Emerson Electric Company v. Reliance Electric Company

306 F. Supp. 588, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12916
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 18, 1969
Docket68 C 87(3)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 306 F. Supp. 588 (Emerson Electric Company v. Reliance Electric Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emerson Electric Company v. Reliance Electric Company, 306 F. Supp. 588, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12916 (E.D. Mo. 1969).

Opinion

306 F.Supp. 588 (1969)

EMERSON ELECTRIC COMPANY, a Missouri Corporation (a common stockholder), Plaintiff,
v.
RELIANCE ELECTRIC COMPANY, an Ohio Corporation, Defendant.

No. 68 C 87(3).

United States District Court E. D. Missouri, E. D.

September 18, 1969.

Bryan, Cave, McPheeters & McRoberts, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiff.

*589 Kenneth Teasdale, Armstrong, Teasdale, Kramer & Vaughan, St. Louis, Mo., for defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

REGAN, District Judge.

In this case, tried to the Court, plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment concerning its liability, if any, to defendant for profits realized on the sale of certain stock. Defendant has counterclaimed for the amount of the profits. The issue of profits has been postponed pending the resolution of the issue of liability. We have diversity jurisdiction.

For determination is the construction and application of Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Section 78p(b), 15 U.S.C.) to the peculiar facts of this case. Most of the essential facts have been stipulated. On May 22, 1967, Emerson Electric Company invited tenders of up to 550,000 shares of Dodge Manufacturing Corporation common stock at a price of $63, reserving the right to purchase all shares tendered. As extended, the tender offer expired June 16, 1967. At that time, Emerson elected to purchase all of the tendered shares, a total of 152,282. These shares constituted 13.2% of the outstanding Dodge common stock. Prior to June 16, 1967, Emerson did not own any shares of Dodge common stock.

Shortly before the stock acquisition by Emerson, Dodge and Reliance Electric & Engineering Company (now Reliance Electric Company) had entered into an agreement whereby Dodge was to be merged into Reliance. Emerson sought to prevent the merger, which needed stockholder approval, advocating instead a merger with Emerson. A stockholders' meeting to consider the merger proposal was called for August 22, 1967. A proxy fight ensued, the result of which was victory for Reliance. Shortly thereafter, but prior to the final approval of the merger by the Dodge directors, Emerson sold its Dodge holdings. It first sold 37,000 shares at $68 a share on August 28, 1967 to Goldman, Sachs & Company, investment brokers. Then, on September 11, 1967, it sold the remaining 115,282 shares at $69 to Dodge. Concededly, Emerson realized a substantial short-term profit on these sales even after deducting all of its expenses of purchase and sale.

Section 16(b) provides, inter alia, that any profit realized by the beneficial owner of more than 10% of certain equity securities from the purchase and sale (or sale and purchase) within any period of less than six months shall inure to and be recoverable by the issuer. The statute further provides:

"This subsection shall not be construed to cover any transaction where such beneficial owner was not such both at the time of the purchase and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the security involved * * *."

The initial question for determination is whether Emerson was a beneficial owner of more than 10 per cent of Dodge common stock "at the time of the purchase" of such stock. Emerson states the question thusly: "Should the very purchase by which one, who prior thereto owns no securities of an issuer, becomes a 10% owner be counted in determining liability for insider short-swing profits?" It argues that in the context of the Act, the words "at the time of purchase" can mean only "before the purchase" and that since Emerson owned no Dodge securities prior to June 16, 1967, and had no access to "inside" information, it may not be subjected to Section 16(b) liability. We do not agree.

Passing for the moment Emerson's further contention that its acquisition of the stock was not a "purchase" within the meaning of the Act, we are convinced that "at the time of purchase" includes the time "simultaneously with" the purchase, so that a shareholder becomes subject to the provisions of Section 16(b) immediately upon (that is, at the very moment of) his acquisition of more than 10 per cent of the corporation's stock. This construction *590 accords not only with the literal meaning of the language, but more importantly, best serves to effectuate the legislative purpose manifest in Section 16(b). Accord: Stella v. Graham-Paige Motors Corporation, D.C.N.Y., 104 F. Supp. 957, affirmed (on this point) 2 Cir., 232 F.2d 299, cert. den. 352 U.S. 831, 77 S.Ct. 46, 1 L.Ed.2d 52. See Cook & Feldman, Insider Trading Under the Securities Exchange Act, 66 Harvard Law Review 612, 631-632.

Emerson urges, however, that although the transaction by which it acquired more than 10 per cent of Dodge stock was in fact a "purchase" (and indeed, under any view, a cash acquisition of this nature could not be otherwise) nevertheless it was not a "purchase" of the kind contemplated by Section 16(b). Its theory is that each case must be examined on its own peculiar facts (Petteys v. Butler, 8 Cir., 367 F.2d 528), and that since the only evidence of record is to the effect that Emerson had no access to and had not acquired "insider" information prior to the purchase, its acquisition of a 13.2 per cent interest was not one that could have lent itself to the practices Section 16(b) was enacted to prevent. Again, we do not agree.

We do not believe that Congress intended to exclude any transaction which is undeniably a purchase under any concept thereof. In the cases in which the facts were examined by the courts, the issue was whether a particular transaction which did not involve a purchase (or a sale) within the ordinary understanding of those terms, e. g. conversions and reclassifications of stock, was a purchase (or a sale) as defined by Section 3 of the Act. It was to aid in resolving problems of that nature that the courts have created the following test or standard: "Every transaction which can reasonably be defined as a purchase will be so defined, if the transaction is of a kind which can possibly lend itself to the speculation encompassed by Section 16(b)." Ferraiolo v. Newman, 6 Cir., 259 F.2d 342, 345. This is the test applied by the Eighth Circuit. Petteys v. Butler, 8 Cir., 367 F.2d 528.

Petteys involved a conversion transaction and the Court held that under the "unique facts" of that case the conversion of convertible preferred stock to common stock by non-controlling directors was not a purchase within the purview of the Act even though it might "represent a type of exchange of equivalents that can be read into a literal interpretation of the § 16(b) language of `otherwise acquire' and `otherwise dispose of'". What Petteys ruled is succinctly summarized by Judge Gibson as follows (367 F.2d, l. c. 536): "If no purpose is served by attaching the artificial label of `purchase' to a transaction when it has none of the common indicia of a purchase, no such label is demanded, nor will one be attached. This, we believe to be the correct law and it is the law to be applied by us to the facts of this case."

In the instant case, no artificial label of "purchase" is attempted. The transaction by which Emerson acquired the Dodge stock has all the "common indicia" of a purchase. Here, we do not have an "otherwise acquire" situation, but rather, a simple, conventional acquisition of stock for cash.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 F. Supp. 588, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emerson-electric-company-v-reliance-electric-company-moed-1969.