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Page 54
566 F.Supp. 54
RESOURCE EXPLORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
YANKEE OIL & GAS, INC., Defendant.
No. C83-956-A. United States District Court, N.D.
Ohio, E.D. April 11, 1983.
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COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 56
Charles F. Clarke, Jr., James J.
Maiwurm of Squire, Sanders & Dempsey,
Cleveland, Ohio, for plaintiff.
David S. Cupps, Stephen J.
Petras, Jr., of Vorys, Sater, Seymour &
Pease, Cleveland, Ohio, for defendant.
ORDER
BELL, District Judge.
This action was filed on March 5,
1983 by plaintiff Resource Exploration,
Incorporated (hereinafter Resource) against
defendant Yankee Oil & Gas, Incorporated
(hereinafter Yankee). Resource's complaint
alleges that Yankee has violated the federal
securities law, Ohio Revised Code § 1333.51
and the common law of Ohio in relation to
the tender offer it commenced on February
28, 1983 for the common stock purchase of
Resource. Jurisdiction over the subject
matter was invoked pursuant to Section 27 of
the Securities and Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. §
78a; 28 U.S.C. § 1331; 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a);
and the court's pendent jurisdiction.
Further, in its complaint, Resource requests
a declaratory judgment that Yankee has
violated Sections 10(b), 14(d) and 14(e) of
the Securities and Exchange Act and
injunctive relief enjoining Yankee's tender
offer and its use or disclosure of
confidential information received during
friendly negotiations.
A motion for temporary injunction
was filed with the complaint and was heard
at an evidentiary hearing on March 7, 1983.
Preliminary to hearing evidence, however,
and after argument by counsel, the court
denied Yankee's motion to transfer the case
to the Southern District of Ohio. In a
memorandum opinion filed March 11, 1983, the
court denied Resource's motion for a
temporary restraining order. The parties
thereafter engaged in expedited discovery.
Currently pending before the
court is Resource's motion for preliminary
injunction to enjoin Yankee from continuing
its tender offer pending a trial on the
merits. Hearing on this motion was conducted
on March 24 and 25, 1983, during which the
court heard the testimony of various
witnesses and received in evidence certain
exhibits. For the reasons which follow, the
court denies Resource's motion for a
preliminary injunction.
I. FACTUAL FINDINGS
A. The Parties
1. Resource
Resource is a corporation
organized pursuant to the laws of Delaware
in 1966 with its principal place of business
in Canton,
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Ohio. It is primarily engaged in the
exploration, development and production of
oil and gas properties. During the period
between June 6, 1978 and February 4, 1981,
Resource was a party to reorganization
proceedings pursuant to the United States
Bankruptcy Act. A Plan of Reorganization was
confirmed by order of the Bankruptcy Court
on February 4, 1981.
The Bankruptcy Court appointed
Mr. Willard E. White (hereinafter White) as
receiver shortly after the petition in
bankruptcy was filed, and he continued as a
trustee of Resource after it filed a
petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy
Code in 1980. In February, 1981, White was
elected president, chief executive officer
and director of Resource, positions which he
continues to hold at the time of this
litigation.
Resource had 4,964,773 shares of
common stock outstanding as of December 31,
1982. These shares are registered pursuant
to Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, 15 U.S.C. Section 78l(g),
and traded in the over-the-counter market.
Resource had approximately six thousand
shareholders prior to Yankee's tender offer.
2. Yankee
Yankee is a corporation organized
pursuant to the laws of Maryland, with its
principal place of business in Boston,
Massachusetts. Yankee is engaged in the
business of drilling and oil field service,
natural gas transportation and marketing,
and oil and gas operations.
Mr. Paul J. Montle (hereinafter
Montle), president and chief executive
officer of Yankee, organized that
corporation in 1977 as a program syndicator,
a company that organizes oil and gas well
investments into limited partnerships in
which the organizer becomes a general
partner and its investors become limited
partners. In 1979, Yankee decided to acquire
its own in-house operating capability in oil
and gas production so that it could operate
the wells it was funding. New Frontier
Exploration, Incorporated (hereinafter New
Frontier) which provided full scale
operating capability was thereafter acquired
for this purpose. In the opinion of Yankee's
directors, Resource was also interesting in
that it offered additional operating
capability, its stock was not expensive and
it was being run by an excellent management
team.
The board of Yankee authorized
the purchase of shares of Resource at its
January 28, 1981 meeting but limited the
amount that could be purchased to under five
percent. On or before July 21, 1982, Yankee
purchased an aggregate of 99,257 shares, or
approximately two percent of Resource's
issued and outstanding common stock.
B. Friendly Negotiations
Between the Parties
By reason of Yankee's ownership
of Resource stock, Montle attended
Resource's annual meeting of stockholders in
January, 1982. Montle introduced himself to
White at this meeting. The first open
discussion of a possible acquisition
occurred at a dinner meeting attended by
White and the members of Yankee's executive
committee on September 8, 1982. When, on
that occasion, Yankee orally offered to
purchase all of Resource's outstanding
shares for $1.25 per share, White suggested
that the offer be reduced to writing so that
it could be presented at the Resource board
meeting the next day.
On September 9, 1982, the members
of Yankee's executive committee attended
Resource's board meeting and presented a
proposed letter agreement dated September 9,
1982. Thereafter they were asked to step
outside so that the board could discuss the
offer. According to the minutes of that
meeting, discussion was held regarding other
contacts that could be made to ascertain any
competing interest in Resource. A resolution
was passed to make inquiries to that effect.
The consensus of Resource's board concerning
Yankee's offer was that it was not
representative of the true value of
Resource. When the Yankee representatives
were recalled to the meeting, they were told
essentially that the offer was not
overwhelming but that it would be considered
and they could expect an early response.
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At some point in that meeting, Mr. Lance
Schneier, a member of Yankee's executive
committee indicated that in the event
Resource and Yankee did not reach an
agreement, Yankee would consider other
options available in regard to Resource.
In point of fact, the Resource
board not only viewed the $1.25 offer as too
low, but also preferred an arrangement
having more acceptable tax consequences.
Therefore, a letter was sent to Yankee over
White's signature on September 16, 1982
refusing the $1.25 offer. It stated that the
unanimous vote of the board was not only to
reject the offer but also to recommend to
their shareholders that they too reject a
Yankee offer at $1.25 should one be made to
them. White stated in the letter that the
conclusions as to Resource's value were
based on a reserve report that had been
prepared in March, 1982 (the Reserve Report)
evaluating the extent and value of its oil
and gas reserves and placing the value of
Resource shares at over $4.00. The letter
clearly left the door open for a
counteroffer.
A meeting between Yankee and
Resource was promptly requested by Yankee
and arranged for September 23, 1982. In
anticipation of that meeting, Montle
forwarded to White information about Yankee,
the purpose of which was to familiarize the
Resource board with its background and
organization. Yankee was provided with a
memorandum prepared by L. Michael McGurk
(hereinafter McGurk), vice president,
secretary and treasurer of Resource,
concerning the advantages of various
business combinations structured as mergers
rather than a cash tender offer.
The September 23, 1982 meeting
took place at Resource's office in Canton,
Ohio. During the meeting Yankee proposed an
offer involving the exchange of a Yankee
$2.50 "zero coupon" debenture for each share
of Resource stock. Yankee perceived this as
equivalent to an offer of $1.50 and having
better tax consequences, an area of concern
to Resource. The Resource board's evaluation
of the offer, however, concluded that this
proposal effectively increased the offer
only to $1.27 per share and should also be
rejected. White informed Yankee of this
result by letter dated September 29, 1982,
and said Resource continued to be interested
but that the price would have to be raised
to at least $3.85 per share. In late
October, Montle made a subsequent offer to
White in a telephone conversation proposing
an exchange of Resource shares which they
would value at $1.50 for Yankee shares.
White communicated this offer to Resource's
board which again rejected the offer as
inadequate. Montle was told of the rejection
in a telephone conversation with White on
November 2, 1982. He told White that,
considering the wide margin between Yankee's
offer of $1.50 and Resource's asking price
of $3.85, there would be no further pursuit
of the matter.
C. The Reserve Report
The Reserve Report relied upon by
Resource in rejecting Yankee's offer was
prepared by E.E. Templeton & Associates,
Incorporated (hereinafter Templeton), a
petroleum engineering firm, for the purpose
of enabling Resource to seek bank loans.
Credit was important to Resource in order to
finance exploration and development
activities. Depending upon income from its
existing wells alone would not adequately
provide future revenues due to their
eventual depletion. Having recently come out
of bankruptcy proceedings, however, there
was little capital for the necessary
drilling of new locations. Banks commonly
require a detailed engineering study
(similar to the Reserve Report) before
approving loans to oil and gas companies.
Resource secured a revolving line of credit
with the Harter Bank & Trust Company,
Canton, Ohio, on the basis of the March 31,
1982 Reserve Report.
Oil and gas companies are
required to file an annual Form 10K with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(hereinafter SEC). A reserve report is
prepared for this purpose but differs in
several material respects from the Reserve
Report commissioned for the purpose of a
bank loan. First, a Form 10K only requires
disclosure of the proved developed reserves
of an oil
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and gas company; i.e.,
hydrocarbons from wells that are drilled,
completed and capable of producing. This
information is published in the aggregate
and not on a well-by-well basis. Therefore,
the well-by-well data is not available in
the publicly filed Form 10K. A reserve
report produced for in-house purposes (such
as seeking bank loans), on the other hand,
may include specific information broken down
by well and covering proved undeveloped as
well as proved developed reserves. Public
disclosure of the well-by-well analysis
would be competitively harmful to an oil and
gas company.
A second point of difference
between reserve reports prepared for Form
10K filings and private purposes is that in
the former, the SEC defines the escalators
and discount factors to be used, while in
the latter, various escalators and discount
factors may be assigned relative to the
purposes of its preparation. The estimated
discounted net revenues would most likely
differ in the two reports.
The Reserve Report which
Templeton prepared on Resource for the
purpose of its bank loan consists of
valuations based on individual well
information relative to past production data
and performance history, well location,
percentage interest of the company in each
well, status of any lease on which wells are
located, oil and gas prices, production
preserves and temperatures and other
engineering data, and operating costs. On
the basis of this information, economic
forecasts are made involving escalator
factors for the projected future prices of
gas and oil and operating costs and discount
factors to arrive at the present value of
the reserves. The Reserve Report consists of
three parts:
1. a summary report of the
results of the Templeton study and the
economic predictions of the interests of
Resource as of March 31, 1982;
2. Appendix I to the summary
report which includes performance curve
analysis of individual wells based on
historical production data;
3. Appendix II to the summary
report which includes specific information
about each well covered by the report
drilled wells in each drilling program.
Projections were made and included
concerning the annual production from
Resource's interest in each well.
The Reserve Report cannot be
duplicated by compiling information
available through public sources. Combining
data from the Reserve Report with publicly
available records, however, would enable a
competitor to determine the exact location
of each Resource well. The Reserve Report
also indicates the value of each Resource
well so that once the location was
ascertained competitive drilling could be
waged in potentially lucrative areas.
Resource treated the Reserve
Report as a confidential document. It was
kept in a locked file and available only to
key personnel. Not all requests to review it
by companies negotiating with Resource were
honored; in fact, a specific request by
Berea Oil & Gas, Incorporated was refused by
the Resource board at their September 16,
1982 meeting. In addition, a resolution was
passed at the board meeting on that date
which mandated that only public information
would be given to companies expressing an
interest in merger or acquisition of
Resource.
D. Yankee's Receipt and Use of
the Reserve Report
The first knowledge Yankee had of
the Reserve Report came as a result of the
reference to it in White's letter of
September 16, 1982 which letter rejected
Yankee's initial $1.25 per share cash offer.
The Reserve Report was again referenced at
the September 23, 1982 meeting at Resource's
Canton, Ohio office during the course of
friendly negotiations. Since this report was
Resource's basis for considering Yankee's
offer inadequate, Yankee officers at the
September 23rd meeting, asked for a copy
which White provided. Resource officials
made this decision because it was interested
in a business combination with Yankee and
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felt that review of the Reserve Report
would result in Yankee returning with a
higher offer.
Officials from both companies
understood the need for maintaining the
Reserve Report's confidentiality. The
conditions imposed by White before he turned
it over were that it would be reviewed only
by Yankee and its banking group (in relation
to the funding Yankee was seeking for the
Resource tender offer), that no copies would
be made and that it would be promptly
returned after a response was formulated. A
letter from Montle to White dated September
24, 1982 essentially affirmed these
conditions and agreed to hold the report in
confidence and not to disseminate it in any
way outside of Yankee and its bank group.
Both parties to these discussions were at
all times aware that Yankee would share this
report with the bank from whom financing was
being sought for the offer. Yankee officials
testified that they were uncertain as to
whether they were told not to copy the
Reserve Report but that this condition was
conceivable.
The appendices to the Reserve
Report were taken to the New Frontier (a
Yankee subsidiary) offices in Canton. Montle
ordered that a copy be made at some point
thereafter. The copy was given to Bernard C.
Voyten (hereinafter Voyten) in the
engineering department of New Frontier
sometime in December, 1982. Voyten reviewed
the appendices to determine if the
conclusions drawn were reasonable; he was
then instructed to take the copies of the
appendices to Pete Cawthon (hereinafter
Cawthon), the consulting petroleum engineer
for the First National Bank of Boston
(hereinafter First National), in Texas.
These engineers spent two days reviewing the
documents which resulted in the conclusion
that the appraisals were reasonable and
fairly represented. Cawthon continued a
thorough review of the appendices keeping
them approximately two and one half months.
First National later solicited his view of
the appendices in relation to extending
Yankee credit for the unfriendly tender
offer. The summary of the Reserve Report was
forwarded to Charles Woodward (hereinafter
Woodward) Yankee's loan officer at First
National who has been involved in making
commercial loans to oil and gas companies
for the last several years.
The original Reserve Report was
returned to Resource in October after White
made several phone calls about it and
eventually sent a messenger to New
Frontier's office to pick it up. It was
contained in a new binding which Resource
officers immediately noticed.
E. The Hostile Tender Offer
When all possibilities of a
friendly takeover were thought to be
exhausted in late December, 1982, Yankee
began discussions with First National
regarding an eight million dollar take-down
of its twenty-five million dollar credit
facility to finance an unfriendly tender
offer. The Yankee board, in the meantime,
passed a resolution at its December meeting
authorizing the purchase of up to a million
and a half dollars worth of stock in various
companies, including Resource. In January,
1983, prior to Resource's annual meeting,
Montle invited White to have dinner with
him. The topics discussed at that meeting
included what figure the Resource board
would recommend to its shareholders in
relation to a friendly offer by Yankee and
the concept of "rolling up" a group of
limited partnerships in which Yankee and
Resource participated into a public
corporation. Montle indicated that he was
impressed with the management of Resource
and with White in particular and asked him
to be a part of Yankee. Friendly
negotiations were not resumed after this
discussion.
At the February 11, 1983 Yankee
board meeting, Montle requested and was
granted the authority to increase purchases
of stock in publicly held companies engaged
in the energy industry from one and a half
to two and a half million dollars. This
amount was to cover all purchases including
the stock of Resource. The resolution
allowed Yankee to become up to a ten percent
shareholder in any given company.
Page 61
Financing approval from the bank
for Yankee's unfriendly tender offer came
through on or about February 24, 1983 and
four days later the tender offer was
commenced. There have been three supplements
issued to the original offer covering
additional information and developments in
these proceedings. The figures from the
Summary of the Reserve Report were included
in the first supplement but no other
information regarding the well-by-well
analysis has been disclosed. Yankee still
held approximately two percent of Resource's
outstanding shares at that time having
purchased no new shares after September,
1982 when friendly negotiations began.
Resource stock was trading in the public
market at approximately $.875 per share
prior to Yankee's negotiations to purchase
at $1.25 per share, that latter figure
representing a forty-two percent premium
over the public market. Resource stock has
been selling at a significantly higher price
recently, a fact that has been brought to
the attention of the shareholders by Yankee
in a supplement to its offer.
F. Resource Management's
Response to the Hostile Tender Offer
On November 2, 1982 Montle and
White discussed by telephone the last offer
Yankee made to the Resource board. White
told Montle that Yankee's offer to exchange
Yankee stock for Resource stock at the rate
of $1.50 per share had been rejected by the
Resource board. Montle then said that there
would be no further offers by Yankee due to
the wide disparity between Yankee's latest
offer of $1.50 and Resource's asking price
of $3.85.
On November 3, 1982, Resource
announced in a press release that
preliminary results of a discovery well it
owned in Chautauqua County, New York, were
quite promising and might be significant in
relation to its overall reserves. A new
reserve report was ordered including the
Chautauqua figures. It was completed and
delivered to Resource in late March, 1983.
Resource promptly responded to
Yankee's unfriendly tender offer on February
28, 1983 with a "Stop, Look and Listen"
letter to their shareholders dated March 2,
1983 which encouraged them not to sell their
stock due to the inadequacy of the offer. To
illustrate why management was urging them
not to sell, the letter stated, first, that
book value for the shares as of December 31,
1982 was $2.25 per share; second, that the
recent significant New York discoveries had
increased the proved reserves of the
company; and last, that the quoted price of
Resource shares on the over-the-counter
market had been $1.75 as recently as five
weeks prior to the Yankee offer to
shareholders.
On March 5, 1983, Resource's
management filed this action to enjoin the
proposed take-over by Yankee claiming the
tender offer had violated the Williams Act
by failing to disclose the contents of the
Reserve Report. Further, this disclosure was
claimed to be impossible because it was
covered by the confidentiality agreement.
II. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Under the applicable Sixth
Circuit precedent, four factors must be
considered in determining whether an
injunction should be granted:
1. Whether the plaintiff has
shown a strong or substantial likelihood or
probability of success on the merits;
2. Whether the plaintiff has
shown irreparable injury;
3. Whether the issuance of a
preliminary injunction would cause
substantial harm to others; and
4. Whether the public interest
would be served by issuing a preliminary
injunction.
Mason
County Medical Association v. Knebel,
563 F.2d 256, 261 (6th Cir.1977).
The Mason County factors
should not be weighed mechanically in
deciding if the injunction should be issued.
Rather we are instructed that the court
should weigh each of the factors in light of
the factual circumstances of the case.
Roth v. Bank of the Commonwealth, 583
F.2d 527, 537-38 (6th Cir.1978),
cert. granted, 440 U.S. 944, 99
Page 62
S.Ct. 1420, 59 L.Ed.2d 632 (1979),
cert. dismissed, 442 U.S. 925, 99 S.Ct.
2852, 61 L.Ed.2d 292 (1979).
Given this controlling case law,
the court will now turn to the consideration
of Resource's motion in light of each of
these factors.
A. Likelihood of Success on
the Merits
1. Claims of SEC violation.
Resource contends that Yankee's
tender offer violated sections 10(b),
14(d)(c) and rule 10-b-5 of the Securities
and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended by the
Williams Act, due to allegedly false and
misleading statements of material fact made
therein as well as various alleged omissions
of material facts. This court has already
ruled that Yankee is neither an insider or
fiduciary for purpose of requiring
disclosure under these statutes. See
Memorandum and Order, March 11, 1983.
Therefore, Yankee had no obligation on this
basis to disclose non-public information to
the shareholders.
However, the Williams Act does
subject offeror's to certain disclosure
requirements in a tender offer which
parallel the other anti-fraud proscriptions
of securities law.
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Piper
Aircraft Corp., 480 F.2d 341, 358 (2d
Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 414
U.S. 910, 94 S.Ct. 231, 38 L.Ed.2d 148
(1973). The purpose underlying the Williams
Act provisions relating to tender offers is
to insure that public shareholders
confronted by a cash tender offer for their
stock will not be required to respond
without adequate information regarding the
qualifications and intentions of the
offering party.
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corporation,
422 U.S. 49, 58, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2075, 45
L.Ed.2d 12 (1975). Additionally, the
shareholders are protected by a broad
antifraud prohibition, section 14(e) of the
Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. section
78n(e), expressly directed at the conduct of
persons seeking to influence the decision of
shareholders or outcome of the tender offer.
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, 430
U.S. 1, 24, 97 S.Ct. 926, 940, 51 L.Ed.2d
124 (1977). It is provided in 15 U.S.C.
section 78n(e) that:
(e) It shall be unlawful for any
person to make any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state any material
fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they are made, not
misleading, or to engage in any fraudulent,
deceptive, or manipulative acts or
practices, in connection with any tender
offer or request or invitation for tenders,
or any solicitation of security holders in
opposition to or in favor of any such offer,
request, or invitation.
Disclosures under the Williams
Act, however, are only required as to
material information. To be material
there must be a substantial likelihood that
a reasonable shareholder would consider it
important in making an investment decision
or would view it as altering significantly
the total mix of information before him.
T.S.C. Industries, Inc. v. Northway,
Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976). After a finding is
made that there has been a material
misstatement or omission, it must still be
determined whether it was done with
sufficient culpability to justify granting
relief; with knowledge that material facts
were misstated or omitted or by failure to
ascertain such facts when they were
available and could have been discovered
with reasonable effort. Chris-Craft
Industries, Inc. v. Piper Aircraft, Inc.,
supra at 362.
The main argument of misstatement
waged by Resource is that Yankee's
definition of undeveloped reserves in its
Supplemental Offer is "egregiously untrue."
This, it contends, has resulted in a
material understatement of the value of
Resource reserves. The definition Yankee
used is in standard usage in the industry
and, in fact, was taken from Resource's Form
10K. Resource argues, however, that the
definition used in this Reserve Report does
not include undrilled reserves which
Yankee's definition does. The result is that
when Yankee disclosed the summary figures
for the value of Resource reserves, it
appeared to encompass
Page 63
reserves yet undrilled. The value of
Resource reserves would, it is claimed, be
greater if these reserves were included, and
therefore, Resource reserves have been
seriously understated by using the
definition selected by Yankee.
In the Third Supplement to its
offer, however, Yankee reported to Resource
shareholders that there had been testimony
at the preliminary injunction hearing in
this court relevant to this definition
stating that no reserves were assigned to
undeveloped acreage or so-called
behind-the-pipe reservoirs. This disclosure
adequately addresses any possible
misstatement and has negated effectively
Resource's contention.
Resource's second SEC claim is
that Yankee has omitted a statement of facts
necessary to make the offer not misleading
by failing to disclose the well-by-well
information contained in the Reserve Report.
In an addendum to its offer, Yankee did
disclose that it had received the Reserve
Report. Thereafter, in its Supplemental
Offer, Yankee disclosed the value assigned
to the oil and gas reserves taken from the
summary to the Reserve Report but did not
disclose the specific production and
economic projections contained in the
appendices. Disclosure of the values from
the summary was done with Resource
agreement.
Although the information in the
appendices is useful for in-house planning
and confidential in that if exposed,
competitors would have the capacity of
purchasing leases near lucrative Resource
wells, it is not material in this tender
offer context because it contains
speculative information concerning potential
oil and gas reserves and valuations based on
arbitrary and shifting economic assumptions.
Any inquiry as to whether an omission is
material must focus on its effect on a
reasonable investor's decision whether to
tender his shares. The test is whether a
reasonable investor would attach importance
to a fact in determining his choice of
action.
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 401
F.2d 833, 849 (2d Cir.1968) (en banc),
cert. denied, sub. nom.,
Coates v. SEC,
394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct. 1454, 22 L.Ed.2d 756
(1969).
Ordinarily disclosure of future
earnings, appraised asset valuations and
other hypothetical data is discouraged by
the SEC and the courts.
Kohn v. American Metal Climax, Inc.,
458 F.2d 255, 265 (3d Cir.1972),
cert. denied, 409 U.S. 874, 93 S.Ct.
120, 34 L.Ed.2d 126 (1972);
Dower v. Mosser Industries, Inc., 488
F.Supp. 1328, 1338-39 (E.D.Pa.1980),
aff'd, 648 F.2d 183 (3d Cir.1981). The
rationale for omitting such information is
that it is apt to create more potential for
misunderstanding than enlightenment.
Denison Mines Limited v. Fibreboard
Corporation, 388 F.Supp. 812, 819
(D.Dela.1974). Hazards inhere when one
tries to disclose sufficient information to
a shareholder who, with or without expert
assistance, attempts to make an independent
decision concerning value. Involved is
either a selection of data to be disclosed
or presentation of all conceivable relevant
information, both of which are potentially
burdensome and/or potentially misleading.
Id. at 820.
The information contained in the
appendices to the Reserve Report is both
complex and speculative. How much of it
would have to be disclosed to aid a
shareholder in making an independent
evaluation that the figures are correct is
far from certain. Even if the figures were
found to be correct, such predictions may
not necessarily be reliable for the
shareholder's decision to sell stock. In
White's testimony, it was admitted that even
Resource uses this information only as a
planning or in-house device.
Resource has relied on the
unreported case of General Portland, Inc.
v. Lafarge Coppee S.A., No. CA
3-81-1060-D (N.D. Tex., August 23, 1981), to
support its Williams Act contentions. While
it is true that this is a factually similar
case, there are several significant
distinctions.
In General Portland a
report was received under a written
agreement as to confidentiality which
included a promise by the offeror that it
would not purchase securities of the target
without approval by the target's board of
directors. This is clearly
Page 64
not the case in the facts before this
court. Here the agreement between the
parties was that the report would be used
only by Yankee and its banking group in
relation to its offer. No protection against
an unfriendly tender offer was sought by
Resource. There are two facts which lead
this court to conclude that Resource knew of
the threat of a hostile offer at the time it
gave the report to Yankee. First, it was
mentioned at the Resource board meeting on
September 9, 1982 that Yankee was interested
in Resource and may pursue its other options
if unfriendly negotiations broke down.
Second, in White's letter of September 16,
1982 to Yankee rejecting Yankee's cash offer
of $1.25, White states that Resource's board
not only rejected the offer because of its
inadequacy but also that it would advise its
shareholders not to sell at that price if
Yankee went directly to them.
Another point of distinction
between the cases is the nature of the
information contained in the confidential
reports. In General Portland, the
confidential report contained "hard" factual
data related to cement plant-by-plant cost
information which if disclosed publicly
would allow competitors to selectively
adjust their prices and thereby offset any
pricing advantage the target may have had in
the market. Although there is "hard"
information in the Reserve Report which
would be competitively harmful if disclosed,
most of the information is "soft", i.e.
predictions and analysis relating to future
production and revenues. Soft information is
not required to be disclosed by the Williams
Act.
Harkavy v. Apparel Industries, Inc.,
571 F.2d 737 (2d Cir.1978); SEC v.
Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., supra. The
burden of requiring disclosure of the
information upon which these predictions are
based is that Yankee would have to either
select which data was necessary for a
shareholder to make an independent
evaluation or disclose everything
conceivably relevant.
See Dennison Mines Limited v. Fibreboard
Corporation, 388 F.Supp. at 820.
This court is of the opinion that both
courses of action involve "more potential
for misunderstanding than enlightenment."
Id. at 819. Therefore, the purposes of
the Williams Act would not be carried out by
requiring disclosure in this case.
Another point of concern in
disclosing the information contained in the
appendices is that this information is a
year old. A new reserve report has been
prepared and delivered to Resource
presumably covering the New York discoveries
which Resource has recently announced.
Resource's petroleum engineer testified that
there could be variances of five to ten
percent over a year's time. The materiality
of the first Reserve Report is questionable
under these circumstances.
Yankee had already decided to
acquire Resource when it received the
Reserve Report. The original offer to
Resource of $1.25 per share was determined
by using public information and the market
price plus a premium. Even though the
Reserve Report was received by Yankee's
bank, it was only for the purpose of taking
down an existing credit line and not for the
establishment of a new one. In addition, to
determine its significance, the bank had its
own petroleum engineer check the figures due
to the complexity of the report. Essentially
Yankee did not rely on the Reserve Report in
making the tender offer.
Yankee disclosed the estimated
net proved reserves, the estimated future
net production, the estimated future net
revenue and the estimated discount net
revenues of Resource all figures were
drawn from the summary to the Reserve
Report. A caveat is given to the shareholder
that the information has not been verified
by Yankee and the disclosure discusses
reasons why the figures given should not be
relied upon as being representative of the
actual reserves which may be recovered in
the future. This disclosure adequately
satisfies the mandates and purposes of the
Williams Act.
Resource points to certain other
claimed misstatements and omissions, but
upon review, the court finds that any of
these "defects" would not affect the total
mix of information or affect the shareholder
decision
Page 65
in any way; if they are "defects," they
are not material.
2. Common Law Claims
Resource contends that Yankee's
misleading disclosures and omissions are
fraudulent at common law. This court finds
this contention without merit in that in
view of the discussion of the SEC claims, a
reasonable investor would not be mislead by
the representations or omissions in this
offer and supplements.
3. Ohio Law Claims
Resource claims that Ohio's trade
secret law, Ohio Revised Code Section
1333.51(A)(3) (Pages 1979), prevents any
disclosure of the Reserve Report in this
offer. It is argued that trade secrets are
protected in Ohio when received under an
express or implied restriction of
non-disclosure.
Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp., 416
U.S. 470, 94 S.Ct. 1879, 40 L.Ed.2d 315
(1974). There was an agreement of
confidentiality covering trade secrets in
the Reserve Report, but the court is of the
opinion that it has not and need not be
violated to carry out the requirements of
the Williams Act.
The salient trade secret aspect
of the Reserve Report is the well-by-well
analysis and projections which, together
with the locations of the wells as drawn
from public records, could be used
competitively to Resource's detriment. In
the area of competition this information is
highly useful even though speculative. As we
have indicated previously, it is not
necessary to recount all of this information
to shareholders under the Williams Act for
them to make an informed decision.
Therefore, the tension between the
Williams's Act and Ohio's trade secret law
that plaintiff advances does not exist in
this case.
Yankee agreed not to disclose
this information to anyone other than its
employees and its banking group. White
testified that at all times persons
connected with a bank, such as its petroleum
engineer, were included in that condition.
Therefore, there has been no violation of
this condition attached to the receipt of
the Reserve Report.
It is true Yankee made a copy of
the report which might technically be
considered a breach. There is no evidence,
however, that it was used contrary to the
agreement to keep the report confidential or
that Resource has been harmed by its use.
In light of this discussion the
court is not persuaded that violations of
the Securities Act, common law or Ohio law
have occurred. Instead, it appears that the
shareholders have been given sufficient
information from both the offeror and the
target's management to decide their course
of action. Therefore, it must be concluded
that success at trial on the merits is
highly unlikely.
B. Irreparable Injury to
Resource
Resource claims that it and its
shareholders will suffer irreparable harm if
Yankee is allowed to proceed without
disclosing the Reserve Report. The basis of
this argument, that the shareholders will be
misled into underestimating Resource's oil
and gas reserves, has been discounted in the
previous discussion of the merits.
Although the cases advanced by
Resource amply support the premise that
relief at this stage is recommended where
the situation would be difficult to restore,
the harm threatened to Resource is not that
compelling in this case. The court has
stated that on the basis of all of the facts
presented in the testimony, stipulations and
exhibits bearing on this issue, Yankee has
made sufficient disclosures to the Resource
shareholders. The Resource board has also
informed the shareholders of reasons for
their conclusion that Yankee's offer is
inadequate. See supra at 61. On the
basis of information received from both
Yankee and Resource management, the court
finds that Resource shareholders have
sufficient facts before them to make an
independent decision as to whether to sell
their stock. The possibility of irreparable
harm to Resource shareholders is, therefore,
minimal.
Page 66
Resource has not been harmed by
Yankee's use of the Reserve Report. It has,
in fact, been used exactly as the parties
agreed it would be. There was no evidence
that Yankee used the Reserve Report in any
way other than in relation to its offer.
C. Harm to Others
Harm may be caused to both the
Resource shareholders and to Yankee by
delaying this offer. Even though Resource
argues that the offer may be renewed if
Yankee should succeed after injunctive
relief has been granted, the delay may
injure Yankee in pursuing other companies,
if in fact the shareholders do not decide to
sell in response to its offer. The
shareholders also may be harmed if Yankee
decides instead not to renew its offer. It
is to be noted that there have been no other
offers or interest in the acquisition of
Resource.
There is at least a minimal
amount of harm possible to others in
granting the injunction. In view of the
resolution of the other factors, the balance
favors its denial.
D. Public Interest
The policy of the securities laws
is to give investors full and fair access to
material information on which to base their
investment decision.
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.,
430 U.S. 1, 22-37, 97 S.Ct. 926, 939-947, 51
L.Ed.2d 124 (1977). However, once it has
been determined that the mandates of this
policy have been satisfied, public policy
then requires that the market place be
allowed to operate unhindered and that
courts avoid tipping the balance. Id.
at 31, 97 S.Ct. at 944. Here disclosures
have been made by the offeror, Yankee, and
communications have been made to
shareholders by Resource's management. In a
situation where both sides of the
transaction are available to advise the
shareholders, public policy favors the
abstention by courts from interference with
the market process in determining the
adequacy of the offer.
III. CONCLUSION
It is the finding of the court
that there is not a substantial likelihood
that Resource will prevail at a trial on the
merits; that a showing, although not strong,
of potential harm to Resource has been made;
that harm is also possible to Yankee by
delaying the offer; and that public policy
favors denying the injunction. In light of
these findings, the court finds that
preliminary injunctive relief is
inappropriate. Accordingly, the motion for a
preliminary injunction is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED. |