| Page 765 607 F.2d 765
51 A.L.R.Fed. 774, Fed. Sec. L. Rep.
P 97,128 Leo P. PORTNOY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
KAWECKI BERYLCO INDUSTRIES, INC., et al.,
Defendants-Appellees. No. 79-1240. United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit. Argued June 15, 1979.
Decided Oct. 1, 1979.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied Nov.
14, 1979.
Page 766
Jerrold M. Shapiro, Chicago,
Ill., for plaintiff-appellant.
Kimball R. Anderson, Winston &
Strawn, Donald B. Hilliker, Isham, Lincoln &
Beale, Chicago, Ill., for
defendants-appellees.
Before FAIRCHILD, Chief Judge,
and SWYGERT and PELL, Circuit Judges.
PELL, Circuit Judge.
The sole issue in this appeal is
whether the plaintiff, a shareholder of both
Cabot Corporation (Cabot) and Kawecki
Berylco Industries, Inc. (KBI), has standing
to bring an action under Section 16(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. § 78p(b), for recovery of profits
allegedly obtained by International Mining
Corporation (IMC) from short-swing trading
of shares of KBI.
1
The structure and relationship of the
corporations involved and the changes in
that structure and relationship are critical
to the outcome.
At the time the plaintiff filed
his complaint on May 26, 1978, he was a
shareholder of KBI and of Cabot.
2 Cabot was the parent of
Cabot Special Metals Corporation (CSMC),
which in turn owned Tuckerton Corporation
(Tuckerton). Five days later, on May 31,
1978, Tuckerton merged into KBI. The
plaintiff and other premerger shareholders
of KBI received cash in exchange for their
shares of KBI common stock, and CSMC became
KBI's sole shareholder. Thus, KBI became a
wholly owned subsidiary of CSMC which was a
wholly owned subsidiary of Cabot. After the
merger, the plaintiff amended his complaint
to state that it was brought on behalf of
Cabot in addition to KBI. As a result, the
standing issue is really a bifurcated one.
First, we must determine whether the
plaintiff lost his standing when, because of
the merger, he lost his status as a
shareholder of KBI, and second, we must
determine whether his status as a
shareholder of Cabot confers standing.
I
Section 16(b) provides in part:
"Suit to recover (short-swing) profit may be
instituted
Page 767 at law or in equity . . . by the owner of
any security of the issuer in the name and
in behalf of the issuer . . . ." When the
plaintiff filed his § 16(b) action, he was
an owner of a security of the issuer (KBI).
However, he lost that status five days
later, and consequently, we are of the
opinion that he lost the standing that he
had as an owner of KBI stock. Only one case
appears to be directly on point. In
Rothenberg v. United Brands Company,
(1977-78 Transfer Binder) Fed.Sec.L.Rep.
(CCH) P 96,045 at 91,690, Aff'd, 573 F.2d
1295 (2d Cir. 1977), the court held that the
plaintiff lacked standing in his § 16(b)
action because he lost his shareholder
interest in the issuer as a result of a
merger of the issuer and another corporation
which occurred after he filed his complaint
but during the pendency of the action.
This result is consistent with
cases decided under Rule 23.1, Fed.R.Civ.P.,
3 which governs
"derivative action(s) brought by one or more
shareholders or members to enforce a right
of a corporation." It requires that the
plaintiff fairly and adequately represent
the interests of other shareholders
similarly situated. Accordingly, a plaintiff
in a derivative action must maintain his
shareholder status throughout the pendency
of the lawsuit, and an action will abate if
the plaintiff loses his shareholder status
before the litigation ends.
Schilling v. Belcher, 582 F.2d 995 (5th Cir.
1978);
Tryforos v. Icarian Development Company, 518
F.2d 1258 (7th Cir. 1975), Cert. denied,
423 U.S. 1091, 96 S.Ct. 887, 47 L.Ed.2d 103
(1976). The underlying rationale of these
cases is that because a shareholder will
receive at least an indirect benefit (in
terms of increased shareholder equity) from
any corporate recovery, he has an adequate
interest in vigorously litigating the claim.
A non-shareholder or one who loses his
shareholder interest during the course of
the litigation may lose any incentive to
pursue the litigation adequately. The same
is true in the present case. Therefore, when
the plaintiff lost his shareholder interest
in KBI, he lost his standing to sue on
behalf of KBI under § 16(b).
4
II
We now consider whether the
plaintiff's status as a shareholder of Cabot
gives him standing in this action. Section
16(b) provides that suit may be brought by
"the owner of any security of the Issuer in
the name and in behalf of the Issuer."
(Emphasis added.) To determine the scope of
the term "issuer" we need not look beyond
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 which
defines "issuer" as follows:
The term "issuer" means any person who
issues or proposes to issue any security;
except that with respect to certificates of
deposit for securities, voting-trust
certificates, or collateral-trust
certificates, or with respect to
certificates of interest or shares in an
unincorporated investment trust not having a
board of directors or of the fixed,
restricted management, or unit type, the
term "issuer" means the person or persons
performing the acts and assuming the duties
of depositor or manager pursuant to the
provisions of the trust or other agreement
or instrument under which such securities
are issued; and except that with respect to
equipment-trust
Page 768 certificates or like securities, the term
"issuer" means the person by whom the
equipment or property is, or is to be, used.
15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(8).
5 The statutory language
is thus specific that the issuer is the
person who issues the security which is
involved in the short-swing trading, in this
case, KBI.
The plaintiff asks us to broaden
the definition to encompass Cabot which
would make the issuer include the parent of
the parent of the issuer. Although the
plaintiff's contention is not absurd on
policy grounds,
6
we cannot rewrite the statute to accommodate
this situation. Congress has spoken clearly.
When it wanted a broader definition of
issuer, it drafted one. In § 2(a)(11) of the
Securities Act of 1933, for example,
"issuer" is defined as including "any person
directly or indirectly controlling or
controlled by the issuer, or any person
under direct or indirect common control with
the issuer." 15 U.S.C. § 77b(11). In §
16(b), on the other hand, Congress
apparently intended only those with a less
tenuous financial interest to have standing
and confined standing other than to the
"issuer" itself to "the owner of any
security of the issuer."
In a similar vein, courts have
refused to construe the phrase "officer of
the issuer" in § 16(b) to include an officer
of the subsidiary of the issuer or an
officer of the division of the issuer.
Lee National Corporation v. Segur, 281
F.Supp. 851, 852 (E.D.Pa.1968), the
court stated:
While the purpose of the Act is to
recover "short swing profits" realized by
so-called "insiders", the fact is that if it
be the congressional intent to include
officers of subsidiary corporations as well
as officers of the "issuer" corporation,
this can be quickly accomplished by a simple
amendment to the Act. It need not be
accomplished by what may be considered
"judicial legislation".
Gold
v. Sloan,
486 F.2d 340 (4th Cir. 1973),
Cert. denied, 419 U.S. 873, 95 S.Ct. 134, 42
L.Ed.2d 112 (1976). We similarly reject the
plaintiff's invitation to draft "judicial
legislation" to grant him standing.
The plaintiff places heavy
reliance on
Blau v. Oppenheim, 250 F.Supp. 881
(S.D.N.Y.1966), for his theory that
ownership of stock in Cabot gives him
standing to sue. In Blau, the plaintiff
brought a § 16(b) action for recovery of
short-swing profits. One year after the
short-swing trading, the issuer sold and
transferred all its assets and choses in
action to M & T Chemicals, Inc., a wholly
owned subsidiary of American Can Co. The
issuer was merged into M & T and ceased to
exist. The plaintiff, as a shareholder of
American Can, filed the § 16(b) suit for
recovery of the short-swing profits obtained
by Oppenheim in trading of the issuer's
stock. The court held that the plaintiff
could maintain the action on the basis of
his shareholder status in American Can whose
wholly owned subsidiary had absorbed the
issuer.
Blau is factually distinguishable
in that the issuer no longer existed,
whereas in the present case KBI still exists
as a viable corporate entity. This
distinction justifies the different result
in Blau, because if the statutory language
were applied to allow only shareholders of
the issuer to enforce the violation, and the
issuer were dissolved, the statutory
language would require the absurd result
that no party would exist who had standing
to enforce the violation.
7
In
Page 769 the present case, since KBI still exists,
its shareholder, CSMC, had the right to
bring the action regardless of whether it
chose to exercise that right.
8
CSMC apparently is not likely to bring an
action since, among other things, it was on
the purchasing end of the short-swing
trading. This, however, does not provide a
compelling reason to contort the statutory
language to confer standing on another
party. It would be a dangerous precedent to
confer standing on a plaintiff who falls
outside the class of parties permitted by
the language of the statute to bring suit
merely because the only parties that fall
within the class choose not to exercise
their right to sue.
In conclusion, although we
consider the result in this case to have the
appearance of being a harsh one in that a
possible violation will apparently go
uncorrected, we note on the more positive
side that the plaintiff has not argued that
the merger which cut off his standing as a
KBI shareholder was accomplished for the
fraudulent purpose of avoiding enforcement
of the § 16(b) claim. For the reasons
hereinbefore stated, we hold that the
plaintiff lacks standing to maintain this
action. The judgment of the district court,
which granted summary judgment for the
defendants because of the plaintiff's lack
of standing, is therefore
AFFIRMED.
SWYGERT, Circuit Judge,
dissenting.
The question is whether Leo P.
Portnoy, a Cabot Corporation stockholder,
has standing to sue on its behalf for the
recovery of short-swing profits under
section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934. Actually, the more precise question
is whether Cabot may currently be considered
the issuer of Kawecki Berylco Industries
common stock. The following diagram may help
to understand the complicated nature of this
case, involving a number of corporate
entities.
NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR
OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE
On May 21, 1978 KBI was merged
with Tuckerton Corporation, the wholly-owned
subsidiary of CSMC which, in turn, was the
wholly-owned subsidiary of Cabot.
1a Although plaintiff lost
his status as a stockholder
Page 770 of KBI as the result of the merger, he was
and remains a shareholder of Cabot. As such,
does he have standing to bring this action?
2a
Plaintiff's standing hinges on
whether Cabot Corporation may for purposes
of section 16(b) be considered the "issuer"
of KBI's common stock. KBI as a separate
legal entity (or at least as an independent
business entity, See supra, n. 1) ceased to
exist after the merger. Cabot through CSMC
and Tuckerton became its
successor-in-interest. Although Cabot was
not the issuer of the KBI stock when it was
issued and therefore does not fit the
literal term of the statute, it succeeded to
that status upon completion of the merger.
This was the same conclusion
Judge Weinfeld came to
Blau v. Oppenheim, 250 F.Supp. 881
(S.D.N.Y.1966). Although the facts there
were somewhat different from those here, the
cases are analogous and, in my view, legally
indistinguishable. (In Blau the insurer's
corporation, Van Winkle, sold its assets to
M & T Chemicals, a wholly-owned subsidiary
of American Can Company and M & T assumed
Van Winkle's liabilities. For consideration,
American delivered a specified number of its
share to Van Winkle which then distributed
these shares to its stockholders. Van Winkle
then merged into M & T and went out of
existence upon being dissolved. The
plaintiff was a subsequent purchaser of
American stock. The defendant charged with
violating section 16(b) was an officer and
director of Van Winkle.) Judge Weinfeld held
that section 16(b) "is broad enough to
embrace an issuer's successor in interest or
a surviving corporation to which has been
transferred all its assets, properties and
choses in action." He then went on to say:
There is no support for the
defendant's position that Congress intended
that suits for the recovery of short-swing
profits be restricted to the initial issuer
whose securities were the subject of the
illicit gains and its security holders, thus
leaving no remedy in those instances where,
as here, the issuer by a transfer of all its
assets to another corporation has become
extinct and is without its original security
holders. It is true, as defendant states,
that the section makes no reference to
survivor or successor corporations of an
issuer but neither does it contain any bar
against the maintenance of 16(b) suits by
such corporations or their security owners.
To deny them the right to maintain suit
would serve to defeat the purpose of the
law; to accord them the right serves to
further it.
Page 771
In sum, the essential argument
which the defendant advances is one of
language. But language alone can never be
dispositive of a statute's meaning. Section
16(b) must be read in its context against
the background of its purpose, of the evils
which it was enacted to rectify, and of the
subsequent construction which the courts
have given it.
250 F.Supp. at 886-88. Judge
Weinfeld's discussion and holding are
equally applicable to the case at bar.
Citing section 2(11) of the
Securities Act of 1933 as an example, the
majority says: "Although the plaintiff's
contention is not absurd on policy grounds,
we cannot rewrite the statute to accommodate
this situation. Congress has spoken clearly.
When it wanted a broader definition of
issuer, it drafted one." But we need not
rewrite the statute. Common sense tells us
that by construction Cabot has become the
issuer of the KBI stock within the
definition of the statute. Put another way,
KBI's identity for purposes of section 16(b)
has been retained in Cabot. We should not
expect Congress to divine and provide for
all the possible corporate restructuring
that, whether intentionally or not, can
defeat the salutary purposes of the statute.
The task of accommodating a statute to a
given set of facts is for the courts. By
such accommodation the purposes of section
16(b) can be satisfied and the laments of
the majority for not being able to reach the
result it seemingly longs for could be
avoided.
1 We offer no opinion as to the merits of
whether IMC did engage in illegal
short-swing trading.
2 His complaint, however, was brought on
behalf of only KBI.
3 We do not suggest that cases decided
under Rule 23.1 are directly applicable to a
§ 16(b) action. But § 16(b) cases such as
the present one are structurally derivative
in nature and thus the Rule 23.1 cases
provide at least some support for the
continuous ownership requirement. See
Rothenberg at 91,692.
We also note, as did the court in
Rothenberg, id., that our decision in no way
affects the well established principle that
a § 16(b) plaintiff need not satisfy the
Rule 23.1 requirement that he be a
shareholder of the corporation at the time
of the transactions complained of.
4 We raised at oral argument the
possibility that the language of § 16(b)
(that suit may be "instituted" by a
shareholder of the issuer) could be read to
mean that the plaintiff only be a
shareholder at the time he filed the action.
Counsel for the plaintiff, however, conceded
at oral argument that he did not rely on
such an interpretation for standing as a KBI
shareholder. One member of our panel asked,
"Do you concede that he (plaintiff) had no
further standing (after the merger) insofar
as (his ownership of) KBI stock is
concerned?" Counsel responded, "Absolutely.
I don't dispute that at all."
5 This definition of issuer applies to §
16(b) actions.
American Standard, Inc. v. Crane Co.,
510 F.2d 1043 (2d Cir. 1974), Cert. denied,
421 U.S. 1000, 95 S.Ct. 2397, 44 L.Ed.2d 667
(1975).
6 The argument could be made that a
shareholder of the grandparent corporation
has some interest in seeing that the
grandchild corporation recovers short-swing
profits because the recovery could affect
the equity value of the grandparent stock.
The connection, however, is so tenuous that,
except in a most unusual situation, the
equity value of the grandparent would be
unaffected.
7 Principles of statutory construction
allow courts to construe a statute with
greater flexibility if the most obvious
construction would lead to an absurd result.
Unquestionably the courts, in
interpreting a statute, have some "scope for
adopting a restricted rather than a literal
or usual meaning of its words where
acceptance of that meaning would lead to
absurd results . . . .
Commissioner v. Brown, 380 U.S. 563, 571, 85
S.Ct. 1162, 1166, 14 L.Ed.2d 75 (1965).
8 Because of the important distinction
just discussed, Blau is inapposite to the
present case. This is not to say, however,
that we condone the reasoning or the result
in Blau. Although we need not and thus do
not now decide the issue, it appears that
Blau went too far in granting standing to
the plaintiff. That the issuer dissolved in
its merger into M & T does not appear to
justify standing for a shareholder of M &
T's parent, American Can. It would seem that
limiting standing to a shareholder of M & T
would be a sounder result.
1a Defendant Cabot Corporation in its
motion for summary judgment averred: "As of
the end of May, 1978, 100% of the interest
of KBI was acquired by Cabot Corporation and
KBI was merged into Tuckerton Corporation, a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Cabot. KBI now no
longer exists as a corporate entity." KBI's
and IMC's motions for summary judgment
contained identical averments.
Interestingly, the brief of
defendant-appellee IMC, in its attempt to
distinguish
Blau v. Oppenheim, 250 F.Supp. 881
(S.D.N.Y.1966), asserted: "In the
present case, KBI, the issuing corporation
still exists as a viable corporate entity."
IMC brief at 14. See also KBI/Cabot
Corporation brief at 3 ("On May 31, 1978,
Tuckerton merged into KBI. The surviving
corporation, KBI, became a wholly-owned
subsidiary of CSMC, which remained
wholly-owned by Cabot.") The defendants'
positions on this factual question have
evidenced remarkable adaptability.
2a The May 12, 1978 KBI proxy statement
contained the following paragraph:
The Company has been advised by its
counsel, Messrs. Donovan Leisure Newton &
Irvine, that questions reasonably exist as
to whether there could be any recovery of
profits realized by one or more of the
Sellers, and as to the amount of any
recovery which might be obtained. The value
of such right, if any, as the Company may
have to such recovery is not reflected in
the financial information included elsewhere
in this Proxy Statement. Neither the Company
nor Cabot has any present intention of
asserting any possible claim it may have
under Section 16(b) arising out of the
transactions described above. If the Merger
is consummated, Cabot will be the Company's
only shareholder and its other present
shareholders will have no interest in any
recovery of profits realized on account of
the transactions described above. If, on the
other hand, the Merger is not consummated,
the Company will give further consideration
to taking legal action in this connection.
If any shareholder commences suit on behalf
of the Company to assert any possible claim
under Section 16(b), he may, upon the
effectiveness of the Merger, lose his
standing to continue to maintain such suit.
However, in determining the value of the
shares of dissenting shareholders, a Pro
rata portion of any possible Section 16(b)
claim may be taken into account. See
"Appraisal Rights of Dissenting
Shareholders". |