Gearhart Industries, Inc. v. Smith International, Inc.

741 F.2d 707, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19003
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 1984
DocketNos. 84-1483, 84-1620
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 741 F.2d 707 (Gearhart Industries, Inc. v. Smith International, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gearhart Industries, Inc. v. Smith International, Inc., 741 F.2d 707, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19003 (5th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

GEE, Circuit Judge:

On this appeal we review a preliminary injunction and various other orders entered by the district court in connection with an attempt by Appellant Smith International, Inc. (Smith) to acquire control of Appellee Gearhart Industries, Inc. (Gearhart), another company operating in the general area of oil field service. A cross-appeal by Gearhart complains of the court’s refusal to sterilize voting rights in a large block of Gearhart shares purchased by Smith early in the takeover attempt from General Electric Venture Capital Corporation.

The movant must prove four prerequisites to secure a preliminary injunction: (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) a substantial threat that the movant will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not issued; (3) that threatened injury to the movant outweighs any damage the injunction might cause to the opponent; and (4) that the injunction will not disserve the public interest. Apple Barrel Productions, Inc. v. Beard, 730 F.2d 384, 386 (5th Cir.1984). The grant or denial of a preliminary injunction by the district judge may be reversed on appeal only by a showing of abuse of discretion. Id. The four elements for preliminary injunctive relief are mixed questions of fact and law. Id. The district court’s findings of fact must be upheld unless they are clearly erroneous. Id. Its conclusions of law, however, are subject to broad review and will be reversed if incorrect. Id.; see also Houston Agricultural Credit Corp. v. United States, 736 F.2d 233 at 235 (5th Cir.1984). [711]*711Whether we might have done as the trial court did is thus of no consequence; the question for us is whether the trial court exceeded the broad limits within which its power could properly be exercised, and we conclude that in some respects it did.

The situation in which the parties and the trial court are placed demands of us speed rather than art, nor — as we note above— need we engage in the sort of plenary review that an appeal of permanent relief would require. Henry v. First Nat’l Bank, 595 F.2d 291, 302 (5th Cir.1979). Hence, we shall be as brief as possible, consistent with explaining the reasons for our rulings. A more full exposition of the facts leading up to the tender offer will be found in the opinion of the trial court, reported at 592 F.Supp. 203 (N.D.Tex. 1984). We state them here only briefly, adding more particulars where needful in the body of our opinion.

Factual Background

Gearhart, the target, is a Texas corporation engaged in the business of oil well evaluation. Its common stock, consisting at the time of the district court’s opinion of just over sixteen million shares issued and outstanding, is listed and traded on the New York Stock Exchange and elsewhere. Smith, the would-be acquirer of control, is a Delaware corporation, admitted to do business in Texas and engaged in oil field service work there. For well over ten years, Smith and Gearhart have considered joining forces in some fashion, going so far about a year ago as to discuss specific merger ratios of Smith shares per Gearhart share. About the same time, however, Smith, with a view to acquiring Gearhart, employed an investment banker and assembled an internal acquisition team.

Shortly after this, and in connection with their merger discussions, Smith obtained permission from Gearhart to talk with General Electric Venture Capital Corporation (GE) about a block of 3,640,514 Gearhart shares it owned. Discussions of various proposals followed, including the possibility that GE might buy out both companies. In mid-October 1983, however, Smith secretly negotiated a purchase of the GE block at $31 a share. When Gearhart learned of the purchase, it expressed approval.

Smith filed a 13(d) disclosure statement just before purchasing the GE shares stating that its purpose in buying the GE block was “acquiring a significant investment” in Gearhart and that, if Gearhart’s prospects appeared to justify it, “Smith may determine to increase its position in [Gearhart].” Over the course of the next half year, Smith increased its position in Gearhart by the purchase of about a half-million shares, most in two blocks totalling over 330,000 shares from Jeffries & Co., a brokerage house, at a price of $21, and some on the open market. By February 1984, Gearhart had apparently become apprehensive about Smith’s activities and retained counsel and an investment banker. In addition, it began to discuss these activities with Smith, seeking to obtain a standstill agreement or otherwise to deflect Smith’s apparent acquisition project. Smith was not cooperative.

By early April, Gearhart rightly concluded that Smith had thrown down the gauntlet. The tempo picked up: in the first week of that month Smith bought over a quarter-million Gearhart shares on the open market at prices between $25 and $27 per share. By April 10, when it filed an amended 13(d) disclosure statement owning up at last to a purpose to continue its acquisition program “by tender offer or otherwise,” it had obtained a 26.5 percent position in Gearhart. Two days later, Smith made a firm offer to purchase a block of well over a million shares of Gear-hart from Kemper Financial Services, Inc. The transaction was consummated on April 16, at a time when — as the trial court concluded — an oral standstill agreement was in effect between Smith and Gearhart. With this, Smith had acquired over one third of Gearhart’s outstanding common stock. Gearhart brought suit on April 18 in both state and federal court seeking to abort the Smith charge.

[712]*712That same day, the Gearhart board authorized the issuance and sale of a large amount of subordinated debentures and accompanying warrants. Nine days later, Gearhart sold $98,700,000 of the debentures at a discount, grossing about $73,-000,000. The accompanying warrants allowed purchase of 2,961,000 shares of Gearhart stock and contained an unusual feature, a provision for reduction of the stock purchase price should certain “triggering events” occur. For its part, on April 27 Smith announced its partial tender' offer, a triggering event, for Gearhart stock and, after the district court declined Gearhart’s request to enjoin it, made the offer on April 30: $31 a share for 3,700,000 shares, enough to give Smith control at the then existing level of issued stock, but leaving a major percentage of stock outstanding in the hands of what would then be minority stockholders of Gearhart.

Thereafter the trial court held an extended evidentiary hearing in connection with Gearhart’s request that the tender offer be halted for claimed violations of both state and federal law by Smith and on Smith’s counterclaim and third-party claim by which it sought an injunction against the holders of the recently-issued debentures and warrants forbidding disposition of the debentures or exercise of the warrants. On June 5, the court filed its memorandum opinion and order enjoining the tender offer on the basis of violations of Sections 13(d) and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d)(l) and 78n(e), as amended by the Williams Act, as well as of Smith’s breach of a standby agreement that it found the parties had entered into under state law.

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741 F.2d 707, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gearhart-industries-inc-v-smith-international-inc-ca5-1984.