| Page 355 682 F.2d 355
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,731
Arnold S. WELLMAN, et al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Fairleigh S. DICKINSON, Jr.,
Defendant-Appellant. Nos. 39, 40, Dockets 80-6213,
80-6357. United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Dec. 9, 1981.
Decided June 24, 1982.
Page 356
S. Lee Terry, Jr., Washington, D.
C. (Jacob H. Stillman, Associate Gen.
Counsel, Elisse B. Walter, Asst. Gen.
Counsel, Ruth S. Epstein, Paul Gonson, Sol.,
Washington, D. C., of counsel), for appellee
S. E. C.
Paul M. Bernstein and Kreindler &
Kreindler, New York City, Lead Counsel for
Stockholder Class and Liaison Counsel
(Kaufman, Taylor & Kimmel, New York City,
Co-Lead Counsel for Stockholder Class,
Harvey Greenfield, New York City, Co-Counsel
for Class Plaintiff Wellman, Pomerantz,
Levy, Haudek & Block, New York City, Lead
Counsel for debenture holder Class, Philips
& Mushkin, P. C., New York City, Counsel for
class plaintiff Polne, Rabin & Silverman,
New York City, Counsel for class plaintiff
Pupko, of counsel on the brief), for class
plaintiffs and cross-appellants.
Sheldon Elsen, New York City
(Orans, Elsen, Polstein & Naftalis, Leslie
A. Luppert, Paul E. Summit, New York City,
of counsel), for defendant-appellant.
Before LUMBARD, MOORE and VAN
GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges.
LEONARD P. MOORE, Circuit Judge:
This appeal arises from seven
separate actions brought against
defendant-appellant, Fairleigh S. Dickinson,
Jr., and eleven other defendants, for
alleged violations of the federal securities
laws, New Jersey state law, and the rules of
the New York Stock Exchange. These seven
actions include an enforcement action
brought by the Securities and Exchange
Commission ("SEC"), a private action filed
by Becton, Dickinson & Company ("Becton")
and certain of its officers, and five class
actions brought on behalf of certain Becton
shareholders. All seven actions stem from
the acquisition by Sun Company, Inc. of
approximately 34% of the outstanding stock
of Becton, a New Jersey corporation engaged
in the manufacture of health care products
and medical testing and research equipment.
The actions were consolidated for a bench
trial before the Honorable Robert L. Carter,
District Judge of the Southern District of
New York. By agreement of the parties, the
consolidated trial was bifurcated on the
issues of liability and damages.
On the issue of liability, Judge
Carter held, inter alia, that Dickinson, in
an effort to induce a third-party takeover
or partial takeover of Becton, had violated
Section
Page 357 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d) (1976),
1 when he joined a group
to sell more than 5% of the company's common
stock without making the requisite filings
with the SEC, Becton, and the exchange on
which the securities were traded.
2
Wellman v. Dickinson, 475 F.Supp. 783, 837
(S.D.N.Y.1979). Before the trial on
damages commenced, the SEC withdrew its
request for relief from Dickinson other than
a judicial declaration that Dickinson had
violated Section 13(d). Accordingly, by
order entered on February 19, 1980, Judge
Carter adhered to the court's findings
concerning Dickinson's liability and, with
the SEC's consent, terminated with prejudice
its enforcement action against Dickinson.
3
On July 31, 1980, Judge Carter
issued a final opinion addressing, inter
alia, the class plaintiffs' claims for
damages or disgorgement of profits against
Dickinson and other members of the group
found to have violated Section 13(d).
Wellman v. Dickinson, 497 F.Supp. 824,
834-36 (S.D.N.Y.1980). Judge Carter held
that these plaintiffs had no right to
monetary relief against Dickinson for a
number of reasons, including their failure
to demonstrate that the Section 13(d)
violations directly caused any injury to the
class. Thus, the district court entered a
final judgment on September 29, 1980,
denying the class plaintiffs' claims for
disgorgement and other monetary relief
against Dickinson for his violation of
Section 13(d).
Dickinson appeals from this final
judgment and all prior orders in this case
finding that he violated Section 13(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Dickinson contends that plaintiffs have
failed to prove either that the purported
members of the Section 13(d) group had
beneficial ownership of sufficient Becton
stock to form a group with him, or that he
had entered an agreement with anyone to
dispose of Becton stock either directly or
indirectly through agents. The class
plaintiffs cross-appeal from those portions
of the September 29, 1980 judgment denying
their claims for disgorgement and other
monetary relief against Dickinson and from
the dismissal of their claims for breach of
fiduciary duty against Dickinson. On appeal,
the class plaintiffs renew their argument
that Dickinson breached his fiduciary duty
to the shareholders of Becton, and that he
must disgorge a portion of the profits he
obtained as a result of his actions in
violation of Section 13(d) and in breach of
his fiduciary duty.
We reject the claims raised by
both parties, and hold that Judge Carter did
not err in finding that Dickinson violated
Section 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 and in denying the claims of the
class plaintiffs for damages or disgorgement
from Dickinson. For the reasons set forth
Page 358 below, we affirm the district court's
judgment and orders in all respects.
FACTS
Since the facts underlying this
appeal are described in detail in the two
opinions of the district court,
Wellman v. Dickinson, 497 F.Supp. 824
(S.D.N.Y.1980);
Wellman v. Dickinson,
475 F.Supp. 783
(S.D.N.Y.1979), we shall only summarize
them briefly.
As Judge Carter observed: "The
background and governing facts in this
complex drama embrace personality conflicts,
animosity, distrust, and corporate politics,
as well as a display of ingenuity and
sophistication by brokers, investment
bankers and corporate counsel". Wellman v.
Dickinson, supra, 475 F.Supp. at 797-98.
One of the principal
personalities was Fairleigh S. Dickinson,
Jr., the son of a founder of Becton and a
major stockholder of the company. He
individually held 802,138 shares of Becton
stock (4.2% of the outstanding shares). In
addition, Dickinson held 140,794 shares
(.64%) as a co-trustee and at least 198,922
shares (1%) as a member of the Dickinson
family.
Dickinson personally managed
Becton for over twenty-five years. In 1974,
Dickinson relinquished his management
responsibilities and became Chairman of the
Board. In late 1976, however, differences
between the new management and Dickinson
emerged. On April 20, 1977, after a bitter
internal power struggle over the course of
several months, the new management team
prevailed, and the board of directors voted
to remove Dickinson as its chairman.
4
The day following his removal as
chairman, Dickinson met with representatives
of Salomon Brothers ("Salomon"),
5 a New York limited
partnership engaged in the investment
banking and brokerage business, to obtain
advice on how to regain control of Becton.
In attendance were Jerome Lipper, who was
Dickinson's attorney, Kenneth Lipper,
brother of Jerome Lipper and a partner of
Salomon, Richard Rosenthal and John
Gutfreund of Salomon, Martin Lipton, who was
Salomon's attorney, and two directors of
Becton who were sympathetic to Dickinson.
These men discussed several possible
strategies. Dickinson ultimately agreed to a
plan to vote with outside directors as a
means of bringing pressure on Becton's
management and selling a block of the
company's shares, including his own, to a
corporation interested in taking over
Becton. Dickinson hired Salomon to assist
him in locating a corporation that would be
interested in purchasing his substantial
holdings in Becton and those of his friends
as the springboard for a complete or partial
takeover of the company. Dickinson's friends
included Dr. J. H. Fitzgerald Dunning, a
director of Becton, who personally owned
3,200 shares and served as one of two
co-trustees for one of three family trusts
which held 344,849 shares (1.8%). Each of
his two brothers served as a co-trustee for
one of the other two trusts, and Dunning's
personal lawyer served as the other trustee
for all three trusts.
Shortly thereafter, Salomon was
also contacted by Dan W. Lufkin who was
concerned about his investment in Becton
stock in light of Dickinson's removal from
the company's chairmanship. Lufkin was a
member of a partnership together with Edward
L. Scarff which owned 93,000 shares of
Becton stock. The partnership and three
other individuals, Richard Drake, Charles
Willock, and Robert Smith, were the
principals of a kidney dialysis company
acquired by Becton in 1977. As a result of
that transaction, the partnership received
93,000 shares of Becton stock, Willock
received 46,248 shares, and the two other
men each received 140,148 shares (total
2.2%). After the acquisition of the dialysis
company, Drake, Willock, and Smith continued
to rely heavily on Lufkin's partnership for
investment advice.
Page 359
Dickinson subsequently contacted
Robert Zeller, chief executive officer of F.
Eberstadt & Company, Inc. ("Eberstadt"), a
Delaware corporation engaged in investment
banking, institutional stock brokerage, and
the management of pension funds and advisory
accounts. Eberstadt had acted for many years
as Becton's investment banker. Zeller had
also advised Dickinson on the handling of
some of his personal affairs. Moreover, an
Eberstadt subsidiary, F. Eberstadt & Company
Managers & Distributors Inc. ("Eberstadt M &
D"),
6 served as
investment advisor to two mutual funds (the
"Funds"), the Chemical Fund and the Surveyor
Fund, which along with a number of
Eberstadt-managed discretionary brokerage
accounts held 496,075 shares of Becton stock
(2.6%). Dickinson informed Zeller that he
was asking Salomon to involve Eberstadt in
the effort to encourage a corporation to
undertake a complete or partial takeover of
Becton. Initially, Dickinson and Salomon and
Zeller entered into merely an oral
understanding. However, after Becton's
counsel threatened to sue if Dickinson
continued to seek a buyer for a large
percentage of Becton stock, Martin Lipton,
Salomon's attorney, advised Salomon to
obtain written indemnification from
Dickinson. By letter dated October 12, 1977,
Dickinson confirmed his engagement of
Salomon and agreed to indemnify the firm
against all claims arising out of its
representation of Dickinson in securing a
buyer for his stock.
Beginning in the spring of 1977,
Salomon and Eberstadt worked earnestly to
interest a major corporation in acquiring a
minority interest or in effecting a complete
takeover of Becton. During the next eight
months, Salomon and Eberstadt arranged
meetings with several major corporations,
including Avon, American Home Products
Corp., and Squibb Corp., in an effort to
induce these companies to acquire shares in
Becton. Dickinson himself participated in
these activities until late December, when
he was hospitalized for approximately one
month.
The presentations by Salomon and
Eberstadt to the corporations potentially
interested in purchasing Becton stock were
virtually identical. A representative from
one of the two brokerage houses would inform
the corporation that Salomon and Eberstadt
were representing Dickinson. They would then
describe Dickinson's animosity toward
Becton's management and his desire to
dispose of his stock in the company. They
would also disclose that other stockholders
shared Dickinson's ill feelings and were
interested in selling their shares. In each
case, the corporation was advised that
Dickinson's stock and a block of stock that
the brokerage houses represented were
available if the corporation was interested
in a takeover of Becton. This block of
shares included those beneficially owned by
the Eberstadt-managed funds and by
Dickinson's friends, Dunning and Lufkin. The
representative would then outline a takeover
plan, placing special emphasis on the number
and availability of the shares controlled by
Dickinson, the Funds, Dunning, and Lufkin's
partnership. They asserted that Dickinson
and his family held approximately 1,200,000
shares and that the remaining three members
of the group held approximately 1,300,000
shares. Although a portion of these shares
were held in trust, the representative
assured the potential purchaser that the
approximately 2,500,000 shares (13%) were
readily available.
7
Moreover, the corporation was usually told
that the group's shares of Becton stock
would provide a sufficient base from which
to launch a more extensive acquisition
program for additional shares and a complete
takeover of the company.
Page 360
The labors of the two brokerage
houses eventually bore fruit when Sun
Company, Inc. ("Sun"), a Pennsylvania
corporation whose principal business
involves oil and gas, entered the picture.
On November 28, 1977, Kenneth Lipper of
Salomon approached Horace Kephart, a senior
vice president of Sun in charge of the
company's corporate development and
diversification program, and suggested that
Sun might want to consider Becton as a
possible acquisition. Lipper informed
Kephart that 15% of Becton's stock was
available and that this initial block
included 1,200,000 shares owned by
Dickinson, 300-400,000 shares owned by
Dunning, 400,000 shares owned by Lufkin, and
500,000 shares owned by the Chemical Fund,
one of the Eberstadt-managed mutual funds.
Lipper also advised Kephart that Sun would
be able to acquire quickly an additional
10-20% of Becton stock. Kephart was aware of
the rift between Dickinson and Becton's
management and learned of Becton's public
announcement in June of its desire to remain
independent.
At a meeting of Sun's senior
executives held in early December, Kephart
mentioned Becton as a possible acquisition
opportunity. A study of Becton and the
health care industry in general was
undertaken to determine the desirability of
an investment in the company. After
reviewing the results of this in-house
study, Sun's senior executives decided that
the possibility of acquiring Becton should
be explored more fully. Accordingly, a
number of meetings were held between
Dickinson's and Sun's representatives in
late December 1977 and early January 1978 to
discuss alternative strategies for acquiring
Becton. Kephart was given a list of
available holdings, including those of
Dickinson, Dunning, and Lufkin. Kephart was
already aware that a large percentage of
Becton's shares was held by institutions,
and he was assured that the 500,000 shares
of Becton stock held by the Funds and the
Eberstadt-managed discretionary accounts
were readily available to Sun. Four possible
strategies were considered: (1) to seek
shares sequentially, first from individuals,
then from institutions; (2) to seek shares
simultaneously from these two groups; (3) to
tender immediately;
8
and (4) to contact management directly. The
consensus was that simultaneous purchases
from large individual and institutional
shareholders, undertaken with as much
secrecy as possible, would be the best
strategy. Sun would purchase the block held
by Dickinson, Dunning, Lufkin and the Funds,
and then would conduct a limited
solicitation of Becton's institutional
holders to reach its target of acquiring 34%
of the outstanding shares.
9
This strategy would enable the acquisition
to be carried out quickly and would permit
Sun to acquire physical possession of the
shares in the shortest possible time.
Presentations made to Sun's board
of directors on January 5 indicated that a
15% block of the Becton's shares held by
four non-management persons were available
and additional shares representing 10-20% of
the outstanding stock could be readily
acquired. Sun executives understood that the
block of shares in question belonged to
Dickinson, the Funds, Dunning, and Lufkin.
On January 11, recommendations concerning an
acquisition strategy were presented to Sun's
senior officials.
On January 13, Sun's Executive
Committee approved the strategy of limited
solicitation of large individual and
institutional shareholders and authorized
the purchase of approximately 34% of
Becton's outstanding shares, provided that
the total expenditure not exceed $350
million. The transaction was contingent,
however, upon Sun's obtaining at least 25%
(subsequently lowered
Page 361 to 20%) of the outstanding shares of Becton
stock. Sun further agreed to a $700,000 fee
to be divided equally between Eberstadt and
Salomon, plus indemnification for all their
out-of-pocket expenses, including attorneys'
fees, due and payable upon the acquisition
of 20% of the shares.
The offer proposed a two tier
price structure-a higher price of $45 per
share with no recourse and a lower figure of
$40 per share with a right to receive the
highest price paid to any subsequent
solicitee.
To complete the first step in
effecting the acquisition, on January 14,
1978, Lipper and Zeller went to Dickinson's
hospital room and formally presented Sun's
proposal to him. Lipper's brother, Jerome
Lipper, was also present. Dickinson was told
that the matter must be kept confidential
and that Sun was the purchaser. After the
price options were outlined, Dickinson
indicated that he was ready to accept the
$45 price but only on the condition that the
proposal would be presented to Dunning as
well. After guaranteeing Dunning's
discretion, Dickinson called Dunning in
Baltimore and informed him that Salomon and
Eberstadt had presented him with an
attractive proposal for the sale of his
Becton stock and that he was conditioning
his acceptance on the extension of the same
offer to Dunning. Dickinson arranged for
Dunning to meet with Zeller and Lipper in
Baltimore on the following day. Kenneth
Lipper then made the same offer given to
Dickinson to Dickinson's daughter, Ann
Dickinson Turner, who was visiting her
father in the hospital. At the request of
Jerome Lipper, Turner subsequently delivered
her shares and those sold by her father to
Sun in New York.
On January 15, Kenneth Lipper and
Zeller met with Dunning in Baltimore and
extended to him the same offer that they
presented to Dickinson. Dunning responded
favorably to the proposal and promised to
advise them after he conferred with his two
brothers and their co-trustee. Sun later
purchased about 110,000 shares from each of
the three Dunning trusts, for a total of
329,849 shares (1.7%).
On January 16, Kenneth Lipper and
another representative of Salomon, met with
Lufkin and made him the same offer extended
to both Dickinson and Dunning. Although the
identity of the purchaser was not disclosed,
he was told that Dickinson favored the
transaction and that the purchaser was an
appropriate company. Lufkin soon learned,
however, that Sun was the purchaser. Lufkin
indicated that he preferred the $45 price
and was confident that he could commit the
93,000 shares of Becton stock that he and
his partner, Edward L. Scarff, received
after Becton acquired the partnership's
interest in a kidney dialysis company.
Moreover, Lufkin stated that while he "could
not speak for" Richard Drake, Charles
Willock, and Robert Smith, the other three
principals of the dialysis company who
received Becton stock as a result of the
takeover, he expected that they would tender
their shares. Lufkin immediately telephoned
Scarff, who promptly agreed that the
partnership shares should be sold at the $45
price. In addition, Scarff promised to
contact Richard Drake, Charles Willock, and
Robert Smith, and inform them that they had
the opportunity to sell their Becton stock
at $45 per share to Sun. On January 17,
Scarff collected the shares of the three
other individuals, receiving their
signatures on purchase agreement contracts
and on their voting proxies. Scarff then
flew to New York to deliver these shares,
those of the partnership, and the executed
contracts to Sun.
Eberstadt M & D was also offered
the same proposal extended to Dickinson,
Dunning, and Lufkin. On January 16, a
representative of Eberstadt M & D
recommended the $45 price to the director of
the Funds and of the Eberstadt-managed
discretionary accounts. Both groups of
directors accepted this offer.
With the favorable response from
Dickinson, Dunning, Lufkin, and the Funds,
the time was ripe for Sun to commence the
second stage of its plan for acquiring 34%
of the outstanding stock of Becton. At 4:00
P.M. on January 16, the Sun solicitation
team met in the trading room at Salomon's
New York offices and began telephone
solicitations
Page 362 of additional tenders from institutional
investors holding large blocks of Becton
stock. The team worked in pairs of one
caller and one lawyer, who monitored the
caller's side of the conversation. The
caller solicited offers to sell Becton stock
to an anonymous purchaser from at least 20
individuals representing 30 institutions,
offering the same two-tier price structure
as was extended to Dickinson, Dunning,
Lufkin, and Eberstadt M & D. Each solicitee
was told that a non-disclosed purchaser was
looking for 20% of Becton's stock; that no
transaction would be final unless 20% of the
shares were acquired; that the $40 option
could be accepted without fear of losing the
opportunity to obtain a higher price in the
event shares were later bought at a higher
figure; and that the purchases necessary to
reach the desired 20% goal were rapidly
being made and that a hurried response was
therefore essential. Each solicitee was
asked to respond within one hour or less,
although some were allowed to wait until the
next day. Sun was identified as the
purchaser to a few institutions, but in most
cases, the purchaser's specific identity was
not revealed.
By 5:35 P.M., Kephart of Sun was
advised that verbal commitments reached 20%,
and Kephart was given authorization to seal
the bargain with the institutions that had
agreed to tender their shares. The closing
price on the New York Stock Exchange for
Becton shares on January 16 was $327/8 per
share. Thus, Sun paid a premium of $121/8
per share over market price to those
stockholders which accepted the $45 option.
Before the end of the evening, Sun officials
had realized their objective of obtaining at
least 34% of Becton's outstanding shares. On
January 17 and 18, couriers were dispatched
throughout the country to pay for the stock,
to obtain signatures or collect prepared
purchase agreements, to take physical
possession of the stock certificates, and to
have solicitees sign powers of attorney to
allow Sun to vote their proxies.
On January 17, Salomon
representatives contacted officials of the
New York Stock Exchange and convinced them
to halt trading in Becton stock on the
ground that an unidentified client would be
filing a statement pursuant to Section 13(d)
filing two days later, on January 19.
Dickinson and Turner, his daughter, also
filed separate Section 13(d) statements on
January 19. On January 24, the day after the
trading ban on Becton stock was finally
lifted, the Dunning trusts filed Schedule
13(d) statements.
Sun's lightning strike triggered
litigation starting on January 23, 1978. In
his first opinion, Judge Carter ruled that
Sun had made a tender offer without the
requisite filings in violation of Section
14(d), 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d) (1976). Sun agreed
to divest itself of its stake in Becton by
issuing debentures of 10-25 years maturity
which will be exchanged or redeemed for
Sun's Becton shares. This agreement, along
with the settlement of various class action
claims, was approved by Judge Carter on July
31, 1980, and upheld by this court in an
unpublished order,
Wellman v. Dickinson, 647 F.2d 163 (2d Cir.
1981). Sun's liability under Section
14(d) is not at issue in this appeal.
DISCUSSION
Section 13(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 requires a group that
has acquired, directly or indirectly,
beneficial ownership of more than 5% of a
class of a registered equity security, to
file a statement with the SEC,
10 disclosing, inter alia, the
identity of its members and the purpose of
its acquisition. The central question on
appeal is whether the district court erred
in finding that Dickinson joined a group
holding beneficial ownership of
approximately 13% of the outstanding shares
of Becton, and in finding that the members
of this group agreed to dispose of the
Becton stock under their control but failed
to disclose
Page 363 this fact pursuant to Section 13(d). A
group, under Section 13(d)(3), 15 U.S.C. §
78m(d)(3) (1976), is defined as an
aggregation of persons or entities who "act
... for the purpose of acquiring, holding or
disposing of securities...." The statute
contains no requirement, however, that the
members be committed to acquisition,
holding, or disposition on any specific set
of terms. Instead, the touchstone of a group
within the meaning of Section 13(d) is that
the members combined in furtherance of a
common objective.
Bath Industries, Inc. v. Blot, 427 F.2d 97,
111 (7th Cir. 1970).
Corenco Corp. v. Schiavone & Sons, Inc., 488
F.2d 207, 217 (2d Cir. 1973);
Texasgulf Inc., v. Canada Development Corp.,
366 F.Supp. 374, 403 (S.D.Tex.1973). Of
course, the concerted action of the group's
members need not be expressly memorialized
in writing.
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Savoy
Indus., Inc.,
587 F.2d 1149, 1163
(D.C.Cir.1978), cert. denied, 440 U.S.
913, 99 S.Ct. 1227, 59 L.Ed.2d 462 (1979).
Dickinson contends that
plaintiffs have not demonstrated that he
entered into a formal or informal agreement
with any other person to dispose of his
Becton stock, or that the purported members
of the Section 13(d) group had beneficial
ownership of sufficient Becton stock to form
a Section 13(d) group with him.
In evaluating Dickinson's
contentions, we must sift through the record
to determine whether there is sufficient
direct or circumstantial evidence to support
the inference of a formal or informal
understanding between Dickinson and others
holding beneficial ownership of more than 5%
of Becton stock for the purpose of disposing
of the shares under their control. See id.
The evidence in this case supports the
district court's determination that as part
of an effort to effectuate a shift in the
corporate control of Becton, Dickinson and
others holding beneficial ownership of
approximately 13% of the company's
outstanding stock, reached an understanding
to act in concert in disposing of their
shares, but failed to disclose this fact as
required by Section 13(d).
Ample evidence supports the
district court's finding that Dickinson,
Eberstadt, Eberstadt M & D, Lufkin, and
Dunning "were all part of a group formed to
dispose of their shares to aid a third party
acquisition of a controlling interest in
(Becton)." Wellman v. Dickinson, supra, 475
F.Supp. at 830. In reaching its conclusion
that an express or implied understanding
existed between the group members, the
district court relied to a great extent on
the representations made by Dickinson and
his representatives from Salomon and
Eberstadt to potential purchasers concerning
the availability of the shares controlled by
Dickinson, Dunning, Lufkin, Eberstadt, and
Eberstadt M & D.
One vivid example of testimony
concerning the assurances made by
Dickinson's representatives to potential
purchasers is that of William LaPorte,
chairman of the board of directors of
American Home Products Corporation, one of
the companies approached with the Becton
takeover proposal. LaPorte testified at
trial that Kenneth Lipper of Salomon called
to inform him that Dickinson was seeking a
company interested in merging with Becton
and that 16-17% of the outstanding shares
were readily available for sale.
Specifically, Lipper indicated, according to
LaPorte, that Eberstadt controlled 500,000
shares of Becton and that the shares
controlled by Dickinson and Dunning were
available and would "go with (the) deal".
John Whitehead, an investment
banker for Monsanto Company, another
corporation offered the Becton takeover
proposal, also testified that Dickinson and
his representatives provided assurances
concerning the availability of outstanding
shares of Becton. Whitehead testified at
trial that he was asked "whether Monsanto
was interested in buying around 3,000,000
shares (of Becton)" and that the 3,000,000
figure was composed in part of 1,200,000
shares controlled by Dickinson and his
family and 1,300,000 shares controlled by
Dickinson's friends and associates.
Moreover, Whitehead testified that Dunning
was named as a
Page 364 principal owner of the latter group of
shares.
Dickinson contends that the
representations made by him and his
representatives to potential purchasers are
not probative of an understanding among the
group members because the statements were
simply "predictions" as to which Becton
shareholders would sell. We reject
Dickinson's claim and conclude that, in
light of all the facts, the district court
could reasonably infer from the evidence
that assurances, not mere predictions, were
made by the group.
Securities and Exchange Commission v.
Parklane Hosiery Co., Inc., 558 F.2d 1083,
1086 (2d Cir. 1977).
Additional direct and
circumstantial evidence supports the
district court's finding of an agreement
between Dickinson, Eberstadt, Eberstadt M &
D, Dunning, and Lufkin. The record clearly
demonstrates that Dickinson aggregated his
family's holdings of 1,200,000-1,300,000
shares of Becton stock and contacted
Eberstadt and Salomon for the purpose of
finding a corporation acceptable to him that
would be interested in buying his
substantial Becton holdings. Dickinson
solicited Eberstadt to assist in his search
for a buyer, aware that the
Eberstadt-controlled discretionary accounts
held 52,175 of Becton stock (.27%) and that
the Funds managed by Eberstadt M & D held
443,200 shares (2.33%).
11
It is conclusively established
that Eberstadt agreed to join Dickinson's
effort to interest a corporate purchaser in
a takeover or partial takeover of Becton.
Executives of Eberstadt were apprised that
the brokerage house's fee of $350,000 was
contingent on its successful delivery of 20%
of the Becton stock to Sun. In an effort to
reach this goal, representations concerning
the number of group shares attributable to
Eberstadt and Eberstadt M & D repeatedly
included the discretionary account shares.
Moreover, actions taken in connection with
Sun negotiations indicate that prior to the
receipt of Sun's offer, a determination had
already been made to sell the shares held by
the discretionary accounts as part of the
total shares of the group.
With respect to Eberstadt M & D,
substantial evidence supports the district
court's finding that it also committed
itself to the endeavor of effectuating a
shift in the corporate control of Becton.
Robert Zeller served as both chief executive
officer of Eberstadt and vice-chairman of
Eberstadt M & D. Moreover, Eberstadt owned
75% of Eberstadt M & D. Dickinson contends
that this finding is erroneous because the
court refused to credit the testimony of
executives of Sun who stated that Zeller of
Eberstadt had disclaimed authority to direct
the disposition of shares held by the Funds
and that the executives had believed these
disclaimers. The court properly discredited
this testimony in light of the fact that the
notes of these executives taken during their
meetings with Dickinson's representatives
reflect the executives' understanding that
the Funds' shares managed by Eberstadt M & D
were available for purchase. Moreover, the
individuals who met with Zeller and Lipper,
despite Zeller's silence or disclaimer,
departed from the meeting convinced that the
shares held by the Funds were available with
those of Dickinson, Dunning, and Lufkin.
"Indeed, Lipper would tell the prospective
acquisition clients that Chemical Fund was
the bellweather of the institutions holding
large blocks of (Becton) stock and that it
would sell for the right price, implying
that the others would follow suit. Zeller
would agree to this statement." Wellman v.
Dickinson, supra, 475 F.Supp. at 828.
The evidence also supports the
inference drawn by the district court that
from the beginning, Dunning was a member of
the undisclosed group formed to dispose of
its shares of Becton. Dickinson kept Dunning
abreast of any progress made in the search
for a corporation interested in taking over
Becton. Moreover, Dunning's name was
mentioned as one of the prospective sellers
Page 365 of Becton stock to nearly every company
solicited by Dickinson's representatives. In
addition, when Lipper and Zeller formally
presented Sun's offer to Dickinson in his
hospital room on January 14, Dickinson said
that he would be interested only if the same
offer were extended to Dunning. Dickinson
contacted Dunning from his hospital room and
arranged for Zeller and Lipper to meet with
Dunning on the following day.
Finally, the evidence as to
Lufkin's participation with Dickinson
supports the conclusion that Lufkin was a
full participant in the search for a
purchaser to take over Becton. On November
10, 1977, Lufkin met with Dickinson, Kenneth
Lipper of Salomon, and Jerome Lipper.
Lufkin, according to Dickinson, informed
them that "he represented a stock holding in
(Becton) that grew out of the acquisition by
(Becton) of a company on the West Coast",
and that he was concerned over the recent
internal difficulties at Becton. Lufkin
stated that he was "very much in
(Dickinson's) corner". Thereafter,
Dickinson's representatives always included
the approximately 400,000 shares held by the
Lufkin partnership and Drake, Willock, and
Smith among those who could be counted on as
willing sellers. In addition, like
Dickinson, his daughter, Dunning, and
Eberstadt, the Lufkin partnership and the
three other individuals received their
offers prior to the extension of formal
offers to other solicitees, and Lufkin
appears to have been told the identity of
the purchaser.
Dickinson, Dunning, Eberstadt,
Eberstadt M & D, and Lufkin were linked by a
desire to profit from a shift in the
corporate control of Becton. The evidence
clearly supports the district court's
finding that in an effort to achieve their
common objective, Dickinson, Eberstadt,
Dunning, Eberstadt M & D and Lufkin formed a
group to dispose of the Becton shares under
their control.
Dickinson also contends that the
district court erred in finding that
Eberstadt, Eberstadt M & D, Dunning and
Lufkin held beneficial ownership of
sufficient Becton stock to form a Section
13(d) group with him because they possessed
"the power to commit (Becton) shares to the
group purpose of effectuating a shift in
corporate control". Wellman v. Dickinson,
supra, 475 F.Supp. at 829 (emphasis
supplied). Dickinson contends that control
over present voting power should be the sole
determinant of beneficial ownership and that
the power to dispose of stock is not a
relevant consideration.
We reject Dickinson's argument.
Although voting control is alone sufficient
to support a finding of beneficial
ownership, it need not be the only indicium.
See Rule 13d-3, 17 C.F.R. 240.13d-3 (1981).
12 A rule that
beneficial ownership can be established only
by proof of voting control would exclude
from the coverage of Section 13(d) a range
of conduct that Congress clearly intended
should be covered. Section 13(d) was
designed to alert investors in securities
markets to potential changes in corporate
control and to provide them with an
opportunity to evaluate the effect of these
potential changes.
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). The
power to dispose of a block of securities
represents a means for effecting changes in
corporate control in addition to the
possession of voting control. Moreover,
Congress intended beneficial ownership to
mean more than voting control when it
specifically included within the definition
of "person(s)" subject to Section 13(d), a
"group" acting in concert for the "purpose
Page 366 of ... disposing of securities of an
issuer". 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d)(3) (1976). In
addition, the narrow construction of the
term "beneficial ownership" requested by
Dickinson conflicts with the legislative
history of Section 13(d)(3). Both the Senate
and House Reports state:
"This provision would prevent a
group of persons who seek to pool their
voting or other interests in the securities
of an issuer from evading the provisions of
the statute because no one individual owns
more than ... (5) percent of a class of
securities at the time they agreed to act in
concert .... This provision is designed to
obtain full disclosure of the identity of
any person or group obtaining the benefits
of ownership by reason of any contract,
understanding, relationship, agreement or
other arrangement." S.Rep.No. 550, 90th
Cong., 1st Sess. 8 (1967); H.R.Rep.No. 1711,
90th Cong., 2d Sess. 8-9 (1968), reprinted
in (1968) U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 2811,
2818 (emphasis supplied).
The evidence clearly supports the
district court's findings that the members
of the group possessed the power to commit
sufficient shares of Becton stock to satisfy
the 5% holding requirement of Section 13(d).
With respect to the discretionary
accounts managed by Eberstadt M & D, the
facts support the conclusion that Eberstadt
controlled the disposition of the Becton
shares held in these accounts. Although
Zeller, chief executive officer of Eberstadt
and vice chairman of Eberstadt M & D, did
not personally handle the discretionary
accounts, his subordinate, Schiefferdecker,
managed these accounts. Schiefferdecker was
informed of the nature of Zeller's
activities on behalf of Dickinson and the
fact that Eberstadt's fee for the Sun
transaction was contingent on its successful
delivery of 20% of Becton's stock to Sun.
Moreover, at trial counsel for Dickinson
never objected to the propriety of counting
these shares toward the 5% holding
requirement of Section 13(d).
Similarly, Eberstadt was always
in a position to direct the disposition of
the 443,200 shares of Becton stock held by
the Funds. As the district court stated, "It
would be blinking reality to find that
Zeller, as chief executive of Eberstadt of
which (Eberstadt) M & D was a subsidiary,
was unable to make a binding commitment of
(the Funds') shares as a part of the
Dickinson, Lipper, Zeller package...."
Wellman v. Dickinson, supra, 475 F.Supp. at
830. The testimony of John Martin, an
unaffiliated director of the Chemical Fund
demonstrates that the directors of the Funds
followed Eberstadt M & D's recommendations
as a matter of course. Martin stated, "I
relied heavily on the M & D organization.
They are professionals. They have the
highest integrity. I have never had reason
to doubt their judgment. They do a thorough
job of analysis and research. They do not
enter into recommendations lightly. Under
the circumstances, I have the highest regard
for Mr. Nilsen (vice president of Eberstadt
and Eberstadt M & D, vice president for
investments of the Chemical Fund, and an
inside director of the Surveyor Fund) and
his judgment, and I rely heavily on his
considered judgment, analysis and assurance
on which to base my decision, which was
really a concurrence of his judgment". Id.
at 814.
Moreover, the procedures followed
in the Sun transaction support the inference
that Eberstadt M & D and thus, in turn,
Eberstadt, controlled the sales decisions of
the Funds. Although all the outside
directors of the Funds were polled, Zeller
had instructed his subordinates at Eberstadt
not to disclose the identity of either the
purchaser or the portfolio security offered
for sale when polling the directors. These
orders were followed. In addition, Eberstadt
M & D failed to disclose that a director of
Eberstadt had been working with Dickinson to
sell his stock as part of a takeover of
Becton. Accordingly, we are convinced that
the directors routinely followed Eberstadt M
& D's recommendation in directing the
disposition of the Becton stock, which
Page 367 permitted Eberstadt M & D to control the
shares held by the Funds from the outset.
13
The record also supports the
findings of the district court that Lufkin
had the power to commit the 93,000 shares
that he held with his partner, Scarff, and
the 326,545 shares held by Drake, Willock,
and Smith, the three Becton shareholders who
relied heavily on Lufkin's partnership for
investment advice.
14
Lufkin testified that when he was formally
presented with Sun's offer, he felt
confident he would be able to commit the
Becton shares held by the partnership and
that the three other shareholders would
tender their Becton stock as well. Lufkin
contacted Scarff, indicating that he was in
favor of accepting Sun's proposal. Scarff
promptly relayed the offer to the three
other shareholders, who immediately
accepted.
Finally, the inference drawn by
the district court that Dunning had
effective control over the disposition of
the 344,849 shares of Becton stock held by
the three Dunning trusts is properly
supported by the record. Although Dunning
served as one of the two co-trustees for one
of the three trusts, each of his two
brothers served as a co-trustee for one of
the other two trusts. Dunning's personal
lawyer served as the other trustee for all
three trusts. Moreover, numerous references
in the record to those shares as "Dunning's
shares" reveal that even the persons most
familiar with the facts believed that
Dunning had the authority to dispose of the
trusts' shares.
The final issue which we consider
is the claim raised by class plaintiffs that
Dickinson should be required to disgorge the
over-the-market premium he received from the
sale of his stock to Sun.
15
Class plaintiffs argue that Dickinson
violated his fiduciary obligation to Becton
shareholders by his failure to advise the
company's management that he was searching
for a corporation to purchase his Becton
holdings, and by his acceptance of a premium
for his shares from Sun without offering
other shareholders an opportunity to
participate. Accordingly, the class
plaintiffs continue, Dickinson should not be
permitted to retain any profits realized
from the transaction. Similarly, class
plaintiffs contend that they were deprived
of the opportunity to share in the premium
which Dickinson obtained as a result of his
conduct in violation of Section 13(d), and
that this provides an independent basis for
ordering the remedy of disgorgement. We
conclude that the district court properly
rejected both of class plaintiffs' grounds
for damages.
Although Dickinson violated
Section 13(d), there is no evidence that
Dickinson had breached any statutory or
common law obligation he owed Becton's
stockholders. At the time he sold his stock
to Sun, Dickinson was a director of Becton.
This position, however, placed him under no
fiduciary duty to reveal to the company's
management his intention to use his Becton
holdings to effectuate a third-party
takeover of the company,
Rochez Bros., Inc. v. Rhoades, 527 F.2d 880,
889 (3d Cir. 1975), or to refrain from
promoting a takeover by a third-party.
Dickinson also had no fiduciary obligation
to other Becton stockholders to refuse the
premium offered by Sun or to advise them
that he was receiving a premium.
Accordingly, Dickinson did not breach any
fiduciary obligation owed to the class
plaintiffs. See Haberman v. Murchison,
Page 368
331 F.Supp. 180 (S.D.N.Y.1971), aff'd, 468
F.2d 1305 (2d Cir. 1972).
With respect to class plaintiffs'
claim that Dickinson should be required to
disgorge the over-the-market premium he
received from the Sun purchases because of
his failure to file a Section 13(d)
statement, we find that plaintiffs have not
demonstrated that their alleged injury was
directly caused by the Section 13(d)
violation or that there was any injury in
fact. To recover damages for violation of
the Securities Exchange Act, "the loss
complained of must proceed directly and
proximately from the violation claimed and
not be attributable to some supervening
cause".
Marbury Management, Inc. v. Kohn, 629 F.2d
705, 719 (2d Cir.) (emphasis in
original), cert. denied sub nom.,
Wood Walker & Co. v. Marbury Management,
Inc., 449 U.S. 1011, 101 S.Ct. 566, 66
L.Ed.2d 469 (1980). Although Dickinson
profited from the sale of his Becton shares,
his profit was not derived from his failure
to file a Section 13(d) statement. Moreover,
Dickinson's failure to file such a statement
did not cause Sun to purchase his shares.
Instead, Sun was interested in purchasing
Dickinson's shares for the reason that such
a transaction enabled it to acquire a large
block of Becton stock expeditiously by
dealing with a limited number of individuals
and institutions. Similarly, Dickinson's
failure to file a Section 13(d) statement
did not prevent class plaintiffs from being
afforded the opportunity to share in the
premium offered by Sun. Since class
plaintiffs have not demonstrated that their
alleged injury was directly caused by the
Section 13(d) violation, the district court
properly denied their claims for damages
against Dickinson.
Affirmed.
VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judge,
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
When reputable and honest
businessmen, advised by able and ethical
lawyers, are held to have violated a federal
statute, the likelihood is that there is
something faulty in the statute, the manner
in which it is administered, or both. In
this case, I believe the fault lies with
both. Under the Williams Act, Congress and
the SEC have attempted to regulate both
purchases and sales of stock with the same
set of rules and with an inadequate
definition of terms. The result has been
less than admirable.
Section 13(d)(1) of the Williams
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78(m)(d)(1), provides that
a person who acquires directly or indirectly
the beneficial ownership of securities in a
class, and thus becomes directly or
indirectly the beneficial owner of more than
5% of such class, must file a Schedule 13D
statement within ten days of the
acquisition. It does not define the term
"beneficial owner". Section 13(d)(3)
provides that, when two or more persons act
as a group for the purpose of "acquiring,
holding, or disposing" of such securities,
the group shall be deemed to be a "person".
The group, says Congress, is deemed to have
become the beneficial owner of the
securities at the time they agree to act in
concert. S.Rep.No. 550, 90th Cong., 1st
Sess. (1967); H.R.Rep.No. 1711, 90th Cong.,
2d Sess. (1968), reprinted in 1968 U.S.Code
Cong. & Ad.News 2811, 2818.
The Commission has codified this
expressed congressional intent at 17 C.F.R.
§ 240.13d-5(b)(1):
When two or more persons agree to act
together for the purpose of acquiring,
holding, voting or disposing of equity
securities of an issuer, the group formed
thereby shall be deemed to have acquired
beneficial ownership, for purposes of
sections 13(d) and 13(g) of the Act, as of
the date of such agreement, of all equity
securities of that issuer beneficially owned
by any such persons.
The Commission's definition of
beneficial ownership, which postdates the
events at issue herein, incorporates "the
power to dispose, or to direct the
disposition of," a security. 17 C.F.R. §
240.13d-3(a)(2). However, neither Congress
nor the Commission has enlightened us as to
how, in the absence of controlling
contractual provisions, this incident of
beneficial ownership is "deemed" to be
exercisable by a group. The record in the
instant case does not disclose whether the
alleged group was to
Page 369 act by majority vote, unanimous vote, or in
some other manner. If there was an agreement
for the formation of the group, such as we
have held to be necessary,
Corenco Corp. v. Schiavone & Sons, Inc., 488
F.2d 207, 217 (2d Cir. 1973), we are
left completely in the dark as to its
pertinent provisions.
My own reading of the record does
not satisfy me that Dickinson, Eberstadt,
Dunning, and Lufkin had the powers of
disposition over stock owned by others which
the district court found to exist. For
example, the district court's finding that
Eberstadt had the power to make a "binding
commitment" to sell the Fund shares is, in
my opinion, clearly erroneous. That finding
treats the Fund directors as automatons,
which they were not, and disregards
Eberstadt's specific disavowal of the power
to assure a sale. In short, if Eberstadt had
been sued because it found itself unable to
carry out its "binding commitment", I would
have been delighted to be the lawyer
handling its defense.
I am also troubled by the absence
of evidence concerning:
1. The alleged power of Dickinson
and Dunning to control the disposition of
stock held in trust where there were
co-trustees whose assent was required, see
90 C.J.S. Trusts § 293, at 449;
2. Dickinson's alleged control
over the disposition of stock owned by other
members of his family,
Texasgulf, Inc. v. Canada Development Corp.,
366 F.Supp. 374, 403 (S.D.Tex.1973);
3. Dunning's alleged power to
dispose of stock held in two trusts of which
he was not even a trustee;
4. Lufkin's alleged control over
the investment decisions of a partnership's
managing partner and the sale of stock owned
by three shareholders whom Lufkin had never
even met.
Despite this flimsy showing of
individual power and control, the district
court concluded that all the group members
became beneficial owners of the stock
involved.
According to the district court,
a group was formed, as an entity separate
and distinct from its members, many months
before the sale of Becton stock to The Sun
Co. Within ten days after its formation, the
group or its individual members had to file
13D Schedules. 17 C.F.R. §§ 240.13d-1(a),
240.13d-1(f). These Schedules had to be
truthful.
GAF Corp. v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709, 720 (2d
Cir. 1971), cert. denied, 406 U.S. 1910,
92 S.Ct. 1610, 31 L.Ed.2d 821 (1972). Both
overstatement and understatement had to be
avoided.
Electronic Specialty Co. v. International
Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 948 (2d Cir.
1969). Lack of candor might have
resulted in civil or criminal liability on
the part of group members. 17 C.F.R. §
240.13d-101;
United States v. Newman,
664 F.2d 12, 16 (2d
Cir. 1981). More significantly, a
misstep in the preparation of a Schedule
might have opened the door to the favorite
delaying tactic of entrenched management, an
application for a temporary injunction. See,
e.g., Electronic Specialty Co. v.
International Controls Corp., supra, 409
F.2d at 947;
Transcon Lines v. A. G. Becker, Inc., 470
F.Supp. 356 (S.D.N.Y.1979);
Nicholson File Co. v. H. K. Porter Co., 341
F.Supp. 508, 520 (D.R.I.1972).
The filing requirement was
designed to identify the group "obtaining
the benefits of ownership ... by reason of
any contract, understanding, relationship,
agreement or other arrangement." S.Rep.No.
550, supra, at 8. Unlike my colleagues, I am
at a loss to know how, in April 1977, the
group members could have disclosed the
group's method of acquiring ownership (17
C.F.R. § 240.13d-101, Item 3) so that the
disclosure would not have been simply an
invitation to litigation. I wonder, for
example, how the shareholders of Chemical
Fund would have reacted to a pronouncement
by Mr. Lufkin that, as a group member, he
had become one of the beneficial owners of
the Fund's 413,200 shares of Becton stock.
Texasgulf, Inc. v. Canada Development Corp.,
supra, 366 F.Supp. at 403. I wonder what
would have happened had Dr. Dunning stated
that, although neither he nor Mr. Lufkin was
acquainted with Robert Smith, Dr. Dunning
nonetheless had become a beneficial owner of
Mr. Smith's Becton stock. I
Page 370 wonder if Becton management would have sat
idle in the face of a group claim that it
was the beneficial owner of stock held in
trust by trustees having no association
whatever with the group. I think
management's reaction would have been one of
amazement and would have prompted it to head
happily for the nearest court of equity.
The Williams Act was not designed
to tip the balance of regulation in favor of
management.
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp., 422 U.S. 49,
58-59, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2075-76, 45 L.Ed.2d 12
(1975). Neither was it designed to
provide the SEC with an amorphous regulatory
power, the boundaries of which preclude
definition by the most skilled of attorneys.
The SEC's bland statement in its brief that,
even though Eberstadt represented the Fund
as well as Mr. Dickinson, there was no
"need" to hold the Fund liable, is a prime
example of such unfathomable regulation.
With all due respect to my
learned colleagues, I cannot join them in
affirming a decision that unjustifiably has
besmirched an honorable name. I would
reverse the district court's holding that
appellant Dickinson violated section 13(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act. I agree with
my colleagues that the balance of the
district court's judgment should be
affirmed.
1 Section 13(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d)
(1976), provides:
"(1) Any person who, after acquiring
directly or indirectly the beneficial
ownership of any equity security of a class
which is registered pursuant to section 78I
of this title, or any equity security of an
insurance company which would have been
required to be so registered except for the
exemption contained in section 78I (g)(2)(G)
of this title, or any equity security issued
by a closed-end investment company
registered under the Investment Company Act
of 1940, is directly or indirectly the
beneficial owner of more than 5 per centum
of such class shall, within ten days after
such acquisition, send to the issuer of the
security at its principal executive office,
by registered or certified mail, send to
each exchange where the security is traded,
and file with the Commission, a statement
containing such of the following
information, as the Commission may by rules
and regulations, prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors-"
2 Judge Carter dismissed all other claims
against Dickinson, including those for
alleged breaches of fiduciary duty and
alleged violations of Section 10(b), 14(d),
and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b), 78n(d), 78n(e)
(1976).
Wellman v. Dickinson,
475 F.Supp. 783, 837
(S.D.N.Y.1979).
3 The order entered on February 19, 1980
provided in pertinent part:
"The prior findings and order of this
Court shall remain in effect as to Dickinson
and (the SEC's enforcement action) as to
Dickinson is otherwise terminated with
prejudice."
4 In September, 1977, Dickinson was
terminated as a Becton employee, and in
December, 1977, he was dropped from the list
of directors to be elected at the Becton
annual meeting in February.
5 Dickinson was a personal friend of
William Salomon, a senior partner of Salomon
Brothers.
6 At the time of the relevant events, F.
Eberstadt & Co. Managers & Distributors,
Inc. was 75% owned by Eberstadt and 25%
owned by the estate of Ferdinand Eberstadt.
It subsequently became a wholly-owned
Eberstadt company.
7 The district court indicated that 2.5
million shares represented approximately
16-17% of the total outstanding shares of
Becton common stock. Wellman v. Dickinson,
supra, 475 F.Supp. at 802. Since the total
number of outstanding shares of common stock
was 19 million, 2.5 million shares represent
approximately 13% of the total shares.
8 In the face of hostile management, a
conventional tender offer was not considered
attractive and was eliminated immediately.
It was felt that this strategy would lead to
competitive bidding which would make the
acquisition more expensive and would result
in time consuming legal maneuvering.
9 At this level of stock ownership, Sun
would be able to utilize equity accounting
and would have sufficient holdings to have a
significant voice in Becton's future
direction.
10 This statement must also be
transmitted to the issuer of the security
and to each exchange where the security is
traded.
11 The Chemical Fund owned 413,200 shares
(2.17%) and the Surveyor Fund owned 30,000
shares (.16%).
12 Rule 13d-3, 17 C.F.R. 240.13d-3
(1981), includes within the term beneficial
owner any person "who, directly or
indirectly, through any contract,
arrangement, understanding, relationship, or
otherwise has or shares: (1) Voting power
which includes the power to vote, or to
direct the voting of, such security; and/or,
(2) Investment power which includes the
power to dispose, or to direct the
disposition of, such securities." The SEC
adopted Rule 13d-3 in February, 1977 but
postponed its effective date until April 30,
1978, subsequent to the events involved in
this case. Although Rule 13d-3 is not
controlling, it serves as further evidence
that the Commission had not intended
beneficial ownership to be defined solely as
present voting power.
13 Although, as we have indicated in
footnote 12, Rule 13d-3, 17 C.F.R. 240.13d-3
(1981), became effective subsequent to the
relevant events involved in this case, we
find it incisive that this Rule includes
within the term beneficial owner any person
"who ... has or shares ... (i)nvestment
power which includes the power to dispose,
or to direct the disposition of such
securities."
14 Lufkin's control of Drake's,
Willock's, and Smith's shares does not,
however, make them members of the Section
13(d) group.
15 Class plaintiffs are stockholders who,
as of the close of business on January 16,
1978, owned shares of Becton common stock
not sold to Sun, and debenture holders who
owned 41/8% convertible debentures due in
1988. The class consists of approximately
13,000 Becton shareholders who hold
12,706,845 shares and 889 debenture holders
who, if their bonds were converted to stock,
would hold 225,840 shares. |