|
Page 47
774 F.2d 47
54 USLW 2194, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
92,305
5v.
SCM CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee,
SCM CORPORATION,
Counterclaim-Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
HANSON TRUST PLC,
Counterclaim-Defendant-Appellant,
and
HSCM Industries, Inc. and Hanson Holdings
Netherlands B.V.,
Additional
Counterclaim-Defendants-Appellants.
No. 412, Docket 85-7745.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Sept. 23, 1985.
Decided Sept. 30, 1985.
Page 49
Barry H. Garfinkel, New York City
(Jonathan J. Lerner, Peter E. Greene, Samuel
Kadet, Jay B. Kasner, Jeremy A. Berman,
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, New
York City, of counsel), and Dennis J. Block,
New York City (Sanford F. Remz, Jonathan M.
Hoff, Stephen A. Radin, Weil, Gotshal &
Manges, New York City, of counsel), for
Hanson Trust PLC, HSCM Industries and Hanson
Holdings Netherlands B.V.
Bernard W. Nussbaum, New York
City (Robert B. Mazur, Eric M. Roth, Marc
Wolinsky, Barbara Robbins, Wendy P.
Rosenthal, Karen Shaer, Wachtell, Lipton,
Rosen & Katz, New York City, of counsel),
for SCM Corp.
Page 50
Daniel L. Goelzer, Gen. Counsel,
S.E.C., Washington, D.C. (Linda D. Feinberg,
Associate Gen. Counsel, David A. Sirignano,
Asst. Gen. Counsel, Michael S. Smith, Sp.
Counsel, Martha H. McNeely, James R. Brown,
Attys., S.E.C., Washington, D.C., Paul
Gonson, Sol., Washington, D.C., of counsel),
for amicus curiae S.E.C.
Before MANSFIELD, PIERCE and
PRATT, Circuit Judges.
MANSFIELD, Circuit Judge:
Hanson Trust PLC, HSCM
Industries, Inc., and Hanson Holdings
Netherlands B.V. (hereinafter sometimes
referred to collectively as "Hanson") appeal
from an order of the Southern District of
New York, 617 F.Supp. 832 (1985), Shirley
Wohl Kram, Judge, granting SCM Corporation's
motion for a preliminary injunction
restraining them, their officers, agents,
employees and any persons acting in concert
with them, from acquiring any shares of SCM
and from exercising any voting rights with
respect to 3.1 million SCM shares acquired
by them on September 11, 1985. The
injunction was granted on the ground that
Hanson's September 11 acquisition of the SCM
stock through five private and one open
market purchases amounted to a "tender
offer" for more than 5% of SCM's outstanding
shares, which violated Secs. 14(d)(1) and
(6) of the Williams Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
78n(d)(1) and (6)
1
and rules promulgated by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) thereunder. See 17
C.F.R. Secs. 240.14(e)(1) and 240.14d-7.
2 We reverse.
The setting is the familiar one
of a fast-moving bidding contest for control
of a large public corporation: first, a cash
Page 51 tender offer of $60 per share by Hanson, an
outsider, addressed to SCM stockholders;
next, a counterproposal by an "insider"
group consisting of certain SCM managers and
their "White Knight," Merrill Lynch Capital
Markets (Merrill), for a "leveraged buyout"
at a higher price ($70 per share); then an
increase by Hanson of its cash offer to $72
per share, followed by a revised SCM-Merrill
leveraged buyout offer of $74 per share with
a "crown jewel" irrevocable lock-up option
to Merrill designed to discourage Hanson
from seeking control by providing that if
any other party (in this case Hanson) should
acquire more than one-third of SCM's
outstanding shares (66 2/3% being needed
under N.Y.Bus.L. Sec. 903(a)(2) to
effectuate a merger) Merrill would have the
right to buy SCM's two most profitable
businesses (consumer foods and pigments) at
prices characterized by some as "bargain
basement." The final act in this scenario
was the decision of Hanson, having been
deterred by the SCM-Merrill option
(colloquially described in the market as a
"poison pill"), to terminate its cash tender
offer and then to make private purchases,
amounting to 25% of SCM's outstanding
shares, leading SCM to seek and obtain the
preliminary injunction from which this
appeal is taken. A more detailed history of
relevant events follows.
SCM is a New York corporation
with its principal place of business in New
York City. Its shares, of which at all
relevant times at least 9.9 million were
outstanding and 2.3 million were subject to
issuance upon conversion of other
outstanding securities, are traded on the
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and Pacific
Stock Exchange. Hanson Trust PLC is an
English company with its principal place of
business in London. HSCM, a Delaware
corporation, and Hanson Holdings Netherlands
B.V., a Netherlands limited liability
company, are indirect wholly-owned
subsidiaries of Hanson Trust PLC.
On August 21, 1985, Hanson
publicly announced its intention to make a
cash tender offer of $60 per share for any
and all outstanding SCM shares. Five days
later it filed the tender offer documents
required by Sec. 14(d)(1) of the Williams
Act and regulations issued thereunder. The
offer provided that it would remain open
until September 23, unless extended, that no
shares would be accepted until September 10,
and that
"Whether or not the Purchasers
[Hanson] purchase Shares pursuant to the
Offer, the Purchasers may thereafter
determine, subject to the availability of
Shares at favorable prices and the
availability of financing, to purchase
additional Shares in the open market, in
privately negotiated transactions, through
another tender offer or otherwise. Any such
purchases of additional Shares might be on
terms which are the same as, or more or less
favorable than, those of this Offer. The
Purchasers also reserve the right to dispose
of any or all Shares acquired by them."
Offer to Purchase For Cash Any and All
Outstanding Shares of Common Stock of SCM
Corporation (Aug. 26, 1985) at 21.
On August 30, 1985, SCM, having
recommended to SCM's stockholders that they
not accept Hanson's tender offer, announced
a preliminary agreement with Merrill under
which a new entity, formed by SCM and
Merrill, would acquire all SCM shares at $70
per share in a leveraged buyout sponsored by
Merrill. Under the agreement, which was
executed on September 3, the new entity
would make a $70 per share cash tender offer
for approximately 85% of SCM's shares. If
more than two-thirds of SCM's shares were
acquired under the offer the remaining SCM
shares would be acquired in exchange for
debentures in a new corporation to be formed
as a result of the merger. On the same date,
September 3, Hanson increased its tender
offer from $60 to $72 cash per share.
However, it expressly reserved the right to
terminate its offer if SCM granted to anyone
any option to purchase SCM assets on terms
that Hanson believed to constitute a
"lock-up" device. Supplement Dated September
5, 1985, to Offer to Purchase, at 4.
The next development in the
escalating bidding contest for control of
SCM occurred
Page 52 on September 10, 1985, when SCM entered into
a new leveraged buyout agreement with its
"White Knight," Merrill. The agreement
provided for a two-step acquisition of SCM
stock by Merrill at $74 per share. The first
proposed step was to be the acquisition of
approximately 82% of SCM's outstanding stock
for cash. Following a merger (which required
acquisition of at least 66 2/3%), debentures
would be issued for the remaining SCM
shares. If any investor or group other than
Merrill acquired more than one-third of
SCM's outstanding shares, Merrill would have
the option to buy SCM's two most profitable
businesses, pigments and consumer foods, for
$350 and $80 million respectively, prices
which Hanson believed to be below their
market value.
Hanson, faced with what it
considered to be a "poison pill," concluded
that even if it increased its cash tender
offer to $74 per share it would end up with
control of a substantially depleted and
damaged company. Accordingly, it announced
on the Dow Jones Broad Tape at 12:38 P.M. on
September 11 that it was terminating its
cash tender offer. A few minutes later,
Hanson issued a press release, carried on
the Broad Tape, to the effect that "all SCM
shares tendered will be promptly returned to
the tendering shareholders."
At some time in the late forenoon
or early afternoon of September 11 Hanson
decided to make cash purchases of a
substantial percentage of SCM stock in the
open market or through privately negotiated
transactions. Under British law Hanson could
not acquire more than 49% of SCM's shares in
this fashion without obtaining certain
clearances, but acquisition of such a large
percentage was not necessary to stymie the
SCM-Merrill merger proposal. If Hanson could
acquire slightly less than one-third of
SCM's outstanding shares it would be able to
block the $74 per share SCM-Merrill offer of
a leveraged buyout. This might induce the
latter to work out an agreement with Hanson,
something Hanson had unsuccessfully sought
on several occasions since its first cash
tender offer.
Within a period of two hours on
the afternoon of September 11 Hanson made
five privately-negotiated cash purchases of
SCM stock and one open-market purchase,
acquiring 3.1 million shares or 25% of SCM's
outstanding stock. The price of SCM stock on
the NYSE on September 11 ranged from a high
of $73.50 per share to a low of $72.50 per
share. Hanson's initial private purchase,
387,700 shares from Mutual Shares, was not
solicited by Hanson but by a Mutual Shares
official, Michael Price, who, in a
conversation with Robert Pirie of
Rothschild, Inc., Hanson's financial
advisor, on the morning of September 11
(before Hanson had decided to make any
private cash purchases), had stated that he
was interested in selling Mutual's Shares'
SCM stock to Hanson. Once Hanson's decision
to buy privately had been made, Pirie took
Price up on his offer. The parties
negotiated a sale at $73.50 per share after
Pirie refused Price's asking prices, first
of $75 per share and, later, of $74.50 per
share. This transaction, but not the
identity of the parties, was automatically
reported pursuant to NYSE rules on the NYSE
ticker at 3:11 P.M. and reported on the Dow
Jones Broad Tape at 3:29 P.M.
Pirie then telephoned Ivan
Boesky, an arbitrageur who had a few weeks
earlier disclosed in a Schedule 13D
statement filed with the SEC
3
that he owned approximately
Page 53 12.7% of SCM's outstanding shares. Pirie
negotiated a Hanson purchase of these shares
at $73.50 per share after rejecting Boesky's
initial demand of $74 per share. At the same
time Rothschild purchased for Hanson's
account 600,000 SCM shares in the open
market at $73.50 per share. An attempt by
Pirie next to negotiate the cash purchase of
another large block of SCM stock (some
780,000 shares) from Slifka & Company fell
through because of the latter's inability to
make delivery of the shares on September 12.
Following the NYSE ticker and
Broad Tape reports of the first two large
anonymous transactions in SCM stock, some
professional investors surmised that the
buyer might be Hanson. Rothschild then
received telephone calls from (1) Mr.
Mulhearn of Jamie & Co. offering to sell
between 200,000 and 350,000 shares at $73.50
per share, (2) David Gottesman, an
arbitrageur at Oppenheimer & Co. offering
89,000 shares at $73.50, and (3) Boyd
Jeffries of Jeffries & Co., offering
approximately 700,000 to 800,000 shares at
$74.00. Pirie purchased the three blocks for
Hanson at $73.50 per share. The last of
Hanson's cash purchases was completed by
4:35 P.M. on September 11, 1985.
In the early evening of September
11 SCM successfully applied to Judge Kram in
the present lawsuit for a restraining order
barring Hanson from acquiring more SCM stock
for 24 hours. On September 12 and 13 the TRO
was extended by consent pending the district
court's decision on SCM's application for a
preliminary injunction. Judge Kram held an
evidentiary hearing on September 12-13, at
which various witnesses testified, including
Sir Gordon White, Hanson's United States
Chairman, two Rothschild representatives
(Pirie and Gerald Goldsmith) and stock
market risk-arbitrage professionals (Robert
Freeman of Goldman, Sachs & Co., Kenneth
Miller of Merrill Lynch, and Danial Burch of
D.F. King & Co.). Sir Gordon White testified
that on September 11, 1985, after learning
of the $74 per share SCM-Merrill leveraged
buyout tender offer with its "crown jewel"
irrevocable "lock-up" option to Merrill, he
instructed Pirie to terminate Hanson's $72
per share tender offer, and that only
thereafter did he discuss the possibility of
Hanson making market purchases of SCM stock.
Pirie testified that the question of buying
stock may have been discussed in the late
forenoon of September 11 and that he had
told White that he was having Hanson's New
York counsel look into whether
Page 54 such cash purchases were legally
permissible.
SCM argued before Judge Kram (and
argues here) that Hanson's cash purchases
immediately following its termination of its
$72 per share tender offer amounted to a de
facto continuation of Hanson's tender offer,
designed to avoid the strictures of Sec.
14(d) of the Williams Act, and that unless a
preliminary injunction issued SCM and its
shareholders would be irreparably injured
because Hanson would acquire enough shares
to defeat the SCM-Merrill offer. Judge Kram
found that the relevant underlying facts
(which we have outlined) were not in
dispute, Memorandum Opinion and Order, at 6
(Sept. 14, 1985), and concluded that
"[w]ithout deciding what test should
ultimately be applied to determine whether
Hanson's conduct constitutes a 'tender
offer' within the meaning of the Williams
Act ... SCM has demonstrated a likelihood of
success on the merits of its contention that
Hanson has engaged in a tender offer which
violates Section 14(d) of the Williams Act."
Id. at 7. The district court, characterizing
Hanson's stock purchases as "a deliberate
attempt to do an 'end run' around the
requirements of the Williams Act," id. at 8,
made no finding on the question of whether
Hanson had decided to make the purchases of
SCM before or after it dropped its tender
offer but concluded that even if the
decision had been made after it terminated
its offer preliminary injunctive relief
should issue. From this decision Hanson
appeals.
DISCUSSION
A preliminary injunction will be
overturned only when the district court
abuses its discretion.
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc., 422 U.S. 922,
931-32, 95 S.Ct. 2561, 2567-68, 45 L.Ed.2d
648 (1975); Application of U.S. In
Matter of Order Authorizing the Use of a Pen
Register, 538 F.2d 956, 961 (2d Cir.1976)
(All-Writs Act), rev'd on other grounds sub
nom.
United States v. New York Telephone Co., 434
U.S. 159, 98 S.Ct. 364, 54 L.Ed.2d 376
(1977). An abuse of discretion may be
found when the district court relies on
clearly erroneous findings of fact or on an
error of law in issuing the injunction.
Coca-Cola Co. v. Tropicana Products, Inc.,
690 F.2d 312, 315-16 (2d Cir.1982);
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, --- U.S.
----, 105 S.Ct. 1504, 84 L.Ed.2d 518 (1985).
Since, as the district court
correctly noted, the material relevant facts
in the present case are not in dispute, this
appeal turns on whether the district court
erred as a matter of law in holding that
when Hanson terminated its offer and
immediately thereafter made private
purchases of a substantial share of the
target company's outstanding stock, the
purchases became a "tender offer" within the
meaning of Sec. 14(d) of the Williams Act.
Absent any express definition of "tender
offer" in the Act, the answer requires a
brief review of the background and purposes
of Sec. 14(d).
Congress adopted Sec. 14(d) in
1968 "in response to the growing use of cash
tender offers as a means of achieving
corporate takeovers ... which ... removed a
substantial number of corporate control
contests from the reach of existing
disclosure requirements of the federal
securities laws."
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, 430 U.S. 1,
22, 97 S.Ct. 926, 939, 51 L.Ed.2d 124 (1977).
See also S.Rep. No. 550, 90th Cong., 1st
Sess., 2-4 (1967) (Senate Report); H.R.Rep.
No. 1711, 90th Cong., 2d Sess., 2-4 (1968)
(House Report) U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
1968, 2811; 114 Cong.Rec. 21483-21484 (July
15, 1968) (Comments of Representatives
Springer and Whalen); 113 Cong.Rec. 854-855
(Jan. 18, 1967) (Comments of Senator
Williams); id. at 24664 (Aug. 30, 1967)
(Comments of Senator Williams); id. at 24666
(Comments of Senator Javits).
The typical tender offer, as
described in the Congressional debates,
hearings and reports on the Williams Act,
consisted of a general, publicized bid by an
individual or group to buy shares of a
publicly-owned company, the shares of which
were traded on a national securities
exchange, at a price substantially above the
current market
Page 55 price. See House Report, supra, at 2; Senate
Report, supra, at 2; 113 Cong.Rec. at 855
(Jan. 18, 1967) (Senator Williams); Takeover
Bids: Hearings on H.R. 14475, S. 510 before
the Subcommittee on Commerce and Financing
of the House Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce, 90th Cong., 2d Sess., 10
(1968) (House Hearings) (Manuel Cohen,
Chairman, S.E.C.); id. at 44 (Donald Calvin,
Vice-President, New York Stock Exchange);
Full Disclosure of Corporate Equity
Ownership in Corporate Takeover Bids:
Hearings on S. 510 Before the Subcommittee
on Securities of the Senate Committee on
Banking and Currency, 90th Cong., 1st Sess.
at 2 (1967) (Senate Hearings) (Senator
Williams); id. at 17 (Manuel Cohen); id. at
42 (Senator Kuchel). The offer was usually
accompanied by newspaper and other
publicity, a time limit for tender of shares
in response to it, and a provision fixing a
quantity limit on the total number of shares
of the target company that would be
purchased.
Prior to the Williams Act a
tender offeror had no obligation to disclose
any information to shareholders when making
a bid. The Report of the Senate Committee on
Banking and Currency aptly described the
situation: "by using a cash tender offer the
person seeking control can operate in almost
complete secrecy. At present, the law does
not even require that he disclose his
identity, the source of his funds, who his
associates are, or what he intends to do if
he gains control of the corporation." Senate
Report, supra, at 2. See also House Report,
supra, at 2, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
1968, at 2812. The average shareholder,
pressured by the fact that the tender offer
would be available for only a short time and
restricted to a limited number of shares,
was forced "with severely limited
information, [to] decide what course of
action he should take." Id. at 2, U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News 1968, at 2812. "Without
knowledge of who the bidder is and what he
plans to do, the shareholder cannot reach an
informed decision. He is forced to take a
chance. For no matter what he does, he does
it without adequate information to enable
him to decide rationally what is the best
possible course of action." Id. at 2,
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1968, at 2812;
Senate Report, supra, at 2.
The purpose of the Williams Act
was, accordingly, to protect the
shareholders from that dilemma by insuring
"that public shareholders who are confronted
by a cash tender offer for their stock will
not be required to respond without adequate
information."
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, 430 U.S. 1,
35, 97 S.Ct. 926, 946, 51 L.Ed.2d 124 (1977);
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp., 422 U.S. 49,
58, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2075, 45 L.Ed.2d 12
(1975).
Congress took "extreme care," 113
Cong.Rec. 24664 (Senator Williams); id. at
854 (Senator Williams), however, when
protecting shareholders, to avoid "tipping
the balance of regulation either in favor of
management or in favor of the person making
the takeover bid." House Report, supra, at
4, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1968, at
2813; Senator Report, supra, at 4. Indeed,
the initial draft of the bill, proposed in
1965, had been designed to prevent "proud
old companies [from being] reduced to
corporate shells after white-collar pirates
have seized control," 111 Cong.Rec. 28257
(Oct. 22, 1965) (Senator Williams). Williams
withdrew that draft following claims that it
was too biased in favor of incumbent
management. Tyson & August, "The Williams
Act After RICO: Has the Balance Tipped in
Favor of Incumbent Management?" 33 Hastings
L.J. 53, 61 (1983). In the end, Congress
considered it crucial that the act be
neutral and place " 'investors on an equal
footing with the takeover bidder' ...
without favoring either the tender offeror
or existing management." Piper, supra, 430
U.S. at 30, 97 S.Ct. at 943 (quoting Senate
Report, supra, at 4). See also Rondeau,
supra, 422 U.S. at 58 n. 8, 95 S.Ct. at 2076
n. 8;
Edgar v. MITE Corp., 457 U.S. 624, 633, 102
S.Ct. 2629, 2636, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982).
Congress finally settled upon a
statute requiring a tender offer solicitor
seeking beneficial ownership of more than 5%
of
Page 56 the outstanding shares of any class of any
equity security registered on a national
securities exchange first to file with the
SEC a statement containing certain
information specified in Sec. 13(d)(1) of
the Act, as amplified by SEC rules and
regulations. Congress' failure to define
"tender offer" was deliberate. Aware of "the
almost infinite variety in the terms of most
tender offers" and concerned that a rigid
definition would be evaded, Congress left to
the court and the SEC the flexibility to
define the term. House Hearings, supra, at
18 (Manuel Cohen, S.E.C. Chairman). See also
Letter from Senators Proxmire, Sarbanes and
Williams to Harold M. Williams, Chairman of
the S.E.C. (July 3, 1979) reprinted in
Securities and Exchange Commission Report on
Tender Offer Laws, printed for the use of
the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and
Urban Affairs 3 (Comm.Print 1980);
Smallwood v. Pearl Brewing Co., 489 F.2d
579, 598 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 419
U.S. 873, 95 S.Ct. 134, 42 L.Ed.2d 113
(1974).
Although Sec. 14(d)(1) clearly
applies to "classic" tender offers of the
type described above (pp. 54-55), courts
soon recognized that in the case of
privately negotiated transactions or
solicitations for private purchases of stock
many of the conditions leading to the
enactment of Sec. 14(d) for the most part do
not exist. The number and percentage of
stockholders are usually far less than those
involved in public offers. The solicitation
involves less publicity than a public tender
offer or none. The solicitees, who are
frequently directors, officers or
substantial stockholders of the target, are
more apt to be sophisticated, inquiring or
knowledgeable concerning the target's
business, the solicitor's objectives, and
the impact of the solicitation on the
target's business prospects. In short, the
solicitee in the private transaction is less
likely to be pressured, confused, or
ill-informed regarding the businesses and
decisions at stake than solicitees who are
the subjects of a public tender offer.
These differences between public
and private securities transactions have led
most courts to rule that private
transactions or open market purchases do not
qualify as a "tender offer" requiring the
purchaser to meet the pre-filing strictures
of Sec. 14(d).
Kennecott Copper Corp. v. Curtiss-Wright
Corp., 449 F.Supp. 951, 961 (S.D.N.Y.),
aff'd in relevant part, 584 F.2d 1195,
1206-07 (2d Cir.1978);
Stromfeld v. Great Atlantic & Pac. Tea Co.,
Inc., 496 F.Supp. 1084, 1088-89
(S.D.N.Y.), aff'd mem., 646 F.2d 563 (2d
Cir.1980);
SEC v. Carter-Hawley Hale Stores, Inc., 760
F.2d 945, 950-53 (9th Cir.1985);
Brascan Ltd. v. Edper Equities, Ltd., 477
F.Supp. 773, 791-92 (S.D.N.Y.1979);
Astronics Corp. v. Protective Closures Co.,
561 F.Supp. 329, 334 (W.D.N.Y.1983);
LTV Corp. v. Grumman Corp., 526 F.Supp. 106,
109 (E.D.N.Y.1981);
Energy Ventures, Inc. v. Appalachian Co., 587 F.Supp. 734, 739-41 (D.Del.1984);
Ludlow v. Tyco Laboratories, Inc., 529
F.Supp. 62, 67 (D.Mass.1981);
Chromalloy American Corp. v. Sun Chemical
Corp., 474 F.Supp. 1341, 1346-47
(E.D.Mo.), aff'd,
611 F.2d 240 (8th
Cir.1979). The borderline between public
solicitations and privately negotiated stock
purchases is not bright and it is frequently
difficult to determine whether transactions
falling close to the line or in a type of
"no man's land" are "tender offers" or
private deals. This has led some to advocate
a broader interpretation of the term "tender
offer" than that followed by us in Kennecott
Copper Corp. v. Curtiss-Wright Corp., supra,
584 F.2d at 1207, and to adopt the
eight-factor "test" of what is a tender
offer, which was recommended by the SEC and
applied by the district court
Wellman v. Dickinson, 475 F.Supp. 783,
823-24 (S.D.N.Y.1979), aff'd on other
grounds,
682 F.2d 355 (2d Cir.1982), cert.
denied, 460 U.S. 1069, 103 S.Ct. 1522, 75
L.Ed.2d 946 (1983), and by the Ninth Circuit
in SEC v. Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Inc.,
supra. The eight factors are:
"(1) active and widespread
solicitation of public shareholders for the
shares of an issuer;
(2) solicitation made for a
substantial percentage of the issuer's
stock;
Page 57
(3) offer to purchase made at a
premium over the prevailing market price;
(4) terms of the offer are firm
rather than negotiable;
(5) offer contingent on the
tender of a fixed number of shares, often
subject to a fixed maximum number to be
purchased;
(6) offer open only for a limited
period of time;
(7) offeree subjected to pressure
to sell his stock;
* * *
[ (8) ] public announcements of a
purchasing program concerning the target
company precede or accompany rapid
accumulation of large amounts of the target
company's securities." (475 F.Supp. at
823-24).
Although many of the above-listed
factors are relevant for purposes of
determining whether a given solicitation
amounts to a tender offer, the elevation of
such a list to a mandatory "litmus test"
appears to be both unwise and unnecessary.
As even the advocates of the proposed test
recognize, in any given case a solicitation
may constitute a tender offer even though
some of the eight factors are absent or,
when many factors are present, the
solicitation may nevertheless not amount to
a tender offer because the missing factors
outweigh those present. Id., at 824; Carter,
supra, at 950.
We prefer to be guided by the
principle followed by the Supreme Court in
deciding what transactions fall within the
private offering exemption provided by Sec.
4(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, and by
ourselves in Kennecott Copper in determining
whether the Williams Act applies to private
transactions. That principle is simply to
look to the statutory purpose.
S.E.C. v. Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S. 119,
73 S.Ct. 981, 97 L.Ed. 1494 (1953), the
Court stated, "the applicability of Sec.
4(1) should turn on whether the particular
class of persons affected need the
protection of the Act. An offering to those
who are shown to be able to fend for
themselves is a transaction 'not involving
any public offering.' " Id., at 125, 73
S.Ct. at 984. Similarly, since the purpose
of Sec. 14(d) is to protect the ill-informed
solicitee, the question of whether a
solicitation constitutes a "tender offer"
within the meaning of Sec. 14(d) turns on
whether, viewing the transaction in the
light of the totality of circumstances,
there appears to be a likelihood that unless
the pre-acquisition filing strictures of
that statute are followed there will be a
substantial risk that solicitees will lack
information needed to make a carefully
considered appraisal of the proposal put
before them.
Applying this standard, we are
persuaded on the undisputed facts that
Hanson's September 11 negotiation of five
private purchases and one open market
purchase of SCM shares, totalling 25% of
SCM's outstanding stock, did not under the
circumstances constitute a "tender offer"
within the meaning of the Williams Act.
Putting aside for the moment the events
preceding the purchases, there can be little
doubt that the privately negotiated
purchases would not, standing alone, qualify
as a tender offer, for the following
reasons:
(1) In a market of 22,800 SCM
shareholders the number of SCM sellers here
involved, six in all, was miniscule compared
with the numbers involved in public
solicitations of the type against which the
Act was directed.
(2) At least five of the sellers
were highly sophisticated professionals,
knowledgeable in the market place and well
aware of the essential facts needed to
exercise their professional skills and to
appraise Hanson's offer, including its
financial condition as well as that of SCM,
the likelihood that the purchases might
block the SCM-Merrill bid, and the risk that
if Hanson acquired more than 33 1/3% of
SCM's stock the SCM-Merrill lockup of the
"crown jewel" might be triggered. Indeed, by
September 11 they had all had access to (1)
Hanson's 27-page detailed disclosure of
facts, filed on August 26, 1985, in
accordance with Sec. 14(d)(1) with
Page 58 respect to its $60 tender offer, (2)
Hanson's 4-page amendment of that offer,
dated September 5, 1985, increasing the
price to $72 per share, and (3) press
releases regarding the basic terms of the
SCM-Merrill proposed leveraged buyout at $74
per share and of the SCM-Merrill asset
option agreement under which SCM granted to
Merrill the irrevocable right under certain
conditions to buy SCM's consumer food
business for $80 million and its pigment
business for $350 million.
(3) The sellers were not
"pressured" to sell their shares by any
conduct that the Williams Act was designed
to alleviate, but by the forces of the
market place. Indeed, in the case of Mutual
Shares there was no initial solicitation by
Hanson; the offer to sell was initiated by
Mr. Price of Mutual Shares. Although each of
the Hanson purchases was made for $73.50 per
share, in most instances this price was the
result of private negotiations after the
sellers sought higher prices and in one case
price protection, demands which were
refused. The $73.50 price was not fixed in
advance by Hanson. Moreover, the sellers
remained free to accept the $74 per share
tender offer made by the SCM-Merrill group.
(4) There was no active or
widespread advance publicity or public
solicitation, which is one of the earmarks
of a conventional tender offer. Arbitrageurs
might conclude from ticker tape reports of
two large anonymous transactions that Hanson
must be the buyer. However, liability for
solicitation may not be predicated upon
disclosures mandated by Stock Exchange
Rules. See S.E.C. v. Carter-Hawley Hale
Stores, Inc., supra, 760 F.2d at 950.
(5) The price received by the six
sellers, $73.50 per share, unlike that
appearing in most tender offers, can
scarcely be dignified with the label
"premium." The stock market price on
September 11 ranged from $72.50 to $73.50
per share. Although risk arbitrageurs
sitting on large holdings might reap
sizeable profits from sales to Hanson at
$73.50, depending on their own purchase
costs, they stood to gain even more if the
SCM-Merrill offer of $74 should succeed, as
it apparently would if they tendered their
shares to it. Indeed, the $73.50 price,
being at most $1 over market or 1.4% higher
than the market price, did not meet the
SEC's proposed definition of a premium,
which is $2.00 per share or 5% above market
price, whichever is greater. SEC Exchange
Act Release No. 16,385 (11/29/79) [1979-80]
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. p 82,374.
(6) Unlike most tender offers,
the purchases were not made contingent upon
Hanson's acquiring a fixed minimum number or
percentage of SCM's outstanding shares. Once
an agreement with each individual seller was
reached, Hanson was obligated to buy,
regardless what total percentage of stock it
might acquire. Indeed, it does not appear
that Hanson had fixed in its mind a firm
limit on the amount of SCM shares it was
willing to buy.
(7) Unlike most tender offers,
there was no general time limit within which
Hanson would make purchases of SCM stock.
Concededly, cash transactions are normally
immediate but, assuming an inability on the
part of a seller and Hanson to agree at once
on a price, nothing prevented a resumption
of negotiations by each of the parties
except the arbitrageurs' speculation that
once Hanson acquired 33 1/3% or an amount
just short of that figure it would stop
buying.
In short, the totality of
circumstances that existed on September 11
did not evidence any likelihood that unless
Hanson was required to comply with Sec.
14(d)(1)'s pre-acquisition filing and
waiting-period requirements there would be a
substantial risk of ill-considered sales of
SCM stock by ill-informed shareholders.
There remains the question
whether Hanson's private purchases take on a
different hue, requiring them to be treated
as a "de facto " continuation of its earlier
tender offer, when considered in the context
of Hanson's earlier acknowledged
Page 59 tender offer, the competing offer of
SCM-Merrill and Hanson's termination of its
tender offer. After reviewing all of the
undisputed facts we conclude that the
district court erred in so holding.
In the first place, we find no
record support for the contention by SCM
that Hanson's September 11 termination of
its outstanding tender offer was false,
fraudulent or ineffective. Hanson's
termination notice was clear, unequivocal
and straightforward. Directions were given,
and presumably are being followed, to return
all of the tendered shares to the SCM
shareholders who tendered them. Hanson also
filed with the SEC a statement pursuant to
Sec. 14(d)(1) of the Williams Act
terminating its tender offer. As a result,
at the time when Hanson made its September
11 private purchases of SCM stock it owned
no SCM stock other than those shares
revealed in its Sec. 14(d) pre-acquisition
report filed with the SEC on August 26,
1985.
The reason for Hanson's
termination of its tender offer is not
disputed: in view of SCM's grant of what
Hanson conceived to be a "poison pill"
lock-up option to Merrill, Hanson, if it
acquired control of SCM, would have a
company denuded as the result of its sale of
its consumer food and pigment businesses to
Merrill at what Hanson believed to be
bargain prices. Thus, Hanson's termination
of its tender offer was final; there was no
tender offer to be "continued." Hanson was
unlikely to "shoot itself in the foot" by
triggering what it believed to be a "poison
pill," and it could not acquire more than
49% of SCM's shares without violating the
rules of the London Stock Exchange.
Nor does the record support SCM's
contention that Hanson had decided, before
terminating its tender offer, to engage in
cash purchases. Judge Kram referred only to
evidence that "Hanson had considered open
market purchases before it announced that
the tender offer was dropped" (emphasis
added) but made no finding to that effect.
Absent evidence or a finding that Hanson had
decided to seek control of SCM through
purchases of its stock, no duty of
disclosure existed under the federal
securities laws.
Second, Hanson had expressly
reserved the right in its August 26, 1985,
pre-acquisition tender offer filing papers,
whether or not tendered shares were
purchased, "thereafter ... to purchase
additional Shares in the open market, in
privately negotiated transactions, through
another tender offer or otherwise."
(Emphasis added). See p. 46, supra. Thus,
Hanson's privately negotiated purchases
could hardly have taken the market by
surprise. Indeed, professional arbitrageurs
and market experts rapidly concluded that it
was Hanson which was making the
post-termination purchases.
Last, Hanson's prior disclosures
of essential facts about itself and SCM in
the pre-acquisition papers it filed on
August 26, 1985, with the SEC pursuant to
Sec. 14(d)(1), are wholly inconsistent with
the district court's characterization of
Hanson's later private purchases as "a
deliberate attempt to do an 'end run' around
the requirements of the Williams Act." On
the contrary, the record shows that Hanson
had already filed with the SEC and made
public substantially the same information as
SCM contends that Hanson should have filed
before making the cash purchases. The term
"tender offer," although left somewhat
flexible by Congress' decision not to define
it, nevertheless remains a word of art.
Section 14(d)(1) was never intended to apply
to every acquisition of more than 5% of a
public company's stock. If that were the
case there would be no need for Sec.
13(d)(1), which requires a person, after
acquiring more than 5%, to furnish the
issuer, stock exchange and the SEC with
certain pertinent information. Yet the
expansive definition of "tender offer"
advocated by SCM, and to some extent by the
SEC as amicus, would go far toward rendering
Sec. 13(d)(1) a dead letter. In the present
case, we were advised by Hanson's counsel
upon argument on September 23 that on that
date it was filing with the SEC the
information required by Sec. 13(d)(1) of the
Williams Act with respect to its private
purchases of
Page 60 SCM stock. In our view this is all that is
required by the Act in the present
circumstances.
It may well be that Hanson's
private acquisition of 25% of SCM's shares
after termination of Hanson's tender offer
was designed to block the SCM-Merrill
leveraged buyout group from acquiring the 66
2/3% of SCM's stock needed to effectuate a
merger. It may be speculated that such a
blocking move might induce SCM to buy
Hanson's 25% at a premium or lead to
negotiations between the parties designed to
resolve their differences. But we know of no
provision in the federal securities laws or
elsewhere that prohibits such tactics in
"hardball" market battles of the type
encountered here.
Treadway Companies, Inc. v. Care Corp., 638
F.2d 357, 378-79 (2d Cir.1980) ("We also
see nothing wrong in Care's efforts to
acquire one third of Treadway's outstanding
stock, and thus to obtain a 'blocking
position'.").
Thus the full disclosure purposes
of the Williams Act as it now stands appear
to have been fully satisfied by Hanson's
furnishing to the public, both before and
after termination of its tender offer, all
of the essential relevant facts it was
required by law to supply.
SCM further contends, and in this
respect it is supported by the SEC as an
amicus, that upon termination of a tender
offer the solicitor should be subject to a
waiting or cooling-off period (10 days is
suggested) before it may purchase any of the
target company's outstanding shares.
However, neither the Act nor any SEC rule
promulgated thereunder prohibits a former
tender offeror from purchasing stock of a
target through privately negotiated
transactions immediately after a tender
offer has been terminated. Indeed, it is
significant that the SEC's formal proposal
for the adoption of such a rule (Proposed
Rule 14e-5) has never been implemented even
though the SEC adopted a similar prohibition
with respect to an issuer's making such
purchases within 10 days after termination
of a tender offer. See Rule 13e-4(f)(6).
Thus, the existing law does not support the
prohibition urged by SCM and the SEC. We
believe it would be unwise for courts
judicially to usurp what is a legislative or
regulatory function by substituting our
judgment for that of Congress or the SEC.
In recognition of Congress'
desire in enacting the Williams Act to avoid
favoring either existing corporate
management or outsiders seeking control
through tender offers (see pp. 55-56, supra
), the role of the courts in construing and
applying the Act must likewise be one of
strict neutrality. Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper
Corp., supra, 422 U.S. at 58-59, 95 S.Ct. at
2075-76. Although we should not hesitate to
enforce the Act's disclosure provisions
through appropriate relief, we must also
guard against improvident or precipitous use
of remedies that may have the effect of
favoring one side or the other in a takeover
battle when allegations of violation of the
Act, often made in the heat of the contest,
may not be substantiated. In this context
the preliminary injunction, which is one of
the most drastic tools in the arsenal of
judicial remedies, Medical Soc. of State of
N.Y. v. Toia, 560 F.2d 535, 537 (2d
Cir.1977) ("an extraordinary and drastic
remedy which should not be routinely
granted"), must be used with great care,
lest the forces of the free market place,
which in the end should determine the merits
of takeover disputes, are nullified.
In the present case we conclude
that since the district court erred in
ruling as a matter of law that SCM had
demonstrated a likelihood of success on the
merits, based on the theory that Hanson's
post-tender offer private purchases of SCM
constituted a de facto tender offer, it was
an abuse of discretion to issue a
preliminary injunction. Indeed, we do not
believe that Hanson's transactions raise
serious questions going to the merits that
would provide a fair ground for litigation.
In view of this holding it becomes
unnecessary to rule upon the district
court's determination that the balance of
hardships tip in favor of SCM and that
absent preliminary relief it would suffer
irreparable injury. However, our
Page 61 decision is not to be construed as an
affirmance of the district court's
resolution of these issues.
SCM and its stockholders may well
have an adequate remedy at law. No other SCM
stockholder is prevented by Hanson's
acquisitions from tendering stock in
response to the SCM-Merrill offer for
purchase at $74 per share. Assuming that
Hanson's purchases were ultimately found to
violate the Williams Act, SCM stockholders
deprived of their ability to realize $74 per
share under the SCM-Merrill offer could
recover money damages for the losses they
suffered. See Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper
Corp., supra, 422 U.S. at 61, 95 S.Ct. at
2077. Furthermore, an order requiring Hanson
to rescind its purchases is within the scope
of relief courts may grant.
J.I. Case v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426, 433-34, 84
S.Ct. 1555, 1560-61, 12 L.Ed.2d 423 (1964).
Finally, there is no evidence that any other
"White Knights" or independent bidders for
control of SCM stood in the wings and might
have joined the bidding fray except for
Hanson's purchases. On the contrary, the
SCM-Merrill tender offer states that Goldman
Sachs "held discussions with several
potential purchasers of the Company [SCM]"
but that, although interest was expressed in
acquiring one or more of SCM's businesses,
"no firm proposals were made or prices
discussed ... for the Company as a whole,
other than the proposal [by Merrill] for the
leveraged buyout of the Company described
below."
The order of the district court
is reversed, the preliminary injunction
against Hanson is vacated, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings in
accordance with this opinion. The mandate
shall issue forthwith.
1 Sections 14(d)(1) and (6) provide in
pertinent part as follows:
"(d)(1) It shall be unlawful for any
person, directly or indirectly, by use of
the mails or by any means or instrumentality
of interstate commerce or of any facility of
a national securities exchange or otherwise,
to make a tender offer for, or a request or
invitation for tenders of, any class of any
equity security which is registered pursuant
to section 78l of this title, ... if, after
consummation thereof, such person would,
directly or indirectly, be the beneficial
owner of more than 5 per centum of such
class, unless at the time copies of the
offer or request or invitation are first
published or sent or given to security
holders such person has filed with the
Commission a statement containing such of
the information specified in section 78m(d)
of this title, and such additional
information as the Commission may by rules
and regulations prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors. All requests or
invitations for tenders or advertisements
making a tender offer or requesting or
inviting tenders of such a security shall be
filed as a part of such statement and shall
contain such of the information contained in
such statement as the Commission may by
rules and regulations prescribe. Copies of
any additional material soliciting or
requesting such tender offers subsequent to
the initial solicitation or request shall
contain such information as the Commission
may by rules and regulations prescribe as
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors,
and shall be filed with the Commission not
later than the time copies of such material
are first published or sent or given to
security holders. Copies of all statements,
in the form in which such material is
furnished to security holders and the
Commission, shall be sent to the issuer not
later than the date such material is first
published or sent or given to any security
holders.
* * *
"(6) Where any person makes a tender
offer, or request or invitation for tenders,
for less than all the outstanding equity
securities of a class, and where a greater
number of securities is deposited pursuant
thereto within ten days after copies of the
offer or request or invitation are first
published or sent or given to security
holders than such person is bound or willing
to take up and pay for, the securities taken
up shall be taken up as nearly as may be pro
rata, disregarding fractions, according to
the number of securities deposited by each
depositor. The provisions of this subsection
shall also apply to securities deposited
within ten days after notice of an increase
in the consideration offered to security
holders, as described in paragraph (7), is
first published or sent or given to security
holders."
2 17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.14e-1(a) provides
that a tender offer must be open for at
least 20 business days from the date when it
is first published or furnished to security
holders.
17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.14d-7 provides that
any person who has deposited securities
pursuant to a tender offer has the right to
withdraw such securities during a period up
to 15 business days from the commencement of
the tender offer.
3 Section 13(d)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act requires any person or group
acquiring beneficial ownership of more than
5% of the equity securities of certain
issuers to file reports with the SEC. It
provides in pertinent part as follows:
"(d)(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 78l
of this title, ... 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, and such additional
information, as the Commission may by rules
and regulations, prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors--
"(A) the background, and identity,
residence, and citizenship of, and the
nature of such beneficial ownership by, such
person and all other persons by whom or on
whose behalf the purchases have been or are
to be effected;
"(B) the source and amount of the funds
or other consideration used or to be used in
making the purchases, and if any part of the
purchase price is represented or is to be
represented by funds or other consideration
borrowed or otherwise obtained for the
purpose of acquiring, holding, or trading
such security, a description of the
transaction and the names of the parties
thereto, except that where a source of funds
is a loan made in the ordinary course of
business by a bank, as defined in section
78c(a)(6) of this title, if the person
filing such statement so requests, the name
of the bank shall not be made available to
the public;
"(C) if the purpose of the purchases or
prospective purchases is to acquire control
of the business of the issuer of the
securities, any plans or proposals which
such persons may have to liquidate such
issuer, to sell its assets to or merge it
with any other persons, or to make any other
major change in its business or corporate
structure;
"(D) the number of shares of such
security which are beneficially owned, and
the number of shares concerning which there
is a right to acquire, directly or
indirectly, by (i) such person, and (ii) by
each associate of such person, giving the
background, identity, residence, and
citizenship of each such associate; and
"(E) information as to any contracts,
arrangements, or understandings with any
person with respect to any securities of the
issuer, including but not limited to
transfer of any of the securities, joint
ventures, loan or option arrangements, puts
or calls, guaranties of loans, guaranties
against loss or guaranties of profits,
division of losses or profits, or the giving
or withholding of proxies, naming the
persons with whom such contracts,
arrangements, or understandings have been
entered into, and giving the details
thereof." |