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Page 163
692 F.Supp. 163
IRVING BANK CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
The BANK OF NEW YORK COMPANY, INC.,
Defendant.
No. 88 Civ. 3542 (CSH).
United States District Court, S.D.
New York.
June 2, 1988.
Page 164
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 165
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz,
New York City (Herbert M. Wachtell, William
C. Sterling, Jr., of counsel), for Irving
Bank Corp.
Sullivan & Cromwell, New York
City (John L. Warden, Richard J. Urowsky,
Hyman L. Schaffer, Norman Feit, Daryl A.
Libow, of counsel), for The Bank of New York
Co., Inc.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
HAIGHT, District Judge:
Plaintiff Irving Bank Corporation
("Irving") is presently involved in a
prolonged, much-publicized, adverse
relationship with Defendant The Bank of New
York Company, Inc. ("BNY"). That
relationship arises out of BNY's effort,
resisted by Irving's board to take Irving
over. Irving commenced this action under the
federal securities laws to compel BNY to
make additional disclosures to Irving
shareholders. Irving seeks preliminary
injunctive relief toward that end. For the
reasons which follow, I conclude that this
Court, sitting in equity, should make an
order at this time; and that Irving is
entitled to some measure of relief.
Irving's motion came before the
undersigned in Part I, during the temporary
absence of Judge Lowe, to whom the case is
assigned. The exigencies of the case and the
press of other matters preclude a scholarly
disquisition. The parties have filed able
briefs. The controlling principles of law
are familiar. In what follows, expedience
necessarily takes precedence over art.
BACKGROUND
In 1987 BNY determined to acquire
Irving if it could. The Irving board
rebuffed BNY's initial overtures. On
September 25, 1987, BNY announced that it
intended to acquire all outstanding shares
of Irving's common stock in a tender offer
and second-step merger. In October BNY
applied to the Federal Reserve Board and to
the New York State Banking Board for
approval to acquire "up to" 100% of Irving's
shares. Irving participated in the
proceedings before these agencies. Both
agencies granted approvals to BNY in
February, 1988. Irving appealed from the
Federal Reserve's order of approval. The
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia circuit affirmed the Board's order.
Irving Bank Corp. v. Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 845 F.2d
1035 (D.C.Cir. 1988).
The Board's order conditioned
approval on the acquisition's consummation
within 90 days. The Board issued its
approval order on February 25, 1988; in
consequence, the 90-day period was scheduled
to expire on May 25. In its order the Board
noted that it would not follow "its normal
procedure" if BNY sought an extension; and
added that the Board would not expect to
grant more than one extension.
Following the grant of regulatory
approvals, BNY commenced its tender offer on
March 18, 1988. The offer is described in a
prospectus of that date, whose sufficiency
under presently existing circumstances fuels
this federal securities law controversy.
In its March 18, 1988 prospectus,
BNY offered to acquire all Irving's common
shares by exchanging 1.575 BNY shares and
$15 in cash for each Irving share. BNY
conditioned its exchange obligation upon,
inter alia, the tender of at least
two-thirds of Irving's shares; BNY's
determination that Section 912 of the New
York Business Corporation Law would not
prohibit the prompt consummation of a merger
between Irving and a subsidiary of BNY; and
the redemption or invalidation of Irving
common stock purchase rights issued pursuant
to a "Rights Agreement" dated October 9,
1987.
These last two conditions require
some explanation. Section 912 of the New
York Business Corporation Law ("BCL"), known
in the vernacular as "anti-takeover"
legislation, precludes a shareholder who
acquires more than 20% of a corporation's
stock without board of directors approval
from effecting a subsequent merger for a
minimum of five years. As for the Irving
rights agreement, it was enacted by the
Page 166
Irving board on October 9, 1987, after
the board rejected BNY's original offer.
This is a "poison pill" that allows Irving's
shareholders to acquire $400 worth of stock
for only $200 in any newly merged company
when the acquiring company gains more than
20% of Irving's stock.
Of these particular conditions,
BNY said in its prospectus that it "does not
presently intend to waive" them although it
"reserves the right to do so."
BNY's exchange offer was
originally scheduled to expire at midnight
New York City time on April 15, 1988. BNY
subsequently extended the expiration date of
the offer from time to time. When Irving
commenced this litigation, under
circumstances described below, BNY's revised
exchange offer was scheduled to expire at
midnight on May 24.
BNY also commenced efforts to
take control of Irving's board by a proxy
solicitation in advance of the 1988 Irving
annual meeting, originally scheduled for
April 21, 1988. On April 18, the Irving
Board announced that it had approved a
partial offer for 51% of Irving's shares
made by Banca Commerciale Italiana ("BCI"),
an Italian entity whose application for
regulatory approval of the transaction is
pending. The Irving annual meeting was
adjourned, on the agreement of Irving and
BNY, to May 6. On May 6, at least as
certified by independent supervisors, Irving
won the proxy fight. The incumbent board won
reelection, defeating BNY's slate of
candidates. BNY challenges the validity of
the election and expresses an intent to
challenge it in state court. However, the
issues before me do not require further
detailed comment on the subject.
On May 17 BNY took the step which
leads directly to this litigation. It
announced publicly that it was waiving the
Section 912 condition and the Rights
Agreement condition and extended its offer
until midnight, May 24. That is to say, if
BNY obtained a tender of at least two-thirds
of the Irving shares, it was prepared to
accept a five-year hiatus between the time
of acquisition and a complete merger between
BNY and Irving. BNY was also prepared to
accept the dilution of Irving shares
contemplated by the initial poison pill.
Also on May 17, BNY advised that
if by 5:00 p.m. on May 20, a Friday, Irving
would redeem the poison pill and waive the
applicability of Section 912 to BNY's offer,
BNY would increase the stock consideration
in its offer to 1.675 shares of BNY stock.
On Thursday, May 19, the Irving
board met and rejected BNY's proposal. In
the Irving board's perception, by that
action it "honored the mandate of the
shareholders who had reelected the directors
to continue to conduct the auction process"
pitting BNY against BCI as rival bidders.
Oral argument, May 23, 1988 hearing at Tr.
23.
It may be observed at this point
that BNY does not accept Irving's
characterization that a fair "auction" is
taking place. Rather, BNY contends that
Irving is preventing an auction in the true
sense, in order to prefer a BCI bid less
favorable to Irving shareholders, but having
the advantage to present Irving directors of
retaining them in office. Apart from
observing that what is happening here does
not particularly resemble auction
acquisitions at Sotheby's or Christie's, I
say nothing about these irreconcilable and
volubly expressed perceptions. They do not
bear directly upon the federal disclosure
issues before me.
The Irving Board took one other
step on May 19. It amended the Irving poison
pill. Under that amendment, known as the
"flip-in" amendment, any acquisition of 20%
or more of Irving's shares, even in a tender
offer for all shares, entitles the holders
of rights, other than the 20% or greater
holder, to buy $400 of shares for $200. This
would bring about so dramatic a dilution of
BNY's interest if it were to acquire
two-thirds of the Irving shares, that BNY
has stated that it would commit "economic
suicide" if it proceeded with the
acquisition in the face of the amended
poison pill. BNY has said repeatedly it will
not do that.
If litigation be equated with
hell as in some eyes it is then it is
fair to say that subsequent to the events of
May 17-19, all hell broke loose.
Page 167
Specifically, on May 20 Irving
filed the captioned action in this case, and
on May 23 moved for a preliminary
injunction. BNY for its part, moved in New
York State Supreme Court, New York County
(Cahn, J.) for an order prohibiting
enforcement of the flip-in amendment,
directing the Irving board to redeem the
poison pill rights previously adopted by the
board, and compelling the board to approve
for BCL Section 912 purposes the acquisition
of Irving shares by BNY pursuant to BNY's
current tender offer, as well as BNY's
proposed second-step merger. That motion,
vigorously opposed by Irving, has been
argued before Justice Cahn, who has reserved
decision.
Irving's motion for a preliminary
injunction against BNY in this Court asks
that BNY be enjoined from purchasing any
Irving common shares pursuant to BNY's
revised exchange offer or otherwise;
disseminating false or misleading statements
or offering materials relating to the
exchange offer or other proposed acquisition
of Irving shares; filing false or misleading
statements with the Securities and Exchange
Commission; voting Irving shares; using
Irving shares; or taking other steps to
acquire control of Irving "or in furtherance
of BNY's unlawful scheme."
This Court has received briefs of
counsel, affidavits and exhibits, and heard
oral submissions of counsel at hearings on
May 23, 24 and 26. At the May 23 hearing
counsel for both parties took the position,
which I accept, that an evidentiary hearing
is not required to resolve the federal
securities issues. Irving's preliminary
injunction motion may be resolved on the
basis of the documents.
The May 24 hearing was
interrupted by the Federal Reserve Board's
letter response, dated that day, to BNY's
request that the Board extend the original
90-day period for BNY's approved acquisition
of the Irving shares. The Board granted a
45-day extension of the period in which BNY
is authorized to consummate the proposed
acquisition. The Board granted that
extension pursuant to certain conditions
which form an important part in the federal
litigation. Those conditions are treated at
greater length in the discussion which
follows.
DISCUSSION
Irving's motion, filed on May 23,
argued that BNY had not made the disclosures
to investors federal securities laws
required in respect of BNY's revised tender
offer of May 17. Irving further argues that
the Federal Reserve Board's action of May
24, and BNY's response to it, make BNY's
obligation of further disclosure all the
more apparent. The basic issue is well
defined. BNY contends that federal
securities laws do not require any further
disclosure than that contained in the March
18 prospectus.
Irving points out that as a
tender offer the BNY offer is subject to the
disclosure requirements of the Williams Act
Amendments to the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d)-(e). Irving also
observes that as an offering to the public
of newly issued BNY securities, the BNY
offer is also subject to the registration
and prospectus requirements of the
Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77a
et seq.
BNY does not challenge the
general applicability of the two statutes.
Their joint applicability in these
circumstances is well established. See
Securities Act Rule 432, 17 C.F.R. § 230.432
(requiring prospectus for securities issued
in tender offer to contain full information
required by Exchange Act rules and
Securities Act requirements). However, in
its brief Irving does not complain of any
failure to disclose under the 1933 Act which
would not also constitute a violation of the
1934 Act. Accordingly the analysis which
follows focuses upon the Williams Act
amendments to the 1934 Act, together with
SEC regulations promulgated thereunder.
A. Propriety of Preliminary
Injunctive Relief at this Time.
At the threshold, I must consider
whether the circumstances justify a
preliminary injunction. The general rule is
familiar enough. To obtain preliminary
injunctive relief, the moving party must
demonstrate irreparable injury if relief is
not granted;
Page 168
and either a likelihood of success on the
merits, or sufficiently serious questions
going to the merits to make a fair ground
for litigation, together with a balance of
hardships tipping decidedly in its favor.
See e.g.,
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc. v.
Department of the Navy,
836 F.2d 760, 763 (2d Cir.1988) (per
curiam).
Initially BNY challenged Irving's
threshold showing of irreparable harm, a
position which if correct would ordinarily
preclude any consideration of the merits. In
addition, BNY suggested that Irving was
guilty of laches, which would have the same
effect. But BNY does not press that latter
assertion, only faintly put forward at the
March 23 hearing; indeed it is fair to say
that both parties press for this Court's
ruling at this time. In the totality of
circumstances, I conclude that they are
right to do so.
The pace of the significant
economic game these parties are playing is
quickening. The Federal Reserve Board has
extended BNY's time within which to complete
the acquisition for only 45-days from May
24. In the interim, as stated under Point B
infra, the Board has limited BNY's
authority to acquire more than 5 percent of
Irving's shares until BNY gives further
notification to the Board and obtains Board
approval to proceed with the consummation of
the proposal. At the conclusion of the May
26 hearing before this Court, BNY through
counsel extended its offer until at least
Friday, June 3, at the close of business. We
cannot know when the state court will rule
on BNY's motion for injunctive relief, or
what appellate procedures may follow. See
Point C, infra. The Federal Reserve
Board has said, in its May 24 letter, that
if BNY notifies the Board of its desire to
proceed with consummation, the Board "is
prepared to grant expedited consideration to
any such notice filed by BNY."
I had at one point considered
whether the Board's conditional May 24
extension constituted, in effect, a "stay
order" whose requirement of further
notification and approval before
consummation did away with the need of this
Court's equitable intervention at his time.
But counsel persuade me that this is not so.
The pot, to use another metaphor, is
furiously boiling; the bubble of attempted
consummation may rise to the surface at any
time. Assuming for the sake of this analysis
the correctness of Irving's contention that
recent events require BNY to make
supplemental disclose to investors, I am
persuaded that investors are entitled to
that disclosure now. There are two pragmatic
reasons for this. First, Irving shareholders
are entitled to disclosure of any presently
existing, material circumstances as they
confront the present June 3 deadline for
tender. That is so, even if one may assume
with some confidence that BNY would extend
its offer again in case of need. Second, if
this Court does not rule on Irving's federal
claims now, fast breaking events may make it
difficult for Irving to revive a midnight
application to Judge Lowe or to me.
Finally, BNY itself points out
that if this Court is disposed to direct
further disclosure, the sooner BNY knows
that the better, so that it may make timely
compliance within the context of the Board's
45-day order. Otherwise, that directed
disclosure and dissemination may take BNY
beyond the extension, thereby costing it the
transaction, to its own irreparable harm.
It is unusual to consider
possible irreparable harm to the opposing
party in determining whether the moving
party has made its threshold showing,
thereby rendering appropriate consideration
of the merits. But equity is flexible where
it must be to protect legitimate interests
in the case at bar, as the Williams Act
itself commands. The Williams Act extends
its protection to all shareholders of the
target company: "those who may decide to
tender those shares and those who may not."
Both groups must be assured full, fair and
adequate disclosure so that their decision
to tender or retain their shares will be
predicated upon a knowledgeable and informed
evaluation of the alternatives.
Commonwealth Oil Refining Co. v. Tesoro
Petroleum Corp., 394 F.Supp. 267, 273
(S.D.N.Y. 1975). Forcing shareholders of
a target company to make decisions without
full
Page 169
and accurate disclosure of material
information by the acquiror causes an
irreparable injury to them inherent in the
nature of the transaction. And relief, if
granted, must be given before the takeover
is consummated, it being difficult
thereafter to "unscramble the eggs."
Bancroft Convertible Fund, Inc. v. Zico
Investment Holdings Inc., 825 F.2d 731,
739 (3rd Cir. 1987); See also Life
Investors, Inc. v. AGO Holding, N. V.,
[1981-82 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep.
(CCH) 98, 356 at 92, 197 (8th Cir.1981).
I find in this case pervasive
present threat of irreparable harm,
affecting both parties and the investing
public, which justifies equity's attention.
Desiring, as it does, a ruling at
this time, BNY no longer presses its defense
of laches on the part of Irving. In any
event, there was never substance to the
argument. BNY announced the revised offer
generating this litigation on May 17. It
accompanied that revised offer to
shareholders with an amended offer to the
Irving board, which had to consider the
offer before rejecting it on May 19. Irving
filed the complaint at bar on May 20 and
appeared with its motion for preliminary
injunction on May 23. Counsel for Irving
described at the May 23 hearing that sort of
fevered weekend activity typical of these
affairs, adding: "I had two hours sleep last
night." Tr. at 23. I am quite prepared to
accept counsel's representation. Irving and
its counsel did not sleep on their rights;
indeed, they did not sleep at all. There is
no substance to a suggestion of laches.
Accordingly I turn to the
question of whether the Williams Act
requires further disclosure at this time by
BNY to Irving shareholders.
B. The Present Status of
Federal Reserve Board Approval.
Irving contends that federal law
requires BNY to issue a supplemental
prospectus describing the present status of
Federal Reserve Board approval for the
acquisition. To evaluate that contention, it
is necessary to state in greater detail the
post-May 17 dialogue between BNY and the
Board.
As noted, on May 17 BNY publicly
stated its intention to waive the
then-existing poison pill provisions and the
Section 912 obstacle to a prompt second-step
merger, assuming that BNY acquired
two-thirds of Irving's outstanding shares.
As noted, BNY extended its tender offer to
midnight May 24. The Board responded to that
announcement with a letter dated May 19 to
counsel for BNY. The Board wrote to counsel
in part:
"To assist in the evaluation of
this revised offer and the comments made
with respect to the offer by Irving in a May
18 letter to the Board, we would like BNY's
comments on the attached questions. We would
appreciate your comments to the questions by
the opening of business on May 23, 1988."
The questions the Board forwarded
to BNY on May 19 included these questions,
coupled with a particular direction:
"2. BNY should provide new pro
forma financial statements and
projections reflecting the revised offer (e.g.,
the possibility of only an approximately
two-thirds ownership interest in Irving).
What adjustments, if any, have to be made to
the projections or financial statements
submitted in connection with the application
in light of the proposed new structure?
Please be specific. In particular, please
provide narrative and supporting schedules
that address the accounting treatment of the
minority interest, the revised purchase
price, computation of acquisition goodwill,
the impact on cash flow, the impact of the
reduced ownership on BNY's ability to
achieve targeted tangible common equity
ratios, and the effect of funding of any
open-market purchase after the tender
offer."
While BNY and its counsel were
engaged in working up the answers to the
Board's inquiries, counsel wrote to the
Board on May 20 to request an extension, not
to exceed 45 days, of the period for
consummation of BNY's acquisition of Irving.
BNY's responses to the Board's
inquiries of May 19 were sent forward in a
letter of
Page 170
counsel dated May 22. In response to the
Board's second inquiry, quoted above, BNY
forwarded to the Board copies of pro
forma consolidated financial data it had
filed with the SEC in connection with a
recent public offering of preferred stock.
That data contained a balance sheet as of
March 31, 1988 and income statements for the
periods ended March 31, 1988 and December
31, 1987. BNY also said this to the Board:
"Although BNY would be entitled
to only two-thirds of the dividend stream
from IBC, this will not present any
difficulties in view of the corresponding
reduction in cash flow requirements.
Irving's estimate of 1989's net income, as
filed with the SEC, is $281 million. From
this amount, $15 million of dividends is
payable on IBC's cumulative convertible
($100 million) and adjustable rate ($75
million) preferred stocks. This leaves $266
million of earnings available to common
shareholders.
In order to service the financing
requirements of the acquisition, total
common dividends of $76 million ($51 million
.67) would be required ($51 million to BNY
and $25 million to the minority interests).
This would represent a common dividend
payout ratio of only 28.6%. Even if IBC's
published projections are overstated by as
much as $50 million, only a 35% dividend
payout ratio would be required. Moreover, in
the event that IBC's projections are not
realized by an even larger margin, BNY has
additional sources of cash flow from its own
operations, as previously presented to the
Federal Reserve Board."
Under date of May 24, 1988 the
Board responded to BNY's request for an
extension. The Board's letter, grants a
45-day extension, but expresses a concern
"that under certain circumstances
consummation of the proposal might have an
adverse effect on the capital adequacy,
financial and managerial resources and
future prospects of the institutions." In
view of that concern the Board granted its
45-day extension of the consummation, "only
upon the condition that before BNY may
acquire more than 5 percent of [Irving's]
shares BNY notify the Board and obtain the
Board's approval for BNY to proceed with
consummation of the proposal." That notice
would give the Board an opportunity to
determine, "based upon the relevant facts
and circumstances at that time, that
consummation would be consistent with safety
and soundness considerations." The Board
concluded by declaring its readiness to
"grant expedited consideration to any such
notice filed by BNY."
BNY says these recent events
require no additional Williams Act
disclosure. It argues that the March 1988
prospectus revealed BNY's reservation of its
right to waive conditions, and that the
economic consequences of a less than total
acquisition were discussed. In essence, the
contention seems to be that nothing has
changed.
I would have difficulty with that
contention even if the Federal Reserve Board
had not written its May 24 letter. The Board
itself, responding to BNY's May 17
announcement, characterized in its May 19
letter BNY's action as a "revised offer",
and called for further information so that
the revised offer might be evaluated. But
any lingering doubts about the need for
further disclosure are dispelled by the
Board's May 24 letter, which as a practical
matter withdrew BNY's prior authority to
acquire up to 100 percent of Irving's
shares, and limited that authority to 5
percent unless BNY sought and obtained
further authority from the Board. These
developments are of obvious material
significance to Irving shareholders.
BNY must accordingly issue and
disseminate a supplemental prospectus
disclosing these events. The present
position of the Board, as stated in its May
24 letter, must be accurately summarized.
The updated pro forma financial
statements must be disclosed to the extent
that they modify or clarify financial
statements contained in the original
prospectus. I make that direction in
principle, and leave it to counsel to
execute it in practice. The Court will
resolve disputes in case of need. In any
event, the projected dividend requirements I
have quoted supra must be disclosed.
Page 171
C. State Court Litigation.
Irving says BNY should disclose
its intentions in respect of BNY's motion
for injunctive relief now sub judice
before Justice Cahn. BNY responds that it
cannot reasonably be required to decide, and
hence to disclose, what it will do until
Justice Cahn does whatever he is going to
do.
That argument has a surface
appeal, but in the last analysis is not
persuasive. As the oral argument made clear,
what is really at issue is BNY's intent if
Justice Cahn rules in its favor, invalidates
the poison pill and directs the Irving board
to remove any Section 921 impediment to a
prompt merger, and then Irving gives timely
notice of appeal. Would BNY go ahead and
purchase tendered Irving shares, in the face
of a possible reversal of Justice Cahn's
order? BNY has said, after all, that its
purchase of Irving shares would be
economically suicidal if those shares were
subject to amended "flip-in" poison pill
dilution. Counsel for BNY has said in
argument to Justice Cahn that BNY "intends
to extend its offer from time to time within
the outer limits of the regulatory framework
so as to allow the judicial process to
operate with respect to this application
both hear and in the appellate division."
That sounds as if an Irving appeal would
inhibit BNY from purchasing Irving shares,
at least until BNY obtained an affirmance at
the appellate division level; but quaere
about the New York State Court of Appeals.
At the argument before me, BNY
counsel stated, as indicated, that its
present intention, within the context of the
state court litigation, was to wait and see
what Justice Cahn decides, and then decide
what to do about it. I agree with BNY's
counsel that they cannot fairly be required
to say more than that now; but I also
conclude that the Williams Act requires them
to say at least that to Irving shareholders,
if such be the present limits of their
intentions. The original prospectus properly
recognized the obligation to advise
investors of pertinent pending litigation,
including the New York State court
litigation in its then existing posture (see
prospectus at p. 3). I agree with Irving
that a supplemental prospectus must bring
investors up to date on the present
litigation position, with particular
reference to the matters which I have just
discussed.
D. Antitrust Issues.
I agree with Irving that, given
present circumstances, disclosure must be
made of a potential risk of antitrust
complications.
While a potential antitrust
violation was considered by the Federal
Reserve Board and subsequently by the
District of Columbia Circuit Court of
Appeals in the case at bar, it is apparent
from the Court of Appeals' discussion of the
issue and the cases it cites (845 F.2d at
1041-1042) that the anti-competitive effect
of a merger between BNY and Irving was
analyzed under Section 7 of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. § 18. Judged by Clayton Act
criteria, the Court of Appeals agreed with
the Board that "there is no adverse
competitive impact bar to the merger."
Id. at 1042.
Under BNY's revised offer of May
17, there would be no merger for at least
five years. Rather than "the combined
entity" contemplated by the Court of
Appeals, id. at 1041, BNY would be
the majority shareholder of a rival banking
institution.
Accordingly, and apparently for
the first time in the regulatory and
litigation history of this proposed
transaction, questions of violations of
Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1
arise.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube
Corp., 467 U.S. 752, 767, 104 S.Ct.
2731, 2739, 81 L.Ed.2d 628 (1984), the
Supreme Court held that a parent and its
wholly owned subsidiary were incapable of
conspiring in violation of Section 1 of the
Sherman Act. But the Court added: "We do not
consider under what circumstances, if any, a
parent may be liable for conspiring with an
affiliated corporation it does not
completely own." Those are the circumstances
that would obtain if BNY's revised offer for
Irving shares is consummated. Subsequent
lower court decisions have gone off, to a
certain degree, in different directions with
respect to the question left open by the
Supreme Court in Copperweld.
Page 172
Counsel for BNY argue that the
responsible bank officers would have to be
"crazy" to so conduct themselves as to
subject BNY and Irving to a charge of per
se Sherman Act violations. Counsel
argue, not surprisingly, that their clients
would not act in an irrational fashion. But
the Williams Act disclosure question is not
so much the likelihood of future antitrust
violations as it is the risk of future
antitrust challenge. Given the changed
circumstances and the present state of the
law, I conclude that BNY is obligated to say
something in a supplemental prospectus about
the issue.
E. BNY's Selection of
Directors if its Offer Succeeds.
Irving contends that BNY is now
obligated to disclose its intentions with
respect to the makeup of the Irving board if
BNY obtains control as the result of the
revised may 17 offer. BNY acknowledges that
if it presently contemplated particular
individuals to place on the board it would
need to make that disclosure; but denies any
such present intent. But Irving says that is
not enough. Irving says that shareholders
are now entitled to a statement from BNY as
to whether truly "independent" directors
would be selected, or whether the Irving
board would be dominated by BNY officers or
affiliated individuals lacking that degree
of independence.
I conclude that the Williams Act
does not require any further declaration by
BNY on the subject of directors. It is
apparent from recent events, in particular
the proxy battle, that if BNY obtains
control of Irving, it is going to change
Irving's board. Irving shareholders are
perfectly able at the present time to factor
into their decision-making process the
possibility that BNY would change not only
the present personnel, but the character of
the Irving Board. The particular manner in
which BNY may address that issue in the
future, if it obtains control of Irving,
need not, and on counsel's representation,
probably cannot be disclosed at this time.
Missouri Portland Cement Co. v. Cargill,
Inc., 498 F.2d 851, 871-72 (2d Cir.)
cert. denied, 419 U.S. 883, 95 S.Ct.
150, 42 L.Ed.2d 123 (1974).
I have considered the other
demands for disclosure made by Irving, and
reject them, seeing no need for further
discussion.
CONCLUSION
Because I have concluded that BNY
must issue and disseminate a supplemental
prospectus addressing certain issues, I make
this temporary restraining order at this
time:
The Bank of New York, its
officers, agents, servants, employees, and
attorneys, and those persons in active
concert or participation with them who
receive actual notice of this order by
personal service or otherwise, are
temporarily restrained for a period of ten
(10) days of the date of this order from
purchasing any shares of Irving common stock
pursuant to the Bank of New York's exchange
offer or otherwise.
During that ten-day period
contemplated by this temporary restraining
order, counsel for the plaintiff Irving Bank
Corporation are directed to settle an order
of preliminary injunction consistent with
this opinion on two (2) day's notice.
The order of preliminary
injunction will provide that BNY's offer be
extended for six (6) business days following
the additional disclosure to be directed.
The foregoing is SO ORDERED.
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