of
common stock of Woolworth.
Defendant Edper is a Canadian
corporation with its principal place of
business in Toronto, Canada. Edper was
formed in late March, 1979, for the purpose
of acquiring effective control of Brascan.
Defendant Edper Investments Ltd. and
defendant Patino, N.V. are privately held
venture capital companies, and are the sole
shareholders of Edper. Defendants Peter and
Edward Bronfman are directors and
shareholders of Edper Investments. Defendant
J. Trevor Eyton is a director of and legal
counsel to Edper. Jack Cockwell is treasurer
of Edper Equities and executive vice
president of Edper Investments. Timothy
Price is vice president of both Edper
Equities and Edper Investments. Jaime
Ortiz-Patino is a director of Edper
Equities. He is also a director of Patino.
Patrick Keenan is president of Edper. He is
also president, chief executive and a
director of a Patino company. Frederick
McCutcheon is a Toronto stockbroker. He is
also a director of both Patino and Edper.
Defendant Balfour Securities is a
securities dealer which transacts business
on the American Stock Exchange. Jay
Goldsmith is the president of Balfour. A. G.
Becker & Co. ("Becker") is a clearing broker
for Balfour.
Defendant Gordon Securities Ltd.
("Gordon Securities" or "Gordon") is a
brokerage firm with its main office in
Toronto, Canada. It also maintains branch
offices in Montreal and Calgary. Its
wholly-owned subsidiary, defendant Gordon
Securities, Inc., has an office in New York
City and transacts business on the AMEX.
Defendant James Connacher is President of
Gordon Securities Ltd.
Detailed Findings of Fact.
Edper Investment's initial
purchase of 50,000 Brascan shares was made
in late December, 1978, after Brascan had
announced the sale of its principal
subsidiary, an electric utility in Brazil
("Light"), to the Government of Brazil for
$380 million (U.S.). The purchases were made
for investment and in anticipation of either
a cash distribution by Brascan of the
proceeds of the sale of Light or an offer by
a third party, attracted by the cash, to
purchase Brascan shares at a premium over
the market.
In early January, Price of Edper
Investments indicated to Connacher of Gordon
Securities that Edper Investments was
seriously looking at Brascan as a possible
acquisition candidate. On or about January
15, 1979, Gordon purchased 100,000 shares of
Brascan stock for an Edper company. On or
about February 15, 1979, Connacher and a
research analyst from Gordon Securities,
David Dorian, met with Cockwell and Price of
Edper Investments. The principal focus of
the meeting was a discussion between
Cockwell and Dorian concerning their
respective analyses of the value of Brascan
shares. Connacher also told Cockwell who
were some of the large Brascan shareholders.
Toward the end of February, Connacher's firm
purchased 650,000 Brascan shares for Edper
Investments.
In January, 1979, Eyton and
Keenan had brief discussions relating to the
possibility of Edper Investments and Patino
investing jointly in Brascan shares. These
initial contacts resulted in a meeting
between representatives of Edper Investments
and Patino on February 20, 1979, at which
time Edper Investments proposed that the two
groups participate together in a bid for
control of Brascan. Another meeting at which
this subject was discussed was held on
February 27, 1979. On that date Patino also
commenced purchasing Brascan shares. On
March 26, 1979, an arrangement between Edper
Investments and Patino was formalized and
Edper was created as a jointly owned
vehicle, owned 2/3 by Edper Investments and
1/3 by Patino, for carrying out
acquisitions. By that date, Edper
Investments owned 800,000, and Patino
460,000 Brascan shares. This amounted to
approximately 5% of Brascan's outstanding
common stock, which was contributed to
Edper.
On March 30, 1979, at Eyton's
request, Brascan's investment banker in
Canada arranged for Edper representatives to
meet
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with Moore, Chairman of the Brascan
Board, on April 5, 1979.
At the April 5 secret meeting,
the Edper representatives informed Moore of
Edper's holdings in Brascan and that Edper
was considering making a bid for effective
control of Brascan. At that time, Edper was
contemplating making a bid through the
facilities of the Toronto Stock Exchange,
and was hoping for Brascan's endorsement.1
Edper offered Brascan assurances with
respect to managerial continuity and the
like. Moore noted that it was not the
board's policy to recommend to shareholders
offers for less than all of the outstanding
shares, but stated that his Board was to
meet the next day. Edper requested a
response after the Board meeting and was
told it might expect response in the
afternoon of April 6.
The Brascan Board convened on
April 6. At that meeting, it resolved to
make a tender offer for all the outstanding
shares of Woolworth's common stock.2
That afternoon, Eyton delivered a letter on
behalf of Edper to the Brascan Board Meeting
(Exhibit 5). The letter confirmed Edper's
interest in Brascan, stating that Edper was
considering making a bid for 45% of the
outstanding Brascan shares at $27 Cdn. per
share.
On April 9, 1979, having received
no response from Brascan, Eyton contacted
Brascan's Canadian counsel at 7:45 a. m. to
read him the text of a release which Edper
proposed to issue concerning its
contemplated offer to purchase in Canada
11.7 million shares of Brascan stock.
Immediately thereafter, the press release
was made available to the financial press.
The press release, in part, stated:
"Edper Equities Ltd. . . .
announced today it is considering making an
offer to purchase 11.7 million Class A
common shares of Brascan Limited at the
price of Cdn. $28 per share. Edper noted
that it presently holds approximately 1.3
million Class A common shares so that, on
completion of a successful offer, the
aggregate holding would amount to
approximately 13 million Class A common
shares representing approximately 50% of the
outstanding voting shares." (Exhibit 6A).
It further announced that any bid
by Edper would be conditioned upon no action
being taken by Brascan management which
would effect a material change in the
affairs of Brascan.
Later that morning, Brascan
publicly announced its proposed tender offer
for all the outstanding common stock of
Woolworth. At about noon that day, Brascan's
Canadian counsel called Eyton to advise that
Brascan's management did not consider
Edper's offer to be in the best interests of
Brascan or its shareholders.
Edper then proceeded to obtain as
much information as it could secure in an
effort to evaluate the Woolworth offer.
Keenan was knowledgeable about Woolworth,
and was in a position to give immediate
advice about what the Woolworth acquisition
would mean to Brascan. By April 10, Edper
had in its possession a report on Woolworth
prepared by The Wertheim Group, as well as
information found in financial publications
and other sources available from the
financial community concerning Woolworth. In
addition, Edper discussed Woolworth with
individuals who were knowledgeable
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about the retail industry. Cockwell of
Edper prepared a cash flow analysis in order
to establish the effect of the proposed
Woolworth transaction on the cash flow of
the combined enterprises. Edper concluded
that the Woolworth acquisition would reduce
the intrinsic value of Brascan shares by an
amount in excess of $10.00 per share and
produce a negative combined cash flow.
On April 10, 1979, Edper
published two press releases. The first,
issued at noon (Exhibit 7) stated that Edper
was considering whether or not to proceed
with its contemplated offer to purchase 11.7
million shares in view of Brascan's
announcement of the proposed Woolworth
tender offer. The release stated that such
an acquisition involving borrowings of $800
million would effect a "material change" in
the affairs of Brascan, "particularly so
when the Brascan offer for Woolworth was
apparently going to be vigorously resisted."
The release concluded that a decision
whether to proceed would be made later that
day.
At 9:00 p. m. Edper issued a
second press release announcing that it
would not be proceeding with its offer in
view of the Woolworth offer (Exhibit 8). The
release stated that Edper was "now assessing
its position as one of Brascan's major
shareholders holding something over 5% of
its outstanding common shares", that a
successful Woolworth bid "would convert
Brascan from a highly liquid company . . .
to a debt-burdened company" and that "the
acquisition of Woolworth by Brascan would
have an immediate negative impact on
Brascan's consolidated cash flows. . . . On
this basis, Edper considered that the
Woolworth transaction was not in the best
interest of Brascan or its shareholders."
The release also indicated that a number of
major Brascan shareholders had expressed
their concerns and that Brascan's management
was giving little consideration to the
interests of its shareholders. Edper noted
that Brascan management had not sought
shareholder approval of either the sale of
Light or the Woolworth acquisition. Edper
commented that Brascan shareholders felt
that the Woolworth transaction "would have
the effect of precluding Edper or any other
person from making a bid for the outstanding
Brascan shares at a premium over their
market price." This release also concluded
by stating Edper's view that the Brascan
offer for Woolworth would be vigorously
resisted.4
During the week of April 9,
following Brascan's announcement of its
offer for Woolworth stock, the Edper group
held several meetings to discuss the various
alternatives available to them.
The agendas for the meetings held
by the Edper group the weeks of April 9 and
16 listed, as topics of discussion and as
tasks to be allocated, contact with Brascan
shareholders. Edper's contacts with the
shareholders of Brascan was confined in
large part to an exchange of views on the
advisability of the Woolworth offer. There
is no evidence that at any point prior to
April 30 Edper discussed with Brascan
shareholders the availability of their
Brascan stock for possible sale.
During the week of April 16,
Edper began to consider seriously, from
among the alternatives available to it, the
making of a "conditional" offer for 11.7
million shares of Brascan stock over the
facilities of the Toronto Stock Exchange,
such an offer to be conditioned upon the
abandonment or failure of the Woolworth
offer. Under Ontario law, the making of such
an offer, required specific approval of the
Ontario Securities Commission, to which
Edper applied on April 17.
On April 19, a hearing was held
before the Ontario Securities Commission.
Edper's application was opposed by Brascan
management and one other Brascan
shareholder. The following day, April 20,
the Commission denied Edper's application
because
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of its conditional nature, and Edper
issued a press release announcing that fact.
In the release Edper "stressed it would
continue to pursue other avenues to have the
Woolworth acquisition abandoned" (Exhibit
17).
On April 20 and 23, key members
of the Edper group met to consider what
course of action Edper should then take.
Numerous alternatives were discussed,
including: the making of an unconditional
offer; the making of a conditional offer in
the United States, Great Britain or in the
provinces of Canada (where regulatory
approval was not required); the making of an
unconditional offer with paper or other
securities (that would have the same effect
as a "Woolworth condition"); a stock
exchange block offer in Canada, and private
arrangements with Brascan shareholders.
Purchases over the AMEX were briefly
discussed but this alternative was not given
prominence at that time. The group discussed
the number and price of shares that would be
involved in the possible courses of action
open to it, various opinions were expressed,
but no conclusions were reached. Also
considered (though not listed on the agenda)
was the possibility of Edper selling its
Brascan shares. The Edper group considered
whether it should prepare a press release
explaining its present posture, and decided
not to do so.
On April 23, Edper contacted
Connacher to arrange a meeting the next
morning. On April 24, and again on April 25,
Connacher met with Price, McCutcheon and
Cockwell. At these meetings, the Edper group
discussed the various alternatives that were
being considered, and told Connacher that
they thought he might be able to provide
assistance in connection with two
alternativespurchases on the American Stock
Exchange and the making of a conditional
offer for Brascan shares in the United
States. In connection with possible
purchases on the floor of the AMEX, Edper
sought Connacher's advice on the selection
of an American broker; the appropriate
commission; dollar conversion; and currency
hedging problems. The group discussed how
many Brascan shares might be bought at
various times and what the prices might be.
Connacher was asked if he would be available
to go with Price to New York on April 29 to
assist in either setting up the mechanics of
purchasing over the AMEX if Edper decided to
do so or to introduce Price to investment
bankers in New York if Edper decided to make
a conditional offer in the United States.
There was no talk of compensation to
Connacher. He was to perform these advisory
services on a friendly unpaid basis. Edper
informed Connacher that it was considering
utilizing the firm of Balfour Securities in
the event that it decided to purchase shares
over the AMEX and asked Connacher to contact
Jay Goldsmith, the President of Balfour, to
see whether he would be available in New
York the following week. An employee of
Gordon Securities contacted Goldsmith for
that limited purpose later that week.
Also on April 24, Edper
investigated further the possibility of
purchasing Brascan stock over the London
Stock Exchange. On April 26 and 27,
McCutcheon met with Ackroyd & Smithers,
jobbers on the London Stock Exchange, to
discuss the mechanics of purchasing over the
London Stock Exchange and the availability
of Brascan stock on that exchange.
Since the week of April 9, Edper
had been pressuring Brascan's management, to
no avail, to either meet with Edper to
discuss the Woolworth offer or to call a
shareholders' meeting. On April 24,
Brascan's management informed its
stockholders that the Brascan annual
meeting, previously scheduled for May 23,
1979, would be deferred to June 26, 1979 or
to an even later date. On the evening of
April 29, 1979, after Connacher and Price
had already left for New York, Messrs.
Keenan, McCutcheon, Eyton, Cockwell and
Bronfman met. Prior to the convening of the
meeting, Edper had still not resolved which
of the several available alternatives it was
going to pursue and work had been continuing
on a number of fronts up to that time.
McCutcheon had been looking into purchases
in London; Greenshields, a Canadian
investment banker, had been talking on
Edper's behalf to lawyers about a paper-type
offer
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in Canada free from tax problems; Edper's
counsel was working on an unconditional
offer; Edper's printers were printing an
unconditional offer; Edper was talking to
National Trust about getting a shareholders
list in order to be able to send out a
circular offer in Canada; and Edper was
working with a mailing house to facilitate
the mailing of a circular offer in Canada.
The initial purpose behind the
meeting on April 29 was to provide an update
for the group. However, various reports were
made at the meeting which lent a sense of
urgency to the situation. The Patino group
reported rumors circulating in Europe about
competing bids for Brascan. Noranda Mines
was mentioned as a possible suitor through a
defensive stock swap. The Patino board of
directors had met on April 26 and 27, at the
Hague and had resolved that more Brascan
shares should be purchased.
In addition, Brascan had
announced it was postponing its annual
meeting and Moore had said that, if the
Woolworth deal was aborted, he would pursue
alternative proposals, which Edper construed
to be further defensive measures.
The conclusion of the April 29
evening meeting was that Edper should
acquire more shares in order to secure the
10% necessary under Canadian law to compel a
shareholders' meeting, to have a greater
impact upon Brascan management, and to
obtain a better reception at the hearing of
the New York Attorney General which was
scheduled for May 10 to investigate
Brascan's offer for Woolworth. The group
discussed paying as high as $25 (Cdn.), per
share. It was provisionally decided to buy
shares the next day on the American Stock
Exchange, subject to sleeping on it and
reviewing the decision in the morning. No
firm decision was made as to the amount of
stock to be purchased. The group discussed
issuing a press release, but decided that it
would not do so unless required by a
regulatory body.
At that meeting, McCutcheon was
authorized to initiate purchases of up to
200,000 shares on the London Stock Exchange
the next morning in line with the previous
close on the American Stock Exchange. He did
not think that a great number of shares
would be available there. His instructions
were to "go gently" and to "check back" if a
great number of shares became available. Due
to the difference in time zones, a decision
to buy on the London Exchange could not wait
until the morning of the following day.
McCutcheon had to place his orders in the
very early morning hours of April 30
Toronto time.
Price and Connacher flew to New
York on April 29. Although nominally a
vice-president of Edper, Price did not have
decision making authority. Furthermore he
had not been extensively involved in Edper's
planning of its Brascan acquisitions. Price
had some experience in stock market activity
and was friendly with Connacher. Price was
sent to New York to carry out Cockwell's
instructions in negotiating terms with a
broker, placing orders as directed, and
setting up the mechanics of the
transactions.
After checking in at the Waldorf,
Price telephoned Goldsmith of Balfour
Securities and arranged to meet with him the
next morning for breakfast.
Shortly after the tentative
decision to purchase on the American Stock
Exchange was reached in Toronto, on April
29, Cockwell telephoned Price to inform him
of the tentative decision and to tell him
that a final decision would be made the next
day. Price told this to Connacher.
April 30
At about 4:30 a. m. on April 30,
McCutcheon placed an order with Ackroyd &
Smithers to purchase 100,000 Brascan shares
on The London Stock Exchange at up to $21
(U.S.), a price approximately equivalent to
the closing price of Brascan stock on the
American Stock Exchange the preceding
Friday. By 9:00 a. m., 15,000 shares had
been purchased. No further purchases were
made that day on the London Exchange,
pursuant to McCutcheon's
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instructions that purchasing cease at
9:00 a. m. New York time.5
At 7:30 a. m. Cockwell instructed
Price to proceed with the planned breakfast
meeting with Goldsmith. Goldsmith met with
Connacher and Price, and agreed, subject to
confirmation with his clearing broker
Becker, to handle purchases for Edper on the
AMEX for a commission of five cents per
share. Price informed Goldsmith that Edper
was considering purchasing one million
Brascan shares. Goldsmith told this to
Becker and reported back approval to broker
the deal at the agreed upon rate of
commission.
After the breakfast meeting,
Connacher and Price went to Gordon's offices
in New York. At some time prior to the
opening of the market, Connacher called
Gordon's offices in Toronto to indicate that
Balfour would be buying Brascan stock on the
floor of the AMEX on behalf of Edper, but
informed the personnel of Gordon not to
discuss that with anyone.
Sometime after 9:00 a. m. Price
was authorized by Cockwell to place an order
with Balfour for one million shares of
Brascan at the best price up to $25 (Cdn.)
(21 7/8 U.S.). Between 9:30 and 9:45 a. m.,
Price informed Connacher that he had a
mandate to purchase up to one million
shares. As the market opened, Price
instructed Goldsmith to purchase Brascan
stock at $21 (U.S.), and soon raised the
bid to 21. Balfour was able to purchase
only approximately 28,000 shares at these
prices. Price held his bid at 21, and no
more stock was available that morning.
Between 10:15 a. m. and 10:30 a.
m. Price said to Connacher that if three
million shares were available, he believed
Edper might be willing to buy them at a
premium. Connacher contacted large
shareholders of Brascan who were clients of
Gordon Securities and instructed Gordon
personnel to do the same. Connacher and his
salesmen contacted between 30 to 50
institutional shareholders and 10-15
individual shareholders of large blocks of
Brascan shares. Total Brascan shareholders
numbered more than 50,000.
The message conveyed by Connacher
and the Gordon people to the large Brascan
shareholders was a uniform one: that if 3 to
4 million shares were offered at $26 (Cdn.)
($22 U.S.), Edper might purchase them.
Throughout April 30 and May 1, the Gordon
people were careful to state that there was
no assurance that the transaction would
occur. There is no evidence that the
shareholders contacted were told any time at
which such a transaction would take place or
any time limit within which they must reply.
The shareholders contacted by Gordon were
highly professional investors. A few large
shareholders and investment bankers
contacted Gordon on their own and were given
the same message conveyed to other
shareholders.
These findings concerning
Connacher and Gordon Securities are
applicable to both April 30 and May 1. In
contacting shareholders on those days,
Connacher and Gordon did not act at the
instructions of, or as a representative of,
Edper. To the contrary, Connacher and Gordon
acted independently as a sellers' broker
because it was in their financial interest
to do so. It is true there was a good deal
of communication between Connacher and
Price, often in the nature of Connacher
informing Price of the volume that was
shaping up on the sell side. Such
communication between buyers' and sellers'
representatives is normal since it serves
the mutual interest of all the parties in
seeking to bring about a mutually
advantageous transaction. Edper's managers
and decision makers in Toronto, on the other
hand, unlike Price, were quite unaware of
Connacher's activities. While they no doubt
assumed he would be doing a stockbroker's
business and participating in this
opportunity to earn lucrative commissions by
soliciting sellers of Brascan shares, they
had no communication with him and no
awareness of his activities beyond the
Page 783
advice as to mechanics he had volunteered
to furnish to Price.
Shortly after noon on April 30 in
Toronto, Cockwell heard further confirmation
that Noranda Mines Ltd. and Brascan were
planning to swap substantial shares of stock
in a joint defensive move and that Noranda
would go into the market to buy substantial
shares of Brascan.
Edper decided to increase the
size and price of Edper's bid to three
million shares at $26 Cdn. (22 U.S.) or
better. Price was so instructed.
Connacher told Price he believed
approximately 1.5 million shares might be
available if Edper placed an order at 22.
At approximately 2:45 p. m. Price placed an
order with Balfour for 2 million Brascan
shares at 22. Price told Connacher he had
placed this order.
Balfour's floor representative
found very little stock available below a
price of 22 3/8. He bought what there was at
lower prices and increased the bid to 22
for over 2 million shares. Shortly after
Balfour received Edper's buy order, Gordon,
which by then had accumulated some two
million shares for sale, approximately 1.7
million of which was available from its
clients, placed an order to sell 2 million
shares at 22.
At 3:08 Edper's broker Balfour
purchased 2.4 million shares in one print at
22, of which 1.8 million came from Gordon,
the rest from other brokers. Later that
afternoon, Price instructed Balfour to buy
500,000 more Brascan shares at 22 and
Balfour did so.
By the close of the day on April
30, Edper had purchased a total of 3,104,800
Brascan shares on the AMEX. Of these shares,
approximately 2,100,000 were sold by Gordon,
for its own account or on behalf of its
customers.
In the late afternoon, Edper
representatives in Toronto received calls
from the Ontario Securities Commission and
the Toronto Stock Exchange requesting that
Edper issue a press release and announce the
amount of its purchases of Brascan shares.
When the Edper group met later that
afternoon, the consensus reached was that
Edper had purchased more than enough shares
to reach its immediate objectives of calling
a shareholders' meeting, influencing
Brascan's management and giving weight to
its presentation at the New York Attorney
General's hearing. The Edper group decided
not to purchase any additional Brascan
shares. Price was authorized to return to
Toronto.
At 5:00 p. m. Edper issued a
press release (Exhibit 31), announcing its
purchases, its total holdings in Brascan
shares and reiterating its determination to
oppose Brascan's plan to acquire Woolworth.
The release itself contained no reference to
Edper's intention not to purchase additional
Brascan shares.
Following issuance of this
release, Eyton spoke to representatives of
the Ontario Securities Commission and the
Toronto Stock Exchange and told them Edper
would not be making further purchases. Eyton
also made the same comment in response to
one or more inquiries from the press. On May
1 the Wall Street Journal reported:
"Edper said it doesn't currently
plan to buy more Brascan shares." (Court Ex.
1).
May 1
McCutcheon had participated on
April 30 in Edper's decision to raise the
bidding price to 22. He left Edper's
offices at 3:30 P.M. to go home and was
unaware of the later decision to stop
buying. Accordingly he rose once again
shortly after 3:00 a. m. on Tuesday, May 1,
and put in his order to London to buy up to
200,000 shares, this time at a price of $22
(U.S.) or better. His London brokers
purchased and confirmed 132,200 at this
price by 9:00 A.M. New York time, when his
London buying ceased. McCutcheon did not
learn of the previous evening's decision to
stop buying until he arrived at Edper's
offices around 9:30 a. m.
Edper's strategists met at 9:30
in Toronto to assess their position. Moore
of Brascan had announced earlier that
morning that Edper's April 30 purchases
would not dissuade Brascan from proceeding
to acquire
Page 784
Woolworth. Patino was extremely unhappy
with Edper's position. He expressed the view
that Edper had incurred a tremendous risk
without accomplishing anything. He urged
additional buying. Price, who had returned
to Toronto that morning, was advised by
Connacher's call, that Connacher had
additional customers interested in selling
sizeable blocks at 22.
Edper decided to resume
purchasing and to seek 1 million shares if
they could be had at the previous day's
prices. Price told Connacher Edper was
interested in 1 million shares without
exceeding 22.
Price gave Goldsmith an order to
purchase Brascan shares at 22 or better.
Very little was available. Price then put in
a bid at 22. By 11:45 Goldsmith had
purchased approximately 110,000 shares of
Brascan.
Connacher and members of his firm
contacted their customers in the manner
previously described and made purchases for
Gordon's account on the floor of the Toronto
Stock Exchange in an effort to accumulate
more shares which Connacher hoped Edper
would buy. Connacher advised Price that
there was a lot of stock available. As the
morning went on, the Edper group in Toronto
decided to bid for as much as 3 million
shares. Price placed an order with Balfour
for two million shares at 22 or better. A
few minutes later Goldsmith of Balfour
advised Connacher by telephone that he had
received an order to bid for two million
shares.
By 12:15 p. m. Balfour had bought
2 million shares (900,000 of which were sold
by Gordon). Soon thereafter, Edper gave
Balfour an order to purchase an additional
one million shares at 22 or better and
later for another 250,000 shares.
Around 1:00 p. m. Goldsmith told
Price that he would like to tell his floor
trader to stop buying so he could get an
accurate count of what he had purchased.
Price agreed. After that time Edper made no
further purchases. During the course of the
trading that day Balfour purchased for Edper
approximately 3,200,000 Brascan shares. Of
this number approximately 1,550,000 were
purchased from Gordon Securities or its
customers.
Since 5:00 p. m. on the afternoon
of May 1, Edper has been under a restraining
order of this court prohibiting it from
exercising stockholder's rights on any of
its stock and prohibiting further purchases.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
I. Liability under Rule 10b-5.
Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. §
240.10b-5, provides in relevant part, that
it shall be unlawful "for any person,
directly or indirectly, by the use of . . .
any facility of any national securities
exchange, . . . (b) To make any untrue
statement of a material fact or to omit to
state a material fact necessary in order to
make the statements made, in the light of
the circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading . . . in connection
with the purchase or sale of any security."
Brascan argues that beginning in early April
and in any event as early as April 20, 1979,
Edper issued a series of confusing and
misleading public statements, and failed to
correct misleading impressions created by
such public statements, with the result that
the acquisitions of April 30 and May 1 on
the American Stock Exchange were in
violation of Rule 10b-5.
I find no basis for the charge
with respect to Edper's conduct occurring
prior to May 1, 1979. Edper's releases in
early April correctly stated its position
with respect to Brascan. On April 9 it
announced an intention to consider making an
offer for 11.7 million shares of Brascan at
$28 a share. Hard on the heels of Edper's
announcement, Brascan publicly announced on
April 9 its intention to make a tender offer
for all of the shares of Woolworth.
Accordingly, the next day Edper issued a new
release to the effect that it would have to
reconsider its plans announced the prior day
by reason of Brascan's aspirations to
acquire Woolworth. Subsequently Edper
announced its application to the Ontario
Securities Commission to permit a
conditional offer for Brascan's shares which
would be
Page 785
conditioned upon Brascan's not proceeding
with the Woolworth acquisition. When the
Ontario Securities Commission refused to
permit such an offer to proceed because of
its conditional nature, Edper announced the
fact that the plan had not been approved and
stated that it had "no specific plans at
[that] moment to proceed further with an
offering for Brascan shares." Edper went on
to state that "it would continue to pursue
other avenues to have the Woolworth
acquisition abandoned" by Brascan, and in
the April 20th as well as in earlier press
releases made arguments to the effect that
Brascan's acquisition of Woolworth was not
in the best interests of Brascan's
shareholders. Edper made no further public
statements until the evening of April 30,
1979.
I find that none of the
aforementioned statements made by Edper were
in any way false, misleading or otherwise
within the scope of Rule 10b-5. While they
may have reflected changing positions, this
was because they accurately documented
Edper's changes of position in response to
Brascan's offer for Woolworth and the
actions of the Ontario Securities
Commission. They were not confusing or
misleading within the meaning of Rule 10b-5.
Brascan seeks to draw support
from a memorandum apparently prepared on
April 11, 1979. This memorandum captioned
"Timing" was apparently prepared by an
attorney associated with Eyton's law firm.
The opening paragraph contains the following
words "Press ReleaseApril 10, 1979 desired
reaction, market down". Brascan contends
that these words document an intention on
Edper's part to drive down the market in
Brascan shares by its April 10 press
release. Eyton, who was questioned about the
document, testified that it meant something
quite different. He said that the words
"desired reaction" were words used in
several instances in Edper's memoranda or
publications and that they referred to the
hope that Brascan's dissatisfied
shareholders would pressure the management
to abandon the Woolworth plan. The words
"market down" simply referred to the fact
that the market for Brascan shares was down
and did not indicate any causal relationship
between Edper's press release and the latter
phenomenon. The item is somewhat confusing.
Its author was not called as a witness.
Brascan through this document has not
sustained any burden of showing fraudulent
or manipulative activity or intent.
Brascan also alleges that the
agendas of several Edper meetings during
April, showing as items for discussion the
maintaining of periodic contact with
representatives of Woolworth, showed that
Edper was operating in an illicit and
manipulative relationship with Woolworth.
The proof showed the contrary. There were a
few brief and innocuous contacts with
Woolworth. These were rapidly terminated on
advice of counsel. These items continued to
appear on the meeting agendas apparently
only because the preparer of the agendas
made a practice of incorporating all items
which had appeared on the previous agenda.
Brascan argues that the public
statement made on April 20 to the effect
that Edper had no specific plans at that
time to proceed with an offering for Brascan
shares was either fraudulent and deceptive
when made, or at least became so very soon
when a specific plan was developed to
acquire shares on the American Stock
Exchange. This contention is unconvincing.
It is my finding that those words on April
20 correctly represented Edper's position.
Edper went on during the next ten days
considering the possibility of a variety of
alternative courses of action which were
discussed at several successive meetings.
The options being discussed included an
unconditional offer in the event that the
Woolworth plan should be abandoned, an offer
including the Woolworth condition in the
United States and the United Kingdom (this
being the offer which had been prohibited in
Toronto), an unconditional offer without the
Woolworth condition "but providing paper or
other securities with the same effect as the
Woolworth condition", a Toronto stock
exchange block offer, an offer on the
American Stock Exchange, and private
arrangements with shareholders. It
Page 786
was not until April 29 that Edper's
managers resolved a strong preference for an
American Stock Exchange acquisition although
this had been emerging as the preferred
course during explorations of the various
alternatives during the week. And it was not
until the morning of April 30 that a firm
intention was developed to plunge into large
scale acquisitions over the American Stock
Exchange. (In these, as in other findings, I
rely in part on the testimony of Jack
Cockwell, who I found to be a thoroughly
credible witness and completely honest and
forthright in his business dealings). I find
no basis for the suggestion that any of the
prior activity constituted a violation of
Rule 10b-5.6
This brings us up to the events
after the close of business on April 30 and
during the day on May 1. During the trading
day on April 30 Edper acquired more than 3
million shares of Brascan stock, mostly at a
price of 22 $U.S. Edper's managers met
together after the close on April 30 and
decided that for the time being they had
accomplished their near range objectives as
explained above, and would purchase no more
stock.
At that time Edper, at the
request of the Ontario Securities Commission
and the Toronto Stock Exchange, issued a
press release (Exh. 31) concerning the day's
acquisitions, breaking its silence of ten
days. Later that evening Eyton received a
telephone call from the Toronto Dow Jones
representative and, in response to the
journalist's questions, said that Edper had
no intention to make further purchases. This
representation was made in good faith and
accurately represented Edper's intentions at
that time.
Brascan argues that Edper's
resumed purchases on the London Exchange
which were ordered by McCutcheon at 4:30
A.M. Toronto time, together with Edper's
resumed large scale buying on the American
Stock Exchange on the following day,
demonstrate that the late April 30 statement
denying intention to acquire more stock was
false and fraudulently designed to soften
the market. The evidence does not support
this contention. McCutcheon who was handling
the London buying had been present in the
Toronto offices during the afternoon of the
30th at the time when continued buying was
authorized at stated prices. He left the
office and went home around 3:30 and was not
present or privy to the 5:00 P.M. decision
to stop buying. He was also unaware until
9:30 the next morning of Eyton's public
statement that no further buying would take
place. McCutcheon arose at 3:00 a. m. to
resume his purchases on the London Exchange
in accordance with the strategy established
the previous day which he did not know had
been later countermanded.
Nor is there any justification
for Brascan's attempt to attribute sinister
and deceptive motives to the manner in which
the London buying was carried out.
McCutcheon's instructions, which he
followed, were to "go easy" in London and
not to bid aggressively, so as not to raise
the price. He was also instructed to cease
buying at 9:00 A.M. Brascan contends that
the latter instruction was given so that the
New York market would be unaware of the
London buying. The argument is fanciful. For
quite some time now communications
technology has been sufficient to permit New
Yorkers at the time of the opening of the
Page 787
market to be well aware of what happened
in the London market during the previous six
hours. The reason McCutcheon was to stop
buying at 9:00 New York time is simple and
logical. Edper did not want to be bidding
against itself.
The instructions to "go easy" in
London do not have any of the sinister or
manipulative character which Brascan seeks
to attribute to them. They are the product
of a normal, intelligent buying strategy.
The London market was a thin market, meaning
that there was not a large amount of Brascan
stock to be acquired there. Aggressive
buying or attempts to acquire large
quantities in London would have driven the
price of Brascan stock quite high without
acquiring any significant amount of stock.
Potential New York sellers on seeing the
high London prices would then have been
inclined to demand higher prices for their
stock. There is as yet no law governing the
securities markets which requires a buyer to
handle his bids in a manner which will
insure that he has to pay the highest
possible price for what he wants to buy.
See General Time Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc., supra, at 164.
Nor does the large scale resumed
purchasing on the American Stock Exchange on
Tuesday, May 1, demonstrate falsity in the
April 30 statement. Edper changed its mind
on May 1 for three reasons. First, Moore,
the Chairman of Brascan, made known that
Brascan had every intention to pursue the
Woolworth acquisition. Apparently Edper's
April 30th buying had not been of sufficient
size to deter the Brascan management.
Second, Edper learned that there may be a
substantial volume of additional stock
available at the same price of $26 Cdn.
($22 U.S.) Third, Jaime Ortiz-Patino, a
principal director of the Patino interests,
upon his arrival in Toronto from Europe that
morning, expressed great dissatisfaction
with Edper's position because in his
estimation Edper had exposed itself to
tremendous risk by sinking a large amount of
capital into the Brascan investment without
having acquired a sufficiently substantial
position to effectuate its policies. Patino
urged resumption of large scale buying and,
particularly in view of the apparent
availability of additional stock, and
Brascan's intransigence, his partners agreed
with him. Accordingly, Edper changed its
mind and undertook another big day's buying.
No consideration was given to issuing any
further press release.
Edper then proceeded on May 1 to
buy another three million shares mostly at
22, which had been the prevailing price of
the day before.
Having undertaken to announce
publicly its massive acquisition of April
30, and its intention to make no further
purchases, I believe that Edper's resumption
of large scale acquisitions on May 1 without
announcing to the public a change from its
so recently announced intentions could
constitute an omission "to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading . . .." under Rule 10b-5. The
April 30 statement denying further
acquisition intentions could have the effect
of making Brascan shareholders feel that
they had missed their chance to sell at the
best prices and make them eager to dispose
of their stock before the price fell any
further. Given the circumstances, the April
30 statement became "misleading" on May 1
when Edper's intentions changed and a
further statement was "necessary in order to
make the statements made . . . not
misleading." Edper omitted to make such
further statements. Given the importance of
the volume of Edper's buying, the issue of
its intentions was "a material fact".
See TSC Industries v. Northway
Industries, Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 449, 96
S.Ct. 2126, 48 L.Ed.2d 757 (1976);
Joyce v. Joyce Beverages, Inc., 571
F.2d 703, 707 n. 6 (2 Cir. 1978).
Accordingly, the elements which appear on
the face of Rule 10b-5 have been made out.
This leads to the question of
scienter. I find that Edper's omission
occurred with knowledge, but not with any
intention to defraud or deceive. Edper was
of course aware that it had made the April
30 statement. It was also aware that it
undertook
Page 788
to buy on May 1. Had its managers thought
about the question they would have been
aware that the actions of May 1 were in
conflict with the statement of April 30 and
that these circumstances might result in
making the Brascan stock cheaper. I note in
passing that with respect to the May 1
London purchases there was not even
awareness on McCutcheon's part of the prior
statement or its conflict with his May 1
actions.
Despite the knowledge that Edper
did have or should have had concerning this
misleading statement, I do not find that the
omission on May 1 was motivated by any
desire to deceive the public or to
manipulate the condition of the stock
market. How Edper would have dealt with the
problem, had it confronted it specifically,
is difficult to guess. It was eager to avoid
making public statements of any kind during
its program of stock exchange acquisitions,
and it made the April 30 statement only
because requested to do so by the officials
of the Ontario Securities Commission and the
Toronto Stock Exchange. In the statement of
intentions informally given to a Dow Jones
reporter, Eyton had gone beyond the
authorized press release which had been
discussed at the late afternoon meeting. I
do find that throughout the events which
were the subject of the hearing Edper's
managers conducted themselves scrupulously,
fairly and with good faith efforts to
observe the requirements of law. I believe
these observations are applicable to Edper's
state of mind in its omission to correct the
April 30 statement.
This raises the troublesome
issue, what degree of scienter is necessary
to justify an action for an injunction under
Rule 10b-5 where the effect of the
injunction would be to protect the
stockholding public from the further effect
of a misleading statement. There is clear
law to the effect that a damage action under
Rule 10b-5 will not lie in the absence of
proof of scienterwhich the Supreme Court
defined
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S.
185, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976),
as a "mental state embracing intent to
deceive, manipulate or defraud," id.
at 193, n. 12, 96 S.Ct. 1381, n. 12, and as
"knowing or intentional misconduct," id.
at 197, 96 S.Ct. 1375.7
It has also been held recently in this
Circuit that fraudulent intent is not
necessary where injunctive relief is sought
by the Securities Exchange Commission.8
What is not clear is the question whether
and to what extent scienter is required when
injunctive relief is sought by a private
party to prevent future harm from the
misleading statement.
I need not reach definitive
resolution of that issue at this stage of a
motion for a preliminary injunction. For
under the second branch of the Sonesta
International Hotel's test,9
all that is needed, together with other
factors discussed below, is a "sufficiently
serious questions going to the merits" to
make it a fair ground for litigation and a
"balance of hardships tipping decidedly
toward the party requesting the preliminary
relief" together with irreparable harm. I
find that that test is narrowly met under
these circumstances and that a tipping of
the equities may well justify some form of
injunctive relief designed to protect
Brascan shareholders from the possibility of
being misled by the continuing effect of the
April 30 statement.
II. Liability under the
Williams Act.
A. The filing requirements of
Section 13(d) and 14(d).
Brascan's first contention with
respect to the Williams Act is that Edper,
from the time it had acquired more than 5%
of the stock of Brascan in the early part of
1979, was in violation of § 13(d) of the
Exchange Act by virtue of its failure to
file
Page 789
statements required therein, and that
this violation was compounded by Edper's
failure to file the statements required by §
14(d) before making its purchases on April
30 and May 1. This contention requires
little discussion. Sections 13(d) and 14(d)
are not applicable to all securities but
apply only to the equity securities of
companies which are registered pursuant to §
12 of the Exchange Act. Brascan's shares are
not registered pursuant to § 12. Brascan is
a foreign issuer whose securities are not
listed on any national securities exchange
in the United States. Its shares are
admitted to unlisted trading privileges on
the American Stock Exchange, and are exempt
from Section 12(g) under the provisions of
Rule 12g3-2. The SEC appearing as amicus at
the preliminary injunction hearing confirmed
that the provisions of §§ 13(d) and 14(d)
were not applicable to Brascan's shares.
Rule 12f-4 does not, as plaintiffs argue,
mandate a different conclusion.
B. The anti-fraud provisions of
Section 14(e) of the Exchange Act.
The anti-fraud provisions of
Section 14(e) are drawn in terms virtually
identical to those of Rule 10b-5, but the
two rules operate in different contexts.
Rule 10b-5 applies if the prohibited conduct
occurs "in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security"; Section 14(e) applies
if the conduct occurs "in connection with
any tender offer . . .."
Accordingly, the omission on May
1 to correct the misleading impression
created by the April 30 announcement which
was found arguably violative of Rule 10b-5
might also have violated Section 14(e) if
Edper's buying on April 30 and May 1
constituted a tender offer. Since the
purposes of the Williams Act differ from
those of Rule 10b-5, it is possible that
upon a finding of a violation of Section
14(e), a different scope of remedial relief
might be available than that appropriate
under Rule 10b-5. Accordingly, the question
must be considered.
I find that Edper's conduct did
not constitute a tender offer within the
meaning of the Williams Act.
In fact, Edper's conduct had very
little similarity to what is commonly
understood as a tender offer and what was
described as a tender offer in the context
of the hearings leading to the passage of
the Williams Act. Edper did not engage in
widespread solicitation of stockholders.
Indeed, it scrupulously avoided any
solicitation upon the advice of its lawyers.
Its purchasing was not contingent on a
minimum fixed number of shares being
offered, it did not put out an offer at a
fixed price and the form of the transaction
did not provide for tenders by the selling
shareholders to be held for some period of
time by the purchaser or a depositary, as is
customary in tender offers. What Edper did
was to acquire a large amount of stock in
open market purchases, bidding cautiously so
as to avoid bidding up the price of the
stock to excessive levels unless there was
large volume available at such prices. This
is not a tender offer, even if a large
volume of stock is accumulated in such
fashion.
See Kennecott Copper Corp. v. Curtiss
Wright Corp., 584 F.2d 1195, 1206 (2d
Cir. 1978).
Brascan argues that Edper made
Connacher its agent so that all of
Connacher's and his firm's activity in
lining up potential sellers is attributable
to Edper in determining whether or not Edper
engaged in a tender offer. I do not find
this contention supported by the evidence.
It is true without question that Connacher
had some connection with Edper and assisted
Edper in certain respects. A week prior to
Edper's large market acquisitions, it had
consulted Connacher (because he was known to
be well informed concerning Brascan stock),
as to his opinion of the feasibility of
acquiring a large number of Brascan shares.
Indeed, earlier in January and February it
had employed Connacher as a broker in
acquiring blocks of Brascan stock. On April
29 and 30, Edper obtained Connacher's
assistance in setting up the mechanics for
American Stock Exchange transactions. He
helped Price negotiate a brokerage
commission with Balfour, and he advised
Price as to
Page 790
how to handle questions of foreign
currency exchange, hedging and mechanisms
for making payment in connection with large
purchases. He was prepared to introduce
Price to New York investment bankers in the
event that Edper chose a route other than
open market purchases. But in his
solicitation of customers who might be
interested in selling, he was simply not
acting at the instructions of, or in any way
as agent for, Edper.
Of course Connacher and Edper
necessarily had interests in common. A
seller's broker always has interests in
common with the buyer. If the buyer does not
buy, the seller's broker will not earn his
commission. Thus, if Connacher as a seller's
broker were capable of rounding up a large
volume of shares for sale at a price that
Edper was willing to pay, Edper's objectives
would be satisfied and Connacher would make
money. That did not make Connacher Edper's
agent for the solicitation of sellers'
shares.
Even if Connacher were deemed to
have been Edper's agent in the solicitation
of shares for sale, still the transaction
would not constitute a tender offer within
the meaning of the Williams Act. All that
Connacher and his firm did was to scout
between 30 and 50 large institutional
holders of Brascan stock, plus about a dozen
large individual investors, to collect a
large block for Edper to purchase at a price
agreeable to both sides of the transaction.
He and his firm did this in the conventional
methods of privately negotiated block
trades. Such privately negotiated block
trading is done on a daily basis in the U.S.
securities markets without anyone's ever
suspecting that what is being practiced
might be a tender offer. In the recent
Kennecott case, supra, this
Circuit refused to construe tender offers
under the Williams Act as covering this sort
of conduct.
A small number of District Court
cases11 have held
that the Williams Act should be deemed
applicable to such large scale
accumulations. The general thrust of the
reasoning is that since the Williams Act was
designed to remedy certain problems often
found in tender offers, and since similar
problems are to be found in other forms of
stock accumulation, the Williams Act should
be deemed to cover such other forms of stock
accumulation even though they are not what
is conventionally understood as a tender
offer.
There are serious problems with
this form of statutory interpretation. First
of all the legislative history of the
Williams Act shows that it was passed with
full awareness of the difference between
tender offers and other forms of large scale
stock accumulations. Statements by Senator
Williams, the proponent of the bill and by
SEC Chairman Manuel Cohen at the legislative
hearings specifically advert to the fact
that tender offers are distinguishable from
other forms of large scale stock
accumulation including privately negotiated
transactions.12
Indeed, the provisions of the Williams Act
itself acknowledge those distinctions since
it provides for different consequences where
an initial accumulation is acquired by
tender offer as opposed to where it is
acquired by other methods. There can be no
question that Congress regulated what it
wished to regulate and chose not to regulate
what it did not wish to regulate.
Further the regulatory scheme
established by Congress in the Williams Act
is incompatible with its application to a
program of market purchasing. As the Court
of Appeals pointed out in the Kennecott
case, the provisions of Sections 14(d)(5),
14(d)(6) and 14(d)(7) are unworkable when
applied to a program of acquisition which
includes stock market purchases. (See also
Rule 10b-13.) The consequence of bringing
such large scale open market and privately
negotiated purchases within the scope of the
Williams Act would be to rule, in effect,
that no large scale acquisition program may
Page 791
be lawfully accomplished except in the
manner of a conventional tender offer. While
this may be a sensible legislative provision
(and may be implicit in the 35 offerees
formulation set forth in the ALI's proposed
Federal Securities Code, see Section
299.68) there is nothing in the legislative
history or the text of the Williams Act
which suggests that it intended to bring
about such consequences.
The Securities Exchange
Commission, at this Court's request,
submitted a brief amicus curiae. The
Commission takes no position as to whether
the acts of Edper constituted a tender
offer, but lists eight factors which
authorities have considered in determining
whether acquisitions constitute a tender
offer under the Williams Act.13
The SEC refrains from specifying which of
the eight factors or how many must be met or
how clearly before an acquisition will be
considered a tender offer. I have doubts as
to whether this view constitutes either a
permissible or a desirable interpretation of
the statute. As to permissibility, I have
some question whether it expands the scope
of the statute beyond what Congress can
reasonably be understood to have intended,
depending how many and which factors are
deemed necessary. I believe it is not
desirable because the application of so
vague a test would introduce a crippling
uncertainty in an area in which
practitioners should be entitled to be
guided by reasonably clear rules of the
road. The consequences of having purchased
on the open market where a court would later
determine on the basis of so unpredictable a
test that the provisions of Section 14(d)
should have been respected could well be
catastrophic beyond reason. Since purchasers
could not reasonably assume such open-ended
risks, the practical consequence of adopting
such an interpretation would be that large
scale acquisitions can only be accomplished
by the method of conventional tender offers
and, as noted above, this is not a
permissible reading of the Williams Act.
But more important for purposes
of this decision, I find that even if the
Commission's eight criteria represented the
authorized interpretation of the Williams
Act, Edper's actions, even as supplemented
by Connacher's, do not sufficiently meet
these criteria to come within the definition
of a tender offer.
The first criterion calling for
"active and widespread solicitation of
public shareholders" is clearly not met. The
solicitations were directed to only
approximately 50 of Brascan's 50,000
shareholders, each of the 50 being either an
institution or a sophisticated individual
holder of large blocks of Brascan shares.
The third criterion calling for
"a premium over the prevailing market price"
is met, but only to a slight degree. Edper
was unable to purchase large amounts at 21.
Its broker, Balfour, did not encounter
sizeable blocks until it went as high as 22
3/8. The price at which it accomplished its
major volume, 22, was only 3/8 of a point
above what any purchaser would have had to
pay for any significant volume.
Criterion number four that "the
terms of the offer are firm rather than
negotiable" was not met. Edper, Gordon, and
the sellers were feeling their way to find a
level at which large volume purchasing could
be done. The fact that Gordon spoke to
potential sellers during the morning of the
likelihood of a price of $26 Cdn. (22 U.S.)
did not represent a firm bid. I find that it
represented Connacher's well educated guess
as to where a deal might be put together
based on his knowledge of the
Page 792
market and of the buyer's and sellers'
desires. He and his traders repeatedly
denied to their customers the existence of
any firm bid.
The fifth criterion, "whether the
offer is contingent on the tender of a fixed
minimum number of shares" is met only to a
slight degree. It is true that Edper was not
interested in bidding up the price too high
without acquiring a large number of shares
in doing so. And it is true that Connacher
advised his customers that he didn't believe
a transaction would go through unless
sufficient volume were achieved. But these
conditions were general, fluid and
negotiable. They were not fixed as part of
the terms of any offer to purchase shares.
The sixth condition, "whether the
offer is open only for a limited period of
time" is not met. Since there was no open
offer, there was certainly no assurance that
any offer would remain open for any period
of time. Nor was there any statement to the
effect that an offer temporarily available
would soon disappear. What was said to the
potential sellers by Gordon was that a buyer
was interested in accumulating a large
volume. Thus the situation did not carry
with it the kind of potential pressure
which, coupling a high premium with the
threat that the offer will disappear as of a
certain time, places an offeree under
pressure to decide. That is the kind of
pressure which the Williams Act was designed
to alleviate, by providing information on
which to base a decision. That was not
present here.
I find that the seventh
criterion, "whether the offerees are
subjected to pressure to sell their stock"
was not met. The offerees were experienced
professionals, in most cases institutional
portfolio managers. Even assuming that such
professional investors can be susceptible to
"pressure" in the sense in which the
Williams Act is concerned, no such pressures
were applied.
Finally, the eighth criterion,
"whether public announcements of a
purchasing program . . . precede or
accompany a rapid accumulation" was not met.
Edper had made some public announcements in
early April when it was contemplating
differently structured programs of
acquisition. It announced its application on
April 18 to the Ontario Securities
Commission for permission to make a
conditional circular offering. When
permission was refused on April 20, Edper
announced the refusal to the public and
indicated that it had no specific further
plans at that time. No further public
statement was made by Edper until the close
of business on April 30.
In short, the only one of the
SEC's eight criteria which is clearly and
solidly met is number two, that "the
solicitation is made for a substantial
percentage of the issuer's stock." While one
might have no disagreement with legislation
which imposed pre-acquisition disclosure
requirements, comparable to those required
by § 13(d), whenever a purchaser intended to
acquire by any means a large specified
percentage of any publicly held stock, that
is not what the Williams Act now requires.
It is not in my view within the power of a
court to so rewrite its provisions.
III. The Scope of Relief.
Having found a single instance of
unintentional misleading of shareholders,
resulting from a failure to correct a prior
statement which changed intentions could
have rendered deceptive, it remains to
consider the appropriate scope of relief
under Rule 10b-5.
Brascan has shown no injury to
itself and no entitlement to injunctive
relief for its protection (as opposed to the
protection of its shareholders). The
justification for permitting Brascan, the
issuer, to maintain this action is that the
issuer was in the best position to protect
the interests of its shareholders from
further deception. It is the interest of the
shareholders which the injunctive relief may
properly protect, at least in the absence of
a showing that the issuer has been harmed by
the violation of Rule 10b-5.
See Electronic Specialty Co. v.
International Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937 at 947-48 (2d Cir. 1969).
Page 793
As to the shareholders, no
violation or injury of any kind has been
shown with respect to sellers of stock
acquired by Edper prior to the close of
business on April 30. Accordingly, there is
no warrant for the grant of any injunctive
relief against Edper concerning its exercise
of full shareholders' rights as to those
shares. As to stock acquired on May 1, the
omission to correct the statement of April
30 might have resulted in bringing a lower
price to the selling shareholders of May 1.
If so, their only injury is monetary. The
continuation of an injunction against Edper
prohibiting its exercise of ownership rights
over those shares acquired on May 1 would in
no way cure any harm which might have been
suffered by the May 1 selling stockholders.
A correction of the misleading aspect of the
statement, would not have induced selling
shareholders to hold on to their stock so as
to preserve their voting rights. And, in any
event, since May 1, Brascan stock has
actively traded well below the May 1 market
price. From this, it can be inferred that
there are no Brascan shareholders who were
prevented by higher market prices from
reconstituting the position they had before
they sold on May 1. The open market has
offered them better relief than rescission.
Accordingly, I can find no basis in Edper's
May 1 omission for the grant of injunctive
relief which would restrict Edper's rights
of ownership as to the May 1 stock. If May 1
sellers were injured in the price they
received, they can seek compensation by a
damage action,
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp.,
422 U.S. 49, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 45 L.Ed.2d 12 (1975),
assuming they would be able to prevail in
showing the necessary scienter (which I have
not found). Whether or not they can prevail
in such a damage action, their position
would in no way be improved by the grant of
injunctive relief against Edper.
The next class to be considered
is the remaining shareholders of Brascan
(the potential offerees of any further
bidding), and the general investing public.
In retrospect it is in their interest alone
that the injunctive relief granted on May 1
was justified. The proper purpose of
injunctive relief in this situation is only
to protect the marketplace and the holders
of Brascan stock from further deception as a
result of the failure to correct the April
30 statement. Holders of Brascan stock after
May 1 might well have been deceived as to
the value of their stock by reason of their
incorrect belief that Edper had withdrawn
from the market. Their protection does not
require that Edper be barred from making
further acquisition of Brascan stock. The
balance of the equities requires only that
Edper set the record straight and disabuse
the shareholders of the misleading effects
of the April 30 statement before doing so.
See Sonesta Hotels, supra.
Given the innocent nature of the
misleading, Edper's undoubted willingness to
make the appropriate corrections and the
ease and speed with which this can be
accomplished, I find no basis for granting
any injunctive relief.14
The preliminary injunction is therefore
denied. And the temporary restraining order
of May 1 is hereby dissolved, with exception
of the provision forbidding further
purchases, which shall be dissolved promptly
upon Edper's application demonstrating that
it has made a public statement, correcting
any misleading impression which may remain
from the statement of April 30.
One final observation is
appropriate. In Talley Industries, supra,
Judge Friendly noted that in allowing a
corporation to enjoin "manipulation of its
stock, . . . courts must act both with speed
and with caution lest such actions become
vehicles for management to thwart" events
which may be in the true interests of the
stockholders. In this case Brascan's
management obtained an ex parte
temporary restraining order which deprived
its 30% shareholder of the exercise of
shareholders'
Page 794
rights. The order has remained in effect
for nearly a month by reason of Brascan's
allegations of pervasive fraud which it now
appears were without foundation. A principal
purpose in Edper's increasing its
shareholdings on April 30 was to be able to
oblige Brascan's management to call a
stockholders' meeting at which holders of
Brascan stock would be able to vote on the
desirability of the Woolworth acquisition.
Management had not only refused Edper's
earlier request for a shareholders' meeting,
but had gone further and postponed the
previously scheduled annual meeting.
Edper, furthermore, contends that
it may have been irreparably harmed by the
duration of its disfranchisement. It has
made an enormous investment in Brascan. It
contends that the value of its investment
will be seriously diminished if Brascan
proceeds with the Woolworth acquisition, and
that it has been unjustifiably prevented
from exercising its stockholder's right to
vote on the matter. Without expressing any
opinion of any kind on the desirability of
the Woolworth acquisition for Brascan, I am
strongly of the view that Brascan's
shareholders should not be precluded by
management from expressing themselves on so
important a question. If, after the lifting
of this restraining order, Edper, as a 10%
holder, proceeds to make its demand for a
shareholders' meeting, I would think it
incumbent on management not to oppose,
obstruct or delay the convening of such a
meeting.
SO ORDERED:
Notes:
1. During the latter part of March and
the early days of April, Edper was involved
in negotiations with two Canadian banks, the
Bank of Montreal and the Toronto-Dominion
Bank, to arrange financing for its
acquisition of Brascan stock. The
arrangement was formalized on April 6, 1979.
Under the agreement utilization of this $210
million (Cdn.) credit would have required
Edper to acquire at least 50.01% of
Brascan's stock within 90 days of its
borrowing. Edper has not borrowed any money
under this arrangement, and accordingly has
incurred no obligations under the agreement.
2. Allegations have been made as to the
motives of and the means by which the
Brascan Board adopted its resolution to
acquire the stock of Woolworth. This issue
was not put before the Court, and in any
event, such questions are not germane to
this lawsuit. I neither make nor imply any
findings concerning the motives behind the
offer, the manner in which the Board decided
to pursue the offer, or the advisability of
the offer.
4. Brascan argues that this observation
prior to any announced resistance by
Woolworth showed illicit communication and
cooperation between Woolworth and Edper.
This was not demonstrated. Edper inferred
resistance from the publicly known fact that
Woolworth had engaged a lawyer well known
for resistance to tender offers.
5. The reason for this was to avoid
Edper's effectively bidding against itself
on two exchanges simultaneously.
6. Brascan also argues that Edper was
under a duty to make a public announcement
of its intentions to purchase Brascan stock
prior to its entering the market on April
30. Brascan offers no support for this
contention. The cases that it relies upon,
SEC v. Shattuck Denn Mining Corp.,
297 F.Supp. 470 (S.D.N.Y.1968),
Cochran v. Channing Corp., 211
F.Supp. 239 (S.D.N.Y.1963), and
Butler Aviation International, Inc. v.
Comprehensive Designers, Inc., 307
F.Supp. 910 (S.D.N.Y.1969), aff'd,
425 F.2d 842 (2d Cir. 1970), are not on
point in that they involved misleading or
manipulative conduct.
More to the point is Judge
Friendly's comment
General Time Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc.,
403 F.2d 159, 164 (2d Cir. 1968),
cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1026, 89 S.Ct.
631, 21 L.Ed.2d 570 (1969), that there is no
rule of law that "a purchaser of stock, who
was not an "insider" and had no fiduciary
relation to a prospective seller, had any
obligation to reveal circumstances that
might raise a seller's demands and thus
abort the sale." See generally Fleischer,
Mundheim & Murphy, An Initial Inquiry into
the Responsibility to Disclose Market
Information, 121 U.Pa.L.Rev. 798 (1973).
7. See also,
Rolf v. Blyth, Eastman Dillon & Co., Inc.,
570 F.2d 38 (2d Cir.), cert. denied,
439 U.S. 1039, 99 S.Ct. 642, 58 L.Ed.2d 699
(1978);
Lanza v. Drexel & Co.,
479 F.2d 1277
(2d Cir. 1973);
Shemtob v. Shearson, Hammill & Co.,
448 F.2d 442 (2d Cir. 1971).
8.
See SEC v. Aaron, 605 F.2d 612
[Current] CCH Fed.Sec.L.Rep. 96,800 (2d
Cir. 1979).
9. Sonesta
483 F.2d 247, 250 (2d Cir. 1973)'>Int'l.
Hotels Corp. v. Wellington Associates,
483 F.2d 247, 250 (2d Cir. 1973).
11.
See S-G Securities, Inc. v. Fuqua
Investment Co.,
466 F.Supp. 1114
(D.Mass.1978); Cattlemen's
Investment Co. v. Fears,
343 F.Supp. 1248 (W.D.Okla.1972).
12. See 113 Cong.Rec. at 854-6 and
Hearings on S. 510 Before Sub-Comm. on
Securities of Senate Comm. on Banking and
Currency, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. at 16,
17, 24-25, 36 (1967).
13. The eight factors are as follows:
(1) "active and widespread
solicitation of public shareholders. . . ."
(2) solicitation is "for a
substantial percentage of the issuer's
stock."
(3) offer to purchase is "at a
premium.. ."
(4) terms of offer "firm rather
than negotiable."
(5) offer "contingent on the
tender of a fixed minimum number of shares.
. . ."
(6) offer is "open for only a
limited period of time."
(7) offerees "subjected to
pressure to sell their stock."
(8) "public announcements of a
purchasing program . . . precede or
accompany a rapid accumulation. . . ."
14. At the hearing I declined to receive
in evidence two affidavits, Exhibits 44 and
45. I have considered their contents and
find that, even had they been received, they
would not have affected my decisions in any
way.
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