Gale v. Value Line, Inc.

640 F. Supp. 967, 13 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1198, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22344
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 24, 1986
DocketCiv. A. 85-0655 B
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 640 F. Supp. 967 (Gale v. Value Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gale v. Value Line, Inc., 640 F. Supp. 967, 13 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1198, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22344 (D.R.I. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANCIS J. BOYLE, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff, Stanley W. Gale is not only a law school graduate and a practicing psychiatrist, but, he has also been a successful investor in convertible securities. Indeed, he claims to have found the foolproof profitable investment, with high profits and practically no risk. The fact that this litigation is brought is some proof of the maxim attributed to one Murphy, that what can go wrong, will.

Plaintiff spends about five hours a week tending to his investments. His method is his own creation and he says it works. It operates as follows. Plaintiff selects warrants or stock options which he considers are overvalued. A warrant is overvalued if it carries a high premium. A warrant is a right to purchase stock, usually common, at a stated price within a specified period of time, usually years. Its investment value is that it is usually sold to be exercized at a price above the then market value of the stock and if, over time, the stock increases in market value, it will yield a substantially higher percentage of profit *969 than would a present purchase of the stock itself held to the same later date. Additionally, a warrant may have an intrinsic value which is the premium. Premium is the amount the market is attributing to the prospect that the stock will increase in value, and usually increases at a greater rate than the value of the stock.

It is essential to the plaintiffs investment plan that the transaction be “covered,” that is, that he has sold call options on the same stock which will expire before the stock warrants expire and that both the sale and purchase involve the same number of shares. This process has been referred to as “hedging.” Its purpose is to reduce the risk to “almost none.”

Plaintiff was a sporadic subscriber to one of the defendants publications called “Value Line Convertibles.” Four issues of the publication are distributed to subscribers each month. It was circulated to between 2200 and 4400 subscribers in the period February, 1983 to April, 1985. The publication ranks convertible securities and includes purchase recommendations. It also includes an evaluation of warrants. Included in the evaluation is information concerning the warrant price and in footnotes further information including usually, if applicable, the fact that the warrant expiration date may be accelerated under certain conditions.

This litigation involves three transactions in warrants of Trans World Airlines. In 1979, Trans World Corporation offered subordinate debentures with warrants to purchase 2,790,000 shares of common stock. The warrant entitled the holder to purchase one share of Trans World common stock for $31.00. The warrants expired by their terms on October 1, 1986, except that Trans World had the right to accelerate the expiration date of the warrants to a date as early as October 1, 1984 by 60 days notice to the warrant agent and registered holders of the warrants if the common stock shall have had a closing market price of not less than 125% of the then current warrant exercise price for a period of 45 consecutive trading days ending not more than 10 calendar days immediately prior to the date of such notice. Although it was Value Lines practice to notify subscribers of a right to accelerate on the part of the issuing corporation in a footnote, it failed for a time to do so and it is this failure which prompts this litigation.

Plaintiff purchased 2000 warrants of Trans World between April 18, and May 2, 1984 to cover 20 calls for Trans World Stock at $25 due December, 1984. Each call is an option to buy 100 shares. In a second series of transactions, plaintiff sold 20 calls at $25.00 per share between August 7 and August 17, 1984 and bought 2000 warrants within the same time period. The calls were due in March, 1985. In a third transaction, plaintiff sold 35 calls at $25.00 per share due in June 1985 and purchased 3500 warrants between September 24, and October 1, 1984.

Thus, on October 1, 1984 plaintiff owned 7500 warrants of Trans World and was indebted to 75 calls of one hundred shares each of Trans World common stock. He paid $82,229.34 for the warrants and received $44,284.30 for the calls. He thus had rights to purchase 7500 shares of common stock of Trans World Corporation at $31.00 per share and the obligation to deliver 7500 shares of Trans World Corporation at $25.00 per share.

On October 3,1984, after the close of the market, Trans World accelerated the expiration date from October 1, 1986 to December 3, 1984 because the conditions permitting acceleration had occurred. This action brought a sharper focus on plaintiffs warrants to purchase common stock at $31.00 per share and his obligation to provide the same stock at $25.00 per share. The difference between the two prices and the then market price was not sufficient to be profitable.

Plaintiff argues that he relied between April 18, 1984 and October 1, 1984 on the accuracy of the defendant’s publication, which did not inform him during that time of the right of Trans World to accelerate the warrants, believing that they would not expire until October 1, 1986 and therefore *970 would survive the calls which he had sold. He contends that defendant breached its contract with plaintiff and further that defendant is guilty of negligent misrepresentation. Defendant contends that its contractual relationship with plaintiff has not been breached, that it has made no misrepresentation and further that plaintiff is barred by its disclaimer.

Each edition of the publication bears on the front page at the bottom: “Factual material is obtained from sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed.” This statement is printed in type about Vs inch in height but only slightly smaller than the type used in the body and footnotes of the publication. Plaintiff admits to having read and understood its meaning. Plaintiff contends that the disclaimer is too small in size and that it applies to errors of others providing information to defendant, while in this instance defendant had available to it the correct information but failed to publish it.

The parties are also far apart on the issue of damages. Plaintiff purchased 7500 warrants for $82,229.37 and sold 75 calls for $44,284.30, a transaction which required him to invest $37,945.07 of his own funds. He has reconstructed the transaction as if the acceleration provision was not included as a term of the warrant and concludes that he would have profited in the amount of $25,835.31, which he seeks as damages. Plaintiffs actual out of pocket loss was, according to plaintiff, $6,519.96. He in August, 1984 had achieved a profit on paper totalling $4,907.00 which he claims in addition, if the appropriate measure of damages is his out of pocket loss. Defendant calculates the out-of-pocket loss on a more conservative basis and arrives at a total of $5,136.00.

There is merit to the plaintiffs argument that the so-called disclaimer does not carry the day for the defendant. The statement is: “Factual material is obtained from sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed.” Plaintiff contends that the purpose of this statement is to protect defendant from the errors of others. Read literally, as it must be, plaintiff is quite correct.

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Bluebook (online)
640 F. Supp. 967, 13 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1198, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gale-v-value-line-inc-rid-1986.