In re Federal Water & Gas Corp.

87 F. Supp. 289, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 2, 1949
DocketCiv. A. No. 1142
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F. Supp. 289 (In re Federal Water & Gas Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Federal Water & Gas Corp., 87 F. Supp. 289, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017 (D. Del. 1949).

Opinion

LEAHY, Chief Judge.

This court, pursuant to a § 11 proceeding under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 15 U.S.C.A. § 79k, approved by order and without opinion, the “dissolution and partial distribution plan” of Federal Water and Gas Corporation as fair and equitable and appropriate to effectuate the provisions of § 11. Part 3 of the plan to which objections had been taken by the Chenery Group (hereinafter referred to as - “Chenery”) were reserved for later consideration and these are now ready for decision. The Chenery litigation has had a long history, both before the Securities and Exchange Commission and the courts.1

The question for decision, then, is whether Part 3 of "the plan is fair and equitable in its treatment of certain officers, directors and controlling stockholders of Federal, notwithstanding they do not share pari passu with other shareholders. This because their preferred stock was purchased on over-the-counter markets during periods when successive reorganization plans proposed by Chenery were before the SEC. Under the fourth reorganization plan this preferred stock was to be converted into common stock of the new and resultant corporation via merger. On the basis of the purchases of preferred stock already referred to, Chenery would have received a substantial percentage of the new common stock. It is conceded that Chenery’s purpose • in buying preferred stock was to protect its interest in the new company and to make a profit; and that there was no fraud or lack of disclosure in ' making the purchases.

As stated above the SEC refused to approve the fourth plan when submitted because the preferred .stock purchased by Chenery was to be treated on a par with the other preferred stock, and it concluded that the officers and directors of a holding company in the process of reorganization under the Act were fiduciaries and were under a duty not to trade in the securities of that company during the reorganization period. 8 S.E.C. 893, 915-921. An amendment to the plan was had which provided that the preferred stock acquired by Chenery, unlike that held by others, was not to be transmuted into new common stock but was, on the contrary, to be surrendered at cost, plus ¿11 dividends accumulated since the purchase dates. This latter plan was approved by the SEC over Chenery’s objection. The basis of these objections are now here for disposition. The issue, viz., is it fair and equitable to deny Chenery equal treatment and to pay the group only $313,190.00, I believe was raised in the merger phase of the case which was passed on by the Supreme Court in two cases.

1. In the first case, S. E. C. v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 63 S.Ct. 454, 87 L.Ed. 626, the Court-reversed the SEC with a remand. The Court held that the SEC’s [291]*291denial of equal participation to Chenery’s preferred could not be sustained on the grounds upon which the Commission acted. On remand, the SEC changed its rationale but reached the same result.

2. In the second Chenery case, 332 U.S. 194, 67 S.Ct. 1575, 1760, 91 L.Ed. 1995, the Supreme Court found that the SEC’s later order had avoided the fatal error which was the basis of its first Chenery action. But what was the precise holding in the second Chenery case is the dispute in the matter at bar. The way this dispute is resolved will largely solve the present question for decision. The objectors argue the, SEC’s order which formed the basis of the second Chenery case did not pass or decide the particular case but stated a rule or standard or policy of the Commission. And such policy is that transactions in securities during a reorganization by officers and directors under the Public Utility Holding Company Act are interdicted. That being the SEC’s decision, the objectors strongly argue that is the Commission action which the Supreme Court affirmed. In short, the objectors say the precise holding of the Supreme Court in the second Chenery case is that the Commission had the power to adopt this new principle, standard or policy as to corporate officials. More than that, the objectors argue the Commission in practice has never adhered to this policy but has adopted a policy of deciding each reorganization case on the merits; that the Commission has never examined the factual record in the present case; and, if it did, there would be no substantial evidence to support the action of the Commission in excluding Chenery from equal participation with other security holders of the same class. The Commission and opponents to Chenery urge the negative of the objectors’ arguments. In short, they urge that the precise matter now before me —whether the Chenery group should participate equally with the other preferred— yvas decided by the Supreme Court in the second Chenery case adversely to the objectors. Consequently the matter is res judicata or, at least, the law of the case.

I think the second Chenery case, especially as interpreted by the Supreme Court itself in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Central-Illinois Securities Corporation, 338 U.S. 96, 69 S.Ct. 1337, compels me to the single conclusion that I am required to approve this plan as fair and equitable as it relates to Chenery. The language of Mr. Justice Rutledge in “Engineers” reads that the Court approved2 without qualification the order of the SEC in the second Chenery case. I am unable to accept the argument of Chenery that the Supreme Court in the second Chenery case merely approved the right of the Commission to enunciate a particular rule or policy, and did not approve or disapprove the application of the policy to the particular case. Regardless of whether the language of the Court in the Engineers case, as to its interpretation regarding the holding of the Chenery case, is dictum, I think, at least as a matter of general semantics, the language indicates that the Court' thought it had approved the action of the Commission in the Chenery case without any qualification at all. This is the apparent meaning of the language used by the Court. The arguments of Chenery that the language used has a different meaning fail to persuade me and consequently I hold that the issue raised here has already been concluded against Chenery by the Supreme Court.

For the reasons just detailed, the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Manu[292]*292facturers Trust Co. v. Becker, 1949, 70 S.Ct. 127, does not compel a different conclusion. There is language in the opinion indicating that in the absence of a definite rule or policy by a regulatory body, a case of this nature must be determined on its particular facts. While as I view the matter there is much in the Becker case to support Chenery’s contentions, still the ratio behind my present memorandum is that I interpret the language .of the Court in the Engineers case, when it refers to the second Chenery decision, as specifically and unqualifiedly approving the action of the Commission as applied to the facts of the Chenery case itself.

3. The Commission’s opinion in the Chenery case seems clearly to indicate that the circumstances of each case are not controlling but that all transactions in securities during reorganization by officers and directors, are prohibited.

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87 F. Supp. 289, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-federal-water-gas-corp-ded-1949.