| Page 207 488 F.2d 207
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,196
CORENCO CORPORATION,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SCHIAVONE & SONS, INC., et al.,
Defendants-Appellees, and
Chester K. Twiss et al., Additional
Defendants to Counterclaim. Nos. 331, 521, Dockets 73-2216,
73-2286. United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Sept. 26, 1973.
Decided Oct. 26, 1973.
Page 209
Jerome Doyle, New York City
(Leonard A. Spivak, George Wailand, Cahill,
Gordon & Reindel, New York City, Richard L.
Brickley, Brickley, Sears & Cole, Boston,
Mass., of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant
and additional defendants to Counterclaim.
Robert W. Sweet, New York City
(Blaine V. Fogg, Thomas J. Schwarz, Edward
J. Yodowitz, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, New York City, of counsel), for
defendants-appellees.
William E. McCurdy, Jr., New York
City (Lord, Day & Lord, New York City, of
counsel), for defendant-appellee Reed Rubin.
Before MOORE, MANSFIELD and
OAKES, Circuit Judges.
MANSFIELD, Circuit Judge:
A familiar defensive tactic
increasingly used by target companies to
delay or thwart a take-over bid made by a
tender
Page 210 offeror has been the institution of a
lawsuit against the offeror charging
violation of the federal antitrust laws or
non-disclosure of material information in
violation of the Williams Act, Pub.L.
90-439, 82 Stat. 454, 15 U.S.C. Secs.
78m(d), (e), 78n(d)-(f). These actions have
presented us with difficult and unusual
questions. See, e. g.,
Gulf & Western Industries, Inc. v. Great
Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 476 F.2d 687 (2d
Cir. 1973);
Sonesta International Hotels Corp. v.
Wellington Associates, 483 F.2d 247 (2d
Cir.1973);
SEC v. Bangor Punta Corp.,
480 F.2d 341 (2d
Cir. 1973). See generally E. Aranow & H.
Einhorn, Tender Offers for Corporate Control
(1973). The present case is no exception. It
is novel in two respects. First, the
district court, facing a question of first
impression, held that the tender offeror, in
this case a closely held company, should
disclose financial data as to its own past
operations, since this information might aid
those solicited in deciding whether to
tender or withhold their shares. Secondly,
the principal appeal is not by the offeror,
which has decided to abide by this aspect of
the district court's decision, but by the
target company, Corenco Corp., after it has
successfully obtained a permanent injunction
based on the offeror's failure to disclose
its financial operations. Corenco appeals
from a modification of that judgment which
would permit the offeror to cure the
deficiency by making the required disclosure
to the offerees and giving them a right of
withdrawal.
The original judgment entered on
August 9, 1973, 362 F.Supp. 939, in favor of
Corenco, the target company, after a trial
before Judge Ward in the Southern District
of New York, permanently enjoined Schiavone
& Sons, Inc. ("Schiavone"), its parent
company, Michael Schiavone & Sons, Inc.
("Michael Schiavone"), and Bear Stearns &
Co., and all persons acting on their behalf
(herein collectively referred to as "the
Schiavone defendants") from (a) soliciting
the tender of any shares of stock of
Corenco, (b) acquiring any Corenco shares as
a result of the tender offer, (c) further
soliciting the proxies of holders of Corenco
common stock, (d) voting any shares of
Corenco common stock or proxies, (e)
otherwise utilizing any such stock or shares
of Corenco as a means of gaining control of
Corenco "unless and until the Schiavone
defendants make full disclosure of financial
information about Schiavone and Michael
Schiavone." The modification relieved the
Schiavone defendants from the injunctive
provisions of the order and judgment and
permitted them to continue soliciting the
tender of Corenco shares upon their filing
with the Securities Exchange Commission (the
"SEC") an amendment (containing financial
statements for Schiavone and Michael
Schiavone) to Schiavone's Schedule 13D
statement and upon their distribution of an
"Extended and Amended Offer to Purchase."
Corenco argues that the
modification permitting the tender offer to
proceed upon the filing of a curative
amendment will encourage minimal disclosure
by other tender offerors in the future and
that it was based on the district court's
mistaken belief that the Schiavone
defendants intended to disclose as much
financial information as they had furnished
to the First Pennsylvania Banking & Trust
Co. ("First Pennsylvania") in securing a
loan to finance the tender offer.
Both Corenco and the Schiavone
defendants also appeal from those portions
of the district court's judgment of August
9, 1973, which dismissed certain of their
various other claims and counterclaims.
1 Corenco alleges
several other violations (besides the
failure to
Page 211 disclose financial information about
Schiavone and Michael Schiavone) of Secs.
14(d) and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 ("the Exchange Act"), 15 U.S.C.
Secs. 78n(d) and 78n(e), and claims that
prior to the public tender offer the
Schiavone defendants together with Reed
Rubin, a broker, conspired in violation of
Sec. 13(d) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 78m(d), to acquire or hold together
more than 5% of Corenco's stock without
making the required filings. The Schiavone
defendants counterclaim that the Corenco
management itself violated Sec. 13(d) of the
Exchange Act by failing to file a Schedule
13D statement while acting in concert to
defeat Schiavone's offer.
For reasons hereinafter stated we
hold that the district court acted well
within its discretion in modifying its
previous order and in permitting the tender
offer to proceed upon the filing of a
curative amendment. However, because we
believe that the district court may have
believed that the Schiavone defendants
intended to disclose all of the financial
information about themselves that they had
previously furnished to First Pennsylvania,
we remand for a determination by the
district court as to whether the disclosure
of Schiavone financial information as to
earlier years should be required. In all
other respects we affirm the modified
judgment of the district court.
Although Corenco has challenged
at length some of Judge Ward's findings of
fact as contrary to the weight of the
evidence, we are here governed by the
"clearly erroneous" standard. Rule 52(a),
F.R.Civ.P.;
United States v. National Association of
Real Estate Boards, 339 U.S. 485, 70 S.Ct.
711, 94 L.Ed. 1007 (1950). Under that
standard the essential facts appear to be as
follows. From time to time during and prior
to 1972 Corenco, a publicly held corporation
organized under Maine laws and engaged in
production of tallow, fertilizers,
shortening and industrial oils, offered a
"finders fee" to Reed Rubin, a broker
employed by Singer & Mackie, Inc., payable
upon his finding any company successfully
acquired by Corenco. In October, 1972, Rubin
arranged a meeting between Corenco
representatives and Joel Schiavone,
vice-president of Michael Schiavone and
president of Schiavone for the purpose of
exploring preliminarily a possible
acquisition of Schiavone by Corenco. Both
Michael Schiavone and its subsidiary,
Schiavone, are closely held corporations
engaged in the scrap metals business.
Although the companies and their industries
were discussed generally at this meeting, no
concrete proposal or plan emerged for a
merger with or an acquisition by Corenco of
the Schiavone companies. Thereafter
discussions periodically took place between
some or all of the representatives of both
sides until on April 12, 1973, negotiations
were terminated.
In the meantime, in January,
1973, Michael Schiavone began purchasing
Corenco stock, initially for investment,
using Rubin as its broker. These purchases
continued throughout the first half of 1973
so that by July 3 Michael Schiavone held
18,300 shares or 4.8% of the 383,456 Corenco
shares outstanding. Prior to March 12, 1973,
Rubin himself had also purchased shares of
Corenco stock, which were held in various
accounts toward which he occupied a special
relationship: as trustee of a trust
established by Vera Rubin (12,965 shares),
as investment "advisor" to his father,
Samuel Rubin (4,950 shares),
2
and as director and treasurer of the
Research Institute for the Study of Man
(1,000 shares).
3
In the aggregate these acquisitions by Rubin
totalled 4.996% of Corenco's outstanding
shares. Prior to July 17, 1973 (the date
when Schiavone
Page 212 made its tender offer) Rubin neither advised
the Schiavone companies of these
acquisitions nor did he know of Michael
Schiavone's purchases of Corenco stock for
purposes other than investment. Rubin, of
course, was to be remunerated as a finder
only if Corenco acquired Schiavone, not if
Schiavone acquired Corenco.
On July 17, 1973, Schiavone
announced publicly that it was offering to
purchase shares of Corenco stock with the
intent of gaining control of the
corporation. Immediately before the
announcement Schiavone filed with the SEC a
statement on Schedule 13D as required by
Sec. 14(d) of the Exchange Act and an Offer
to Purchase dated July 17, 1973. Schiavone
offered to pay $33 net
4
per share for Corenco shares tendered prior
to August 2, 1973, except that Schiavone
would not be obligated to purchase fewer
than 90,000 nor more than 130,000 Corenco
shares. The Offer to Purchase also
disclosed: that Michael Schiavone had
already acquired approximately 4.8% of
Corenco's common stock "for investment;"
that Schiavone and Michael Schiavone would
own approximately 28.6% of the outstanding
Corenco shares if 90,000 shares were
purchased and approximately 39.2% of the
outstanding shares if 130,000 shares were
purchased and that Schiavone's purpose in
making the offer was to gain control of
Corenco with a view to a possible merger or
other combination of the two companies. The
Offer also included financial information
about Corenco and the market value of its
stock, and information about the officers
and directors of the Schiavone companies and
the source of the funds required to finance
the tender offer. However, the Offer did not
contain any financial information as to
Schiavone or Michael Schiavone.
On the next day, July 18,
Schiavone published an announcement of its
offer in the Wall Street Journal.
5 The announcement stated
that it did not itself constitute an offer
and advised readers that they could obtain
copies of the printed Offer to Purchase from
the Depository, the Forwarding Agent or the
Dealer Manager. The announcement also
explained that no tenders would be accepted
unless made by a "duly executed" Letter of
Tender which the shareholder could obtain
only if he requested an Offer to Purchase.
Within a day or two after the
announcement of the tender offer Corenco's
management decided-by unanimous vote-to
fight it. A series of letters were sent by
the management to shareholders urging them
to delay action on the offer and warning
them that the offer was "inadequate." The
letters were supplemented by press releases
and hundreds of telephone calls. On July 23
the management declared an extra cash
dividend payable to shareholders of record
on August 3 (the day after Schiavone's offer
was due to expire) and a 10% stock dividend
payable to shareholders of record on August
21. In short Corenco made it clear that it
would leave no stone unturned in its
opposition to the bid.
On July 25 Corenco's management
brought the present suit in the United
States District Court for the Southern
District of New York seeking an injunction
against the tender offer. The complaint
alleged that the proposed acquisition would
violate Sec. 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 18, by precluding a potential
competitor from entering the market. It also
claimed that the "announcement" in the Wall
Street Journal itself constituted a tender
offer within the meaning of Sec. 14(d) of
the Exchange Act and hence was illegal
because it failed to include the required
information, and that the Offer to Purchase
contained several material misstatements and
omissions in violation of Sec. 14(e) of the
Page 213 Exchange Act. The management also claimed
that the Schiavone companies and Reed Rubin
had violated Sec. 13(d) of the Exchange Act
by collectively conspiring to acquire more
than 5% of Corenco's stock without making
the required filings. The Schiavone
defendants counterclaimed alleging that
Corenco's management itself had violated
Sec. 13(d) by acting in concert to oppose
Schiavone's tender offer without filing a
statement on Schedule 13D.
Both parties asked initially for
preliminary injunctions against each other.
At a subsequent hearing on their petitions,
however, they stipulated, pursuant to Rule
65(a)(2), F.R.Civ.P., that the hearing would
constitute a trial on the merits. After the
hearing the district court, in a well
reasoned opinion, dismissed most of
Corenco's claims, including its antitrust
charges. However, it held that in view of
the circumstances of the case and the nature
and purpose of Schiavone's tender offer,
Schiavone should have disclosed financial
information about itself and Michael
Schiavone and that its failure to do so
violated Sec. 14(e) of the Williams Act.
Judge Ward noted particularly that both
Schiavone companies were privately held so
that no financial information about them was
publicly available, and reasoned that such
information might be important to an
investor seeking to decide whether he should
sell his Corenco shares for $33 or retain
them as an interest in a company that might
be controlled by Schiavone if its
solicitation of tenders should be
successful. He further concluded that it
would be material to a Corenco shareholder
to have information as to the source of the
funds available to repay the loan obtained
by Schiavone from First Pennsylvania to
finance the tender offer. Accordingly Judge
Ward restrained the Schiavone defendants
from acquiring any Corenco shares as a
result of their tender offer "unless and
until the Schiavone defendants make full
disclosure of financial information about
Schiavone and Michael Schiavone." The court
dismissed the Schiavone defendants'
counterclaim against Corenco.
The injunction was issued on
August 9, 1973. On August 10, the Schiavone
defendants moved the court pursuant to Rules
60(b) (5) and (6), F.R.Civ.P., for relief
from the injunction to permit them to file
with the SEC an amendment-containing
financial information about Schiavone and
Michael Schiavone-to Schiavone's Schedule
13D statement and to distribute an "Extended
and Amended Offer to Purchase." In an
affidavit in support of this motion
Schiavone represented that the financial
information contained in the proposed
amendment "is the information which was
submitted in confidence to the First
Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Company in
connection with the financing of the tender
offer." On August 16, 1973, the court
granted the Schiavone's motion on condition
that the "Extended and Amended Offer to
Purchase" state in bold face type that each
shareholder who had already tendered his
shares could withdraw them within 30 days
and that the Amended Offer contained
financial information about the Schiavone
companies which had not previously been
disclosed.
Corenco appeals from the court's
August 16th order modifying its injunction
and from its judgment entered on August 9,
1973, dismissing its various other
complaints. The Schiavone defendants appeal
from the district court's dismissal of their
counterclaim. Corenco further contends for
the first time upon this appeal that since
Michael Schiavone supplied First
Pennsylvania with financial statements for
the five-year period from February
1968-1973, whereas in its amendment
Schiavone disclosed financial statements for
the Schiavone companies only for the years
ended February 1972 and 1973, Schiavone's
amendment was in any event inadequate.
6
Page 214
The Permission to Make Curative
Amendments
Corenco argues that in view of
Schiavone's deliberate
7
failure to reveal even limited financial
information about itself and Michael
Schiavone until a permanent injunction had
been entered against it, the modified order
permitting further curative amendments
containing the essential financial
information violates the principle
underlying the Supreme Court decision in J.
I. Case Co. v. Borak. 377 U.S. 426, 84 S.Ct.
1555, 12 L.Ed.2d 423 (1964), that "remedies
should be designed to encourage compliance
with the law." Here, Corenco asserts, the
remedy is so minimal that future tender
offerors will be encouraged to make the
least disclosure possible until compelled by
court order. Corenco urges, as a more
appropriate remedy, that Schiavone be
required, if it desires to pursue the
acquisition, to start over, making a wholly
new tender offer after all previously
tendered shares have been returned and a
"cooling off" period has expired. The
purpose and effect of such a provision would
be to penalize Schiavone for its
non-disclosure and deter offerors generally
from playing their cards too close to the
vest.
If Schiavone's conduct had
represented an effort on its part, with
knowledge that Corenco shareholders were
entitled to the financial information, to
prevent them from obtaining it, there might
be merit to Corenco's proposal as a means of
insuring future compliance with the Williams
Act. But we think that Corenco attributes to
Schiavone guilty knowledge and intent which
it is not shown to have possessed. The
district court's order of August 9, 1973,
was the first time that the new Williams Act
had been construed to require a tender
offeror to disclose financial information
about itself. Since Schiavone does not
challenge this provision of the court's
order, it is not an issue before us.
However, until the district court's ruling
the question was far from clear and a
respectable argument could be made that such
information was at best of peripheral
significance.
8
Ordinarily a stock-holder receiving a tender
offer is primarily interested in the cash
price. Although he may decide not to accept
an offer if he believes that the proposed
takeover of control will strengthen his
investment and the offeror is not exactly
anxious to encourage such a course, it is
clear that if all stockholders rejected the
offer, there would be no such strengthening
of his investment. Hence, the offeror's
financial condition is at best a secondary
factor.
9 Once the
tender offeror's obligation to reveal past
financials is established, however, it would
be self-defeating for an offeror not to
include the information from the outset.
Failure to include such information from the
outset would lead inevitably to additional
loss of time and expense. Hence we cannot
agree that allowance of a curative amendment
here, where an
Page 215 obligation to disclose past financials was
found for the first time, will encourage
deliberate violations of the Williams Act in
the future.
In permitting the Schiavones to
remedy the deficiency the court was adhering
to a logical method of securing compliance
with the Exchange Act which we have
previously endorsed.
Sonesta International Hotels Corp. v.
Wellington Associates, 483 F.2d 247 (2d
Cir. July 3, 1973) [Current] CCH
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. p 94,041 (2d Cir. 1973).
Electronic Specialty Co. v. International
Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937 (2d Cir. 1969);
Butler Aviation International, Inc. v.
Comprehensive Design Inc., 425 F.2d 842,
844-845 (2d Cir. 1970).
Bath Indus. Inc. v. Blot,
427 F.2d 97 (7th
Cir. 1970), to which Corenco refers us,
involved a late rather than an insufficient
filing and the court there emphasized the
broad discretion of the trial court in
fashioning remedies.
We are not impressed by Corenco's
emphasis on Schiavone's delay in disclosing
its financials until it was permanently
enjoined from proceeding with its tender
offer. Curative amendments should not be
proscribed merely because the parties agree
under Rule 65, F.R. Civ.P., to merge their
applications for preliminary and final
relief into one trial. Such a result would
obviously discourage stipulations under the
Rule.
Aside from its quarrel with the
wisdom of allowing a curative amendment in
this case, Corenco asserts that the district
court had no power under Rules 60(b) (5) and
(6), F.R.Civ.P., to grant relief from its
former permanent injunction because the
Schiavone defendants had not shown that they
were "seriously and needlessly impeded" by
the injunction and that relief was necessary
"to achieve the results intended."
King-Seeley Thermos Co. v. Aladdin
Industries, Inc., 418 F.2d 31 (2d Cir. 1969).
The short answer to this is that the
injunction, being expressly limited in
duration "until the Schiavone defendants
make full disclosure of financial
information about Schiavone and Michael
Schiavone," reserved to the court the
discretionary equitable power to modify its
terms. Neither King-Seeley nor any of the
cases relied on by Corenco involved
injunctions expressly limited in duration.
United States v. Swift, 286 U.S. 106, 52
S.Ct. 460, 76 L. Ed. 999 (1932)
(meatpackers enjoined from selling
groceries), and
United States v. United Shoe Corp., 391 U.S.
244, 88 S.Ct. 1496, 20 L.Ed.2d 562 (1968)
(shoe machinery manufacturers restrained in
various ways) with
Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. American Oil
Co., 405 F.2d 803 (8th Cir.), cert.
denied, 395 U.S. 905, 89 S.Ct. 1745, 23 L.
Ed.2d 218 (1969) (oil companies
"perpetually" enjoined from using certain
names). Even assuming that the standards set
forth in King-Seeley for the court's
exercise of discretionary power are
applicable here, relief from the permanent
injunction was clearly permissible once the
specific results intended-disclosure of
financials by Schiavone-had been achieved.
We think that Judge Ward acted
well within his discretionary power in
permitting the tender offer to proceed upon
the filing and distribution of a new
amendment disclosing financial information
about Schiavone and Michael Schiavone. We
are troubled, however, by the possibility
that he may have believed that Schiavone was
disclosing all of the financials that it had
previously furnished to First Pennsylvania
instead of those for the last two out of the
five years given to the bank.
10
Since this issue
Page 216 was raised for the first time on appeal, we
remand the case to the district court to
determine in its discretion whether the
Schiavone defendants should furnish
financial statements for the three earlier
years. The district court may also want to
review the form of the financial
disclosures, which has been questioned by
the staff of the SEC.
11
Dismissal of Other Claims Brought Under
Sec. 14(d) and (e) of the Exchange Act
Corenco argues that the district
court erroneously dismissed its several
other claims under Sec. 14(d) and (e) of the
Exchange Act: that Schiavone's
"announcement" of its tender offer in the
Wall Street Journal on July 18 1973, itself
constituted a tender offer which should have
included all the information required by
Sec. 14 (d); that Schiavone's original Offer
to Purchase misrepresented that Michael
Schiavone's purpose in acquiring
approximately 4.8% of Corenco's common stock
prior to the tender offer was "for
investment;" and that the original Offer to
Purchase failed to disclose the likelihood
or possibility that Corenco's assets would
be converted into cash for use in repayment
of the loan taken by Schiavone to finance
the tender offer. We find no merit in these
claims and affirm the district court's
dismissal of them.
Schiavone's "announcement" in the
Wall Street Journal fell short of being a
tender offer within the meaning of Sec.
14(d) since it specifically stated that it
did not itself constitute an offer and that
tenders could be made only after the Corenco
shareholder had obtained a printed Offer to
Purchase and Letter of Tender. In another
context we have recognized that an
announcement of an offer may be different
from an offer.
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Bangor Punta
Corp., 426 F.2d 569, 574 (2d Cir. 1970);
Rules 134, 135, Securities Act of 1933. In
the absence of a statutory checklist of
features that may be included in a tender
offer announcement which does not also
constitute a tender offer, courts are left
to develop a "rule of reason." Id. The
purposes of the Williams Act would not have
been furthered significantly in this case if
Schiavone had included in its newspaper
announcement all the information found in
its 24-page Offer to Purchase, which was
readily available and which a Corenco
shareholder would as a practical matter have
to obtain before he could tender his shares,
since the Letter of Tender required to be
submitted by each tendering shareholder
could be obtained only by stockholders who
also received a copy of the Offer.
Section 14(e) of the Exchange Act
prohibits only material misstatements in
connection with a tender offer. Even
assuming that the statement in the original
Offer to Purchase concerning Michael
Schiavone's purpose in acquiring Corenco
stock prior to the tender offer was
inaccurate, since Michael Schiavone may have
acquired some shares after Schiavone decided
to seek control of Corenco, Corenco does not
explain how the misstatement was material.
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 153-154, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 31
L.Ed.2d 741 (1972). Indeed Corenco
concedes that this information regarding the
purpose of pre-tender offer purchases was
not required under Secs. 13(d) and 14(d) of
the Exchange Act. Even if the
Page 217 misstatement was material, Schiavone
corrected it in its first amendment (filed
July 30, 1973) and the district court could
well have concluded that no further action
was necessary.
We do not agree with Corenco's
assertions that if the tender offer is
successful a conversion of its assets into
cash to be used to repay bank loans made to
finance the offer is "likely" or "probable."
If the offer is successful, the income and
assets of both Schiavone and Michael
Schiavone, which has consolidated assets in
excess of $17.5 million and a net worth in
excess of $6.8 million, will be available.
Thus conversion of Corenco's assets, unlike
the situation
General Host Corp. v. Triumph American,
Inc., 359 F.Supp. 749 (S.D. N.Y.1973),
appears most unlikely. But even if such a
conversion were likely, we would only
require a disclosure of the circumstances
rather than a specific statement that a
conversion was likely to occur. General Host
Corp., supra, 359 F.Supp. at 755. This the
district court has already done by requiring
Schiavone to disclose financial information
about itself and Michael Schiavone.
Dismissal of Corenco's Claim Under Sec.
13(d) of the Exchange Act
Corenco argues that the Schiavone
defendants and Reed Rubin were a "group"
within the meaning of Sec. 13(d)(3) of the
Exchange Act,
12
and were required to file a Schedule 13D
statement by reason of their purchases and
holding of Corenco shares prior to July 3,
1973. More specifically, Corenco maintains
that the district court erroneously required
it to show that Rubin and the Schiavone
defendants conspired or agreed to acquire
Corenco stock before July 3 whereas under
the decision of this court
GAF Corp. v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709 (2d Cir.
1971), cert. denied, 406 U.S. 910, 92
S.Ct. 1610, 31 L. Ed.2d 821 (1972), as
opposed to the decision of the
Seventh Circuit in Bath Industries, Inc. v.
Blot,
427 F.2d 97 (7th Cir. 1970), a
plaintiff must show only that the defendants
conspired to acquire or hold more than 5% of
a company's stock.
Judge Ward's reference to the
necessity of showing a conspiracy to acquire
Corenco stock
13
merely summarized the language of Corenco's
own complaint, which alleged that "at least
as early as January 1973" Joel Schiavone had
agreed with Reed Rubin to acquire over 5% of
Corenco stock "and/or to acquire control of
Corenco," that pursuant to this agreement
Joel Schiavone and Reed Rubin secretly
acquired substantial amounts of Corenco
stock (Par. 10) and that "while owning in
excess of 5% of such securities [they]
agreed to act in concert to acquire control
of Corenco" (Par. 22). In any event the
distinction between an agreement to
"acquire" and an agreement to "hold" appears
immaterial in this case since Judge Ward
found insufficient evidence of any agreement
whatsoever between Rubin and Schiavone
defendants regarding their respective
holdings of Corenco stock. It is true that
Michael Schiavone controlled 4.8% of
Corenco's outstanding shares. Rubin,
assuming for present purposes that he
exercised sufficient dominion over the three
accounts for which he had purchased shares,
would have controlled another 4.996%. These
percentages indicate an acute awareness on
the part of both parties of the 5% figure
fixed by Sec. 13(d). However, absent an
agreement between them a "group" would not
exist. While it is charged that Rubin met
several times
Page 218 with Joel Schiavone during the period of
Michael Schiavone's purchases, Judge Ward
noted that Rubin's fee depended on Corenco
acquiring Schiavone rather than vice versa
and that some Corenco stock was actually
sold out of the accounts allegedly
controlled by Rubin during the period of the
supposed conspiracy. Upon this record we
cannot conclude that Judge Ward's finding of
no agreement or conspiracy was "clearly
erroneous."
The Schiavones' Counterclaim Against
Corenco
Turning to the Schiavone
defendants' counterclaim that Corenco's
management and their affiliates were a
"group" within the meaning of Sec. 13(d)(3)
and were required to file a Schedule 13D
statement by reason of their pooling of
their Corenco shares for the purpose of
defeating the tender offer, it is unclear
what "independent interest" protected by the
statute exists which gives the Schiavone
defendants standing to assert their
counterclaim.
Electronic Specialty Co. v. International
Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 944-946 (2d
Cir. 1969). Assuming they have standing,
however, we are satisfied that the members
of Corenco's management were not required to
file individual Schedule 13D statements when
they agreed to pool their interests to fight
the threatened takeover.
Section 14(d) (4) of the Exchange
Act specifically requires the disclosure of
certain information when the management of a
company advises its shareholders to reject a
tender offer.
14
Corenco's management complied with this
section when it filed a form 14D. Since the
Exchange Act contains a specific provision
governing the disclosures required of a
target company's management, it would be
pointless to superimpose requirements found
in another section, which does not deal
specifically with management disclosures.
The reliance placed by the Schiavone
defendants on GAF v. Milstein, supra, is
misplaced. There the court expressly
declined to decide the question "whether
management groups which expressly agree to
pool their interests to fight a potential
take-over are subject to section 13(d)." 453
F.2d at 719 n. 20.
Conclusion
We affirm the district court in
all respects except that we remand the case
to it for a determination, in the exercise
of its discretion, whether the Schiavone
defendants should be required to disclose
their financials for the past five years
rather than the past two years. If it should
so conclude, the form of any such
disclosures might be approved by the
district court without necessarily awaiting
approval by an administrative agency.
1 Corenco does not appeal from dismissal
of Count 1 of its complaint, charging
antitrust violations, or Count 5, which
alleges that the Schiavone defendants
solicited proxies for Joseph A. Schiavone
and Joel Schiavone to vote the common stock
of Corenco without supplying the persons
solicited with a written proxy statement
containing the information specified in
Schedule 14A promulgated by the SEC under
the Exchange Act.
2 Although Rubin actually purchased the
Corenco shares for his father, he claimed
that the only control he had over these
shares was the power he was given by a
specific proxy to vote the shares at a
specific annual meeting.
3 The principal contributor to this
Research Institute was the Samuel Rubin
Foundation.
4 On July 16, 1973, the bid price for
Corenco stock which was trading
over-the-counter was $26.50. The asked price
was $28.00 per share.
5 The announcement was subsequently
republished in at least five other
newspapers.
6 Corenco alleges that Schiavone misled
the court and Corenco into believing that
the financial information furnished in the
amendment represented the entire data
disclosed to First Pennsylvania. However,
the loan agreement between Schiavone and
that bank, then in Corenco's possession,
revealed that five years' financials had
been furnished to the bank.
7 In its brief, Corenco points to Joel
Schiavone's testimony in these proceedings
that the reason for not disclosing any
financial information regarding the
Schiavone companies was "that Corenco
stockholders may not have tendered had this
information been available to them."
8 It is significant that, although the
SEC, acting pursuant to authority delegated
to it by Secs. 13(d) and 14(d) of the 1934
Exchange Act, adopted rules requiring
certain disclosures to be made by a cash
tender offeror, information as to the
offeror's financial condition was not
specified. Furthermore, the SEC's proxy
rules (Reg. 14A under Securities Exchange
Act of 1934), which form the basis of the
disclosures the Williams Act seeks to
require, see S.Rep.No.550, 90th Cong., 1st
Sess. 3 (1967), do not obligate the
disclosure of such financial information
regarding a company or group seeking
control.
9 In contrast, where an exchange offer is
made, information as to the financial
operations and condition of the offeror is
clearly of material significance since it
enables the offeree to form a judgment as to
the value of the package offered in
exchange.
10 We do not believe that the statement
in the Schiavone defendants' affidavit in
support of its motion under Rule 60(b) (5)
and (6) was deliberately deceptive since the
adequacy of the proposed financial
disclosures had not been challenged. Any
attempt to conceal the fact that the
proposed disclosures were not as extensive
as those made to First Pennsylvania would
have been pointless. Furthermore, the SEC,
which reviewed the financials for the last
two years and made certain suggestions that
have been incorporated in the financial
information contained in Amendment 7, did
not suggest inclusion of earlier financials,
possibly for the reason that its Rule 14a-3,
dealing with the analogous procedure for
disclosure of financial information in
annual reports used in proxy statements,
requires disclosure of only the last two
years financials. In addition, Schiavone's
first quarter earnings for 1973, which are
disclosed in Amendment 3, represented a
substantial improvement over the earlier two
years.
11 The financial statements of Schiavone
and Michael Schiavone which were
incorporated in the new amendments to
Schiavone's Schedule 13D statement were
unaudited. When the amendments were filed
with the SEC, the staff suggested that
certain changes be made. These suggested
changes were incorporated in Amendment 7
which was filed with the SEC on August 31,
1973.
12 Section 13(d) (3) provides:
"When two or more persons act as a
partnership, limited partnership, syndicate,
or other group for the purpose of acquiring,
holding, or disposing of securities of an
issuer, such syndicate or group shall be
deemed a 'person' for the purposes of this
subsection."
13 Judge Ward began his discussion of
Corenco's claim under Sec. 13(d) by writing:
"It is essential to Corenco's claim under
section 13(d) of the 1934 Act that Corenco
prove an agreement or conspiracy between the
Schiavone defendants and Reed Rubin to
acquire Corenco stock."
14 Section 14(d) (4) provides:
"Any solicitation or recommendation to
the holders of . . . a security to accept or
reject a tender offer shall be made in
accordance with such rules and regulations
as the Commission may prescribe as necessary
or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors." |