| Page 60 860 F.2d 60
57 USLW 2304, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
94,065 CITY CAPITAL ASSOCIATES LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP, Cardinal
Holdings Corp. and Cardinal Acquisition
Corp.
v.
INTERCO INCORPORATED, a Delaware
Corporation, Harvey
Saligman, Richard B. Loynd, R. Stuart Moore,
Charles J.
Rothschild, Jr., Ronald L. Aylward, Donald
E. Lasater, Harry
M. Krogh, Lee Lieberman, Mark H. Lieberman,
Robert H.
Quenon, William E. Cornelius, Marilyn S.
Lewis and Thomas H.
O'Leary, and Charles M. Oberly, III,
Attorney General of the
State of Delaware, and Michael E. Harkins,
Secretary of
State of Delaware.
INTERCO INCORPORATED, Counterclaimant and
Third Party Plaintiff,
v.
CARDINAL ACQUISITION CORP., Cardinal
Holdings Corp., City
Capital Associates Limited Partnership,
Counterclaim Defendants,
and
Steven M. Rales, Mitchell P. Rales, City GP
I, Inc., City GP
II, Inc., ASM Group, Inc., and Arthur M.
Bylin,
Third Party Defendants.
Appeal of INTERCO INCORPORATED, a Delaware
corporation
("Interco"), Counterclaimant and Third Party
Plaintiff. No. 88-3645. United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit. Argued Oct. 11, 1988.
Decided Oct. 20, 1988.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc and
Application for
Injunction Denied
Nov. 1, 1988.
Page 61
John Michael Clear, Terrence J.
O'Toole, J. Thomas Archer, Bryan, Cave,
McPheeters & McRoberts, St. Louis, Mo.,
Charles F. Richards, Jr., Thomas A. Beck, C.
Stephen Bigler, Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, Del., Steven M. Barna, Michael
W. Schwartz (argued), Robert A. Ragazzo,
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New York
City, for Interco Inc. et al.
Rodman Ward, Jr., Jay B. Kasner,
Charles L. Glick, Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, Wilmington, Del., Robert E.
Zimet (argued), Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, New York City, for
counterclaim defendants and third party
defendants appellees.
Before GIBBONS, Chief Judge, and
STAPLETON, and WEIS, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
STAPLETON, Circuit Judge:
This suit was instituted by City
Capital Associates Limited Partnership (City
Capital) seeking preliminary and permanent
injunctive relief against Interco
Incorporated (Interco), and certain Delaware
officials to foreclose application of
Section 203 of the General Corporation Law
of Delaware, Del.Code Ann.Tit. 8, Sec. 203
(1987), to City Capital's tender offer for
Interco stock. Interco counterclaimed
alleging violations of the Williams Act. The
district court denied Interco's motion for a
preliminary injunction on its counterclaim,
696 F.Supp. 1551, and this appeal followed.
The appeal raises only a single Williams Act
issue.
I.
Interco, formerly known as
International Shoe Company, is a St. Louis
business with total assets of approximately
$2 billion and a shareholder's equity of
$1.2 billion dollars. The company is listed
on the New York and Midwest Stock Exchanges
and has 36 million shares outstanding. City
Capital is a partnership owned by two
limited partners who each have a one (1%)
percent interest and two general partners,
City GP I, Inc. (City GP I) and City GP II,
Inc. (City GP II) which each own forty-nine
(49%) percent. Steven M. Rales is the sole
stockholder of City GP I and his brother,
Mitchell P. Rales, is the sole stockholder
in City GP II. City Capital owns 100% of
Cardinal Holdings Corporation (Holdings)
which in turn owns 100% of Cardinal
Acquisition Corp. (Acquisition), the entity
that is making the tender offer for Interco
stock. Acquisition was organized by City
Capital as a vehicle for the acquisition of
Interco stock.
On July 18, 1988, City Capital,
City GP I, City GP II, Steven Rales and
Mitchell Rales filed a Schedule 13D with the
Securities and Exchange Commission advising
that City Capital had acquired 8.10 percent
of Interco stock. On July 27, 1988, City
Capital proposed a friendly merger with
Interco at $64 per share and on August 8,
1988, increased the offer to $70 per share.
Interco's Board of Directors, maintaining
that the company's shares were fairly valued
at $76 each, rejected the merger offer. On
August 15, 1988, Acquisition, Holdings, City
Capital, City GP I, City GP II, Steven
Page 62 Rales and Mitchell Rales filed a Schedule
13D and a Schedule 14D-1 notifying the SEC
of a hostile takeover bid for Interco shares
to be made by Acquisition as the "bidder,"
at $70. This tender offer commenced on
August 15, 1988. The bid price has since
been increased to $72.
The tender materials disclose
that $2.6 billion in financing will be
required to consummate the tender offer. It
is expected that $1.225 billion will be
borrowed from a syndicate of banks led by
Chase National Bank (Chase). Drexel Burnham
Lambert, Inc. (Drexel) has been engaged to
raise the remaining $1.375 billion through
the sale of preferred securities of
Acquisition. Acquisition's obligation to
purchase tendered shares is conditioned,
among other things, upon the tender of a
sufficient number of shares which, when
added to the Interco shares owned by City
Capital, will constitute 75% of the
outstanding Interco stock. If the tender is
successful it is expected that Interco will
be combined with Acquisition or one of its
affiliates in a merger in which each share
of Interco, other than shares owned by
Acquisition or its affiliates or by Interco
stockholders who have perfected their
appraisal rights, will be cashed out for an
amount equal to the price paid in the tender
offer. While preferred and common stock of
Acquisition will be issued in connection
with the financing of the offer, City
Capital will retain a minimum of 63% of the
common stock of Acquisition, through
Holdings or otherwise, and thus will remain
in control of Acquisition.
The tender offer materials also
disclose the consideration to be received by
Drexel for its services as financial adviser
and dealer manager. City Capital agreed to
make available to Drexel or its designees
between 29% and 36% of the common equity of
Acquisition, depending upon the amount of
preferred stock Drexel is asked to sell. The
right to place the common equity was sought
by Drexel so that it could offer common
equity as a "sweetener" to prospective
purchasers in order to encourage them to
purchase the preferred securities that
Drexel has undertaken to place. However,
Drexel has the right to keep for itself up
to one-half of the 36%. Drexel is under no
obligation to purchase any equity interest
in Acquisition.
1
In connection with the placement of the
preferred stock, Drexel is also entitled to
a $12 million fee if the takeover is
successful and a $6 million fee if it is
not. Further, Drexel is promised a 1.125%
fee for funds for which it secures written
commitments, and 3 percent to 5.25 percent
of the total gross proceeds from the sale of
debt or equity securities it underwrites. In
addition, Drexel is to receive a $2 million
fee for performing exclusive financial
adviser services and is to receive $1
million for acting as dealer manager.
Finally, Drexel has the right to 15% of
profits the Rales brothers make in the event
that acquired shares are sold following an
unsuccessful takeover.
The tender offer materials
further disclosed that Drexel has received
subpoenas from a grand jury investigation in
New York and is the subject of an impending
SEC civil enforcement action.
On September 9, 1988, Interco
filed a counterclaim alleging that the
tender offer violated the Williams Act and
the regulations thereunder in that (1) the
tender materials failed to disclose that the
proposed transaction would violate the
margin requirements because the "preferred"
stock is in reality debt, (2) those
materials also failed to disclose that the
transaction would violate the Hart-Scott
Act, and (3) both Drexel and Chase were
"bidders", as that concept is employed in
the Williams Act regulations, and both had
failed to make the filings and disclosures
required of "bidders" under those
regulations. Interco stockholders were
advised of the filing of this counterclaim
and of these contentions in supplemental
tender offer materials.
Page 63
Discovery concerning the tender
offer, including depositions of the Drexel
personnel involved in the tender, was
conducted prior to the September 16, 1988
presentation of Interco's motion for a
preliminary injunction to the district court
and numerous affidavits, documentary
exhibits and deposition excerpts were
submitted supporting and opposing that
motion. On September 23, 1988, the district
court filed its opinion finding that Interco
had failed to show a likelihood of success
on any of its contentions. In particular,
the district court concluded that neither
Drexel nor Chase was a "bidder."
On October 3, 1988, Interco
appealed from the order denying its motion
for a preliminary injunction. We expedited
consideration of the appeal and heard
argument October 11, 1988. Before us,
Interco contends only that Drexel is a
"bidder" and that, accordingly, the tender
offer has been made in violation of the
applicable Williams Act regulations. 17
C.F.R. Sec. 240.14d-1 to Sec. 240.14d-101
(1987).
II.
We agree with Interco that the
Williams Act was intended to require one
making a tender offer of the requisite size
to disclose all information material to
decisions about the tender offer. However,
there is no dispute that in connection with
the tender offer giving rise to this case,
Acquisition, Holdings, City Capital, City GP
I, City GP II, Steven M. Rales and Mitchell
P. Rales filed a timely and complete
Schedule 14D-1 as "reporting persons."
2 Despite
Interco's access to the documents,
employees, and agents of both these entities
and Drexel, it has been unable to point to
any material misrepresentation or material
omission in these filings.
3
In particular, Interco can point to no
material misrepresentation or omission about
the role of Drexel in the proposed
transaction. As a result, it is forced to
argue that Drexel is a "bidder" as that term
is used in the regulations adopted under
Section 14D and that the Schedule 14D filing
is deficient because it includes no Drexel
financials. In support of this contention,
Interco cites the evidence indicating that
Drexel will be paid very substantial fees
for services rendered in connection with the
tender offer and will receive for itself and
its designees the right to purchase between
29% and 36% of the common equity of the
corporation that will purchase the tendered
stock. In our view, the former evidence is
irrelevant to the "bidder" issue and the
latter is insufficient to make Drexel a
"bidder."
The undisputed facts of record
indicate that the Rales brothers decided to
make a tender for Interco stock and, in
fact, made an offer at $64 per share before
engaging the services of Drexel.
4 While the Raleses
subsequently enlisted Drexel's assistance
and agreed to pay its substantial fees and
grant it the above-referenced option, there
is no indication that the Raleses
relinquished to Drexel any control over the
tender offer. Moreover, it is undisputed
that City Capital will retain at least 63%
of the common stock of the purchaser of the
tendered shares and there is no evidence
that Drexel is to have any role with respect
to the purchaser other than that of an
investor.
5
Accordingly, the legal issue presented is
whether the filing by the Rales
Page 64 brothers and their related entities of a
Schedule 14D, both complete and accurate
from their perspective, satisfied the
disclosure requirements of the Act or
whether a person who will hold a minority
investment position in the surviving entity
must also file a similar schedule, viewing
itself as an additional "bidder."
Before turning to this issue it
is important to stress two considerations
that must guide our analysis. First, the
Securities and Exchange Commission has been
entrusted by Congress with the
interpretation, administration, and
enforcement of the Securities Acts. As a
result, we must defer to its interpretation
of the Williams Act and the regulations
thereunder unless we are prepared to say
there is a conflict between those
interpretations and the Congressional
mandate.
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Chenery
Corporation, 332 U.S. 194, 67 S.Ct. 1575, 91
L.Ed. 1995 (1947); Chevron,
U.S.A. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 467
U.S. 837, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694
(1984). Second, this is an area of the
law in which predictability is of crucial
importance. The regulations are provided for
the guidance of those seeking to comply with
the law and it would be a serious mistake to
reach a result in this case of which the
regulations do not give fair notice. Thus,
we must be constrained by a fair reading of
the text of the regulations even if we might
reach a different result were we charged
with the responsibility of promulgating
regulations to implement the Williams Act.
The Williams Act mandates that
persons intending to make certain tender
offers disclose such information as the SEC
directs. Under the regulations that
implement this mandate, the required
information is specified in the Schedule
that constitutes a part of the regulations.
17 C.F.R. Secs. 240.14d-6(e); 240.14d-100.
In spelling out the extent of the required
disclosure, both the regulations and the
Schedule use the word "bidder," a term not
found in the Act itself. The regulations
define "bidder" to mean "any person who
makes a tender offer or on whose behalf a
tender offer is made." Sec. 240.14d-1.
Schedule 14D defines "bidder" to mean simply
"any person on whose behalf a tender offer
is made." Sec. 240.14d-100 General
Instruction G. We acknowledge that either of
these definitions could be interpreted,
depending on its context, to include the
stockholders of a corporation making an
offer to buy securities of the "subject" or
target company. In the context of the
regulations and the Schedule, however,
"bidder" is consistently used to describe
the person or entity that will purchase the
securities tendered. This is nowhere more
apparent than in the part of Schedule 14D
that imposes the disclosure requirement
relied upon by Interco. Item 9 of Schedule
14D provides:
Where the bidder is other than a natural
person and the bidder's financial condition
is material to a decision by a security
holder of the subject company whether to
sell, tender or hold securities being sought
in the tender offer, furnish current,
adequate financial information concerning
the bidder; Provided, That if the bidder is
controlled by another entity which is not a
natural person and has been formed for the
purpose of making the tender offer, furnish
current, adequate financial information
concerning such parent.
The "proviso" of this Item makes
it clear that the SEC does not understand
"bidder" to include the stockholder of a
corporation making a tender offer even when
that corporation has been formed for the
sole purpose of making the offer. Moreover,
Item 9 reveals that the Commission has
focused on precisely the issue we here
confront, i.e., when should financials of
someone other than the one making the bid
and intending to purchase the securities be
required. The answer provided by the
Commission for a situation of the kind
before us is that the entity controlling the
"bidder" must provide financial information
whenever that information would be "material
to a decision by a security holder of the
subject company."
The Schedule addresses similar
issues with respect to other information,
makes similar distinctions between the
"bidder" and others associated with the
"bidder," and provides similar answers. Item
10, for
Page 65 example, requires disclosure not only of any
material "contracts, arrangements or
understandings" between the "bidder" and the
subject company, but also of any such
relationship between persons "controlling"
the "bidder" and the subject company.
Indeed, General Instruction C of Schedule
14D requires that, unless otherwise
specified, information relating to each
"controlling person" must be provided in
response to all Items.
The regulations and the Schedule
simply do not communicate to any lawyer or
layman attempting to comply with the law
that financials are required from an entity
that ultimately will be a minority
stockholder in a corporation making a tender
offer. Indeed, the regulations and the
Schedule fairly read send exactly the
opposite message and the message they do
send is precisely the message one reading
them would expect. Where a stockholder of a
corporation making a tender offer is in a
position to have a significant impact on the
future of that corporation, information
about the stockholder may well be material
to a decision of stockholders of the target
whether to take the offer or hang on with
the hope of a greater return.
Prudent Real Estate Trust v. Johncamp
Realty, Inc., 599 F.2d 1140, 1147 (2d
Cir.1979). The same is not true,
however, when one is speaking of a
stockholder that has not been shown to
possess the potential for significantly
affecting the future of the corporation
making the tender.
This brings us to a final point.
Under Item 9, financials are not required
even from a "bidder" unless they would be
"material to a decision by a security holder
of the subject company whether to sell,
tender or hold securities being sought in
the tender offer." Thus, even if Interco
were legally correct in contending that
Drexel is a "bidder," the failure to provide
Drexel's financials would be a ground for
enjoining consummation of the tender offer
only if Interco had shown some basis for
believing that those financials would
provide information that Interco's
stockholders would find of interest in
responding to the tender offer. During
discovery Interco had access to Drexel's
financials and we see no reason why we
should presume that those documents would be
of interest without any record basis for so
concluding. Where the financials at issue
are those of a controlling entity, such a
presumption might well be appropriate, but
not here.
6
III.
Since Interco has failed to show
a likelihood of success on its contention
that disclosure of Drexel's financials were
required by the regulations, the order of
the district court denying a preliminary
injunction will be affirmed and this court's
injunction pending further order of the
court will be vacated. The mandate will
issue forthwith.
WEIS, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
The issue before us is a narrow
one--whether Drexel Burnham Lambert is a
"bidder" required to make certain
disclosures under the Williams Act. The
district judge believed that, in its
activities at issue here, Drexel Burnham
"has gotten dangerously close to the point
at which this Court would not hesitate to
classify Drexel Burnham as a bidder." I am
convinced that Drexel passed that point and
is within the class of persons Congress
intended to be governed by the Williams Act.
In cases such as this where a
regulatory agency lurks in the wings, there
is an unfortunate tendency for the litigants
to rely almost entirely on regulations,
rulings, releases, and other appendages
rather than referring to the governing
statute itself. The agency publications are
then construed by the litigants in the
manner most favorable to their best
interests, seizing upon
Page 66 isolated administrative utterances to
bolster the arguments and in the process
losing sight of the plain language of the
legislative enactment and its evident
intent.
The resolution of the issue
before us should begin with the statute
itself. The Williams Act provides in
pertinent part:
"It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly, ... to make a tender
offer for ... any class of any equity
security ... if, after consummation thereof,
such person would, directly or indirectly,
be the beneficial owner of more than five
per centum of such class, unless ... 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
prescribed as necessary or appropriate in
the public interest or for the protection of
investors."
15 U.S.C. Sec. 78n(d)(1).
Two observations on this language
are worth noting. First, the statute does
not use the word "bidder." Second, the
discretion entrusted to the Securities and
Exchange Commission--a quite broad
delegation--is to determine what "additional
information" beyond that listed in the
statute should be required of the "person"
making a tender. The statute does not
purport to grant the SEC discretion to
determine who shall file the statement with
the agency.
The Act provides a broad
definition of "person." "When two or more
persons act as a partnership, limited
partnership, syndicate, or other group for
the purpose of acquiring, holding, or
disposing of securities of an issuer, such
syndicate or group shall be deemed a
'person' for purposes of this subsection."
15 U.S.C. Sec. 78n(d)(2). Thus, the word
"person" includes not only its plural, but
entities such as partnerships, syndicates,
and "groups" as well.
The word "bidder" is a term that
the SEC adopted obviously for ease of
reference. In a 1979 Release, the agency
explained that the "terms 'bidder' and
'subject company' provide short-hand
references to the principal participants in
a tender offer and avoid certain pejorative
terms now commonly used to describe
participants in a tender offer. The term
'bidder' would mean any person who makes a
tender offer or on whose behalf a tender
offer is made." Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 15548, [1979 Transfer Binder]
Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p 81,935, at p. 81,216
(Feb. 5, 1979).
It is significant that in using
the term "principal participants" the SEC
Release was referring to both the bidder and
the subject company--not the bidder alone.
There is no basis to infer that "principal
participants" applies to only some of the
"bidders."
In a regulation, the SEC did
define "bidder" as "any person who makes a
tender offer or on whose behalf a tender
offer is made." 17 C.F.R. Sec.
240.14d-1(b)(1). This definition simply
tracks the language of the statute, however,
and does not purport to limit the class of
those required to comply with the Act. It
follows that the agency's use of the word
"bidder" must be read in harmony with the
statutory language and not as an attempt to
narrow the scope of the Act--action beyond
the Commission's authority. To avoid
terminological confusion, I shall also use
the word "bidder" as designating those
required by the Williams Act to make
disclosure.
The legislative history states
that the term "person" as used in section
14(d)(2) is identical with section 13(d)(3).
In explaining the latter subsection's
definition of person, the House Report
stated:
"This provision would prevent a group of
persons who seek to pool their voting or
other interests in the securities of an
issuer from evading the provisions of the
statute because no one individual owns more
than 10 percent of the securities. The group
would be deemed to have become the
beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of
more than 10 percent of a class of
securities at the time they agreed to act in
concert. Consequently, the group would be
required to file the information called for
in section 13d(1) within 10 days after they
agree to act together, whether or not any
member of the group had acquired any
securities at
Page 67 that time. This provision is designed to
obtain full disclosure of the identity of
any person or group obtaining the benefits
of ownership of securities by reason of any
contract, understanding, relationship,
agreement or other arrangement."
H.R.Rep. No. 1711, 90th Cong., 2d
Sess. (1968), reprinted in 1968 U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News 2811, 2818. Congress thus
intended that disclosure be made by those
expansively designated persons or groups
obtaining the benefit of securities
ownership through a variety of arrangements.
In defining the need for the
legislation, Congress acknowledged the
difficulties that a shareholder faces when
notified of a tender offer. Given the many
variables inherent in such offers, the
decision whether to accept the tender, sell
the stock in the market, or hold the shares
should be made on the basis of adequate
information. "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 2812. As the Committee
reasoned:
"The persons seeking control, however,
have information about themselves and about
their plans which, if known to investors,
might substantially change the assumptions
on which the market price is based. This
bill is designed to make the relevant facts
known so that shareholders have a fair
opportunity to make their decision....
"The bill avoids tipping the
balance of regulation either in favor of
management or in favor of the persons making
the takeover bid. It is designed to require
full and fair disclosure for the benefit of
investors while at the same time providing
the offeror and management equal opportunity
to fairly present their case.
"While the bill may discourage
tender offers or other attempts to acquire
control by some who are unwilling to expose
themselves to the light of disclosure, the
committee believes this is a small price to
pay for adequate investor protection."
Id. at 2813.
Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp., 422 U.S. 49,
57-58, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 2075-76, 45 L.Ed.2d 12
(1975); 11A E. Gadsby, Business
Organizations: The Federal Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 Sec. 7A.01 (A. Sommer
ed. 1988). As the Supreme Court
characterized the legislative intent, "what
Congress had in mind was the protection of
shareholders, the 'pawn[s] in a form of
industrial warfare.' "
Piper v. Chris-Craft Indus., 430 U.S. 1, 30,
97 S.Ct. 926, 943, 51 L.Ed.2d 124 (1977).
The need for full disclosure
during the pendency of the tender has been
echoed by the
Courts of Appeals. In Prudent Real Estate
Trust v. Johncamp Realty, Inc.,
599 F.2d 1140, 1147 (2d Cir.1979), the Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit surmised
that, if the bidder is prosperous, "the
stockholder might decide to hold his shares
in the hope that, if the offer was only
partially successful, the bidder might raise
its bid after termination of the offer or
infuse new capital into the enterprise." On
the other hand, the "poor financial
condition of the bidder might cause the
shareholder to accept for fear that control
of the company would pass into irresponsible
hands." Id.
Similarly, in the case of a
partial tender, a shareholder must weigh
staying with the company and the bidder as
part of the minority bloc, a decision in
which the bidder's financial condition may
be quite significant.
The appellate courts have had
little opportunity to determine what
entities should be considered as offerors.
Perhaps this is not surprising, for in most
tender cases time constraints preclude an
appeal from the decision of the district
court.
In Prudent Real Estate Trust, the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
required disclosure from the principal
stockholder of a corporation that partially
owned and controlled the acquisition
vehicle. In that case, the interests
represented by the principal stockholder
supplied 20% of the financing, but he had
the right to vote shares acquired from the
target company and to manage its properties
after acquisition. Prudent Real Estate
Trust, 599 F.2d
Page 68 at 1147.
Arkansas Best Corp. v. Pearlman,
688 F.Supp. 976 (D.Del.1988) (individual defendants
controlled companies which owned acquisition
vehicle, and were committed to purchase $37
million of target stock).
Koppers
Co. v. American Express Co.,
689 F.Supp. 1371 (W.D.Pa.1988), the district court
noted that the defendant Shearson companies
had acquired a substantial, although not
controlling, interest in the acquisition
vehicle. In addition, the Shearson interests
had committed themselves to provide a large
financial contribution to the purchasing
company and, in return, take either
unsecured subordinated notes or preferred
stock with limited voting rights. Moreover,
Shearson would earn substantial brokerage
fees. As the court pointed out, the Shearson
interests acted as advisor, underwriter,
equity partner, and financier to the
acquisition vehicle. In those circumstances,
the court ruled that the Shearson companies
were playing a central, participatory role
in the tender offer; the fact that they
would control less than 50% of the
acquisition vehicle would not exempt them
from bidder obligations. Id. at 1389-90. The
majority distinguishes Koppers because the
Shearson companies were to have
representation on the board of the surviving
entity. That distinction is
unconvincing--the test is beneficial
ownership of stock.
Pabst
Brewing Co. v. Kalmanovitz,
551 F.Supp. 882
(D.Del.1982), the court determined that
two individuals were the "primary motivating
force behind the formation and
capitalization of [the acquiring vehicle]
for the effectuation of the tender offer."
Id. at 892. In that case, the acquiring
corporation had been created for the express
purpose of extending a tender offer. The
court distinguished dissimilar rulings
Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc. v. Hi-Shear
Indus.,
503 F.Supp. 1122 (E.D.N.Y.1980),
and
Gray Drug Stores v. Simmons,
522 F.Supp. 961
(N.D.Ohio 1981), where the acquiring
corporation had not been formed for the
purpose of accomplishing the acquisition.
Pabst Brewing Co., 551 F.Supp. at 891-92.
Because I am not persuaded that Raybestos
and Gray Drug Stores are correctly decided,
I need not consider here whether the
distinction that the court drew in Pabst was
significant.
Other district courts have been
diverted from the basic "offeror" inquiry by
focusing on whether the alleged bidder has a
"dominant" or "controlling" role in the
transaction, or whether that entity or
another corporation--even a "shell"--is the
actual offeror. Nothing in the Act indicates
that Congress intended that only an entity
or individual that "dominates" or "controls"
the group making a tender offer is bound by
the disclosure requirements. The absence of
language narrowing the statute's application
in that manner is compelling, as is the
legislative history which sought to prevent
the "pooling" of interests as a device to
evade disclosure.
The Williams Act, as illustrated
by its legislative history, is not concerned
with dominance by particular entities within
an offering group, but rather with the
desirability of disclosures by all parties
who combine to make an offer. The expressed
intent of Congress was full and fair
disclosure. Therefore, in the event of doubt
on a particular disclosure question, courts
should exercise liberality in order to carry
out the remedial purposes of the statute.
Excess information may well be harmless, but
inadequate disclosure could be disastrous to
the shareholder.
The majority relies principally
on an interpretation of Item 9 of the SEC's
special instructions for complying with the
Schedule 14D-1 disclosure requirement. See
17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.14d-100. I pass over the
interesting question of whether such agency
"instructions" can amount to an
administrative construction of the statute
because I read Item 9 as not constricting
the scope of disclosure, but instead as a
caution against evasion.
1a
Page 69
As the district court pointed out
Arkansas Best Corp. v. Pearlman,
688 F.Supp. 976 (D.Del.1988), "[u]nder the plain
wording of Item 9, it would appear that
natural persons who are bidders would never
have to disclose material financial
information." Id. at 980. However, the SEC
stated in a Release that "financial
information concerning a bidder who is a
natural person may be material." Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 13787 [1977-78
Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p
81,256, at p. 88,379 n. 2 (July 21, 1979).
In Arkansas Best the district court found
that individuals who were the dominant and
motivating principals behind a series of
partnerships and corporations formed for the
purpose of making a tender offer were
bidders. That case demonstrates the danger
of relying on the wording in Item 9 without
considering its purpose.
Properly read, Item 9 heeds the
statutory language which prohibits "any
person, directly or indirectly" from making
a tender offer without complying with the
Act. See 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78n(d)(1). The
formation of a shell corporation for the
purpose of making a tender without
disclosing who or what is behind the legal
facade would be a blatant device to
circumvent the express congressional
prohibitions against an undisclosed party
"indirectly" acquiring beneficial ownership.
The SEC recognized this danger and, in
discussing the proviso to Item 9 stated,
"However, it should be specifically noted
that the Commission will not tolerate
schemes to circumvent the requirements of
Item 9 by relying on this proviso."
Securities Act Release No. 58444 [1977-78
Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p
81,256, at p. 88,380 (July 21, 1977) (citing
example of shell corporation formed for
reasons other than acquisition).
The Rales brothers apparently
recognized that Item 9 did not exclude them
as natural persons from the "bidder"
designation and its incumbent disclosure
obligations. In contrast, the majority's
interpretation of Item 9, taken to its
logical conclusion, would suggest that the
disclosures made by each of the Rales
brothers were gratuitous--a result I doubt
the majority or the SEC would espouse.
I believe that the district court
erred as a matter of law in concluding that
Drexel Burnham is not a bidder. Drexel
Burnham obviously is a critical player in
the Interco tender offer scenario. It
expects to receive between 29% and 36% of
voting stock, and substantial proceeds in
the event of either success or failure of
the tender offer.
The present situation is quite
different from one in which a lending
institution enters into an arrangement where
it seeks the return of the amount it had
loaned with interest. The record here
conclusively demonstrates that Drexel
Burnham's involvement in the Interco tender
far surpasses such a lender-offeror
relationship. Drexel Burnham is actually a
participant in the venture as a major
stockholder--indeed, planning to obtain more
shares than each of the Rales brothers. It
may be that, if the Rales brothers pool
their shares, Drexel Burnham could be
out-voted. That result, however, is not
inevitable and, in any event, the Williams
Act does not restrict disclosure to only the
holders of majority interests. It requires
compliance by those who become holders of
"beneficial interests."
2a
That description fits Drexel Burnham.
Events which have occurred since
the district court considered the matter
have served only to confirm the conclusion
that Drexel Burnham is a "bidder."
Apparently, Drexel Burnham was unable to
secure outside support for a substantial
part of the financing it had pledged to
provide. As a result, in the Second
Supplement to the
Page 70 tender offer dated October 4, 1988, the
following statement appears: "The Purchaser
[Cardinal Acquisition Corp.] also has
received a commitment letter, dated as of
September 26, 1988 ("Group's Commitment
Letter") from the Drexel Burnham Lambert
Group Inc. whereby Group has agreed to
purchase an aggregate of $609.685 million of
Series A Stock and Series B Stock ("Group's
Commitment")."
3a
I am not impressed by the fact
that, superficially, it appears that Drexel
Burnham did not become a participant in the
venture until after the initial tender was
made. Whatever may have been true at the
outset of the venture, it is clear that once
additional "bidders" are added to the
roster, appropriate supplemental disclosure
must be made. Otherwise, the opportunities
for evasion are so glaring as to frustrate
the important goals of the Williams Act.
Whether disclosure beyond that
already made must be forthcoming is a
question of materiality. Information is
material, and disclosure compelled, if there
is a substantial likelihood that a
reasonable investor would consider the
disclosure to have changed the "total mix"
of his investment deliberations.
TSC Indus. v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S. 438,
449, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132, 48 L.Ed.2d 757
(1976). This is largely a fact-driven
assessment which should, in the first
instance, be made by the district court.
Because the district judge here decided the
case on the theory that Drexel Burnham was
not a bidder, there was no necessity for
findings on the materiality issue and none
were made. I would therefore remand to the
district court for determination of that
question and stay the closing of the tender
offer until a ruling is made.
1 We decide this appeal on the record
before the district court. Interco
supplemented that record with an affidavit
in support of its motion for a stay pending
appeal. That affidavit asserts that, as of
October 4, 1988, Drexel had committed itself
to purchase an aggregate of $609.685 million
of the preferred securities. We leave it for
the district court to determine in the first
instance the significance, if any, of this
fact.
2 In their filing, these entities
acknowledged being members of a "group." The
"bidder," however, was identified as
Acquisition.
3 We, of course, accept the unappealed
rulings of the district court rejecting
Interco's claim that the tender materials
contained two material omissions.
4 Drexel was retained on July 29, 1988.
By that date City Capital had already
devised its offer strategy; made a $64
merger proposal to Interco; publicly
announced the proposal; accumulated over 3
million Interco shares at a cost of over
$117 million; filed a Schedule 13D with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
disclosing its plans to seek to merge with
Interco; and filed two lawsuits against
Interco and its Board of Directors.
5 This fact distinguishes this case from
Koppers Company, Inc. v. American Express
Company,
689 F.Supp. 1371 (W.D.Pa.1988),
upon which Interco primarily relies. In that
case the equity securities held by the
Shearson Lehman interests entitled them to
representation on the board of the surviving
company and the court viewed the Shearson
Lehman interests as sharing control of the
board with others.
6 The dissent suggests that the concept
of "bidder" as utilized in the regulations
is intended to be synonymous with the
statutory concept of a "group". See 15
U.S.C. Sec. 78n(d)(2) (1981). While the
regulations do implement the statutory
provisions regarding "groups," see, e.g., 17
C.F.R. Sec. 240.14d-100 General Instruction
C, they do not do so through the concept of
a "bidder." At oral argument counsel for
Interco expressly disavowed any contention
that Drexel was a member of the Rales
"group" and no such argument was presented
to the district court. Accordingly, we have
no occasion to express an opinion on that
issue.
1a It is doubtful that "instructions" on
how to complete a form qualify as an
administrative construction of a statute so
as to be entitled to the deference cited
Chevron, USA v. Natural Resources Defense
Council, 467 U.S. 837, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81
L.Ed. 2d 694 (1984) or
SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194, 67 S.Ct.
1575, 91 L.Ed.2d 1995 (1947). The
"instructions" are not a reasoned,
considered discussion of the statute.
2a
Portsmouth Square, Inc. v. Shareholders
Protective Comm., 770 F.2d 866, 873 (9th
Cir.1985) ("beneficial owner" of
security for section 13(d) purposes--subject
to disclosure obligations--is anyone having
power to vote, invest, or dispose of
security);
GAF Corp. v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709 (2d
Cir.1971);
Bath Indus., Inc. v. Blot, 427 F.2d 97, 112
(7th Cir.1970) ("beneficial owner" under
section 13(d) is anyone with right to
determine how stock is voted). See 17 C.F.R.
Sec. 240.13d-3. SEC Rule 14d-1(g) states
that the definition of beneficial ownership
set forth in Rule 13(d)(3) also applies to
section 14(d)(1).
3a The exemption provided by 17 C.F.R.
Sec. 240.13d-3 would not apply here where
Drexel Burnham initially agreed to purchase
stock. |