Charles W. Leigh and Ervin F. Dusek, Etc., and George Johnson, Intervening v. Clyde William Engle

727 F.2d 113
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1984
Docket82-2943, 82-3040
StatusPublished
Cited by303 cases

This text of 727 F.2d 113 (Charles W. Leigh and Ervin F. Dusek, Etc., and George Johnson, Intervening v. Clyde William Engle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles W. Leigh and Ervin F. Dusek, Etc., and George Johnson, Intervening v. Clyde William Engle, 727 F.2d 113 (7th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs in this case are beneficiaries of an employee benefit plan who alleged that the plan administrators and others had violated fiduciary duty provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461 (“ERISA”). The heart of the case is a dispute over how ERISA governs the actions of plan administrators and other fiduciaries with respect to investment activities in contests for corporate control. The beneficiaries allege that the plan administrators and other defendants violated ERISA when they used plan assets to purchase stocks of companies that were targets of the defendants’ investment program. After a bench trial, the district court entered judgment for the defendants. We vacate and remand.

I.

Plaintiffs-appellants are beneficiaries of the Reliable Manufacturing Corporation Employees Profit Sharing Trust (“Reliable Trust”). This action was originally filed by Charles W. Leigh and Ervin F. Dusek; they are beneficiaries of the Reliable Trust and former owners of the Reliable Manufacturing Corporation (“Reliable Manufactúr- *116 ing”). Intervening plaintiffs are a class of all other Reliable Trust beneficiaries who have fully vested rights in the trust.

The Reliable Trust was created by Reliable Manufacturing in 1968 as an employees’ profit sharing trust; the trust administrators were appointed by the Reliable Manufacturing board of directors. The Reliable Trust is subject to ERISA, and plaintiffs allege that the defendants-appellees violated their fiduciary duties under ERISA in a series of investments the Reliable Trust made in the spring of 1978. Until March 1978, the trust held all of its assets in the form of fixed income money market investments. In late March 1978, the trust invested approximately 30% of its assets in the stock of three companies: Berkeley Bio Medical, Inc. (“Berkeley”), Outdoor Sports Industries, Inc. (“OSI”), and the Hickory Furniture Company (“Hickory”). Both before and after the trust’s purchases, other defendants made sizable investments in the same companies. Plaintiffs allege that the investment of approximately 30% of the Reliable Trust’s assets in these three companies was done to aid the defendants who hoped either to win control of the companies or to earn substantial “control premiums.”

Defendants-appellees are a group of individuals and business entities with close connections to defendant Clyde W. Engle. The complex network of legal and financial relationships among the defendants is central to our disposition of this case, so we must trace them in some detail. Although defendants dispute the characterization, we will on occasion refer to them as the “Engle group.”

A.

Clyde Engle stands at the center of the network. He is an Illinois financier and investor with numerous business interests. 1 Since 1976 Engle has been chairman of defendant Libco Corporation. In the spring of 1978, Engle owned 31.5% of Libco shares and through trusts for his children controlled an additional 6.4% of Libco. Supplemental Appendix at 496. He also had some degree of control over an additional 12% of Libco shares owned by the Sierra Capital Group, described below. Clyde Engle’s offices are at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.

Defendant Libco Corporation is a holding company which purchased 100% of the common stock of Reliable Manufacturing from plaintiffs Leigh and Dusek in April 1977. 2 Libco also has offices at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago. In the spring of 1978, Libco owned 64% of the stock of defendant Telco Marketing Services, Inc. (“Telco”). At that time, Clyde Engle was chairman of the board, chief executive officer and treasurer of Tel-co. Telco’s offices are also at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

Defendant Telvest, Inc. (“Telvest”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Telco formed on June 1, 1978, for investment purposes. En-gle was president, treasurer and a director of Telvest in 1978. Telvest’s offices are also located at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

Two other Engle businesses are not parties to this lawsuit, but their investments in Berkeley, OSI and Hickory in 1978 are relevant to the dispute here. First, GSC Enterprises, Inc. (“GSC”) is a holding company *117 which owns the Bank of Lincolnwood. In 1978 Engle was chairman of the board and president of GSC, as well as chairman of the board of the bank. GSC’s offices are also located at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. Second, the Sierra Capital Group (“Sierra”) is an Illinois limited partnership engaged in investment activities. The general partner in Sierra is Sierra Associates, another Illinois limited partnership. Clyde Engle is one of two general partners of Sierra Associates. In the spring of 1978, among its other investments, Sierra owned 12% of Libco stock and 19% of GSC stock. Sierra’s offices are also at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

Defendant Nathaniel Dardick is an attorney who played key roles in all of the organizations described above. Dardick graduated from the University of Chicago Law School in 1974. He was associated for several years with the Chicago firm of Sachnoff Schrager Jones Weaver & Ruben-stein, which did work for Clyde Engle. 3 He then established his own firm with offices at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago. During 1978 and 1979, Dardick was retained as personal counsel to Clyde Engle. He was also general counsel to Libco, Telco, Telvest, GSC, the Bank of Lincolnwood and Sierra. The record does not show clearly whether Dardick had other clients in 1978 and 1979, but it is clear that Engle and these organizations accounted for most of Dardick’s income from his law practice. 4 Dardick is also one of two administrators of the Reliable Trust, and he had direct control over the trust’s investments in 1978 and 1979.

Defendant Ronald Zuckerman was president of Reliable Manufacturing and a member of the Reliable Manufacturing board of directors in 1977 and 1978. However, he received no salary from Reliable Manufacturing. He was paid only as a member of the Libco board and as an investment consultant to Libco. Zuckerman was also the other administrator of the Reliable Trust. He and Dardick were appointed administrators in September 1977 by the Reliable Manufacturing board of directors, composed of Engle, George Contarsy and Zuckerman himself. (Engle, Contarsy and Zuckerman were also directors of Libco.) Neither Dar-dick nor Zuckerman received compensation as trust administrators. Zuckerman’s offices are also at Suite 1600, 625 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

Charles Newbill was originally named as a defendant in the case, but he was never served with the complaint. His role in the case is central, for he was the investment analyst who identified the investment opportunities for Dardick and the Reliable Trust, as well as for Engle, Libco, Telco, Telvest, Sierra and GSC. Newbill first met Engle when both worked at the Harris Bank in Chicago.

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Bluebook (online)
727 F.2d 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-w-leigh-and-ervin-f-dusek-etc-and-george-johnson-intervening-ca7-1984.