| Page 1382 573 F.Supp. 1382
CONDEC CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
William F. FARLEY, Farley Metals, Inc.
Employee Benefit Master Trust, Farley
Metals, Inc., Farley Industries, Inc., John
F. Farley, William H. Vrba, and the Northern
Trust Company, Defendants. No. 83 CIV 6932 (LBS). United States District Court, S.D.
New York. October 21, 1983. Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays &
Handler, New York City, for plaintiff; Allen
Kezsbom, Ira S. Sacks, Karen E. Katzman, New
York City, of counsel.
Katten, Muchin, Zavis, Pearl &
Galler, Donald E. Egan and Lee Ann Watson,
Chicago, Ill., Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen &
Hamilton, New York City, for defendants
except The Northern Trust Co.; Edwin B.
Mishkin, Judith A. Ripps, Neil P. Forrest,
New York City, of counsel.
Page 1383
Sonnenschein, Carlin, Nath &
Rosenthal, Chicago, Ill., Friedman & Gass,
New York City, for defendant The Northern
Trust Co.; Harold C. Hirshman, Roger Siske,
Chicago, Ill., and Peter Wang, Neal
Brickman, New York City, of counsel.
OPINION
SAND, District Judge.
Plaintiff Condec, a corporation
whose shares are traded on the American
Stock Exchange, moves for a preliminary
injunction against defendant William Farley
and other named defendants claimed to be
under his control based on alleged
violations of Sections 13(d), 14(d), and
14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. §§ 78m(d), 78n(d), and 78n(e).1
Plaintiff requests, inter alia,
various corrective disclosures, a ban on
future purchases of Condec by defendants,
and "sterilization," for the purposes of an
upcoming proxy contest, of the shares
defendants have already acquired. Defendant
The Northern Trust Company, by way of
interpleader, requests a limitation of its
liability with respect to its purchases of
Condec stock in its capacity as trustee for
defendant Employee Benefit Master Trust
("Master Trust").
On October 12, 1983, this Court
in the related action, 83 Civ. 7223 (LBS),
denied with leave to renew by October 17,
1983 Condec's application for a temporary
restraining order and preliminary
injunction, against these defendants, based
on alleged violations of New York's Takeover
Disclosure Act, N.Y.Bus.Corp. §§ 1600-14
(McKinney 1982 Supp.). That opinion,
familiarity with which is assumed, details
the relationship between the state and
federal bases of plaintiff's applications
for injunctive relief. Plaintiff has not
renewed its application for injunctive
relief predicated on state law grounds.
Plaintiff's basic contentions are
that William Farley determined to seek
control of Condec, that this determination
was made prior to any acquisition of Condec
stock, that Farley's plan was furthered by
stock purchases which he caused employee
benefit plans to make in breach of fiduciary
obligations owed to the beneficiaries of
such plans and that all of the foregoing was
omitted or inadequately disclosed in
defendants' filings under 15 U.S.C. §
78m(d).
Plaintiff's allegations center on
purchases of Condec stock made by William
Farley personally and by the Master Trust,
which funds and manages the assets of the
ERISA plans of Farley Metals, Inc., a
corporation wholly owned by defendant
William Farley. Pursuant to an arrangement
with defendant The Northern Trust Company,
the trustees of the Master Trust, William
Farley and defendant William Vrba,
VicePresident of Farley Industries, have the
authority to make investment decisions
regarding securities and other property held
by the Master Trust. It is not disputed
that, beginning in March of 1983, defendants
Farley and Vrba used this authority to cause
the Master Trust to purchase a substantial
amount of Condec common stock. Farley
explained to Vrba, "I want to buy 4.8% of
Condec through various of our pension fund
accounts." See deposition of William
Farley (quoted at Plaintiff's Memorandum of
Law, page 8). Plaintiff contends that this
statement illustrates Farley's intent "to
obtain a foothold in Condec of slightly
under 5% from which he could launch an
effort to control Condec while avoiding the
disclosure requirements of Section 13(d)."
Plaintiff's Memorandum at pp. 7-8.
Defendants dispute this characterization,
claiming that the 4.8% figure correlates
with a planned three million dollar initial
investment in Condec. (Three million dollars
would have purchased approximately
Page 1384
4.8% of Condec at the time Farley made
the above quoted statement.) Defendants'
position is supported by the fact that the
Master Trust's stock purchases stopped in
July, 1983, well before the 4.8% figure was
reached, but at about the time its
investment in Condec stock amounted to three
million dollars. Currently the Master Trust
owns approximately 3.8% of Condec's common
stock, acquired at a cost of $3,052,518. The
Condec stock purchases represent the only
common stock investments ever made by the
Master Trust; the stock holdings account for
between seven and nine percent of the Master
Trust's investment portfolio.
In addition to directing
purchases of Condec's common stock for the
Master Trust, Farley also made personal
investments in Condec. According to
defendants, 95% of Farley's personal
purchases occurred after July 25, 1983, the
date of the Master Trust's final purchase of
Condec stock. Even during the period when
Farley and the Master Trust were both
purchasing Condec, defendants claim, Farley
carefully timed his purchases to avoid
competing with the Master Trust for the same
blocks of Condec stock.
By September 7, 1983, the Condec
stock owned by the Master Trust and by
Farley personally comprised in excess of
five percent of Condec's outstanding shares,
triggering a Schedule 13D filing, under 15
U.S.C. § 78m(d). The filing took place on
September 16th. By this time, Farley held
167,900 shares of Condec stock (3.9% of
shares outstanding); and the Master Trust
held 162,500 shares (3.8%), over which
Farley and Vrba had dispositive and voting
powers. The Schedule 13D stated that
Farley's personal holdings were acquired
with the purpose of "investment," but there
was currently a possibility that he would
seek a position or positions on Condec's
Board of Directors and/or Control of Condec,
through means of open market or privately
negotiated purchases, tender offer, merger,
a going private leveraged buy out, "or
otherwise." The Schedule 13D further stated
that the Master Trust's purchases were made
with an "investment" purpose.
A first amended Schedule 13D was
filed on September 28th to reflect
additional personal purchases of Condec
stock by Farley (his holdings had increased
to 209,700 shares) and the fact that this
lawsuit was commenced by plaintiffs. The
amended 13D described in some detail
plaintiff's allegations, and included, as an
exhibit, a copy of plaintiff's complaint.
The September 28th filing also revealed
Farley's intentions with respect to his
holdings in somewhat greater detail than the
original filing:
At present, Farley does not
intend to purchase in excess of 200,000
additional Shares or to make a tender offer
for Shares; but he is considering whether to
seek a position or positions on the board of
directors of the Company and the possibility
of determining to seek control of the
Company, by means of a proxy solicitation or
otherwise, though he has at present not
concluded whether to pursue such courses of
action.
First Amended 13D, page 5.
On October 14, 1983, Farley filed
a second amended 13D, which indicated that
by that time he had decided to pursue a
proxy solicitation:
At present, Farley does not
intend to purchase in excess of 189,500
additional Shares (including Shares
purchased by FMI [Farley Metals, Inc.]) or
to make a tender offer for Shares; but he
has decided to seek election of himself and
other persons to be nominated by him to the
board of directors of the Company at its
forthcoming annual meeting of shareholders
to be held on November 16, 1983 ("Meeting")
and to solicit proxies for that purpose. It
is Farley's understanding that five of
eleven directors will be elected at the
Meeting.
Second Amended 13D, page 8.
At the time of this filing,
Farley held 214,700 Condec shares
individually; the Master Trust held 162,500
shares; and Farley Metals, Inc. 5,500.
Farley, thus, had sole or shared dispositive
and voting powers over 382,700 shares of
Condec, representing
Page 1385
approximately nine percent of Condec's
outstanding shares.
Plaintiff's claims focus in the
main on alleged misstatements and omissions
contained in the 13D filings. The
allegations are numerous and described in
depth in extensive memoranda submitted by
plaintiffs. Plaintiff principally charges
that the original 13D and the amendments
fail to disclose (1) that Farley had a fixed
intent, dating from the time of the earliest
Condec purchases, to obtain control of
Condec, (2) that Farley and Vrba breached
their fiduciary duties to the Master Trust
by directing its purchases of Condec stock,
(3) that Northern Trust's resignation as
trustee related to the alleged breach of
fiduciary duties, (4) that Farley financed
his own purchases of Condec with allegedly
improper loans from Farley Metals, Inc., (5)
that Farley, upon achieving control, planned
to sell a sizeable portion of Condec's
assets, (6) that Farley misrepresented
discussions between himself and Norman
Schafler, Condec's Chairman and founder.
Plaintiff further claims that
defendants are engaged or have engaged in a
secret "creeping" tender offer for Condec
stock in violating of the filing
requirements of Section 14 of the Exchange
Act. Defendants dispute each of these
allegations.2
At oral argument on this
application, we solicited counsel's views on
whether an evidentiary hearing would be
appropriate. Toward the end of his argument,
plaintiff's counsel requested a hearing,
indicating his desire to put William Farley
and William Vrba on the stand. Defendants
oppose such a hearing, noting that
plaintiff's request was belated and that the
570 pages of transcripts resulting from
expedited depositions of Farley and Vrba
provided a sufficient basis for the Court to
rule on this application.
Our decision set forth below
rests on our finding that plaintiff has
failed to make the requisite showing of
threatened irreparable injury. Even assuming
arguendo that a hearing would elicit
testimony wholly supportive of plaintiff's
contentions, it would not in any way modify
the disposition outlined below. The hearing
would speak only to the merits of
plaintiff's contentions as to Farley's
intentions, and not at all to whether
plaintiff has made the threshold showing of
irreparable injury.
Discussion
It is well-established that to
obtain preliminary injunctive relief, the
moving party must demonstrate (a)
irreparable harm and (b) either (1)
likelihood of success on the merits, or (2)
sufficiently serious questions going to the
merits to make them a fair ground for
litigation and a balance of hardships
tipping decidedly in its favor. See,
e.g.,
Bell & Howell v. Masel Supply Co.,
719 F.2d 42, 45 (2d Cir.1983);
Jackson Dairy, Inc. v. H.P. Hood & Sons,
Inc., 596 F.2d 70, 72 (2d Cir.1979). As
a threshold matter, the Court must be
satisfied with the movant's showing of
irreparable injury. See Jackson Dairy,
Inc., supra, 596 F.2d at 72 (vacating
preliminary injunction for failure to
demonstrate irreparable injury); Trane
Co. v. O'Connor Securities,
561 F.Supp. 301, 310 (S.D.N.Y.1983), appeal dismissed
as moot, 718 F.2d 26 (2d Cir. 1983)
("[w]hile there are two alternative bases in
this circuit for grant of preliminary
injunctive relief ... in either case the
failure to show irreparable harm is
fatal."). As noted in our previous opinion,
inadequacy of a monetary award is the
touchstone of irreparable injury. See
Condec Corp. v. Farley, No. 83 Civ. 7223
(LBS), slip op. at n. 2, (October 12, 1983)
(citing Jackson Dairy).
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp., 422
U.S. 49, 60, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2076, 45 L.Ed.2d
12 (1975).
Page 1386
We conclude that plaintiff has
failed to demonstrate irreparable injury
because we find that the 13D filings made by
the defendants subsequent to the initiation
of this action appear to adequately set
forth the relevant facts and information
which a Section 13D filing is intended to
afford stockholders and the marketplace in
general, and that, if the contrary should be
established after a full trial on the
merits, the Court will then have ample
opportunity to grant effective relief.
As was made quite evident at oral
argument, what plaintiff now seeks by way of
a court mandated corrective revision to the
13D filings is not a further factual
disclosure by defendants but rather a
"confession of judgment," i.e., an
admission that an intent to seek control
antedated any of defendants' stock purchases
and that a breach of fiduciary
responsibilities to beneficiaries of the
Master Trust, in fact, occurred. Moreover,
it is also evident that the underlying basis
for plaintiff's request relates primarily to
the proxy fight which lies ahead, that is,
the suitability of Farley and his group to
serve as directors of Condec. But we are
mindful of the fact that before the
stockholders of Condec will be called upon
to exercise their proxies, they will have
the benefit of all of the disclosures which
the securities laws require in such
proceedings. Further, in determining that
the extraordinary remedy of preliminary
injunctive relief is not now appropriate, we
recognize the ability of a court of equity,
after a full trial on the merits and even
after the proxy election has been conducted,
to fashion adequate forms of relief to
rectify any violations proven by plaintiff.
Cf. GAF Corp. v. Heyman, [1982-83
Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH)
99,237 (S.D.N.Y.1983) (appeal pending).
Central to our holding is the
fact that we believe the additional
information which would be furnished by the
requested "corrective disclosures" would add
little to the fund of information available
to the stockholders and marketplace, but, at
the same time, would have serious collateral
consequences for the defendants because such
disclosures would be tantamount to an
admission of liability for ERISA and
securities law violations. Moreover, the
question whether such violations have in
fact occurred is one not easily answered and
in any event is not one appropriately to be
determined by this Court in this proceeding.
This is not simply a case where defendants
have failed to file a Schedule 13D or have
failed to indicate in their filings that
serious questions have been raised about the
propriety of their stock purchases and about
the adequacy of their prior 13D filings.3
Rather, the net consequence of the filings
in fact made, which include a full
recitation of the issues raised by plaintiff
in this litigation, is that all interested
parties now have access to all of the facts.
We find the reasoning of the
court
Avnet, Inc. v. Scope Industries, 499
F.Supp. 1121 (S.D.N.Y.1980) fully
apposite here. In Avnet, plaintiff
corporation sought a preliminary injunction
under Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act
requiring defendants to state in their
Schedule 13D that, inter alia,
corporate defendant Scope was an
"unregistered investment company," a fact
about which, Judge Lasker stated, "serious
questions exist." 499 F.Supp. at 1124. The
court, on defendants' motion
Page 1387
to dismiss, dismissed the portion of
plaintiff's claim relying on Section 13(d),
declaring,
When, as here, the record
demonstrates that there is a dispute as to
the facts, the law requires only that the
disputed facts and the possible outcomes be
disclosed. This is the limit of the law
unless there is reason to believe that the
facts are not genuinely in dispute. In the
case at hand, there is no reason to believe
that they are not genuinely in dispute.
Id. at 1125-26 (footnote
omitted). Questions regarding the lawfulness
of the purchase of Condec stock by the
Master Trust concern genuinely disputed
facts and issues.4
Condec is of course not an appropriate
spokesman for the beneficiaries of the
Master Trust.5
Condec's sole right is to ensure that the
stockholders have truthful and complete
information. We find that stockholders now
have adequate information vis-a-vis Section
13(d). The adequacy of disclosures for
purposes of proxy solicitations or the
outcome of the ongoing ERISA investigations
are not now before the Court.
Condec's real complaint relates
to the "uncertainty" generated by the
defendants' actions. But the annual meeting
is now scheduled for November 16, 1983, less
than one month away and so the period of
alleged uncertainty is relatively
circumscribed. In any event, such
uncertainty clearly does not constitute
irreparable harm under the Williams Act.
The concern of management, the
anxiety of the franchisees, and the
confusion of employees and shareholders all
result from the large position ... secured
in [plaintiff's] stock. These problems all
relate to the possibility of a change in
management. However, the federal securities
laws were never intended to shield
management from ouster or to prevent a power
struggle by a group of shareholders for
control. Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper, supra,
422 U.S. at 58, 95 S.Ct. at 2075.
Trane Co. v. O'Connor
Securities,
561 F.Supp. 301, 309-311
(S.D.N.Y.1983), appeal dismissed as moot,
718 F.2d 26 (2d Cir.1983).
Dan River, Inc. v. Icahn, 701 F.2d
278, 287 (4th Cir.1983) ("[T]he thrust
of disclosure laws is to protect
shareholders, not management. Management's
right of action under the Williams Act is
primarily in the interest of ...
stockholders to ensure `truthful and
complete' information.");
Treadway Companies, Inc. v. Care Corp.,
638 F.2d 357, 380 (2d Cir.1980).
Since the annual meeting is
currently scheduled for mid-November,
enjoining share purchases, voting, or
"attempt[s] to exercise, directly or
indirectly, any influence upon the
management of Condec," Plaintiff's
Memorandum at 94, may insulate Condec's
management from challenge for a year and
jeopardize defendants' plans and
investments. Recognizing that delay is often
management's "most potent weapon,"
Edgar v. Mite Corp., 457 U.S. 624,
102 S.Ct. 2629, 2638 n. 12, 73 L.Ed.2d
269 (1982), and that the framers of the
Williams Act did not intend to so arm
management,
Rondeau v. Mosinee, 422 U.S. 49,
58-59, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2075-2076, 45 L.Ed.2d
12 (1975), it is our strong belief that
returning this struggle from the courtroom
to the marketplace and annual meeting will
not irreparably harm the parties or the
investing public.
While most of our discussion of
irreparable harm is directed to the
allegations under Section 13(d), it applies
with equal if not greater force to the
alleged
Page 1388
violations of Section 14. Plaintiff, at
oral argument and in its memoranda, does not
advance any claims of injury peculiar to
Section 14. Indeed, a fair reading of
plaintiff's reply memorandum would suggest
that, in light of defendants' current
disclaimer regarding a tender offer,
plaintiff has confined its claims under
Section 14 to a period within the month of
September. See Reply Memorandum at
pages 45-48. To the extent that plaintiff
alleges continuing injury under Section 14,
we note that those who tender their shares
in connection with what plaintiff describes
as a "tender offer" would constitute a
finite group of investors, with brokers'
receipts, for whom money damages would be
fully compensatory.
Application of The Northern Trust
Company
Northern Trust seeks, by way of
interpleader, a determination that it is
free from liability arising by virtue of its
capacity as trustee and nominal title holder
of the Condec stock acquired by the Master
Trust. Its position is that it has no
responsibility for the Condec stock
purchases since the investment decisions
rest with defendants Farley and Vrba.
However, as we indicated at oral argument,
it would be inappropriate for this Court, in
the present state of the record and without
the appearance before it of any authorized
representative of the beneficiaries of the
Master Trust (other than Farley and Vrba,
who would hardly qualify as disinterested
representatives of the beneficiaries), to
reach any determinations concerning the
potential liability of Northern Trust. We
defer any further action with respect to
Northern Trust's application pending
completion of the Department of Labor
investigation into possible ERISA violations
which has been initiated, apparently at
Northern Trust's request. We emphasize,
however, that our reservation of
jurisdiction over this claim in no way
relieves any or all of those having ongoing
fiduciary responsibility to the
beneficiaries of the Master Trust with
respect to the retention or disposition of
the Condec stock from continuing to exercise
such fiduciary responsibilities pursuant to
the obligations imposed by law.
For the foregoing reasons,
plaintiff's application for a preliminary
injunction is denied.6
SO ORDERED.
Notes:
1. For the purposes of this application,
plaintiff appears to have dropped its claim
based on § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j. The claim was not
pressed at oral argument on this motion, and
is mentioned only in one sentence of the
approximately 150 pages of written argument
submitted by plaintiff. See
Memorandum of Law of Condec at page 72, n.
17 (stating merely "such conduct constitutes
an actionable 10(b)(5) violation as well").
See also Transcript, Oral Argument, October
17, 1983 ("Tr.").
2. Defendant's memorandum of law suggests
that Farley's plans, on October 14th, went
beyond mere proxy solicitation to the end of
placing five of Farley's candidates on the
eleven person board of Condec, but rather,
included a decision to "seek control" of
Condec. See Memorandum in Opposition at page
47. Whether this statement is mere "lawyers'
error," as characterized by counsel, Tr. p.
40, or an accurate description of Farley's
plans is unimportant to our resolution of
this application.
3. While plaintiff claims that "it is
beyond dispute that any change in corporate
management which is effected by unlawful
means causes irreparable harm to
stockholders," Reply Memorandum at 58, we
believe that the teaching of Rondeau
is to the contrary. Cases finding
irreparable injury have generally involved
egregious instances of nondisclosure, where
it could fairly be said that for appreciable
periods of time an entire marketplace was
trading wholly unpossessed of the
information Section 13(d) was designed to
convey. See, e.g.,
Hanna Mining Co. v. Norcen Energy Resources,
Ltd.,
574 F.Supp. 1172 [1982 Transfer Binder]
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) 98,878 (N.D.Ohio
1982);
General Steel Industries, Inc. v. Walco
National Corp., 527 F.Supp. 305
[1981-82 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec. L.Rep. (CCH)
98,402 (E.D.Mo.1981).
Jackson Dairy, Inc. v. Hood, 596 F.2d
70, 74 (2d Cir.1979) (Mansfield, J.,
concurring) (discussing relationship between
irreparable injury and likelihood of success
on merits).
As our opinion indicates, we do
not believe the alleged nondisclosure
approaches this magnitude.
4. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish this
case from Avnet by claiming that the
admissions or disclosures plaintiff requests
involve no legal conclusions. We find the
distinction unconvincing. Admissions of the
magnitude plaintiff requests would lead to
the inevitable "legal conclusion" that
defendants wilfully violated federal
securities law and ERISA. See, e.g.,
Tr. 21-22.
5. The Department of Labor, which is an
appropriate spokesman for such
beneficiaries, has initiated an
investigation of the Master Trust's Condec
stock purchases. See infra p. 1388.
6. In reaching our decision, we have
taken into account plaintiff's letter of
October 20, 1983, allegedly providing
additional support for the application.
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