Kaback v. Schweickart & Co.

415 F. Supp. 646, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14887
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 27, 1976
Docket74 Civil 5341
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 415 F. Supp. 646 (Kaback v. Schweickart & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaback v. Schweickart & Co., 415 F. Supp. 646, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14887 (S.D.N.Y. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION, FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

Plaintiffs Bernard and Florence Kaback, husband and wife, college educated, both principals in the New York City school sys *648 tem, bring this action against various defendants seeking recovery of the value of securities, essentially upon claims of violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, and of Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder.

The defendants are: Schweickart and Co., a limited partnership, and its general partners Winfield H. Schweickart, Jean M. Golashesky, Frank J. Bennett, Frederick W. Schwerin, Nicholas G. Tomasulo, Robert H. Reimer, Eugene M. Cohen, Alexander P. Kelly, III, and Arthur Rafkind. Also named as a defendant is Howard M. Miller, who was a limited partner of Schweickart and Co., and through whose introduction to Schweickart’s partners plaintiffs first entered into the transactions, the final one of which is the subject of this litigation. Plaintiff Bernard Kaback, in connection with those transactions, acted on behalf of both plaintiffs. Accordingly reference to him will be deemed to refer to both.

During the period from about 1948 to 1969, Kaback invested in securities upon the recommendation of a friend and lawyer, and apparently was quite successful in his investments. His experience during those years indicates that he was knowledgeable with respect to securities transactions and their nature; he was familiar with the ways of Wall Street and its jargon. He was sufficiently familiar with so-called “tax shelters” to seek their advantages.

Kaback first met defendant Howard Miller at a school teachers’ convention through a Dr. Abramson. Miller and his wife at that time had a substantial financial interest in Schweickart and Co. as limited partners to the extent of $400,000. Thereafter, plaintiffs the Millers and Dr. Abramson met socially on several occasions and discussed their respective investments. Dr. Abramson and Kaback had expressed to Miller an interest in investment opportunities. About August or September 1969, Schweickart and Co. was seeking to expand its business with additional capital. Miller, after investing an additional $350,000, communicated with Dr. Abramson and suggested to him the opportunity to invest in Schweickart and Co.; Dr. Abramson declined the offer because he was without the required funds. Abramson then suggested that Kaback might have adequate funds, and Miller contacted Kaback.

The Kabacks had securities in their portfolio in excess of $200,000. They were interested in obtaining further income in addition to the dividends payable on these securities. Their initial discussion with Miller related to an investment in Schweickart and Co. as subordinated lenders of securities with interest payable on capital value. Miller acted as a sort of intermediary between Kaback and Stanley A. Nabi, then a general partner of Schweickart and Co. and not a defendant in this action. Thereafter all negotiations and correspondence with respect to the transaction were between Kaback and Nabi or Winfield Schweickart. A return of six percent on the market value of the securities, then valued at $252,500, was agreed upon, and documents evidencing the investment as a subordinated loan to Schweickart' and Co., the partnership, were executed by Kaback. However, based upon a computation, such a transaction was deemed undesirable in view of the Stock Exchange’s restrictions on Schweickart and Co.’s capital structure. Thereupon it was decided that the transaction would be on the basis of a personal loan by Kaback to Winfield Schweickart, the managing general partner of Schweickart and Go. Plaintiff was so advised. An explanatory letter sent to him states: “The New York Stock Exchange does, however, welcome the addition of capital through the means which have been suggested to you — the lending of securities to general partners who in turn lend them to the Firm.”

New agreements were prepared which were duly executed by Kaback and Schweickart whereby the securities were loaned personally to Winfield Schweickart, who was to use the securities or their proceeds to increase his capital investment in Schweickart and Co. The plaintiff understood he was making a personal loan to Winfield Schweickart and the note signed *649 by both parties evidences this. The initial transaction occurred in September 1969. Upon expiration of the loan it was renewed from time to time, in each instance as a personal loan to Winfield Schweickart. With respect to each of these successive transactions separate agreements were executed by Kaback and Schweickart which reflect, as in the instance of the first loan, that they were personal loans to the latter. The dates of the subsequent transactions are September 10, 1970, March 10, 1971, March 3,1972 and September 30,1972. The securities involved in all these transactions were substantially those that had been originally loaned to Schweickart.

Finally there is the note dated May 31, 1973, which is the subject of the instant litigation. Prior thereto, plaintiff testified, he had discussed making an investment as a subordinated lender in another brokerage firm, Edwards and Hanly, which had offered him 6.2 percent interest on his loan. Kaback testified he did not invest in Edwards and Hanly because both Miller and Schweickart, whom he had not met personally up to this time, told him that Edwards and Hanly had lost money in the Equity Funding debacle. Schweickart agreed to pay him the interest rate he had discussed with Edwards and Hanly, to wit, 6.2 percent, and the note of May 31, 1973, was executed in that amount. This note, in addition to bearing Winfield Schweickart’s signature, also was signed by the defendants Jean Golashesky and Alexander P. Kelly, III.

While plaintiffs in their complaint make many charges of fraudulent conduct, upon the trial they were narrowed. First they charge that Winfield Schweickart made a material misrepresentation prior to the May 31,1973 renewal of the loan when he stated that Schweickart and Co. was in “sound financial condition,” and further that Schweickart omitted to state material information in not advising plaintiffs that Schweickart and Co. had suffered monthly losses commencing in February 1973, which by the end of April totaled in excess of $300,000. The Kabacks seek to hold not only Schweickart individually and as a general partner of Schweickart and Co., but also all the other Schweickart general partners in addition to Kelly and Golashesky, who signed the note.

Plaintiffs charge that Miller violated the securities laws in that Miller knew of the firm’s losses in early 1973, but failed to inform them of the losses when Miller allegedly advised the Kabacks to keep their investment in Schweickart and Co. and not to transfer it to Edwards and Hanly. Miller denies the factual basis of the charges against him. Kaback also charges that Miller failed to disclose that he had withdrawn as a subordinated lender in September 1971. Again Miller denies the charge and alleges that he did inform Kaback of his withdrawal in that capacity.

A preliminary and fundamental issue is whether, as plaintiffs contend, their investment by way of the loan of their securities was made in Schweickart and Co., the partnership as an entity, or was made personally to Winfield Schweickart.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 F. Supp. 646, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaback-v-schweickart-co-nysd-1976.