Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,069 Republic Technology Fund, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation v. The New England Industries, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation

483 F.2d 540, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8738
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 1973
Docket529, 530, Dockets 72-1901, 72-1902
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 483 F.2d 540 (Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,069 Republic Technology Fund, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation v. The New England Industries, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,069 Republic Technology Fund, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation v. The New England Industries, Inc. v. The Lionel Corporation, 483 F.2d 540, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8738 (2d Cir. 1973).

Opinions

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

This case is the unhappy aftermath of a corporate marriage gone sour, with the bride’s family claiming that the groom failed to disclose a number of liabilities at the time of the negotiations leading up to the nuptials. The appeal is from a judgment absolving the appel-lee from liability under either contractual or securities law in connection with an interim (six months’) financial statement, used in proxy materials and in a registration statement, prepared relative to the merger of Hathaway Instruments, Inc. (“Hathaway”), into The Lionel Corporation (“Lionel”). Appellants were stockholders in Hathaway. Their principal claim below and here is that the interim statement (and hence the proxy materials and registration statement) was misleading in that it artificially inflated earnings because it did not reflect $2,221,000 of adjustments that at year’s end were ultimately required and also because it contained no write-off of good will of a subsidiary that was losing money at the time. The case essentially involves, therefore, the scope of a corporation’s duty to make its interim financial statements accurately reflect the real state of fiscal affairs prior to a merger, or, put another way, the extent to which in an interim statement adjustments that are or should be made at year’s end must be anticipated.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW.

Appellants are both investment funds. Appellant Republic Technology in July, 1960, purchased 25,000 shares of common stock in Hathaway. This stock was not registered but Hathaway had agreed to use its best efforts to cause it to be registered on request from Republic Technology. Appellants between them later purchased another 40,000 shares of Hathaway stock in March, 1961.1 In return, Hathaway agreed that it would prepare and file with the SEC a Registration Statement for the stock on or before May 15, 1961, and that it would use its best efforts to the end that such reg[543]*543istration would become and remain effective for a period of not less than 24 months from the effective date thereof. No request to register was required under the March, 1961, purchase.

Lionel was the well-known toy and train manufacturer that, after some years of successful operations, entered into a program of corporate acquisitions, one of which was Anton-Imco Electronics Corp., which in turn owned Intercontinental Manufacturing Co., Inc., and Anton Electronics Laboratories Inc. (Anton-Imco and its two subsidiaries are sometimes collectively referred to herein as the “Anton-Imco” or “electronics division” of Lionel.) Further to complicate matters a little, the Anton Electronics Laboratories Inc. corporate name was changed in March of 1961 to Lionel Electronic Laboratories Inc. (hereinafter “Lionel Labs”), but it remained with Intercontinental a subsidiary of Anton-Imco. Lionel Labs made “radiation detection and measuring devices” and “electronic and electro-me-chanical devices.” Intercontinental manufactured aircraft and missile components. These last two together provided, apparently, some “glamor” to the corporate package. Other Lionel acquisitions included Airex, a fishing tackle concern, and Telerad, a “microwave components” concern. Up to the ultimate Hathaway merger in November, 1961, the stock of Lionel had been selling at two to four times its book value despite the fact that even on the June 30, 1961, interim statement here in dispute Lionel was losing money during the first six months of 1961.

Prior to the Lionel merger, appellant Republic Technology exercised its option to request registration of its Hathaway shares and on or about May 7, 1961, Hathaway filed a registration statement. When merger discussions with Lionel commenced in June of 1961, however, Hathaway requested permission from the SEC to withdraw this registration statement. This permission was not granted until late September when Lionel filed its registration statement with the SEC.

Meanwhile, however, unaudited financial statements for the six months’ period ending June 20, 1961, had been prepared for Lionel and Hathaway and a combined pro forma for that period had also been prepared. These figures showed a six months’ loss for Lionel of $84,000 or $.06 per share and a combined pro forma profit of $245,000 or $.08 per share. It is the omission of the Lionel statement to show certain adjustments made at year’s end or to take into account by way of adjustment to Anton-Imco good will that subsidiary’s losses that is the crux of the controversy here.

The interim statements were used in connection with the agreement of merger dated September 15, 1961. Under its terms Lionel agreed to file on or before October 15, 1961, a registration statement covering all stock acquired by Hathaway stockholders which by previous agreement Hathaway was legally obligated to register. Lionel also agreed to undertake Hathaway’s obligations to effectuate and maintain the effectiveness of a registration statement. The same six months’ figures were used in the proxy materials submitted to Hathaway and Lionel stockholders to obtain their approval of the merger, which approval ensued on October 25, 1961, effective on November 6, 1961. They also were used in the registration statement, Form S-l, filed with the SEC on September 28, 1961, by Lionel. Pursuant to the merger appellants exchanged their 65,000 shares of Hathaway common for 21,667 shares of 3%'% convertible preferred stock of Lionel.

There were a number of adjustments recorded as of December 31, 1961, as a result of the year-end audit or of events occurring during the fourth quarter of 1961. Of these, the ones appellants most insistently claim should have been reflected in the June 30 interim statement are:

1. Inventory write-downs: In Lionel’s toy and train division $262,830 for [544]*544inventory obsolescence was written down in the fourth quarter or written off as at December 31; $140,000 was a write-off- as “raw material price variance,” $77,946 was a write-down to lower of cost or market; and the rather remarkable sum of $256,000 was written off as “unlocated difference between December 31, 1961 book and physical inventory.” In Lionel’s Telerad division $100,000 of inventory was written off in the fourth quarter and $440,000 was required to be written off at year’s end. In Lionel Labs $200,000 was written down in inventory at year’s end. The total of these year-end write-offs yras $1,476,776.

2. Sales returns and allowances: A total of $106,000 was provided at year’s end for sales returns and allowances in the toy and train division and the Airex division.

3. Research and development: Research and development costs totaling $226,983 in the toy and train division and $163,000 in Lionel Labs were written off at year’s end.

4. Deferred selling, advertising and service expense: Lionel wrote off $249,000 of these expenses in its toy and train division at year’s end.

The total of the above adjustments which were made at year’s end is $2,221,659.

Appellants also claim that the interim statement:

5. Should have reflected a write-off in good will attributable to Lionel’s Anton-Imco division, which was carried at $998,000, despite a $189,000 loss for the first six months of 1961;

6. Should have reflected a greater reserve for bad debts, sales returns and allowances;

7.

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Bluebook (online)
483 F.2d 540, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fed-sec-l-rep-p-94069-republic-technology-fund-inc-v-the-lionel-ca2-1973.