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Page 413
537 F.Supp. 413
MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
Carl C. ICAHN et al., Defendants.
No. 82 Civ. 0755 (PNL). United States District Court, S. D.
New York. February 16, 1982. On Renewal of Motion for Temporary
Restraining Order March 10, 1982.
On Motion for Preliminary Injunction
March 23, 1982. On Application for Temporary
Restraining Order Re Tender Offer March 26,
1982.
Page 414
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 415
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, Douglas M. Kraus, Daniel E. Stoller,
Timothy A. Nelsen, Jemera Rone, Bradley
Holmes, New York City, for plaintiff and
counterclaim-defendant Marshall Field & Co.
Ronald S. Rolfe, Alan C.
Stephenson, Henry B. Gutman, Cravath, Swaine
& Moore, New York City, for BATUS, Inc.,
BATUS Holdings I, BATUS Holdings II.
Theodore Altman, Mathew E.
Hoffman, Gordon, Hurwitz, Butowsky, Baker,
Weitzen & Shalov, and David Simon, Michael
O. Finkelstein, William O. Purcell, Barrett,
Smith, Schapiro, Simon & Armstrong, New York
City, for defendants Carl C. Icahn, Icahn
Capital Corporation, Icahn & Co., Inc., C.
C. I. & Associates and Brett Investors Corp.
Edward G. Turan, Leonard
Benowich, Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver &
Jacobson, New York City, for defendant
Bayswater Realty & Capital Corp.
Edward Brodsky, Thomas H. Sear,
Edward J. Westlow, Spengler, Carlson, Gubar,
Brodsky & Rosenthal, New York City, for
defendants Alexander M. Goren,
Establissement Dan-Elath Investment and
Picara Valley N. V.
Herman Sassower, Barry R. Fertel,
Bell, Kalnick, Beckman, Klee & Green, New
York City, for defendants Philip S. Sassower
and Lawrence I. Schneider.
OPINION
LEVAL, District Judge.
Schedule 13D, Item 4, of the
Securities Exchange Commission's Regulations
requires reporting persons who have acquired
the requisite amount of securities of the
issuing corporation to state in their filing
under Section 13D the purposes of the
acquisition. Among the possible purposes
that must be reported are
(b) An extraordinary corporate
transaction, such as a merger,
reorganization or liquidation, involving the
issuer or any of its subsidiaries; (c) A
sale or transfer of a material amount of
assets of the issuer ...; (f) Any other
material change in the issuer's business or
corporate structure ....
20 C.F.R. § 240.13d-101 (1981);
GAF Corp. v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709, 717 (2d Cir. 1971), cert. denied,
406 U.S. 910, 92 S.Ct. 1610, 31 L.Ed.2d 821
(1972). In this case the only statement of
such purpose set forth in the 13D filing is
a disclaimer of any plans or proposals "to
liquidate the Issuer, sell its assets, merge
it with any other person or persons, or make
any other major change in its business or
corporate structure."
There is some substantial proof
in the evidence submitted after a few days
of hasty discovery to the effect that the
defendants have formulated tentative
purposes which would include extraordinary
corporate transactions, material sales of
assets and material changes in Marshall
Field's business. The evidence, although
sketchy and incomplete, suggests that the
motivation for the sudden attempt to acquire
effective control of Marshall Field
(involving the investment of what may well
run to $70,000,000) may be a perception that
the real estate assets of the company are
worth far more on a liquidation basis than
the going business value of the retailing
concern. This is the conclusion expressed in
a study prepared for Mr. Icahn last year.
There is also sketchy evidence that the
purchasing group has already formulated some
tentative plans as to how cash raised in the
liquidation of certain real estate assets
might be invested, including the acquisition
of undervalued companies.
Page 416
Although mindful of the Court of
Appeals' warning that Congress did not
intend "to impose an unrealistic requirement
of laboratory conditions that might make
[the Williams Act] a potent tool for
incumbent management to protect its own
interest against the desires and welfare of
the stockholders,"
Electronics Specialty Co. v.
International Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 948 (2d Cir. 1969), and of the
warning of the Fifth Circuit that a
registrant should not be required to make
predictions of future behavior which may
result in unjustified reliance by the public
investor,
Susquehanna Corp. v. Pan American Sulphur
Co., 423 F.2d 1075, 1083-84 (5th Cir.
1970), I nonetheless question whether an
acquirer of control whose acquisition is
motivated primarily by plans, however
tentative, which would seriously alter the
structure and business of the acquiring
company, is not obligated under the statute
and regulations to inform the marketplace of
the kind of plans being considered. Such
advice can and should when appropriate be
written in properly tentative language to
avoid creating unjustified reliance.
A comparison of the evidence of
such purposes with the broad disclaimer in
the 13D statement of any plans or proposals
suggest that there are "sufficiently serious
questions going to the merits to make them a
fair ground for litigation."
Jackson Dairy Inc. v. H. P. Hood & Sons,
Inc., 596 F.2d 70, 72 (2d Cir. 1979)
(per curiam).
I conclude also that irreparable
harm is present if the investing public and
the present shareholders of Marshall Field
are trading in a market place which is
deprived of important and legally required
information as to the acquiring group's
intentions which may affect their judgment
as to whether the stock should be sold,
bought, or held.
I find also that the balance of
hardships, at least for a brief period, tips
decidedly in favor of the grant of relief.
The hardship to the investing public and the
issuer's shareholders is that mentioned in
the preceding sentence. The defendants have
submitted no proof of hardship which they
would suffer by reason of a brief
court-imposed restriction on further
purchases.
I have therefore concluded that a
temporary restraining order should be
imposed on further acquisition by the
defendants of shares of Marshall Field. This
Order is based solely on the question
whether the Schedule 13D filing has
adequately disclosed the intentions of the
acquiring group with respect to the issuer's
assets, corporate structure and business. It
is not in any part based on the allegations
made by the plaintiff company under 18
U.S.C. § 1962.
It is also contemplated that this
order may be of very brief duration. The
filing of an amended 13D statement which
gives the public adequate information may
well justify a lifting of this order so as
to permit continued purchases in a properly
informed market place. The order is also
intended to give the plaintiff some further
opportunity to conduct discovery to develop
proof that would justify continuation of the
restraint or entry of further orders as
appropriate.
As mentioned above, I am mindful
that such litigation can be misused by
management for self-perpetuation in a manner
which is contrary to the interest and
welfare of their stockholders. I recognize
the possible validity of defendants'
allegations that the present application is
such an abuse. The court accordingly will
remain available to both sides on short
notice to modify or lift the present order
as circumstances indicate.
An order giving effect to the
purposes of this Memorandum is being entered
simultaneously.
On Renewal of Motion For Temporary
Restraining Order
Marshall Field renews its motion
for a temporary restraining order enjoining
the Icahn group from making further
purchases of Marshall Field stock pending
hearing on the preliminary injunction
motion.
On February 16, 1982 I granted a
temporary restraining order upon a finding
of substantial questions as to whether the
13-D filing of the Icahn group adequately
disclosed proposals for extraordinary
transactions
Page 417
in the event the group acquired control.
On February 19, 1982 a modified schedule
13-D was filed that in my view adequately
disclosed such proposals as the evidence
proved were being entertained by the Icahn
group. I therefore lifted the temporary
restraining order.
During the period when the
questionable 13-D was on file, the Icahn
group purchased nearly 900,000 shares of
Marshall Field stock, or about 8.7% of the
outstanding stock. Since the lifting of the
temporary restraining order, the group has
apparently increased its ownership to
approximately 23%.
Marshall Field argues that the
temporary restraining order should be
reimposed because the group's possession of
so large a portion of the company's shares
effectively dissuades any other potential
offeror from making competing offers to its
shareholders. It contends that the group has
acquired an effective blocking position,
absent a grant of restraint.
Marshall Field also contends that
the present filing by the group fails to
disclose adequately the group's intention to
acquire control and to force the company to
make extraordinary transactions.
I find that the current 13-D is
adequate, measured against the evidence
submitted, in disclosing that the group may
persevere to acquire control and, if so,
that it may cause the company to engage in
extraordinary transactions to realize what
it perceives to be a value in real estate
assets which far exceeds the book and market
value. The evidence seems to show that the
group also is maintaining an open option to
sell its position if offered a sufficient
profit. In my view, based on the existing
evidence, to require a more firm statement
of intentions may be to require a false
statement, and might well mislead the
investing public.
Nor do I accept Marshall Field's
argument that the Marshall Field
shareholders are irreparably harmed by the
discouragement of prospective white knights
if further buying is not enjoined. It is
arguable that the Field shareholder would be
equally harmed if the principal existing
bidder for their shares were barred from
making further offers. Furthermore, if the
Icahn group were barred, management might
well lose its urgency in seeking competing
bidders. It is far from clear that such an
injunction would benefit the existing
shareholders.
I conclude there is no basis for
granting the order now sought to restrain
further purchases by the Icahn group.
The argument is also advanced
that failure to grant relief permits Icahn
to benefit from his violation of law by
permitting him to use, for blocking
purposes, the large number of shares which
were acquired under the allegedly fraudulent
misleading 13-D statement. It is true that
the further discovery called to my attention
tends to confirm the accuracy of my earlier
judgment that the initial 13-D was
deficient.
If this is so, it may well be
appropriate in time to grant relief which
bars the Icahn group from voting the shares
acquired under the allegedly misleading
13-D. They may also be subject to suits for
damages or rescission brought by uninformed
or misled sellers. Additionally it is
possible that they may face regulatory
action if it should be found that the
disclosures were intentionally misleading.
These possibilities do not,
however, support the conclusion that further
buying by the Icahn group should now be
enjoined.
For the reasons stated above, the
temporary restraining order is hereby
denied.
On Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Marshall Field & Co. moves for a
preliminary injunction enjoining the
defendants from further purchases of Field
stock, requiring rescission of previous
acquisitions and, alternatively, enjoining
the defendants from voting certain shares
acquired by defendants under an assertedly
misleading Schedule 13-D.
The defendants form a group led
by Carl Icahn that has purchased a
substantial percentage of the Field common
stock pursuant to a program of acquisition
of Field shares.
Page 418
On February 16, 1982, Field
sought a temporary restraining order against
further purchases by the defendants. I found
the existence of a substantial question on
the merits whether the 13-D statement then
filed by the Icahn group adequately
disclosed the defendants' proposals or
plans, in the event the group acquired
control, to engage in extraordinary
transactions respecting the company's real
estate assets. Because of the high
likelihood that the Field shareholders and
the market place generally were being misled
as to information the acquiring group was
required by law to disclose, I found that
the balance of hardships decidedly favored
the injunction of further purchases.
Field claims that, during the
effective period of the assertedly deficient
13-D filing, the Icahn group acquired
942,000 shares or nearly 9% of the stock.
The defendants contend that this number
should be reduced by 380,000 shares which
were purchased on the day of, but prior to,
the filing.
Three days after the grant of the
temporary restraining order the Icahn group
amended the Schedule 13-D and sought
revocation of the restraining order. I found
that the new statement was adequate, in
light of the evidence then available, to
advise the public of extraordinary proposals
being considered by the Icahn group.
Accordingly, I lifted the order. The Icahn
group has since increased its holdings to
approximately 30% of the outstanding stock.
Marshall Field has made, in the
meantime, additional applications for
restraining orders which I have found to be
without merit and have denied. Field has
also been active seeking competing tenders
from a "white knight". On March 17, 1982,
BATUS, Inc., with the support of the Field
management, announced a tender offer for
Field shares. The price of BATUS' offer was
increased the next day.
* * *
Field's first contention is that
further purchases by the defendants should
be enjoined on the ground that their 13-D
filings misrepresent the intentions of the
Icahn group. The argument is made with
particular reference to the intention to
acquire control and the intention thereafter
to cause Field to make extraordinary
transactions.
Recognizing that the matter
remains in a preliminary stage in which
findings are subject to change with further
discovery of additional evidence, I conclude
that Field has failed to make out these
contentions in a manner calling for relief.
The evidence suggests not that Icahn is
operating under a firm plan to acquire
control but rather that the defendant group
is feeling its way with a mind open either
to selling out if offered a sufficiently
attractive profit or to pushing on for
control if that seems preferable. In my
view, based on the available evidence, to
require a more definite statement of
intention to acquire control may be to
require a false overstatement, equally
capable of misleading the marketplace.
As to plans or proposals for
extraordinary transactions in the event
control is obtained, I conclude that the
amended filing is not inadequate or
misleading when measured against the sketchy
evidence available.
Field's alternative contention is
that I should enjoin the voting of the
shares acquired by defendants under the
earlier 13-D filing. An argument in favor is
that one who used false filings to assist
him in an attempt to gain control should not
be rewarded by being allowed to exercise the
benefits of the fraudulently obtained
stocks. Field argues that this ruling would
encourage fraudulent filings with occasional
correction from time to time as court
decrees require.
The argument does not depend on
irreparable harm which would flow from the
voting of the shares or be avoided by an
injunction. The argument depends rather on
the policy of preserving the integrity of
the requirements of the securities laws and
preventing violators from profiting by the
violation.
This argument has considerable
force. However, strong arguments also point
to
Page 419
the contrary in these circumstances.
First, there has been no conclusive finding
that the early 13-D was false. The finding
was of the tentative kind which can justify
temporary relief depending on the balance of
equities. It is not clear that Field will be
able to prove falsity by a preponderance of
the evidence when all discovery is complete
and the issue is ripe for definitive trial
on the merits. Second, in the event it
should eventually be shown that the earlier
filing was false, those deceived by it, who
arguably sold out more cheaply than they
would have on proper information, would
obtain no benefit from the relief Field now
seeks. The victims of such a false filing
can be protected by an action for money
damages. The benefits of the injunction
would go to persons other than those damaged
by the false filing.
Third, the application is
premature. No shareholder vote is currently
scheduled before November, eight months
hence. Even assuming that injunction of the
voting will eventually be justified, no
irreparable harm results from failure to
grant such relief at a preliminary stage
based on an inconclusive record.
Field argues that refusing to
grant the relief now effectively rewards the
defendants for false filings since potential
white knights will be deterred by the size
of defendants' voting block. Since the
argument was advanced, however, a white
knight bidder has emerged. Furthermore,
uncertainty and speculation would in any
event cloud the future, for a competing
tenderer relying on such a preliminary
grant of relief would have to bear the risk
that the relief provisionally granted would
ultimately be rescinded. Likewise, the
sophisticated marketplace will be aware that
the relief of sterilization of the shares,
although now premature, may well be granted
at a subsequent time, either upon final
trial, or in the event a vote or other
circumstance arises which calls for such
relief. I can see no reason to enjoin voting
on a provisional and inconclusive record
when no vote is scheduled for eight months
an eternity in the marketplace of tender
offers and battles for control. The
application, although now denied, may be
renewed either upon final trial or if the
imminent holding of an election or other
circumstance raises the threat of immediate
irreparable harm.
In pressing for sterilization,
Field contends that the mere possibility
that the Icahn group will be able to vote
the shares in the future poses an immediate
threat to the success of the BATUS tender
offer and the welfare of Field shareholders.
First, Field argues that, if a majority of
the company's outstanding shares are not
tendered to BATUS, BATUS will be dissuaded
from waiving its minimum condition of
acceptance if it expects a proxy fight from
the Icahn group armed with the voting rights
to the contested shares. Second, the
shareholders' current decision whether to
sell now at the market price or tender their
shares depends on their estimate of the
ultimate success of the tender offer. That
estimate in turn depends in part on the
likelihood of a waiver by BATUS in the event
the minimum tender condition is not met.
This argument is not persuasive.
The first prong depends on the possibility
that BATUS' tender will yield close to, but
slightly less than, 50% of the stock. If
that situation does in fact occur, there
will be a further timely occasion to
consider whether failure to grant relief
will result in irreparable harm. As to the
second prong of the argument, the
preliminary relief sought here would not
bring certainty to the shareholders. As
noted above, the temporary injunction would
not preclude the possibility that the Icahn
group would eventually be allowed to vote
the shares. Moreover, because lay
shareholders may misconstrue preliminary
relief as a final determination on the
merits, a preliminary injunction might well
exacerbate the problem rather than solve it.
Marshall Field also contends that
the failure of Alexander Goren and Dan-Elath
to file Schedule 13-D's justifies the entry
of a preliminary injunction. Dan-Elath is
the controlling shareholder of Picara Valley
N. V., a filing member of the
Page 420
Icahn group. Goren is the controlling
shareholder of Dan-Elath. Even if this
failure to file is a violation of section
13(d)(1), it is not misleading. The roles of
both Goren and Dan-Elath are set forth in
the current filings. The public is not being
deprived of any material information. Such a
violation will not support a preliminary
injunction.
Treadway Companies, Inc. v. Care Corp.,
490 F.Supp. 660, 665 (S.D.N. Y.),
aff'd in part, 638 F.2d 357, 380 (2d
Cir. 1980);
Wellman v. Dickinson, 475 F.Supp.
783, 833 (S.D.N.Y.1979).
Marshall Field's allegation that
Goren is in violation of Israeli tax laws is
hotly disputed by the defendants.
Finally, Field contends that the
defendants have violated the
anti-racketeering statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§
1961-1968 (1976), and that these violations
justify preliminary relief. The RICO Act
forbids, among other things, acquisition of
an interest in a company through a "pattern
of racketeering activity." 18 U.S.C. §
1962(a)-(b) (1976). A "pattern of
racketeering activity" requires at least two
acts of "racketeering activity" within the
past ten years. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5) (1976).
"Racketeering activity" is defined at length
in 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(A)-(D). One
racketeering activity under § 1961(1)(D) is
"an offense involving ... fraud in the sale
of securities ... punishable under any law
of the United States."
Field contends Icahn is liable
under this branch of the RICO prohibitions.
For proof of fraud in the sale of
securities, it relies primarily on a series
of civil settlements and stipulations
entered into by various defendants with the
SEC in earlier SEC proceedings unrelated to
this litigation. These settlements admit no
violations and are not themselves admissible
as evidence of securities violations.
Marshall Field also relies on evidence
adduced in these earlier proceedings. I find
that this evidence does not suffice to show
a likelihood of success on the merits with
respect to proving any "offense[s] involving
... fraud in the sale of securities ...
punishable under any law of the United
States." See 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(D)
(1976). Nor do I find a balance of equities
tipping in the plaintiff's favor on this
claim. Nor has Field demonstrated
irreparable harm flowing from the Icahn
group's acquisition of Field shares.
Marshall Field's motion for a
preliminary injunction is therefore denied.
On Application For Temporary
Restraining Order Re Tender Offer
This is an application by three
members of the Icahn Group for a temporary
restraining order directed against the
tender offer of BATUS, Inc. for the shares
of Marshall Field Company. Icahn asks the
court to set back the proration date of the
tender offer and to restrain BATUS and Field
from taking steps in furtherance of the
tender offer so long as certain agreements
of Marshall Field remain in force. It is
alleged that the agreements in question
constitute manipulative devices in the
tender offer setting which violate Section
14(e) of the Williams Act, 15 U.S.C. §
78n(e) (1976).
The application is denied. I find
that the Icahn group ("Icahn") has shown
neither irreparable harm, nor likelihood of
success on the merits, nor a balance of
hardships tipping in its favor. The force of
its argument is based on unsupported
speculation.
Icahn contends that certain
contractual agreements of Field, some with
BATUS and some with potential bidders for
control of Field, interfere with the
possibility that others will compete with
BATUS for control.
The first of these arrangements
is a stock purchase agreement committing
BATUS to purchase and Field to sell two
million shares of Field treasury stock at
$25.50 per share. This price was set at the
time of the original BATUS tender offer and
was at the same price as the tender price.
The tender price was increased to the
current $30 per share on the day after it
was announced. Under the stock purchase
contract BATUS is relieved of its commitment
if it or a third party obtains 51% of Field
or if it keeps its offer open until April 1,
1983.
Page 421
The second is an agreement by
which Marshall Field has conferred a right
of first refusal on BATUS for the purchase
of the properties constituting Field's
Chicago Division in the event they should be
sold by Field within a year after
termination of the BATUS-Field merger
agreement. This agreement provides that
BATUS may pay with Field stock valued at
BATUS' cost.
It is contended that these
agreements give BATUS an improper preferred
position over competition and further deter
competitive bids by giving BATUS the
possibility of buying Field's most valuable
and important assets below their fair price.
I had expressed concern at a
conference earlier this week whether the
right of first refusal might operate in such
fashion as to prevent competitive bidding
for the Chicago properties. Thereafter a
clarification agreement was entered into by
BATUS and Field expressly providing that
upon any exercise by BATUS of its right of
first refusal, the bidding for the Chicago
properties would be reopened. This
clarification rebuts the contention that the
property would be sold at a price below fair
market value.
Icahn also contends that the
provision for payment using Field stock at
BATUS' cost could result in a bargain
purchase if Field stock would have dropped
at the time. There are two answers. First,
the only stock conceivably to be used in
such a transaction is the 2 million treasury
shares under contract at $25.50 per share.
BATUS would not likely own other Field stock
unless its tender offer had succeeded in
bringing it control, in which case it would
not be a buyer of what it already
controlled. If that is the case, Field
itself has received $25.50 for those shares,
selling them to BATUS at a premium. Second
and more important is that the circumstance
is very unlikely to arise. The first refusal
comes into play only if Field (including any
new management after a take-over) seeks to
sell the Chicago properties within a year of
the termination of the Field-BATUS merger. A
new management need only wait one year to
sell those assets to defeat BATUS' rights.
These contracts seem most unlikely to
dissuade competitors (if any exist) from
tendering for control of Field.
Third, Icahn points to two
agreements of Field, one with BATUS, another
made with several companies approached by
Goldman, Sachs & Co., Field's agent, as
potential white knight bidders for control
of Field. Prior to entering into its current
arrangement with BATUS, the Field
management, through Goldman Sachs, "shopped"
the company. Prospective "white knights"
were given confidential information on which
to rely in formulating bids. Field obtained
letters from potential bidders committing
them not to purchase Field shares without
having obtained the approval of Field's
board of directors. Such a provision was
well justified at the time to prevent
purchases utilizing inside information.
In its merger agreement with
BATUS, Field committed itself to BATUS not
to solicit or encourage competing bids for
Field stock.
Icahn contends that these two
agreements in concert prevent the
signatories of the letters from making
competing tender offers. Icahn contends that
it is injured as a shareholder of Field by
being deprived of the competitive bidding
for its shares.
At oral argument, I raised the
question whether, now that BATUS' tender
offer had made public all the confidential
information, such arrangements might
effectively freeze out interested
competitors for control.
Field thereupon telegraphed to
all signatories Field's waiver of its right
of approval for offers seeking at least 51%
of the Field stock.
Icahn contends that even as
modified these commitments improperly
interfere with the market for competing
tenders. I am convinced by Field's argument
that the restrictions have a proper purpose
and serve the interest of Field's
shareholders. BATUS has bid for a minimum of
51% (and has committed itself to accept a
much larger amount of Field's shares at a
substantial premium over market. One who
joined forces with Icahn's 30% holdings
could top
Page 422
BATUS' $30 offer, bidding for only 20% of
the shares. While such a bid might be at a
higher price per share, it would be
detrimental to all the Field shareholders
except Icahn since control could be acquired
by buying far less of the Field stock than
BATUS is committed to accepting. In
addition, should such an offer be made,
BATUS might well withdraw from the
competition, eliminating all bids except for
the 20% offer.
Equally important is Field's
argument that the contentions of Icahn are
purely theoretical. There is no indication
that any potential competitor exists who is
being thwarted by the contractual
restriction. Field asserts that when Goldman
Sachs was reviewing the bids, it advised
each bidder that the time to make its best
offer was at hand. None of the competing
offers was sweetened. Since that time, no
signatory has approached Field to request
permission to bid. None has come to court
asking to be relieved of the restriction.
Icahn has named no entity which it contends
is being restrained by the restrictive
covenant.
I conclude that Icahn's argument
has no practical application to the
circumstances. A temporary restraining order
in these circumstances would have serious
adverse implications for the BATUS tender
offer. Even assuming that Icahn's
theoretical arguments would be sufficient to
make out a violation of the Williams Act,
which is far from clear, an injunction will
not be issued on theoretical, speculative
possibilities without any showing of harm.
* * *
Apart from the absence of proof
of harm, Icahn's contentions rest on a
questionable legal theory. Icahn relies
solely on
Mobil Corp. v. Marathon Oil Corp.,
669 F.2d 366 (6th Cir. 1981). I doubt
that decision represents the law in this
circuit. In my view the reasoning of that
decision could unduly interfere with the
right of company management to combat a
takeover attempt that it believes in good
faith to be harmful to its shareholders. In
my view the securities laws do not bar
management from taking action in the best
interests of its shareholders even if this
will make more difficult the success of a
disfavored offeror. The rule might be
otherwise on a showing that management is
acting for its own interests in violation of
its fiduciary duty to its shareholders. No
such showing has been made here.
But even if the Mobil
decision represented controlling law, it
does not compel an injunction on these
facts. The 2 million share purchase
agreement is not merely an option, although
defeasible in certain circumstances. It was
not set at a bargain price, even though the
tender offer price was soon raised above it.
The right of first refusal on the Chicago
properties is not an option and is not
calculated to effectuate a sale below market
value. I conclude that the Mobil case
is properly distinguished even if it
represents the law.
Finally, Icahn contends that
BATUS has not adequately disclosed the
potential antitrust problems involved in a
merger with Field. I find that the current
state of disclosure is adequate to alert the
shareholders to the potential problem.
Perfection is not required in a tender
offer.
Electronics Specialty Co. v.
International Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 948 (2d Cir. 1969).
For the foregoing reasons Icahn's
application for a temporary restraining
order is denied.
SO ORDERED. |