| Page 1043 510 F.2d 1043
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,924
AMERICAN STANDARD, INC.,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CRANE CO., Defendant-Appellant and
Third-Party Plaintiff,
v.
Edward J. HANLEY et al., Third-Party
Defendants. No. 97, Docket 74--1233.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Oct. 23, 1974.
Decided Dec. 20, 1974.
Certiorari Denied June 2, 1975.
See 95 S.Ct. 2397.
Page 1046
Abraham L. Pomerantz, New York
City (Pomerantz Levy Haudek & Block, William
E. Haudek, and Lord, Day & Lord, John W.
Castles 3rd and Michael J. Murphy, New York
City, of counsel), for defendant-appellant
Crane Co.
David W. Peck, New York City
(Sullivan & Cromwell, Edward W. Keane,
Robert M. Osgood and Marcia B. Paul, New
York City, of counsel), for
plaintiff-appellee American Standard, Inc.
Herbert L. Scharf, New York City
(Bobroff, Olonoff & Scharf, Alfred Olonoff,
New York City, of counsel), for
plaintiff-appellee Kritzler.
Wolf, Popper, Ross, Wolf & Jones,
New York City (Donald N. Ruby and Robert M.
Kornreich, New York City, of counsel), for
plaintiff-appellee Abrams.
Before MOORE, OAKES and GURFEIN,
Circuit Judges.
GURFEIN, Circuit Judge:
This is the third in a trilogy of
appeals to come before this court in the
continuing litigation between American
Standard, Inc. ('Standard') and Crane Co.
('Crane') arising out of the contest for
control of Westinghouse Air Brake Company
('Air Brake') which Standard has won,
succeeding in effecting a merger of Air
Brake into Standard. In Crane Company v.
Westinghouse Air Brake Company et al.,
419 F.2d 787 (2 Cir. 1969), cert. denied, 400
U.S. 822, 91 S.Ct. 41, 27 L.Ed.2d 50 (1970)
(Crane I) this court held, inter alia, that
Standard had violated both Section 9(a)(2)
and Rule 10b--5 of the Securities Exchange
Act by a market manipulation which
artificially raised the price of Air Brake
stock on the last day of Crane's tender
offer for the stock, and remanded that cause
for appropriate remedies.
1
Crane Co. v. American Standard, Inc., 490
F.2d 332 (2 Cir. 1973), we held that the
fraud action mentioned above should be tried
to the court without a jury (Crane II).
The present appeal concerns a
separate action brought against Crane for
alleged violation of Section 16(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act ('the Act') by
Standard, as well as by two stockholders
Page 1047 of Air Brake, Kritzler and Abrams, and a
stockholder of Standard, to recover alleged
short-swing profits of Crane.
2
The short-swing profits are alleged to have
arisen through trading by Crane in equity
securities of Air Brake up to the date of
Air Brake's merger with Standard and of the
merged company thereafter.
3
The District Court, Lasker, J.,
denied Crane's motion for summary judgment
and granted partial summary judgment to
Standard on the issue of Crane's liability.
346 F.Supp. 1153. Crane appeals from this
decision by permission of this Court
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) and F.R.A.P.
5.
Though the background of this
controversy has been set forth in previous
opinions, it is necessary to repeat it to
some extent. Crane first proposed a merger
of Crane and Air Brake to the Air Brake
management on May 15, 1967. 419 F.2d at 790.
In June 1967 Crane began to acquire large
quantities of Air Brake shares in the open
market for the purpose of acquiring control.
It continued its purchases into 1968. On
December 7, 1967 Air Brake changed its
bylaws to raise the minimum cumulative vote
needed to obtain representation on the board
from 9.1 to 25 per cent. 419 F.2d at 790. On
December 13, 1967 Air Brake declined the
proposal for merger.
Although Crane then briefly
discontinued its open market purchases of
Air Brake common stock, it resumed them in
January becoming a more than 10% owner on
January 26, 1968, thereby achieving the
status of a 'beneficial owner' for § 16(b)
purposes.
Air Brake responded by arranging
a 'defensive' merger with Standard. On
Page 1048 February 20, 1968 A. King McCord, President
of Air Brake, met with several of his
directors to consider a proposal which had
been submitted by Blyth & Company the day
before, to merge Air Brake into Standard by
exchanging Air Brake common stock for a
Standard security to be valued at about $50
per share. Air Brake common was then quoted
at about $36 per share. 419 F.2d at 791.
On the very day McCord was
meeting on the Standard merger proposal,
Crane, now a 10% stockholder, filed a 14B
statement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission declaring its intention to
solicit proxies for the Air Brake Board
election.
On March 1, 1968 McCord reached
an agreement on the terms of the merger with
representatives of Standard, and on March 4
the Air Brake Board voted its approval. On
March 5 Air Brake informed its shareholders
of the terms of the agreement and of the
Board's approval. Air Brake stock rose to
$44. (ibid.)
In the proposed merger, every two
shares of the outstanding Air Brake stock
were to be converted into one share of a new
class of Standard $4.75 cumulative
convertible preference stock. Each Standard
preference share was to be convertible into
2 2/3 shares of Standard common. Upon
consummation of the merger Air Brake's
existence was to end.
In the face of this previously
announced merger agreement by Air Brake and
Standard managements, Crane on April 6, 1968
publicly announced a registered tender offer
to exchange $50 face value of its debentures
for each Air Brake share.
4
The offer was to expire April 19 unless
renewed. At this time, as has been noted,
Crane was already a 10% holder of Air Brake
common. Air Brake reacted quickly. On April
8, 1968, Air Brake called a meeting of its
stockholders for May 16 to vote on the
proposed merger with Standard. The Crane
offer was set to expire unless renewed, as
noted, about a month before that
stockholders' meeting.
On the last day of Crane's tender
offer, April 19, as this Court held, 419
F.2d 787, Standard fraudulently manipulated
the market through a series of concealed
wash sales with the intended result that the
market price of Air Brake rose to $50.
Crane's initial offer failed. Crane extended
its offer three times to April 29, May 14
and May 24, 1968, but failed to gain a
majority.
5 On
April 17, 1968
Page 1049 Crane brought a federal court action against
Air Brake charging a violation of the proxy
rules. On May 6, 1968, Crane brought suit
against Standard and its underwriter, Blyth
and Company, under the fraud provisions of
the Act and Rule 10b--5 to enjoin the
merger. The District Court ultimately
dismissed the action.
6
On or about May 16, 1968, the Air
Brake stockholders voted to approve the
merger with Standard. On June 7 the merger
became effective and the Standard
convertible preference stock became
available for exchange for Air Brake common.
By this time, Crane owned 32% of Air Brake
common. Between June 7 and June 13, Crane
actually exchanged its then holdings of
1,408,623 Air Brake shares for 740,311 of
Standard. Standard was Crane's largest
competitor in the plumbing industry. 419
F.2d at 791. Crane also became by virtue of
the merger, the largest, or one of the
largest stockholders of Standard.
On June 13, Crane sold 730,311
shares of Standard convertible preference
stock on the New York Stock Exchange for
$76,134,921.75 at a profit estimated at over
$10,000,000. Four days thereafter, on June
17, 1968, Standard commenced its present
16(b) action. Shortly after that Crane sold
9,000 of its remaining 10,000 shares.
Crane had acquired its Air Brake
stock as follows:
Air Brake Shares
Purchased by
Crane
6/15/67-1/26/68 (market) ............................ 469,200
1/31/68-4/2/68 (market) ............................. 202,900
4/19/68 (tender offer) .............................. 316,662
4/29/68 (first extension of tender offer) ........... 212,883
5/14/68 (second extension of
tender offer) ................................ 98,594
5/24/68 (third extension of
tender offer) ............................... 180,384
---------
1,480,623
---------
Standard contends in this court
that Crane, through its Chairman, Thomas
Mellon Evans, had the possibility of
acquiring inside information and that it
actually did acquire such information. Crane
denies the fact but urges us not to consider
this argument, in any event, because the
facts now urged in support had not been
called to the attention of the District
Court on the motion for summary judgment.
7 These alleged
facts deal largely with the activities of
Evans.
The facts relevant to Evans'
activities as they appear in the affidavit
of George C. Kern, Jr., annexed to the
motion papers on the summary judgment
motion, were given as follows:
In June 1967 the Crane Board
authorized Evans to buy Air Brake stock as
he thought it advisable. In the latter part
Page 1050 of 1967, Crane revealed its substantial
ownership to the Air Brake management and
proposed that Air Brake be merged into
Crane. On December 13, 1967 Evans was told
by Air Brake that it was not interested in
any kind of merger with Crane. The Chairman
of Crane 'came to the conclusion that there
was no way we could deal with them or that
they would deal with us.' By January, 1968
Crane had 'dropped' its plans to merge with
Air Brake. It bought no stock between
January 5 and January 24. In the early part
of 1968 Crane had heard 'from various
sources' that Air Brake was negotiating with
other companies. On March 4, 1968, the
President of American Standard, W. D.
Eberle, met with Evans and told him that Air
Brake and Standard had agreed to merge and
that a press release to that effect would be
issued later in the day.
Judge Lasker's attention was not
called to any specific incident in which
Evans purportedly received inside
information.
Standard now urges us to consider
additional facts not directly called to
Judge Lasker's attention but which it argues
could have been found by combing the record.
It notes that, between the acquisition of
beneficial owner status on January 26, 1968
and the public announcement of the Air
Brake-Standard merger on March 4, 1968,
Evans met with Air Brake Director Mayer and
separately with Director Shoemaker on
February 23rd, and had a telephone
conversation with Mayer on February 16 and
with Chairman McCord and Director Hanley on
February 23. Mayer, who was also Chairman of
the Mellon Bank, which was one of Crane's
banks, argued against the Standard merger
and discussed favorably with Evans putting
some Crane representatives on the Air Brake
Board. In pursuit of that objective, Evans
telephoned Mayer on February 23rd to ask if
he would not arrange a meeting with the
directors of Air Brake to consider his
request for three directors on the Air Brake
Board. During the conversation Mayer told
Evans that he thought Air Brake was going to
get an offer of $50 in cash. He did not
mention the name of the offeror. Nor did he
mention an acquisition of Air Brake for a
certain number of convertible preference
shares nor any ratio of exchange. Evans
replied that they had not bought the stock
for 'stock speculation,' that he would like
to hear more about it 'but I don't think
that is what we want.'
8
Before becoming a 10% holder,
Evans had heard through a proxy solicitor,
who was under retainer to Crane, that Air
Brake management intended to peddle the
company, apparently to thwart Crane's
attempt to take over. Having become aware of
this classic defensive maneuver to defeat an
unwanted suitor Crane apparently decided to
become a 10% holder, to continue buying
beyond that point and not to give up the
fight.
After the February 23rd
conversation with Mayer the schedule of
stock purchases indicates that Crane did
nothing about the 'information' either
immediately or on a large scale. Crane
bought no shares whatever until March 1 when
it picked up 1200 shares to add to the
500,000 shares it already owned. By
Page 1051 March 4 when the merger was publicly
announced, Crane had acquired an additional
1600 shares of Air Brake.
As we have seen, on March 4, the
Air Brake people informed Evans that they
would announce a merger with Standard later
that day, which they did. After the terms of
the Standard merger had been announced and
had become public property, Crane engaged in
large purchases of Air Brake, culminating in
its own tender offer of April 6 described
above.
9 There is
no clear evidence tendered to us of the
likelihood that Crane had received any other
information that could be classified as
'inside information' after becoming a 10%
holder which was not also public knowledge.
10
The Claim
The claim that Crane is liable to
Standard for its profit embraces the
following alternative theories of 'purchase'
and 'sale': Claim (1) The purchase of Air
Brake shares on January 26, 1968 which put
Crane in the position of a 10% holder was
the initial 'purchase', and the exchange of
that stock pursuant to the merger terms for
Standard convertible preference stock was
the 'sale'; Claim (2) The 'purchase' was the
exchange of Air Brake stock for Standard
convertible preference shares under the
merger terms, and the 'sale' was the sale
for cash of those shares within six months;
Claim (3) The purchase of the Air Brake
stock as in Claim (1) was the 'purchase',
and the matching 'sale' was the sale of the
Standard convertible preference stock
received on the merger.
Proceedings in the District Court
The District Court rendered its
decision granting summary judgment to
Standard on liability under § 16(b). 346
F.Supp. 1153 (Oct. 12, 1971), a day before
this Court decided
Abrams v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 450
F.2d 157 (2 Cir. 1971). The District
Court had noted that 'Abrams had many
elements in common with the instant action'
and it had followed the reasoning of the
District Court in that case, 323 F.Supp.
570, the reversal of which was announced by
the Court on the following day.
11
Following the reversal of
Occidental, Judge Lasker withdrew his
opinion to consider its effect. After
consideration, the District Court adhered to
its earlier decision in a supplemental
opinion. 346 F.Supp. 1165. This appeal is
from that decision.
In its first decision the
District Court had held that Crane was
liable under 16(b) for its profits on the
basis of what we have called Claim (1); that
is, that the exchange of Air Brake common
stock for Standard convertible preference
stock was a 'sale' for 16(b) purposes. The
District Court reasoned that a company
seeking to acquire a target company must
know that there was a likelihood of a
defensive merger which, upon its
consummation, would give it a handsome
profit even if it failed to succeed in the
takeover. This was thought to create a
'heads I win, tails you lose' situation
which required the imposition of liability
under 16(b).
In this first decision the
District Court held accordingly 'that the
conversion of Crane's Air Brake stock into
Standard stock constituted a sale of Air
Brake to be matched against its cash
purchases of that stock within a period of
six months prior to the date of conversion.'
346 F.Supp. at 1161. Alternatively, the
District Court, treating the Standard stock
and the Air Brake stock as the same stock,
held that the 'sale' for 16(b) purposes was
the cash sale by Crane of the Standard
convertible preference stock within six
months of its original acquisition of the
Air Brake common stock. 346 F.Supp. at 1163.
Page 1052
When the decision of this Court
in the Occidental case was called to the
attention of the District Court, it
recognized that on the question of whether
Crane's position offered the opportunity for
speculative abuse, this court's ratio
decidendi in Occidental might well raise
serious doubts whether Standard's motion for
summary judgment could be granted on the
basis that the exchange of Air Brake stock
for Standard stock in the merger was a
'sale' that triggered 16(b) liability.
Instead, the Judge wrote a supplementary
opinion in which he now relied upon the
alternative theory of liability, what we
have called Claim (3). The District Court
held that, putting the exchange of stock on
the merger to one side because of the
Occidental decision, there was,
nevertheless, a purchase of Air Brake stock
and a sale for cash of the Standard stock
received on the merger within six months
which must be matched for § 16(b) purposes.
346 F.Supp. at 1167--1168. He properly noted
that in Occidental the actual sale for cash
(through the exercise of an option) took
place more than six months from the
effective date of purchase for § 16(b)
purposes, whereas here the sale for cash was
within the six months period.
The appellee, thus, does not come
to this court with the benefit of a holding
by the District Court in the face of the
Occidental reversal that it was the exchange
of stock in the merger that was the 'sale'
for § 16(b) purposes.
12
Nor does it appear from the tenor
of Judge Lasker's supplementary opinion that
Standard pressed upon him seriously the
contention, now pressed upon us, that
Occidental is distinguishable because
Occidental had no opportunity for access to
inside information, while in the instant
case there was such opportunity for access.
13
The Occidental Opinion
To set the matter in perspective,
a review of the Occidental case is in order.
That, too, involved a takeover
situation with a contest for control and a
defensive merger that defeated the takeover
bid. After unsuccessful efforts by
Occidental to induce the management of Old
Kern to discuss a merger, Occidental on May
8, 1967 published an offer to purchase at
$83.50 per share 500,000 shares of Old Kern
for cash. Old Kern advised its stockholders
not to tender. By May 10 more than 500,000
shares of Old Kern shares had been tendered.
On May 11, Occidental, already a beneficial
owner of more than 10% of Old Kern stock,
extended its offer to encompass an
additional 500,000 shares. Old Kern again
advised its stockholders not to tender.
On May 19 Old Kern's directors
announced their approval of a merger
proposal from Tenneco, Inc. ('Tenneco')
whereby Tenneco would exchange its own
convertible preference shares said to be
worth $105 per share for a transfer of Old
Kern's assets to New Kern, a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Tenneco.
On June 7 Occidental gave up the
contest and granted Tenneco an assignable
option to purchase 886,623 shares at a fixed
price, the option being exercisable at any
time after December 9, 1967, six months and
a day after Occidental's last contemplated
acquisition of Old Kern shares. Tenneco paid
$10 per share for the option which it later
sold. On December 11, 1967, after the six
months period had elapsed Occidental
tendered its Old Kern shares for Tenneco
preference stock. The assignee of the option
then exercised the option, purchasing all
the preference shares that Occidental had
received on the exchange of stock under the
Tenneco-Old Kern plan.
Page 1053
New Kern then sued Occidental for
its 'short swing' profits under 16(b) on two
theories: (1) that Occidental had 'sold' its
Old Kern shares when at the August 30
closing between Old Kern and New Kern it
became irrevacably entitled to Tenneco
preference stock and (2) that the execution
of the option agreement of June 2, 1967
constituted a 'sale' by Occidental of the
Old Kern shares.
I
This court reversed a summary
judgment in favor of New Kern and directed
dismissal of the complaint. The holding
concerning the option need not concern us
here.
14 The
holding that the exchange of Old Kern common
stock for Tenneco convertible preference
stock did not constitute a sale for 16(b)
purposes is highly relevant, however, to our
inquiry. In this regard, the similarity of
Occidental to the case at bar is striking.
Judge Friendly, for the Court,
essentially held that although in the
'gardenvariety purchase and sale or sale and
purchase within six months' the statute
operates as a 'crude rule of thumb,'
nevertheless, where there is a conversion of
securities the court would look into whether
'the conversion could have lent itself to
speculative abuse.' 450 F.2d at 162.
This court noted that we had held
an exchange of stock pursuant to the
particular merger to be a sale for § 16(b)
purposes in Newmark v. R.K.O. General, Inc.,
425 F.2d 348 (2 Cir.), cert. denied, 400
U.S. 854, 91 S.Ct. 64, 27 L.Ed.2d 91 (1970).
Judge Kaufman (now Chief Judge) had adopted
a pragmatic approach in that case. This
court was of the opinion in Occidental that
'the indispensable predicate to the holding
that the particular exchange there at issue
was within § 16(b) was the finding that
R.K.O.'s knowledge of the impending merger
coupled with the ability to control it
involved the possibility of speculative
abuse with which § 16(b) (was) meant to
deal.' 450 F.2d at 163. (emphasis supplied).
The Supreme Court granted
certiorari and affirmed. Kern County, supra.
We believe that Kern County holds
the defensive merger situation to be sui
generis in terms of § 16(b) liability. The
implication is that the status of a defeated
tender offeror affords no presumption of
abuse of confidential information by virtue
of relationship to the issuer. By status it
is accordingly not 'presumed to be an
insider who will receive information
regarding the company before it is made
public.'
Chemical Fund, Inc. v. Xerox Corp., 377 F.2d
107, 110 (2 Cir. 1967). The adversary
stance also rebuts the presumption of
control.
In Occidental, this court was
faced with a situation where the tender
offeror had given up the fight. That it
remained vulnerable to a defensive merger
did not make it more of an 'insider' than it
had been before. Occidental had given up in
the face of the Tenneco defensive merger.
Crane had not. Instead, Crane had continued
to fight for control and to try to defeat
the Standard merger. We are now called upon
to determine whether the difference in the
reactions of Occidental and Crane to the
respective defensive mergers makes a
decisive difference. We think not. We think
the similarities outweigh the differences.
As we noted in the Occidental
case, tender offers 'often operate to the
great benefit of stockholders of the target
corporation', 450 F.2d at 164. When
sometimes the managment of a company whose
shares are held by many small stockholders
becomes stolid and unprogressive to the
detriment of its stockholders, tender offers
for the company redound to their advantage.
They are given a chance to sell out at a
price above the market, stay with a new
management, or become the beneficiaries of a
possibly higher offer in a defensive merger.
Page 1054
The making of a tender offer
after the terms of the merger have been
announced puts the stockholder of the target
company in an enviable position of choice
with all the cards on the table under the
proxy rules. To discourage such contests
would tilt the scales against the small
stockholder and in favor of management. His
right to evaluate the competing securities
offered in exchange would be frustrated. We
see no public policy to be promoted in such
case through the medium of Section 16(b).
Nor can we say that Crane would
not have achieved control through its tender
offer if Standard had not painted the tape
to discourage tenders. We need not repeat
Judge Smith's penetrating analysis in Crane
I, supra. Suffice it to say that Crane
apparently exerted its best efforts to win.
If it had won, the defensive merger would
not have come into being.
The important consideration is
that the information Crane was likely to
receive was in no way increased by its
making of a tender offer. On the contrary,
the sharpness of an open contest for control
would make it even more an adversary. The
terms of the merger it was opposing were
known to all the stockholders of Air Brake
as well as of Standard. The current
financial conditions of both companies had
become public property or would soon become
public property, depending on when the proxy
statements were issued.
Old Kern, like Air Brake, had
advised its stockholders not to tender. Like
Air Brake, Old Kern had agreed to a
defensive merger.
Crane, like Occidental, went to
litigation in its attempt to win control.
Crane, like Occidental, was an antagonist of
the target company's management. Neither,
despite 'beneficial owner' status, had a
single director of its choosing nor any
control over the terms or timing of the
merger.
The crucial question the Supreme
Court faced in Kern County was a resolution
of the difference of opinion on how far the
automatic sanctions of § 16(b) should be
applied to unorthodox transactions. It
accepted the 'pragmatic approach' that in
merger situations the policy objectives of
Congress in the enactment of Section 16(b)
should be considered. Kern County, 411 U.S.
at 594, n. 26, 93 S.Ct. 1736.
The pragmatic test of borderline
transactions had become 'whether the
transaction may serve as a vehicle for the
evil which Congress sought to prevent--the
realization of short swing profits based
upon access to inside information.' 411 U.S.
at 594, 93 S.Ct. at 1744. The court did not
rule that a merger may never result in a §
16(b) violation,
15
but it apparently distinguished Newmark v.
R.K.O. General, Inc., supra, and
Park & Tilford v. Schulte,
160 F.2d 984
(2 Cir.); cert. denied, 332 U.S. 761, 68
S.Ct. 64, 92 L.Ed. 347 (1947), as cases
where the defendant, unlike Occidental, had
participated in or controlled the merger
agreement or its equivalent. 41 U.S. at 599,
93 S.Ct. 1736.
The emphasis in Mr. Justice
White's opinion was on two factors: 1) The
unlikelihood of actual access to inside
information in an atmosphere of hostility by
a party adverse in interest; and 2) the
utter inability of the unsuccessful party to
control the course of events. It is not
enough that a sophisticated tender offeror
may assume that if his bid fails because of
a defensive merger he will probably profit
if the defensive merger actually occurs.
Such speculation is common but it is not the
product of inside information. It is rather
a sophisticated prophecy which is open to
all public stockholders who possess no
Page 1055 inside information whatever. Such a neutral
prophecy is beyond the reach of § 16(b). Mr.
Justice White noted that even the
expectation that the public tender might
increase the likelihood of a defensive
merger is not related to the use of inside
information unavailable to public
stockholders. 411 U.S. at 598, 93 S.Ct.
1736. In the words of Mr. Justice White:
'If there are evils to be redressed by
way of deterring those who would make tender
offers, § 16(b) does not appear to us to
have been designed for this task.' 411 U.S.
at 597--598, 93 S.Ct. at 1746.
The teaching of Kern County is
that for Section 16(b) liability there must
be a likelihood of access to inside
information 'by reason of its ownership of
more than 10% of the outstanding shares',
411 U.S. at 596, 93 S.Ct. at 1745 (emphasis
supplied), that is, 'by virtue of its stock
ownership' 411 U.S. at 599, 93 S.Ct. at
1747. The otherwise casual acquisition of
inside information through personal
friendship and its use could be a violation
of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b--5, but the
irrebuttable presumption of § 16(b) should
not be applied.
The very concept that stock
ownership beyond a certain percentage makes
the owner a statutory 'insider' was based on
the assumption that such percentage was
enough to make him an 'influential
stockholder.'
16
The 10% holder in the garden variety case is
presumed to be 'influential' as a friend of
management or in control of some directors.
The essential policy objective of
Section 16(b) is to prevent the abuse of
confidential information by directors,
officers and beneficial owners. Ordinarily,
this simply requires a matching of the
'sale' and 'purchase,' or 'purchase' and
'sale' in less than six months. When the
setting is not one of control, but of its
antithesis, the very weakness of the tender
offeror in being unable to thwart the merger
is further evidence that he does not control
the target company's directors or
stockholders.
We thus have a tender offeror who
does not have access to inside information
about the target company by virtue of his
position as a 'beneficial owner', coupled
with an inability, as further evidenced by
the vote on the merger, to affect the course
of the target company. It is this
combination of circumstances that dictated
the result in Kern County and dictates the
conclusion on this appeal that the exchange
of stock pursuant to the merger terms was
not a 'sale' for § 16(b) purposes.
We hold that whether the tender
offeror quits fighting when the defensive
merger is announced or continues to fight in
the hope of winning, his exchange of stock
on the merger after he has been defeated is
not ipso facto a 'sale' for § 16(b)
purposes.
We inquire then whether facts
were presented below that overcame the
controlling effect of Kern County.
In his first opinion, on
cross-motion for summary judgment, the able
District Judge had stated that 'as to
liability, there are no genuine issues as to
material facts.' 346 F.Supp. at 1155. The
District Court phrased as the 'preliminary
but decisive' question: 'Were there
opportunities for speculative abuse?' 346
F.Supp. at 1157, 1159. In answering the
question in the affirmative, it relied
simply on the general knowledge of all
tender offerors rather than on any specific
knowledge by Crane. Indeed, in stating the
facts of the R.K.O. case, supra, the
District Court noted, as one of the salient
facts, that R.K.O. 'had knowledge of the
merger' and characterized this as 'facts not
present in the instant case.' 346 F.Supp. at
1160.
Page 1056 Judge Lasker made no mention of any
contention of Standard that Crane had
particular knowledge beyond the general
knowledge that a tender offeror normally
has. When the recent decision in Occidental
by this court was called to his attention
the Judge did not distinguish it upon the
ground that here Crane had greater access
than Occidental had possessed.
We have examined the briefs which
were filed by Standard in the District Court
six weeks after our decision in Occidental.
Nowhere was there pressed upon Judge Lasker
the present contention that 'the evidence
shows that Crane had access to, and in fact
possessed, confidential information about
Air Brake and its successor' (Point 1A,
Standard's Brief).
17
On the contrary, Standard relied on the
argument that 'Crane's aggressive
participation in a prolonged corporate
struggle' was in contrast to 'Occidental's
role as a mere bystander.' The point made
was that Crane, by continuing its purchases
after public knowledge of the merger, took
advantage of the Air Brake stockholders
because Crane had to know that the proposed
merger would make the stock go up, but not
because it was in a position to be 'fed'
inside information.
Nor was the 9(g) statement under
the local rules of the Southern District on
motions for summary judgment amended by
Standard to show accessibility to inside
information either as a disputed or as a
conceded fact.
18
Since we have found upon the
record as presented by Standard that there
was no accessibility of Crane to Air Brake
inside information 'by reason of its
ownership of more than 10% of the
outstanding shares' Kern County, 411 U.S. at
596, 93 S.Ct. at 1745, we need not decide
whether we are foreclosed on appeal from
considering the facts tendered by Standard
which it failed to call to the attention of
the District Court on the motion for summary
judgment. We leave that question to another
day.
19
II
We now turn to the contention
that the 'purchase' for § 16(b) purposes was
the exchange of Air Brake common shares for
Standard convertible preference shares and
that the 'sale' was the sale of those shares
within six months.
We have already stated the
reasons why we find the exchange pursuant to
the merger not to have been a 'sale' of the
Air Brake shares, and we include as a factor
the nonvolitional character of the exchange.
It would be anomalous, for the same reasons,
to hold the identical transaction a
'purchase' of the Standard shares.
Gold
v. Sloan, 486 F.2d 340, 344 (1973),
cert. denied, 419 U.S. 873, 95 S.Ct. 134, 42
L.Ed.2d 112 (1974), the
Page 1057 Fourth Circuit held, in a decision rendered
after Kern County, supra, that whether the
exchange of stock pursuant to a merger is a
'purchase' is not subject to an 'automatic
rule,' 'but each transaction must be
adjudged on its own particular facts and in
the light of the evil which Congress sought
by the statute to prevent.' In Gold the
exchange of stock in a merger was held to be
a 'purchase' by one defendant, though not by
other defendants.
20
The facts with respect to the defendant held
liable under Section 16(b) came within the
reach of R.K.O., supra. In that type of case
an exchange on a merger can be a 'purchase'
Kern County type of case it would make Kern
County type of case it would made no sense
to treat a transaction held not to be a
'sale' to be a 'purchase.'
On the contrary, holding the
exchange pursuant to merger to be a
'purchase' would allow the successful party
to lock in the defeated tender offeror for
six months post-merger. That would act as a
powerful deterrent on tender offers, many of
which involve the payment of substantial
interest to lending banks.
The District Court did not
specifically rely on this contention of the
appellee. It emphasized, rather, the
matching of the purchase of Air Brake shares
for cash and the sale for cash after the
exchange pursuant to the merger of the
Standard stock received on the exchange.
III
We turn then to the District
Court's determination that the cash sale by
Crane of the Standard Preference Stock it
acquired on the merger should be matched
against its purchase of a different stock,
Air Brake Common within six months of the
sale. We have found no case in which the
sale of the stock of the successor
corporation was matched against the purchase
of the stock of the acquired corporation to
spell § 16(b) liability.
21
We must consider the decision below rendered
in July, 1972 as one of first impression.
22
Standard, in its amended
complaint, fairly alleged the matching of
the transactions mentioned as affording a
claim for relief, and Crane adequately
countered by defending on the ground, inter
alia, that the § 16(b) claim did not, in any
event, belong to plaintiff Standard. On this
aspect of the case there is surely no
factual dispute, and the issue is ready for
summary judgment.
The issue is whether Section
16(b) permits a statutory liability to
attach by matching the purchases of the
shares of one 'issuer' against the sale of
shares of another 'issuer.'
23
Page 1058
The appellant makes a number of
other contentions as well. Appellant
contends that § 16(b) does not apply to
Crane's sale of Standard preference stock
because that stock was at the time
unregistered and exempted from § 16 of the
Act and, alternatively, because the
convertibility of the Standard preference
stock did not confer on Crane the status of
beneficial owner of Standard common. As an
additional factor, it relies on the argument
that, in the particular circumstances, Crane
would have been unable to convert into
Standard common because that would have
involved a violation of the federal
antitrust laws. Crane carries the antitrust
point further by contending that its sale of
the Standard stock was effected under
antitrust compulsion which absolves it from
§ 16(b) liability.
Appellant contends as well that
its sale of the Standard stock was a result
of Standard's fraudulent market manipulation
and that Standard should not be permitted to
profit from its own wrongdoing.
We do not find it necessary to
decide these issues in view of our
disposition of the matter upon the grounds
discussed in this opinion.
The Statute
Subdivisions (a) and (b) of
Section 16 are grammatically interrelated
and must, therefore, be read together for
coherence. In pertinent part they provide:
'(a) Every person who is . . . the
beneficial owner of more than 10 per centum
of any class of any equity security . . .
which is registered pursuant to section 78l
of this title, . . . shall file . . . within
ten days after he becomes such beneficial
owner, . . . a statement with the Commission
. . . of the amount of all equity securities
of such issuer of which he is the beneficial
owner . . .. (Emphasis supplied).
'(b) For the purpose of preventing the
unfair use of information which may have
been obtained by (such beneficial owner) by
reason of his relationship to the issuer,
any profit realized by him from any purchase
and sale, or any sale and purchase, of any
equity security of such issuer . . . within
any period of less than six months . . .
shall inure to and be recoverable by the
issuer . . .. Suit to recover such profit
may be instituted . . . by the issuer, or by
the owner of any security of the issuer . .
..' (Emphasis supplied).
Section 3(a)(8) of the Act
defines 'issuer' as 'any person who issues
or proposes to issue any security.'
The statute speaks of 'such
issuer' in the singular. There is no room
for a grammatical construction that would
convert the singular into a plural. Nor does
the internal construction of the section
lend itself to such a free interpretation.
For if the 'issuer' is Air Brake, the
insider profits 'recoverable by the issuer'
would not be the profits on the sale of its
own stock but of the stock of a different
'issuer'--Standard. If the 'issuer' is
Standard, 'any profit realized by him from
any purchase and sale . . . of any equity
security of such issuer' does not cover the
purchase of an equity security of another
'issuer'--Air Brake.
The literal inapplicability of
the statute was not involved when the claim
was that the exchange on the merger was
itself the 'sale' for matching purposes.
Newmark v. R.K.O. General, Inc., supra, for
in such case the 'equity security' purchased
and sold was the same security, that of the
original 'issuer.' Nor was it posed when the
claim was that the exchange on the merger
was itself the 'purchase' for matching
purposes
Page 1059 with a subsequent sale, Gold v. Sloan,
supra, for there too the matched securities
are of the same 'issuer', the successor
corporation.
When, however, as here and in
Kern County, supra, the exchange of stock on
the merger is held to be neither a 'sale'
nor a 'purchase' for Section 16(b) purposes,
reliance must be had by Standard solely on
the subsequent sale of Standard preferred
shares matched against the earlier purchase
of Air Brake stock.
As applied to beneficial owners,
as distinguished from officers and
directors, § 16(b) provides:
'This subsection shall not be construed
to cover any transaction where such
beneficial owner was not such both at the
time of purchase and sale, or the sale and
purchase of the security involved'.
(Emphasis supplied).
'Such' refers back to subsection
(a) requiring the filing 'of the amount of
all equity securities of such issuer of
which he is the beneficial owner.' (Emphasis
supplied). The style and substance lead to
the conclusion that Congress was concerned
with a single issuer.
24
The literal meaning is that of
beneficial ownership of the same security at
the time of purchase and sale. While the
statement of statutory purpose would not
necessarily defeat a normal reading of the
statute,
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., 136 F.2d 231, 236
(2 Cir.), cert. denied, 320 U.S. 751, 64
S.Ct. 56, 88 L.Ed. 446 (1943), the converse
is not true when the statement supports the
normal reading. The statutory purpose of §
16(b) is to prevent the abuse of inside
information 'by reason of his relationship
to the issuer.' At the time of purchase
Crane had no relationship to Standard.
While the legislative history
affords no explanation of the purpose of the
proviso, the majority opinion
Reliance Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric
Co., 404 U.S. 418, 424, 92 S.Ct. 596, 30
L.Ed.2d 575 (1972), suggests that 'it
may be that Congress regarded one with a
long-term investment of more than 10% as
more likely to have access to inside
information than one who moves in and out of
the 10% category. But whatever the rationale
of the proviso, it cannot be disregarded
simply on the ground that it may be
inconsistent with our assessment of the
'wholesome purpose' of the Act.'
25
To consider the argument that
'such issuer' may be construed to include a
successor in interest by merger, several
tools of interpretation, in addition to the
grammatical reading, may be employed, such
as 1) the judicial gloss on the statute by
earlier judicial interpretation; 2) the
legislative history; 3) the standards of
statutory interpretation; 4) whether of
statutory interpretation; 4) whether the
statutory interpretation will in cases
likely to arise serve as a good or bad
precedent; and 5) the ease of statutory
amendment if the Congressional views on
policy differ from the judicial views.
1. In Abrams v. Occidental,
supra, this court rejected the view that
Section 16(b) should be mechanically applied
'across the board, even to situations that
Congress scarcely considered.' 450 F.2d at
162. Judge Friendly (then Chief Judge) noted
that we had been freed from the restrictive
dictum of Park & Tilford, 160 F.2d 984, 987
by a series of cases beginning with the
holding of Judge Stewart (as he then was)
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342, 346 (6
Cir. 1958) down through this court's
consideration of the approach to § 16(b)
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507 (2 Cir. 1966).
We shall not review all the cases
that support, in the happy phrase of Judge
Hastie, a 'rule of reason'
26
in unorthodox transactions but we point to
the culmination of the so-called 'subjective
approach' in Kern County.
Page 1060
We note that Crane did not
acquire a controlling interest in Standard,
had no representation on Standard's Board of
Directors, lacked sufficient voting power to
elect a director and apparently had no
intention of seeking such representation.
Examination of the possibility of
abuse in the transaction to determine
whether it should come within the automatic
ban ascribed to § 16(b) by cases (in
language at least) like Park & Tilford v.
Schulte, supra, has thus far been limited to
situations where there has been a
'conversion' of securities rather than a
purchase or sale for cash.
Such a nonobjective approach has
been applied to exchanges involving
securities of the same issuer, e.g.,
Blau v. Lamb, 363 F.2d 507 (2 Cir. 1966);
and
Roberts v. Eaton,
212 F.2d 82, 83--86 (2
Cir. 1954), cert. denied, 384 U.S. 827,
75 S.Ct. 44, 99 L.Ed. 652 (1959);
Petteys v. Butler, 367 F.2d 528 (8 Cir.
1966); as well as to the exchange of
securities in a merger, Newmark v. R.K.O.
General, Inc., supra; Abrams v. Occidental,
supra, aff'd sub nom. Kern County, supra;
Gold v. Sloan, supra.
27
The reason why this broader
approach has been limited to such cases is
not hard to find. For if the matter upon
examination turns out to be within the
proper scope of § 16(b), the exchange of
shares pursuant to the merger is itself
found to be the 'sale' matched against an
earlier purchase for cash, as in R.K.O.,
supra; or the exchange is found to be the
'purchase' matched against a subsequent sale
for cash of the same security. Gold v.
Sloan, supra.
In such cases the need to match
the securities of different issuers could
hardly arise, since one of the two requisite
components--purchase or sale--would, by
hypothesis, have been found to inhere in the
exchange itself.
2. The legislative history of
Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act has been
studied by courts in many cases. See, e.g.,
Kern County, supra; Smolowe v. Delendo
Corp., supra (Clark, J.); Blau v. Lamb,
supra, Petteys v. Butler, supra.
The rather short legislative
history of the present § 16(b)
28 indicates that this
'anti-Wiggin statute'
29
as it was popularly called, dealt with the
speculative practices of those captains of
finance who had taken advantage of
confidential inside information to trade in
the securities of their own companies to the
abuse of their own 'outside stockholders.'
Congress was concerned about the 'outside'
owners of securities which were being
cavalierly traded by fiduciaries whom the
stockholders had elected to positions of
trust. The stress was on fiduciary
responsibility. The purpose of § 16(b) was
to prevent directors, officers and principal
stockholders 'from speculating in the stock
of the corporations to which they owed a
fiduciary duty.' S.Rep. No. 1455, 73rd
Cong.2d Sess. 68 (1934).
30
Congress imposed liability for his profits
upon the statutorily presumed faithless
trustee without proof of actual loss. The
profits were to be restored to the
presumptively aggrieved cestui que trust,
the issuer of the securities. The prize
could be given to no other, for an
alternative would have required proof of
actual injury. If the asset of the
corporation-
Page 1061
--secret information--was improperly taken,
the profits were to be restored to the
cestui.
Judge Learned Hand in Gratz v. Claughton,
187 F.2d 46, 49--50 (2 Cir. 1951), cert.
denied, 341 U.S. 920, 71 S.Ct. 741, 95 L.Ed.
1353 (1951).
31
The beneficial owner concept was intended
simply to expand the class of putative
fiduciaries. After hearings on stock market
practices the Senate Banking and Currency
Committee reported in 1934:
'. . . Closely allied to this type of
abuse was the unscrupulous employment of
inside information by large stockholders
who, while not directors and officers,
exercised sufficient control over the
destinies of their companies to enable them
to acquire and profit by information not
available to others.'
32
The successor corporation in a
merger is hardly the cestui who was wronged.
33 The
stockholders of the acquired corporation,
aside from the defendant, may have only a
small interest in the equity of the
surviving corporation. They would share only
in a relatively small proportion in any
recovery by the successor.
34
While every § 16(b) recovery may
be deemed to partake of windfall there is
ample justification in legislative purpose
for restoring the recaptured profit to the
issuer itself.
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 446 F.2d
1301, 1308 (2 Cir. 1971);
Diamond v. Oreamuno, 24 N.Y.2d 494, 499,
301 N.Y.S.2d 78, 248 N.E.2d 910 (1969).
There is nothing but sheer windfall,
however, in handing it to the successor
corporation.
35
That corporation was not in any relationship
with Crane before the merger except that of
competitor for control of Air Brake.
Standard's determination of the ratio of
exchange in a merger it controlled was of
its own making in negotiation with Air
Brake. If the purchases by Crane of Air
Brake stock incidentally affected the number
of Air Brake stockholders who ultimately
voted for the merger, such activities were
legal and hardly within the prohibitory
scope of § 16(b). See Kern County, supra,
411 U.S. at 597--598, 93 S.Ct. 1736.
3. In the legislative history we
have observed no omission by inadvertence.
But even if there had been inadvertence, as
Justice Brandeis wrote in another context,
'(w)hat the Government asks is not a
construction of a statute, but, in effect,
an enlargement of it by the court, so that
what was omitted, presumably by
inadvertence, may be included in its scope.'
Iselin v. United States, 270 U.S. 245, 251,
46 S.Ct. 248, 250, 70 L.Ed. 566 (1926).
Appellees do not suggest that we
rewrite the statute. That we cannot do.
Packard Motor Co. v. National Labor
Relations Board, 330 U.S. 485, 492--493, 67
S.Ct. 789, 91 L.Ed. 1040 (1947). As Mr.
Justice Stewart said in Reliance, supra, '.
. . we are not free to adopt a construction
(of § 16(b)) that not only strains, but
flatly contradicts, the words of the
statute.' 404 U.S. at 427, 92 S.Ct. at 601.
The appellee argues that 'issuer'
should be read as if it said 'corporation'
Page 1062 and that a successor in interest by
operation of law thus comes within the term.
The difficulty is that the term 'issuer' was
the term of art selected by the
Congressional draftsmen because it relates
to its own registered 'equity securities.'
Section 16(b) is not a statute dealing with
corporate assets whatever they may be. The
functions of registration and reporting are
meaningful only in relation to the specific
'issuer.'
While a legal successor in
interest, indeed, has standing to recover,
it does so only as successor to a claim
already matured, a chose in action of the
acquired corporation. Cf. Western Auto
Supply Co. v. Gamble-Skogmo, Inc., supra.
4. While we believe that our
interpretation of the statute is compelled,
we pause, nevertheless, to assess as best we
can, its impact for the future. Although
Section 16(b) is now forty years old, the
precise question has never before been
presented for decision nor is it likely to
arise except in contested tender offer
situations. When more than 10% of the
subsequently acquired stock has been
purchased within the six months before the
effective date of the merger, and the tests
of the R.K.O decision have been met, there
will be no problem, for the exchange itself
will be the end rather than the beginning of
the matching process. In mergers where the
defendant is the opposiing party in the
contest for control and the test of Kern
County is met, a sensible policy should
permit the losing contender to divest itself
of stock in the successor company, for it
did not intend that company to be its
investment vehicle. To make it hold on to
the stock which it received in exchange
would be to compel it to subject itself to
the vagaries of the market, and probably to
the continued payment of interest to a
lending institution as a penalty for losing
the contest for control. The enemy of
yesterday is not the friendly insider of
tomorrow. The enmity would hardly be
dissolved by the merger unless some new deal
were made for access to confidential secrets
and control. A defensive merger may create a
practical armistice but it is far short of
being a treaty of peace.
We are satisfied, therefore, to
hold as we do in this defensive merger
situation, without fear of undesirable
precedential effect.
5. While most, if not all,
'beneficial owners' (other than those
engaged in adversary contests for control)
would be caught in the web of Section 16(b)
simply by treating the exchange on the
merger as a 'sale' or a 'purchase,' there
may be some other hypothetical situations
that do not readily come to mind in which
our reading of § 16(b) might not be in
accord with the statutory purpose. It is
better that any such hypothetical situations
be covered by legislative action, whether it
be by amendment of § 16(b) or in a new
statute.
The proposed ALI Federal
Securities Code, under the able guidance of
Professor Louis Loss, has thus far in the
draft statute not extended the automatic
sanction of Section 16(b) to mergers. While
the draft makes no mention of the 'defensive
merger' situation as such, it would add to
present law a specific statutory provision
permitting matching if the securities
involved have 'more than one issuer,' §
1413(g), providing, however, that 'if the
defendant proves that he did not use
information obtained by reason of his
relationship to an involved issuer', he is
relieved of liability under § 1413(h). This
addition to existing statutory law, in any
event, would not apply the irrebuttable
presumption of the present Section 16(b) to
such transactions involving 'more than one
issuer.'
36
There has, indeed, been some
comment to the effect that 'before the
development of Rule 10b--5 there was a
legitimate reason for expanding the coverage
of § 16(b) and applying it flexibly, but
that reason no longer exists. The
'possibility of abuse' test operates with no
more certainty or simplicity than does Rule
10b--5; yet its application does not
Page 1063 disclose actual inside speculation.' Note,
Reliance Electric and 16(b) Litigation: A
Return to the Objective Approach, 58
Va.L.Rev. 907, 928 (1972). See also
Lowenfels, Section 16(b): A New Trend in
Regulating Insider Trading, 54 Corn.L.Rev.
45, 61--64 (1968).
Lastly, we note that the policy
issue, of recent development, lends itself
to legislative consideration. The stronger
emphasis on the abuse of inside information
for speculative purposes exemplified by
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur,
401 F.2d 833 (2
Cir. 1968); 466 F.2d 1301 (2 Cir. 1971)
coupled with the legislative concern with
tender offers, Securities Exchange Act, §
14(d), 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d), Act of July 29,
1968, Sec. 3, 82 Stat. 456, added in the
Williams Act, indicate that reliance on
Section 16(b) as the key tool in merger
situations may not necessarily be desirable.
See Lowenfels, supra. It is Congress which
can make any contrary policy decision.
For the foregoing reasons the
order granting partial summary judgment
against Crane is reversed, and the cause
remanded with instructions to enter judgment
dismissing the complaint.
1 The court held in favor of Standard on
all other points including an attack on its
proxy statement.
2 The actions were consolidated in
January 1969, 490 F.2d at 338. The claim of
Kritzler and Abrams is that Crane is liable
to the former Air Brake stockholders rather
than to Standard. Under the order of
consolidation this claim is in abeyance
pending determination of whether Crane is
liable.
3 Section 16(a) reads:
'Every person who is directly or
indirectly the beneficial owner of more than
10 per centum of any class of any equity
security (other than an exempted security)
which is registered pursuant to section 78l
of this title, or who is a director or an
officer of the issuer of such security,
shall file, at the time of the registration
of such security on a national securities
exchange or by the effective date of a
registration statement filed pursuant to
section 78l(g) of this title, or within ten
days after he becomes such beneficial owner,
director, or officer, a statement with the
Commission (and, if such security is
registered on a national securities
exchange, also with the exchange) of the
amount of all equity securities of such
issuer of which he is the beneficial owner,
and within ten days after the close of each
calendar month thereafter, if there has been
a change in such ownership during such
month, shall file with the Commission (and
if such security is registered on a national
securities exchange, shall also file with
the exchange), a statement indicating his
ownership at the close of the calendar month
and such changes in his ownership as have
occurred during such calendar month.'
Section 16(b) reads:
'For the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by such beneficial owner, director,
or officer by reason of his relationship to
the issuer, any profit realized by him from
any purchase and sale, or any sale and
purchase, of any equity security of such
issuer (other than an exempted security)
within any period of less than six months,
unless such security was acquired in good
faith in connection with a debt previously
contracted, shall inure to and be
recoverable by the issuer, irrespective of
any intention on the part of such beneficial
owner, director, or officer in entering into
such transaction of holding the security
purchased or of not repurchasing the
security sold for a period exceeding six
months. Suit to recover such profit may be
instituted at law or in equity in any court
of competent jurisdiction by the issuer, or
by the owner of any security of the issuer
in the name and in behalf of the issuer if
the issuer shall fail or refuse to bring
such suit within sixty days after request or
shall fail diligently to prosecute the same
thereafter; but no such suit shall be
brought more than two years after the date
such profit was realized. This subsection
shall not be construed to cover any
transaction where such beneficial owner was
not such both at the time of the purchase
and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the
security involved, or any transaction or
transactions which the Commission by rules
and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection.'
4 In exchange for each Air Brake share,
Crane offered to issue $25 principal amount
of its 5% subordinated convertible
debentures and $25 principal amount of its
7% subordinated debentures, both due in
1993. The 5% debentures were convertible
into Crane common stock at $50 per share
(i.e., 20 shares for each $1,000 debenture).
5 Judge Smith described Standard's April
19th activities and their result as follows:
'The critical day in the take-over battle
was April 19, the day Crane's tender offer
for Air Brake stock was to expire. The
holders of Air Brake stock could be expected
to delay until the last moment in order to
make a decision based on the latest market
information, i.e., to compare the value fo
the tender offer, here not more than $50,
with the market price on the day the offer
was to expire. In fact, 85 percent of the
shares tendered to Crane by the 19th were
offered on that day. (citation) On April 19,
Air Brake opened at 45 1/4 on the New York
Stock Exchange, giving Crane's tender offer
a good prospect of success. The surest way
to defeat the Crane offer was to run the
price up to $50. The tape did quickly reach
$50 on April 19, and Crane's tender offer
failed. Crane's claim that this was the
result of extraordinary transactions by
Standard is supported by the record.
'. . . The net result of this buying was
to present to the public, whose primary
source of information is the tape, that
there was a great demand for Air Brake at an
increased value. It is reasonable to
conclude that many Air Brake stockholders
who might
Page 1063 otherwise have chosen to tender to Crane
chose not to do so because their own
holdings in Air Brake looked better as the
price went up. . . .
'Standard had 'painted the tape' in Air
Brake stock. . . .
'Standard's extraordinary buying here,
coupled with its large secret sales off the
market, inevitably distorted the market
picture and deceived public investors,
particularly the Air Brake shareholders.'
419 F.2d at 792--793.
6 This court reversed the dismissal of
the fraud action in Crane I.
7 A motion for summary judgment was made
by Crane on May 27, 1970 on the ground that
'the findings of the Court of Appeals (in
Crane I) are dispositive of this action and
entitle Crane to summary judgment dismissing
the consolidated complaint. Standard
cross-moved for summary judgment on June 23,
1970 on the issue of liability alone. It
based its motion on an 'annexed affidavit of
George C. Kern, Jr., the record in the two
civil actions (heretofore consolidated)
entitled 'Crane Co., plaintiff, against
Westinghouse Air Brake Company et al.,
defendants' (S.D.N.Y. No. 68 Civ. 1560) and
'Crane Co., plaintiff, against American
Standard, Inc., et al., defendants'
(S.D.N.Y. No. 68 Civ. 1845), 'Plaintiff's
Statement of Material Facts Pursuant to this
Court's General Rule 9(g), defendants'
answers to plaintiff's interrogatories dated
July 2, 1968 and all pleadings and
proceedings heretofore had herein."
Kern's affidavit also mentions 'a third
action brought in the Court of Common Pleas
of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, entitled
'Crane Co., plaintiff, against Westinghouse
Air Brake Co., defendant' (No. 249 April
Term, 1968)' and purports to incorporate by
reference the trial transcript, although the
notice of motion itself makes no mention of
the Pittsburgh action.
8 On March 1, 1968 Evans sent a telegram
to Air Brake's Chairman stating:
'We are advised that you have been
negotiating a merger or sale of Westinghouse
Air Brake Company. . . . Request that you
and your directors make no commitment with
respect to merger proposals involving other
companies without first giving Crane Co.
your Company's largest stockholder the
opportunity to make a counter proposal that
would be more favorable to all (Air Brake)
stockholders . . .'
On April 4, 1968 Evans and associates met
with the Air Brake Board, analyzed the
Standard balance sheet as overstated, and
still pressed for approval of Crane's plan
instead. When the presentation of Crane was
turned down, Crane announced its tender
offer two days later, on April 6.
The other subject of the meeting was the
request of Crane for a stockholders' list
which was refused absolutely. Crane had to
sue to get the list.
Crane Co. v. Westinghouse Air Brake Co., 56
Misc.2d 538, 288 N.Y.S.2d 984
(Sup.Ct.N.Y.Co., 1968).
9 After the merger plan was announced it
was not 'inside information'.
Kern County Land Co. v. Occidental Corp.,
411 U.S. 582, 597--598, 93 S.Ct. 1736, 36
L.Ed.2d 503 (1973).
10 In any event, no information was given
to Crane by virtue of its ten per cent
ownership.
11 The decision of this court was later
aff'd sub nom. Kern County Land Co. v.
Occidental Petroleum Corp., supra.
12 Not discussed, however, was the
question whether the exchange of Air Brake
stock for Standard stock on the merger could
be deemed a 'purchase' of Standard stock for
Section 16(b) purposes to be matched against
the sale of the same Standard stock within
six months.
13 At this point we cite the case as
Occidental (2 Cir.) rather than Kern County
(Supreme Court) because Judge Lasker had
before him at the time of his supplemental
opinion of July 6, 1973 only the decision of
this court. Kern County was not decided
until May 7, 1974.
14 The court held that the granting of
the option (a 'call') was not a sale. The
actual exercise of the option occurred after
the six months period for 16(b) purposes had
passed.
15 Contrary to the inference drawn by
appellee, the court was careful not to state
its caveat in terms of 'defensive' mergers
but rather of 'mergers' generally. It is
certainly true that mergers, as in R.K.O.,
supra, can result in § 16(b) violations, as
well as Rule 10b--5 violations.
Dasho v. Susquehanna Corp., 380 F.2d 262 (7
Cir. 1967), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 977,
88 S.Ct. 480, 19 L.Ed.2d 470 (1969).
16 Thomas Corcoran, testifying before the
Senate Committee on Banking and Currency on
February 23, 1934 said that the section
(then numbered § 15) should apply 'to every
influential stockholder who, by reason of
his position--and 5 percent is a lot of
stock in a modern corporation--is on the
inside of the circle.' Hearing on Stock
Exchange Practices, p. 6555.
17 The omission may have been a
sophisticated stratagem by Standard's able
counsel to prevent an issue of fact from
arising which might preclude summary
judgment in its favor on what it thought
were winning grounds. In its statement of
material facts pursuant to General Rule 9(g)
of the District Court Standard listed three
facts as to which there exist genuine issues
to be tried but failed to list whether
Crane, in fact, had the possibility of
access to inside information. We can hardly
say that this was an unwise gamble.
18 Rule 9(g) of the 'General Rules of
United States District Courts for the
Southern and Eastern Districts' reads as
follows:
'Upon any motion for summary judgment
pursuant to Rule 56 of the Rules of Civil
Procedure, there shall be annexed to the
notice of motion a separate, short and
concise statement of the material facts as
to which the moving party contends there is
no genuine issue to be tried.
'The papers opposing a motion for summary
judgment shall include a separate, short and
concise statement of the material facts as
to which it is contended that there exists a
genuine issue to be tried.
'All material facts set forth in the
statement required to be served by the
moving party will be deemed to be admitted
unless controverted by the statement
required to be served by the opposing
party.'
19 We surely cannot approve a practice,
however, of dumping an extensive record on a
busy District Judge without guidance from
counsel, expecting him to ferret out facts
which might conceivably be relevant on a
motion for summary judgment.
20 Gold did not involve a defensive
merger, nor a 'beneficial owner.' It
involved a voluntary merger in which the
defendant held liable was the principal
negotiator.
21 The decision below is said to be the
first case so to hold. See Posner,
Developments in Federal Securities
Regulation, 29 Bus. Lawyer 3, 38 (1973).
22
Blau v. Oppenheim, 250 F.Supp. 881
(S.D.N.Y.1966) involved only a question
of standing to sue. A stockholder of a
successor corporation by merger was held to
have standing to sue for recovery of profits
of a director who purchased and sold, within
six months, the stock of the acquired
company. The successor corporation had
succeeded to all the assets of the acquired
corporation, including the § 16(b) claim.
Judge Weinfeld held that its stockholders
could sue in a direct action under § 16(b).
Oppenheim was cited with approval by this
court, but only on the question of standing.
Newmark v. R.K.O. General, Inc., supra, 425
F.2d at 352, n. 4.
Western Auto Supply Co. v. Gamble-Skogmo,
Inc., 348 F.2d 736, 739--740 (1965),
cert. denied, 382 U.S. 987, 86 S.Ct. 556, 15
L.Ed.2d 475 (1966), the Eighth Circuit
treated the question as one of survivability
of the cause of action. The Oppenheim case
has been construed by a commentator 'as
relating solely to the issue of standing and
is of dubious precedential value for the
conclusion that equity securities of
different entities should be matched in
order to invoke liability under the
statute.' Lang & Katz, Section 16(b) and
Extraordinary Transactions, 49 Notre Dame
Lawyer 705, 723 (1974).
23 For purposes of this discussion we
assume, without deciding, that the immediate
right of Crane to convert its preference
shares into common requires the computation
of its more than 10% beneficial ownership on
the basis of a hypothetical conversion which
would have made Crane a 15% holder of the
issued and outstanding Standard common
stock. We note SEC Rule 16a--2(b) without
passing on its applicability or validity.
This is not to say, in any event, that a
sale of the preferred stock is a 'sale' of
the underlying common. We do not reach that
question here. Cf. Chemical Fund v. Xerox
Corp., supra; Simon v. Sunasco Co., Inc.,
CCH Fed.Sec.L.Rep. 92,547 (S.D.N.Y.1970).
24 This has been the view of
commentators. See e.g., Note, 117 Pa.L.Rev.
1034, 1052 (1969), Lang and Katz, supra, 49
Notre Dame Lawyer at 721--24.
25 In Reliance, supra, the facts
disclosed that Emerson was 'forced' into its
successive 'sales' by a defense merger. See
Supreme Court, 1972 Term: Securities
Regulation, 87 Harv.L.Rev. 291, 295, n. 29
(1973).
26 Hastie, J., dissenting
Heli-Coil Corp. v. Webster, 352 F.2d 156,
174 (3 Cir. 1965).
27 'In 1966, the conversion problem
largely became moot when the Commission
adopted Rule 16b--9, which exempted from the
operation of § 16(b) any acquisition or
disposition involved in a conversion of one
equity security into another of the same
corporation. Thenceforth, the controversy
would center upon merger situations,
creating the necessity of reexamining the
problem of volition.' Weinstock, 29 Bus.
Lawyer 1153, 1160 (1974).
28 In draft form it was early called §
15(b).
29 See Report of House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 73rd Cong.
2d Sess. Report No. 1383 p. 13 (1934).
30 'The undoubted congressional intent in
the enactment of § 16(b) was to discourage
what was reasonably thought to be a
widespread abuse of a fiduciary
relationship.' Judge Burger (now
Chief Justice) in Adler v. Klawans, 267 F.2d
840, 844 (2 Cir. 1959). As Professor
Loss notes, the 'inure to' phrase in § 16(b)
suggests the concept of a constructive
trust. Loss, Securities Regulation, 1042 n.
17 (1961). See Cook and Feldman, Insider
Trading Under the Securities Exchange Act,
66 Harv.L.Rev. 385, 408 (1953). See Munter,
Section 16(b), 52 CornL.Q. 69--71 (1966).
31 In Judge Hand's words: '. . . § 16(b)
in effect made 'beneficial owners'
fiduciaries as directors and officers were
anyway.' 187 F.2d at 49.
32 Stock Exchange Practices, Report of
Com. on Banking & Currency, S.Rep. No. 1455,
73d Cong., 2d Sess. (1934) 55.
33 See separate opinion of
Winter, J., in Gold v. Sloan,
486 F.2d 340 at 355.
34 On the present appeal we deal with a
situation where about two-thirds of the
common stock of Standard after the merger
was owned by persons who had no relationship
whatever to Air Brake before the merger.
They could hardly be described as cestuis of
Crane. Per contra, all the former
stockholders of Air Brake, aside from Crane,
owned approximately no more than 20% of the
equity on the basis of a hypothetical
conversion of all the preference shares.
35 That is, except where recovery is
based on assignment from the dissolved
corporation of a § 16(b) claim already
matured for which it is assumed some
consideration will have been paid in the
merger exchange. See, e.g., Reliance
Electric Co. v. Emerson Electric Co., supra.
36 ALI Federal Securities Code, Tentative
Draft No. 2 (1973). |