| Page 576 900 F.2d 576
58 USLW 2636, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
95,267 McMAHAN & COMPANY, Froley, Revy
Investment Co., Inc. and
Wechsler & Krumholz, Inc.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
WHEREHOUSE ENTERTAINMENT, INC., Louis A.
Kwiker, George A.
Smith, Michael T. O'Kane, Lawrence K.
Harris, Donald E.
Martin, Joel D. Tauber, Furman Selz Mager
Dietz & Birney,
Inc., Wei Acquisition Corp., Wei Holdings,
Inc., Adler &
Shaykin, and Chemical Bank, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 399, Docket 89-7664.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Dec. 19, 1989.
Decided April 10, 1990.
Page 577
Philip K. Howard, New York City
(Howard, Darby & Levin, Warren G. Caywood,
Jr., Bonnie Blacklock, of counsel), for
appellant McMahan.
Dennis J. Block, New York City
(Weil, Gotshal & Manges, H. Adam Prussin,
Richard B. Friedman, Miranda S. Schiller, of
counsel), for appellee Wherehouse.
Before OAKES, PRATT, Circuit
Judges, and SAND, District Judge for the
S.D.N.Y., sitting by designation.
GEORGE C. PRATT, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment
of the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York, Mary Johnson
Lowe, Judge, dismissing their complaint that
defendants made material misrepresentations
and omissions in a debenture offering in
violation of Sec. 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78j;
Sec. 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 77k; and Sec. 12(2) of the
Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77l.
Finding that the complaint "fail[ed] to
allege any omission or misstatement of
fact--material or otherwise--within the
meaning of the securities laws", the
district court granted summary judgment to
defendants. The court also dismissed
plaintiffs' state-law claims for lack of
pendent jurisdiction. Since we conclude that
plaintiffs presented sufficient evidence to
create a genuine issue as to whether the
offering was materially misleading, we
reverse the summary judgment and remand the
case for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
Defendant Wherehouse
Entertainment, Inc. offered 6 1/4%
convertible subordinated debentures whose
key selling feature was a right of holders
to tender the debentures to Wherehouse in
the case of certain triggering events which
might endanger the value of the debentures.
The tender right was to arise if:
(a) A person or group * * * shall
attain the beneficial ownership * * * of an
equity interest representing at least 80% of
the voting power * * * unless such
Page 578 attainment has been approved by a majority
of the Independent Directors;
(b) The Company * * *
consolidates or merges * * * unless approved
by a majority of the Independent Directors;
(c) The Company * * * incurs * *
* any Debt * * * excluding * * * Debt which
is authorized or ratified by a majority of
the Independent Directors, immediately after
the incurrence of which the ratio of the
Company's Consolidated Total Debt to its
Consolidated Capitalization exceeds .65 to
1.0.
Indenture Sec. 5.02, 11-12 (June
15, 1986); see also Prospectus Summary,
"Optional Tender", 3 (July 10, 1986); id.
Description of Debentures, "Optional
Debenture Tender", 25-26.
The offering materials defined an
"Independent Director" as "a director of the
Company" who was not a recent employee but
who was a member of the board of directors
on the date of the offering or who was
subsequently elected to the board by the
then-Independent Directors. Indenture, Sec.
5.02, 12; Prospectus Description of
Debentures, "Optional Debenture Tender", 26.
The reason offered for this unusual right to
tender was that it would be a protection
against certain forms of take-over attempts,
including leveraged buy-outs. Prospectus
Description of Debentures, "Effect on
Certain Takeovers", 27. At the heart of this
appeal is the meaning of the limitation
placed on the right to tender by the role of
"Independent Directors".
Plaintiffs are financial
institutions that purchased 34% of the
convertible debentures. Eighteen months
after the purchase, Wherehouse entered into
a merger agreement with defendants WEI
Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiary WEI
Acquisition Corp. The practical effect of
the merger, accomplished through a leveraged
buy-out, left Wherehouse with a debt
approaching 90% of its capitalization and
left plaintiffs' debentures valued at only
approximately 50% of par. Plaintiffs
attempted to exercise their right to tender,
but the company refused to redeem the
debentures on the ground that the "board of
directors" had approved the merger.
Plaintiffs then commenced this
suit for damages and an injunction to
prevent the merger. Named as defendants were
Wherehouse, various officers of Wherehouse,
the underwriter of the debentures, WEI
Holdings, Inc., WEI Acquisition Corp., and
the bank that was financing the tender
offer. Plaintiffs claimed that the
descriptions of the debentures in the
registration materials, as well as
representations made during conversations,
were materially misleading. Specifically,
they claimed that, even though the
defendants knew that the right to tender was
illusory, their representations of the right
as valuable and protected had misled
investors into buying the debentures and
therefore violated federal securities laws.
In the alternative, claiming that the
representations created a right to tender
under the contract, plaintiffs asserted
state-law claims of breach of contract,
interference with contract, breach of
implied duty of good faith, and fraudulent
conveyance.
Defendants argued that all the
relevant provisions were clear and
unambiguous and that no false statements
were made; thus the offering was not
materially misleading or in violation of the
securities laws.
The district court found nothing
misleading. It granted summary judgment to
defendants and dismissed plaintiffs'
state-law claims for lack of pendent
jurisdiction. The district court held that
defendants were not required to speculate
about the likelihood of a waiver of
debentureholders' rights by the Independent
Directors and that, even if the right were
worthless, defendants were not required to
use pejorative terms describing it as such.
Moreover, it found the tender option was not
illusory, because it (was possible that it)
might provide a benefit to debentureholders
in the case of a takeover hostile to
shareholders which management chose to
fight. Finally, according to the district
court, the definition of "Independent
Directors" was adequate because further
description of their role, the extent of
their discretion, their
Page 579 interests, or their intent would constitute
mere legal conclusions, characterizations,
or descriptions of underlying motives and
were not required disclosures. Thus, the
district court found that the descriptions
of the right were not misstatements, and
that the alleged omissions were not required
to be disclosed under the securities laws.
We disagree with the district
court's atomistic consideration of the
presentation of the debentureholders' right
to tender. The district court concluded that
defendants had not misled plaintiffs because
the information they included in the written
and oral representations was "literally
true". We think, however, that when read as
a whole, the defendants' representations
connoted a richer message than that conveyed
by a literal reading of the statements. The
central issue on all three claims is not
whether the particular statements, taken
separately, were literally true, but whether
defendants' representations, taken together
and in context, would have mislead a
reasonable investor about the nature of the
debentures.
Some statements, although
literally accurate, can become, through
their context and manner of presentation,
devices which mislead investors. For that
reason, the disclosure required by the
securities laws is measured not by literal
truth, but by the ability of the material to
accurately inform rather than mislead
prospective buyers.
Greenapple v. Detroit Edison Co., 618 F.2d
198, 205 (2d Cir.1980) (where method of
presentation or "gloss" placed on
information obscures or distorts
significance of material facts, it is
misleading). Even " 'a statement which is
literally true, if susceptible to quite
another interpretation by the reasonable
investor * * * may properly * * * be
considered a material misrepresentation.' "
Beecher v. Able, 374 F.Supp. 341, 347
(S.D.N.Y.1974) quoting
SEC v. First American Bank & Trust Co., 481
F.2d 673 (8th Cir.1973).
We hold that the district court
erred in granting summary judgment to the
defendants because plaintiffs have raised a
triable issue as to whether the written and
oral representations about the right to
tender these debentures were materially
misleading to a reasonable investor in
violation of Sec. 11 and Sec. 12 of the 1933
Securities Act and also of Sec. 10(b) of the
1934 Securities Exchange Act. Since the
analysis for all three securities claims is
similar, we will first consider it in some
detail under Sec. 11, and then review it
only briefly under Secs. 12 and 10(b).
A. Section 11 of the Securities Act of
1933
Section 11 states that any
signer, officer of the issuer, and
underwriter may be held liable for a
registration statement which "contained an
untrue statement of a material fact or
omitted to state a material fact * * *
necessary to make the statements therein not
misleading". Plaintiffs claim that these
offering materials misstated the right to
tender and omitted important information
about it in violation of Sec. 11. They argue
that a reasonable investor would have
believed that the right to tender was
valuable because it was presented as a right
to be exercised at the holder's option and
as a protection against takeovers that might
affect the security of the debentures. In
truth, however, the right to tender was
illusory, they argue, because it was
designed to be exercised only at the option
of management and therefore was intended to
protect the interests of shareholders, not
of debentureholders.
Plaintiffs are correct that the
offering materials can reasonably be read to
present the option to tender as a valuable
right. The language used was invariably
language of entitlement:
Holder's Right to Tender. The Holder of
any Security or Securities shall have the
right, at his option, * * * to tender for
redemption any such Security or Securities.
Indenture Sec. 5.01, 10 (emphasis
added). The prospectus summary provided
that:
"Each holder of Debentures has the option
to require the Company to redeem the
holder's Debentures."
Page 580
"Optional Tender", 3 (emphasis
added). And the prospectus itself stated:
"Holders of the Debentures will have the
option * * * to require the Company to
redeem such Debentures."
Description of Debentures,
"Optional Debenture Tender", 25 (emphasis
added).
Further, a jury could reasonably
view the presentation of the right to tender
as a special feature to protect investors,
for the offering materials stressed the
purported value of the right in any takeover
transaction which would threaten the value
of the debentures.
Since the events which give rise to such
right of redemption could be expected to
occur in connection with certain forms of
takeover attempts, the optional tender
provisions could deter takeovers where the
person attempting the takeover views itself
as unable to finance the redemption of the
principal amount of Debentures which may be
tendered * * * To the extent that Debentures
may be tendered * * * the Company would be
unable to use the financing provided by the
sale of the Debentures offered hereby. In
addition, the ability of the Company to
obtain additional Senior Debt based on the
existence of the Debentures would be
similarly adversely affected.
Prospectus Description of
Debentures, "Effect on Certain Takeovers",
27; see also id. "Optional Debenture
Tender", 26.
Finally, the right was restricted
only in that it was subject to action by
"the Independent Directors". Similar
language describing the restriction--the
right to tender occurs upon a triggering
event, "unless [the event is] approved by a
majority of the Independent Directors"
(emphasis added)--is found in the Indenture,
Sec. 5.02, 11-12; in the prospectus summary,
"Optional Tender", 3; and again in the full
prospectus, Description of Debentures,
"Optional Debenture Tender", 25-26. A jury
could reasonably find that this repeated use
of the word "unless" encouraged the
inference that exercise of the right would
be the norm and that waiver would be the
exception.
Although the offering materials
explain that the Independent Directors would
be chosen from the company's board of
directors, the term "Independent Director"
implies a special status, some distinction
from an "ordinary" director. The term
suggests that these directors would be
"independent" of management and the normal
obligations of board members to act in the
interests of shareholders. Thus the
restriction could reasonably be understood
to mean that in the case of a triggering
event, the right to tender would arise
unless the Independent Directors find the
event to be in the interests of the
debentureholders. In short, as plaintiffs
argue, a reasonable investor could have
regarded the right to tender as a valuable
right, protected by Independent Directors
who would, in situations endangering the
security of the debentures, consider
debentureholders' interests before approving
any waiver of their right.
By thus representing that in a
takeover context the Independent Directors
would be considering the interests of
debentureholders, the defendants implied
that the Independent Directors had a duty to
protect the debentureholders' interests.
Defendants, however, have shown nothing in
their corporate charter or by-laws that
would have permitted, much less required,
these Independent Directors to favor
debentureholders over shareholders.
Moreover, at the time of the approval of
this merger, the Independent Directors
constituted all but one of the "ordinary"
directors on the board. As ordinary
directors, they had a fiduciary duty to
protect the interests of shareholders in any
takeover situation, regardless of
debentureholders' interests or rights. It is
inevitable, then, that the so-called
Independent Directors had no independence;
they would never protect the interests of
debentureholders except by coincidence
because, as ordinary directors, they were
required by law to protect the interests of
the shareholders. From this perspective,
there is merit in plaintiffs' contentions
that the right to tender was illusory and
that the representations of it in the
offering materials were misleading.
Page 581
In sum, on a fair reading of the
offering materials, despite their literal
meaning, an investor could have reasonably
believed that the tender option was
presented as a valuable right for
debentureholders; that it provided a special
feature of protection for their interests;
and that Independent Directors were to
render independent votes on the right to
tender based on the impact of a merger and
on the interests of debentureholders. But
if, as plaintiffs claim, the right to tender
was illusory because the Independent
Directors were tied to management, served
its needs, protected shareholders'
interests, and would inevitably waive the
right in any merger beneficial to management
regardless of debentureholders' interests,
then the offering materials could be found
by a rational trier of fact to be materially
misleading in violation of Sec. 11 of the
Securities Act of 1933. Plaintiffs have
therefore raised a genuine issue as to
whether the written representations could
have misled a reasonable investor,
Greenapple, 618 F.2d at 205, and summary
judgment was therefore unwarranted.
B. Section 12 of the Securities Act of
1933
Section 12(2) of the Securities
Act of 1933 presents a problem similar to
Sec. 11, but it has the added factor of oral
representations made to the investors in
order to induce them to purchase. Section
12(2) states that anyone who makes a
securities offering "by means of a
prospectus or oral communication, which
includes an untrue statement of a material
fact or omits to state a material fact
necessary in order to make the statements *
* * not misleading * * * shall be liable"
(emphasis added). In an affidavit, Thomas
Revy of plaintiff Froley, Revy, alleges that
in a phone conversation and at a "due
diligence" lunch, officers of Wherehouse
specifically represented that the debentures
included the right to tender as a
"protective covenant for the
debentureholders" against takeovers.
Plaintiffs claim these oral communications
were untrue and violated Sec. 12(2).
Defendants argue that the
statements were accurate because they would
protect holders in the event of a takeover
that was hostile to management. The district
court agreed, finding that "where the
company might find itself subjected to an
hostile takeover, the right to tender could,
indeed, be 'protective' of the
debentureholders' interests."
However, the language
used--"protective covenant" and "special
protection"--is promissory and unrestricted.
The statements clearly imply that the
protection to debentureholders would extend
to the case of any takeover hostile to the
holders' rights. It would be, to say the
least, a cramped interpretation to view the
right to tender as a "protective covenant
for the debentureholders" if its protection
were limited to a takeover that was hostile
only to management and the shareholders.
Finally, by representing that this special
right to tender was the key selling feature
of otherwise low-value debentures,
defendants could be found to have implied
that debentureholders would be protected
against takeovers hostile to their own
interests, regardless of the interests of
shareholders, and thus to have misled
plaintiffs as to the true nature of the
right. Summary judgment was therefore
inappropriate on plaintiffs' Sec. 12(2)
claim.
C. Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the general fraud
provision of the act, prohibits any person
from using or employing "any manipulative or
deceptive device" in connection with the
sale of a security. To state a claim under
this section, plaintiffs "must allege
material misstatements or omissions
indicating an intent to deceive or defraud
in connection with the purchase or sale of a
security."
Luce v. Edelstein, 802 F.2d 49, 55 (2d
Cir.1986);
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185,
96 S.Ct. 1375, 47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976).
Plaintiffs claim that disclosure of the true
nature of the tender provision not only
would have altered a reasonable investor's
investment decision, but would have
dissuaded investment here by showing these
debentures to be a poor risk. They
Page 582 allege that Wherehouse knew this and so
deliberately misrepresented the
right-to-tender feature, thereby misleading
investors in violation of Sec. 10(b).
The district court, having
dismissed the claims under Sec. 11, found it
was therefore impossible to state a Sec.
10(b) claim. Since we have concluded that a
question of fact is presented as to whether
the offering materials and the oral
communications, taken together, could have
misled a reasonable investor, it follows
that a jury should also determine whether
the defendants violated Sec. 10(b).
D. Pendent Claims
Since the only reason for the
district court's dismissing plaintiffs'
pendent state-law claims was that the
federal basis for jurisdiction had
disappeared, now that we have reinstated the
federal claims, the pendent claims are
reinstated as well.
Reversed and remanded.
SAND, District Judge:
The reasons why I am constrained
to dissent may be briefly stated.
The question whether an
anti-takeover provision provides a "special
protection" to debentureholders cannot be
answered in the negative merely because the
"Independent Directors" decided to waive its
provisions and approve a particular
transaction. These directors were explicitly
empowered to act in this fashion by virtue
of the fully disclosed terms of the
provision. A significant function of an
anti-takeover provision is to serve as a
deterrent to hostile takeovers, including
takeovers which would be contrary to the
interests of both shareholders and
debentureholders. One cannot, I believe,
fairly characterize such a provision as
being "worthless" to the debentureholders,
even though as a matter of Delaware law
directors owe a fiduciary duty solely to
shareholders. The anti-takeover provision
was therefore a "special protection" to
debentureholders, albeit a limited one.
Federal securities laws do not
impose an obligation to advise investors of
the fundamentals of corporate governance.
The disclosure required by the federal
securities laws is not a "rite of confession
or exercise in common law pleading. What is
required is the disclosure of material
objective factual matters."
Data Probe Acquisition Corp. v. Data Lab,
Inc., 722 F.2d 1, 5-6 (2d Cir.1983),
cert. denied, 465 U.S. 1052, 104 S.Ct. 1326,
79 L.Ed.2d 722 (1984). Especially is this so
where, as here, the investor-complainants
are sophisticated financial institutions
making major investments. The role of the
federal securities laws is not to remedy all
perceived injustices in securities
transactions. Rather, as invoked in this
case, it proscribes only the making of false
and misleading statements or material
omissions.
Whether the Independent Directors
breached an implied duty of good faith or
otherwise acted contrary to their fiduciary
obligations are matters of state law. Here,
the federal claims were asserted only
conditionally, the express condition being
the failure of the state law claims. These
state claims were properly dismissed by the
court below for lack of pendent
jurisdiction.
Believing no valid federal claim
to be present, I would affirm essentially
for the reasons set forth in the Opinions of
the Magistrate and District Court. |