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Page 239
84 F.3d 239
64 USLW 2764, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
99,239,
34 Fed.R.Serv.3d 974 Joseph LERRO and John Duty,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
The QUAKER OATS COMPANY, Snapple Beverage
Corporation, and
Thomas H. Lee, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 95-3495, 95-3496. United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit. Argued March 29, 1996.
Decided May 17, 1996. Mark C. Gardy, Arthur N. Abbey
(argued), Abbey & Ellis, New York City,
Richard S.
Page 240 Schiffrin, Michael D. Craig, Schiffrin &
Craig, Buffalo Grove, IL, for John Duty,
Joseph Lerro.
Jerold S. Solovy, Douglas A.
Graham, Jenner & Block, Chicago, IL, Dennis
J. Block (argued), Paul J. Collins, Weil,
Gotshal & Manges, New York City, for Quaker
Oats Co., Loop Acquisition Corp.
Before EASTERBROOK, ROVNER, and
DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
The Quaker Oats Company acquired
Snapple Beverage Corporation for $1.7
billion in 1994. A merger agreement was
signed on November 1, 1994, and a tender
offer was announced to the public on
November 4. Quaker Oats offered $14 in cash
for each share of Snapple stock; the merger
agreement contemplated the same payment per
share. Investors who thought $14 too low
could refuse to tender, vote against the
merger, and demand appraisal under § 262 of
the Delaware Corporation Law. Nonetheless,
the success of the transaction was assured
by the support of Thomas H. Lee, who
controlled at least 35 percent of Snapple's
shares (this is plaintiffs' figure; the
tender offer documents say that he
controlled 47 percent). Lee not only
promised to tender his shares but also gave
Quaker Oats an option to purchase them even
if the tender offer failed. When the offer
closed, 96.5 percent of Snapple's stock had
been tendered. Quaker Oats immediately
effected a short-form merger under Delaware
law between Snapple and LOOP Acquisition
Corporation, which had been created for this
purpose. Later LOOP changed its name to
Snapple Beverage Corporation, which is today
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Quaker Oats.
I
One part of the offering document
intrigued investors Joseph Lerro and John
Duty:
At the insistence of Parent
[Quaker Oats] and to induce Parent to enter
into the Merger Agreement, a number of
agreements relating to employment,
noncompetition, consulting and other matters
were entered into and are described in the
Schedule 14D-9. Additionally, the Company
[Snapple] and Stokley-Van Camp, Inc., a
subsidiary of Parent entered into a new
Distribution Agreement (the "Distributor
Agreement") with Select Beverages, Inc.
("Select") for the distribution of their
respective products. A majority of the
common stock of Select is held by affiliates
of THL [Thomas H. Lee Company] and 20
percent of such common stock is held by the
Company. The Distributor Agreement grants to
Select the exclusive right to distribute in
certain areas of Indiana, Illinois
(including Chicago) and Wisconsin, certain
sizes of Snapple and Gatorade in certain
channels. The Agreement commences upon
consummation of the Offer and is perpetual,
and is subject to termination if Select
fails to satisfy certain tests for
increasing distribution penetration and
available visicoolers. The effect of the
Distribution Agreement will be to cause
Select to lose some Snapple sales and to
gain some Gatorade sales.
Lerro and Duty filed separate
actions under § 14(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as added by the
Williams Act of 1968, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d),
contending that the Distributor Agreement
provided Lee with extra compensation for his
shares, in violation of § 14(d)(7) and the
SEC's Rule 14d-10(a)(2), 17 C.F.R. §
240.14d-10(a)(2). Section 14(d)(7) provides
that when a bidder "varies the terms of a
tender offer ... before the expiration
thereof by increasing the consideration
offered to holders of such securities," it
must apply the increase to all shares
acquired under the offer. The Distributor
Agreement, which was in place from the
start, is hard to characterize as an
"increase" in compensation. Rule
14d-10(a)(2), adopted in 1986, is broader.
It forbids any tender offer that does not
satisfy this condition:
The consideration paid to any security
holder pursuant to the tender offer is the
highest consideration paid to any other
security holder during such tender offer.
According to Lerro and Duty,
profits anticipated under the Distributor
Agreement are consideration Lee received in
his role as a
Page 241 security holder, which per Rule 14d-10(a)(2)
must be paid to everyone else who tendered
into the offer.
Quaker Oats believes that the
Distributor Agreement is a substitute for
Select's existing contractual rights (it had
perpetual distribution rights for some
Snapple products) rather than compensation
for anyone's shares. Moreover, Quaker Oats
submits, the valuation of such a contract as
of November 1994 would be next to
impossible, because Select's profits
depended on how fast it could increase
beverage sales--indeed, on whether it could
avoid termination under the "tests for
increasing distribution penetration and
available visicoolers". Lee was not required
by the Internal Revenue Code to treat the
present value of the flow of future profits
as a capital gain realized in November 1994
from the sale of stock, and one may doubt
whether it would be sound to try to
capitalize those profits for other purposes.
There is also some question whether Rule
14d-10(a)(2) creates a private right of
action for damages.
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.,
430 U.S. 1, 97 S.Ct. 926, 51 L.Ed.2d 124 (1977),
with
Epstein v. MCA, Inc., 50 F.3d 644, 649-52
(9th Cir.1995), reversed on other
grounds under the name
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v.
Epstein, --- U.S. ----, 116 S.Ct. 873, 134
L.Ed.2d 6 (1996).
Instead of deciding the case on
any of these grounds-some of which might
have required factual development-the
district judge assumed that the Distributor
Agreement compensated Lee for his shares in
Snapple but dismissed the suit anyway under
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Plaintiffs could not
state a claim, the judge concluded, because
the Distributor Agreement had been signed
before the tender offer began and therefore
fell outside Rule 14d-10(a)(2), which
requires only that the bidder pay every
tendering investor the "highest
consideration paid to any other security
holder during such tender offer" (emphasis
added). If Quaker Oats had purchased all of
Lee's shares for $20 apiece on November 1,
the district judge believed, it still could
have offered $14 to the remaining investors.
Treating the Distributor Agreement as a
premium for each of Lee's shares is the same
as a higher cash price in advance, the court
thought. A holding that the offer did not
"commence" until after November 1 polished
off the case. (Delaware law permits unequal
division of the gains from transactions in
corporate control, and plaintiffs therefore
did not present any state-law ground for
laying claim to a portion of the value of
the
Distributor Agreement. See Weinberger v.
UOP, Inc.,
457 A.2d 701 (Del.1983);
Fins v. Pearlman, 424 A.2d 305 (Del.1980).)
II
Before we tackle the
securities-law issues, we address the
district court's alternative ground of
decision: that plaintiffs forfeited all of
their arguments by failing to object within
10 days after a magistrate judge recommended
dismissal of the complaint.
Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 106 S.Ct. 466,
88 L.Ed.2d 435 (1985); Video Views, Inc.
v. Studio 21, Ltd., 797 F.2d 538 (7th
Cir.1986). The magistrate judge filed his
report and recommendation on August 2, 1995,
and served it on the parties the same day.
Plaintiffs filed their objections on August
18. The district judge held that plaintiffs
had only until August 15. The dispositive
question is whether the additional time when
service is by mail (as the magistrate
judge's report was served), see Fed.R.Civ.P.
6(d), is added before or after the
application of Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(a). Perhaps we
could duck this question, because, in
addition to finding the plaintiffs'
objections untimely, the district judge
decided the case on the merits--as he had
every right to do, for this time limit is
not jurisdictional.
Hunger v. Leininger, 15 F.3d 664, 668 (7th
Cir.1994). But because the question has
divided the judges of the district court and
has a potential to trip up lawyers in other
cases--where district judges may not be so
forgiving--we think it prudent to address
the question now.
"Within 10 days after being
served with a copy of the recommended
disposition, a party may serve and file
specific, written objections to the proposed
findings and recommendations." Fed.R.Civ.P.
72(b). Because Rule 72(b) requires the
magistrate judge to "serve," rather than
just to "file," the recommendation,
Page 242 Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(e) comes into play: "Whenever
a party has the right or is required to do
some act or take some proceedings within a
prescribed period after the service of a
notice or other paper upon the party and the
notice or paper is served upon the party by
mail, 3 days shall be added to the
prescribed period."
Contrast Lorenz v. Valley Forge Insurance
Co., 23 F.3d 1259 (7th Cir.1994) (when
judicial action is complete on filing, Rule
6(e) does not apply). The magistrate judge's
report was served by mail. Then there is
Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(a), part of which says: "When
the period of time prescribed or allowed is
less than 11 days, intermediate Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal holidays shall be
excluded in the computation." How do these
three rules fit together?
The district judge began with the
10 days provided by Rule 72(b) and added 3
days under Rule 6(e). Because the total is
13, the judge concluded that Rule 6(a) does
not apply. A competing way to count applies
Rule 6(a) before Rule 6(e). The 10 days
provided by Rule 72(b) are fewer than 11, so
Rule 6(a) excludes weekends and holidays.
That turns 10 days into 14 (two weekends and
no holidays during the period in question),
plus 3 for service by mail, for a total of
17 calendar days. Service occurred on August
2, 1995, making the objections due on August
19, a Saturday. Another part of Rule 6(a)
allows parties to file the next day the
court is open--here, on Monday, August 21.
Plaintiffs filed on Friday, August 18,
timely if this method of counting is right.
Neither Rule 6 nor the committee
note explaining its rationale discusses
whether to apply Rule 6(a) before or after
Rule 6(e). The text could support either
approach. Weekends are excluded, under Rule
6(a), "[w]hen the period of time prescribed
or allowed is less than 11 days". But what
is "the period of time"? The district judge
thought that "the period of time" is the sum
of all allowable periods; but one could as
easily say that the period of time is the
one that would govern in the absence of Rule
6 (here, 10 days under Rule 72(b) to file
objections) rather than the total time
allowed by the interplay of rules. Referring
to the specific rule rather than to the rule
plus extensions is simpler; it is also more
sensible. See Charles Alan Wright & Arthur
R. Miller, 4A Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1171 at 516-21 (1987).
Rule 6(e) is designed to give a
litigant approximately the same effective
time to respond whether papers are served by
hand or by mail. If service is by hand, then
the time to respond starts immediately; if
service is by mail, the party receives three
extra days as an approximation of the time
required for mail delivery, and on average
should have the same number of days to act
as he would have had following service in
hand. We know from Rules 72(b) and 6(a)
that, if the magistrate judge had passed his
decision over the bench to counsel,
plaintiffs would have had 14 calendar days
to file objections. It would be queer if
service by mail, which delays actual
knowledge of the decision, would reduce the
time to object. Yet that is the effect of
adding time under Rule 6(e) first; the time
would fall from 14 calendar days for
personal service to 13 calendar days for
service by mail. And because mail delivery
takes time (plaintiffs say that it took five
days), the time available to act can be
curtailed substantially--here, to eight
calendar days. Interactions within a complex
set of rules sometimes can have unexpected
and unwelcome effects, but we should not
create them when the text readily can bear
another meaning. The only way to carry out
Rule 6(e)'s function of adding time to
compensate for delays in mail delivery is to
employ Rule 6(a) first. The objection to the
magistrate judge's report therefore is
timely.
III
The district court's analysis of
the merits depends on its conclusion that,
so far as the Williams Act and Rule
14d-10(a)(2) are concerned, Quaker Oats
could have bought Lee's shares at $20 (or
$50) apiece the day before commencing the
tender offer, without objection from other
investors. Is that true? Certainly it is
consistent with the language of the rule,
which gives every investor whose shares are
acquired as part of the offer "the highest
consideration paid to any other security
holder during such tender offer" (emphasis
added). Everyone who tenders
Page 243 receives the highest price paid "during the
tender offer"--not, as plaintiffs would have
it, that the minimum price "during the
tender offer" is set by a price paid at some
other time. Before the offer is not "during"
the offer. Many cases, such as
Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., --- U.S. ----, 115
S.Ct. 1061, 131 L.Ed.2d 1 (1995), and
Central Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First
Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A., --- U.S.
----, 114 S.Ct. 1439, 128 L.Ed.2d 119
(1994), tell us to respect the language of
the securities statutes and regulations. The
difference between "during" and "before" (or
"after") is not just linguistic. It is
essential to permit everyone to participate
in the markets near the time of a tender
offer. Bidders are forbidden to buy or sell
on the open market or via negotiated
transactions during an offer, see Rule
10b-13(a), but they are free to transact
until an offer begins, or immediately after
it ends. Several courts accordingly have
held that these transactions do not
establish a floor under the price to be paid
for shares tendered into the offer.
Kramer v. Time Warner Inc., 937 F.2d 767,
778-79 (2d Cir.1991);
Hanson Trust PLC v. SCM Corp.,
774 F.2d 47
(2d Cir.1985);
Kahn v. Virginia Retirement System, 783
F.Supp. 266, 269-70 (E.D.Va.1992),
affirmed on other grounds,
13 F.3d 110 (4th
Cir.1993);
Priddy v. Edelman, 679 F.Supp. 1425, 1431-32
(E.D.Mich.1988), affirmed on other
grounds, 883 F.2d 438, 446 (6th Cir.1989).
Purchases near in time to a
tender offer, but outside it, may be
essential to transactions that all investors
find beneficial. Controlling shareholders
often receive indirect or non-monetary
benefits and are unwilling to part with
their stock (and hence with control) for a
price that outside investors find
attractive. At the same time, potential
bidders may be unable to profit by paying
everyone the price essential to separate the
insiders from their shares. Suppose a firm's
stock is trading for $20, insiders who hold
30 percent of the firm would not sell for
less than $30, and a potential bidder values
the entire firm at $25 per share. An offer
of $25 for all stock would not attract the
insiders' shares; and as a practical matter
(if not a legal matter under some states'
laws), failure to attract the control bloc
would doom the offer. The transaction would
be feasible, however, if the acquiror could
pay $30 to the control group before the bid
commences and acquire the rest of the stock
at $22 per share, for an average price of
$24.40. Everyone is better off: the public
investors prefer $22 to $20; the control
group is happy; the bidder anticipates a
profit of 60cents per share. Treating the
Williams Act as a mandate for an identical
price across the board--as opposed to an
identical price for all shares acquired in
the offer--would make all investors worse
off.
Just as those who sell for $15
today cannot complain if their trading
partner pays $20 to someone else tomorrow,
those who sell in the market a day before
the offer starts are not entitled to the
higher price paid to those who wait (nor are
those who sell in the offer entitled to a
higher price paid before or after its
duration); the point of Rules 10b-13,
14d-10, and their cousins is to demark
clearly the periods during which the special
Williams Act rules apply. Once the offer
begins, professional investors and amateurs
receive the same price. That is the
objective of § 14(d)(7) and Rule 14d-10.
Persons who make tender offers do not lose
their ability to participate as investors
for undefined periods "near" the time of the
offer. With millions or even billions of
dollars at stake, precise definition of the
blackout period is essential, and the SEC
has accordingly consistently differentiated
actions "during" an offer from those close
to the offer's beginning or end. The line is
arbitrary, to be sure; it invites
transactions that use the rules for personal
advantage ("tax planning" is a respected
specialty of the bar, while "tax evasion" is
a felony); but some line is essential, and
it had best be a bright one.
Against this conclusion, which
rests on both the language and the function
of the rules, plaintiffs set
Field v. Trump,
850 F.2d 938 (2d Cir.1988),
and Epstein v. MCA, supra. Field applies a
step-transaction approach to include within
a tender offer a transaction that occurred
between two offers. The bidder commenced an
offer, dropped it for a day, and then made a
second offer. During the single day in which
no offer was formally outstanding, the
bidder acquired one family's stock at a
price exceeding that
Page 244 paid to other investors in the second,
completed tender offer. The second circuit
held that the first and second offers should
be integrated with the intervening day's
purchases to form a single transaction;
understood in this way, the purchase in the
middle was an increase in compensation
covered by § 14(d)(7). "Integration" of
purchases or sales in this fashion is
standard fare under the securities laws,
which apply to whole "offers" or "offerings"
and therefore require courts to establish
whether a particular course of conduct is an
"offering." Trump did not suggest that its
conclusion--that purchases between two
offers were during a single integrated
offer--required a modification of Hanson
Trust, which concluded that "street sweep"
purchases within hours after the end of a
tender offer are not subject to the Williams
Act rules. Kramer, which the second circuit
decided after Field, holds that a
transaction similar to the one between Lee
and Quaker Oats does not offend Rule 14d-10.
Epstein does not present an
integration or step-transaction problem.
Matsushita wanted to acquire MCA and was
willing to pay $71 per share. Two of MCA's
largest investors had substantial blocks of
stock with a basis of 3? per share. Taxes on
the recognition of $70.97 per share made the
offer unattractive to them. Matsushita
offered these two investors a special deal,
under which shares would be exchanged
(without recognition of gain) rather than
purchased. A subsidiary of Matsushita
swapped its own preferred stock for the
common stock of MCA. Problems under Rule
14d-10 arose because Matsushita funded the
subsidiary at 106 percent of the price paid
in the tender offer--and because the
exchange did not occur until the tender
offer had succeeded. Until then, both sides
were free to back out. Epstein lacks
precedential value; the Supreme Court
vacated the judgment after concluding that
the ninth circuit should not have reached
the merits in light of a prior settlement of
class litigation in Delaware. Whatever
persuasive force the opinion retains does
not assist our plaintiffs, because Epstein
simply does not address the proper treatment
of a transaction completed before a tender
offer begins--except in dictum that favors
Quaker Oats. "If, in advance of the tender
offer, [the investor] had become
unconditionally obligated to exchange his
MCA shares, the transaction would not have
violated Rule 14d-10, even if Matsushita
believed that acquiring [the] shares was a
first step in acquiring MCA." 50 F.3d at
656-57. On this understanding, neither the
second nor the ninth circuit would see a
problem in the transaction by which Quaker
Oats acquired Snapple.
Of course, all of this assumes
that the transaction between Stokley-Van
Camp and THL (and therefore between Quaker
Oats and Lee) really did precede the
commencement of the tender offer.
Plaintiffs' complaint alleges, and we
therefore assume, that the Distributor
Agreement was integral to the transaction,
in the sense that Quaker Oats would not have
launched the bid unless it knew that Lee was
satisfied with the terms. The Distributor
Agreement was signed on November 1, but its
effect depended on the merger and obviously
was bound up with the tender offer too (Lee
promised to tender his shares and gave
Quaker Oats an option on them). Nonetheless,
this does not establish that Quaker Oats
paid Lee more than $14 per share "during"
the tender offer. The agreements were signed
before the offer began, and were effective
with a merger that occurred later. Kramer
rejects, rightly we think, any argument that
a follow-up merger should be integrated with
a tender offer. They are different
transactions, under different bodies of law
(federal law regulates the tender offer and
state law the merger). Accepting plaintiffs'
request to treat the tender offer and the
merger as a single step would imperil
countless ordinary transactions--from
two-tier tender offer and merger sequences
(with different prices, or different forms
of securities, offered in the two tiers) to
simple employment agreements under which the
surviving entity promises to employ managers
for stated terms or give severance pay.
Suppose a firm's CEO, who is also a
shareholder, negotiates a deal under which
his contract will be extended for two years
after an acquisition. Must a court attempt
to determine how much in advance of two
years the CEO would have been eased out, but
for the agreement? On plaintiffs'
Page 245 view the difference is a "premium" for the
CEO's shares, payable to all other investors
too. Yet none of the regulations
implementing the Williams Act requires
managerial salary, or Golden Parachute
payments, to be imputed to stock and offered
to non-managers as well.
Doubtless there are limits to the
use of a follow-up merger as a means to
deliver extra compensation. Suppose Quaker
Oats had promised Lee $14 for each share he
tendered during the offer, plus another $6
for each of these shares one month later.
Just as tax law requires "boot" to be
treated as a gain received from the sale of
stock, securities law treats "boot" as a
payment during the tender offer. But as we
have already mentioned, the Internal Revenue
Code does not require Lee to treat the
present value of THL's profits as part of
the price realized on the exchange of Lee's
shares in Snapple, and we see no reason to
devise a broader attribution doctrine under
the securities laws. Plaintiffs have not
alleged that Lee and Quaker Oats devised a
boot transaction, and we therefore need not
decide how such deals should be treated
under Rule 14d-10. Plaintiffs' own complaint
alleges that Lee controlled enough shares to
ensure the success of Quaker's bid, so the
"success and merger" contingency in the
Distributor Agreement was theoretical only.
Because transactions before or
after a tender offer are outside the scope
of Rule 14d-10, we must decide whether the
transactions at issue preceded the tender
offer. Rule 14d-2(a) addresses this
directly:
A tender offer shall commence for the
purposes of section 14(d) of the Act and the
rules promulgated thereunder at 12:01 A.M.
on the date when the first of the following
events occurs:
(1) The long form publication of the
tender offer is first published by the
bidder pursuant to Rule 14d-4 (a)(1);
(2) The summary advertisement of the
tender offer is first published by the
bidder pursuant to Rule 14d-4 (a)(2);
(3) The summary advertisement or the long
form publication of the tender offer is
first published by the bidder pursuant to
Rule 14d-4(a)(3);
(4) Definitive copies of a tender offer,
in which the consideration offered by the
bidder consists of securities registered
pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, are
first published or sent or given by the
bidder to security holders; or
(5) The tender offer is first published
or sent or given to security holders by the
bidder by any means not otherwise referred
to in paragraphs (a)(1) through (4) of this
rule.
The Merger Agreement and
Distributor Agreement were signed on
November 1, 1994. News of an impending bid
first reached the public, via the Dow Jones
News Wire, on November 2, and the tender
offer was formally announced on November 4,
commencing it on that date.
Not so, plaintiffs insist. They
believe that the offer commenced even before
November 1 under Rule 14d-2(a)(5), because
it was "given" to Lee and other Snapple
insiders before then. How could they
negotiate the agreements and promise to
tender their shares, plaintiffs ask, if an
offer had not been extended? Plaintiffs read
"security holders" in Rule 14d-2(a)(5) to
mean any security holder, rather than
investors in general; on plaintiffs'
understanding, a tender offer "commences" as
soon as a potential bidder opens negotiation
with a potential target's management. Yet no
case or administrative interpretation
supports that understanding. Rule 14d-2
contemplates general publication or notice,
as the SEC's explanation confirms. 44
Fed.Reg. 70340 (Dec. 6, 1979). Under the
rule, "the tender offer" means the
definitive announcement, not negotiations
looking toward an offer. No one supposes
that a public offer of securities begins,
for purposes of § 5 of the 1933 Act, when a
firm and its investment bank open private
conversations; why should a tender offer be
treated differently? The language "first
published or sent or given to security
holders" comes from § 14(d)(1) of the Act,
and Rule 14d-4(a) elaborates by defining
this event as the transmission of the forms
required by statute and regulation; that
step necessarily follows rather than
precedes negotiations.
Page 246
Treating private negotiations as
the "commencement" of a tender offer would
have effects far beyond requiring Quaker
Oats to pay a little more than $14 per share
to Snapple's public investors. For starters,
it would forbid outright the kind of bargain
that Quaker and Snapple's managers reached.
Under Rule 10b-13(a), once a tender offer
begins, the bidder cannot acquire shares (or
options) in negotiated transactions.
Inability to reach a modus vivendi would
make bids less attractive, reduce the prices
bidders are willing to pay, or both--to the
detriment of the investors Congress set out
to protect. If the offer commences when
negotiations open, then potential bidders
must get out of the public markets too. And
that is not all. The Williams Act and the
accompanying regulations are crammed with
timetables measured from the commencement of
the bid. As soon as an offer commences, the
bidder must file and transmit to investors
several complex forms and schedules. See
Rules 14d-3, 14d-6. This can hardly be done
at the outset of negotiations, yet on
plaintiffs' view the entire offer was
unlawful because it was commenced long
before the required forms were disseminated.
Under Rule 14e-1(a), a tender offer must be
held open for 20 days from the time it is
"first published or sent or given to
security holders". This period is designed
to afford even amateur investors time to
read the documents, decide what to do, and
tender their shares. But if plaintiffs are
right, and the offer is "first published or
sent or given to security holders" when
private negotiations begin, then the 20 days
may be up before the public announcement,
and the "Saturday night special" offer--open
only to the cognoscenti--would again be
lawful. Similarly, the times for withdrawal,
proration rights, and so on, run from
commencement of the offer and would be
disrupted if not nullified by a conclusion
that a private negotiation marks the
commencement. It would defeat the purposes
of the Williams Act and the SEC's
regulations to close the proration pool
before the public learns of the offer. It
would wreak havoc to say that the operation
of all of the clocks cannot be known until,
years after the events, a judge declares
when negotiations became sufficiently
serious to mark the commencement of the
offer. Everything depends on making the
times start from a public announcement--and
on making that time as clear as humanly
possible. That is the function of Rule
14d-2.
Plaintiffs remind us that neither
the Williams Act nor the SEC's regulations
defines "tender offer." That term has been
frustratingly difficult to encapsulate.
Hanson Trust with SEC v. Carter Hawley Hale
Stores, Inc.,
760 F.2d 945 (9th Cir.1985).
True enough, but our case is about "when"
rather than "what." Quaker Oats made a
traditional tender offer. The commencement
date for such an offer is rigorously
defined. This offer commenced at 12:01 A.M.
on November 4, 1994. There are no facts to
find or inferences to draw in the district
court; plaintiffs concede that the public
announcement by the bidder occurred on that
date. From this conclusion everything else
follows, and the judgment is
AFFIRMED. |