Kornfeld v. Eaton

217 F. Supp. 671, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9847
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 24, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 217 F. Supp. 671 (Kornfeld v. Eaton) 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
Kornfeld v. Eaton, 217 F. Supp. 671, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9847 (S.D.N.Y. 1963).

Opinion

WEINFELD, District Judge.

These are cross-motions for summary judgment in an action brought under *672 section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 1 on behalf of the Norwich Pharmacal Company to recover short-swing profits realized by one of its officers and directors. The matter is ripe for summary judgment since the basic facts are not in dispute. What is at issue is the validity of Rule X-16B-6 of the Securities and Exchange Commission which in effect limits the amount of profits recoverable when stock, involved in a short-swing transaction, has been purchased by an “insider” 2 by the exercise of an option acquired more than six months before its exercise. In short, the Rule recognizes a distinction between the long term and short term aspects of profits realized in such purchases and sales, and grants exemption only on the long term profits. The Commission appears as amicus curiae and urges the validity of its Rule, 3 which provides in pertinent part:

“(a) To the extent specified in paragraph (b) of this section the Commission hereby exempts as not comprehended within the purposes of section 16(b) of the act any transaction or transactions involving the purchase and sale or sale and purchase of any equity security where such purchase is pursuant to the exercise of an option or similar right either (1) acquired more than six months before its exercise, or (2) acquired pursuant to the terms of an employment contract entered into more than six months before its exercise.
“(b) In respect of transactions specified in paragraph (a) of this section the profits inuring to the issuer shall not exceed the difference between the proceeds of sale and the lowest market price of any security of the same class within six months before or after the date of sale. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to enlarge the amount of profit which would inure to the issuer in the absence of this section.” The undisputed facts are:

The defendant Thomas J. Eaton, at all times hereinafter mentioned, was a director and officer of the Norwich Pharmacal Company, the stock of which was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. On August 23, 1956 Norwich granted to Eaton an option to purchase 2,000 shares of its common stock at ninety-five per cent of its fair market value at the time of the grant of the option. The then market price was $13.63 per share and the option price was $12.95 per share. 4 The option was exercisable at any time within eight years after its issuance; it was conditioned upon continuance in Norwich’s employ for one year after grant and was not transferrable or assignable except by will or intestacy. The option was granted and the conditions attached thereto were pursuant to a Key Employees’ Stock Option Plan approved in September, 1951 by the Norwich stockholders. Eaton did not exercise his option until almost four years after it accrued, when on July 12, 1960 he purchased 2,000 shares of the stock *673 at $12.95 per share. Within six months before this purchase, between February 25 and May 12, 1960, on three separate occasions he sold a total of 2,228 shares of Norwich common stock at net prices ranging from $40.55 to $44.93 per share. There is no dispute but that the foregoing sales and purchase come within the scope of section 16 (b). The range of the lowest price of the stock at any time within six months before or after the respective sale dates of the stock was between $32.50 and $37.25 per share.

In October, 1961 plaintiffs’ attorney requested Norwich to institute suit against Eaton to recover the short-swing profits realized by him upon the transactions. Thereafter, upon Norwich’s demand, Eaton paid to Norwich $15,418.96 together with interest from July 12, 1960 to the date of payment. Plaintiffs concede that the sum was computed in accordance with the provisions of Rule X-16B-6. However, contending that the Rule was invalid, they demanded that Norwich institute action to recover the claimed additional profits, which they computed at $45,945.62 plus interest. This figure is based upon their contention that the purchase price of the stock was its value on the day the options accrued, to wit, on August 23, 1956, when the market value was $13.63. The company refused, whereupon the present suit was commenced.

The plaintiffs’ fundamental position is that the Rule is beyond the power of the Commission since it offends the basic purpose of section 16(b) of the Act and, in any event, since it limits the amount of profits recoverable from a short-swing transaction, it exceeds the Commission’s statutory power of exemption. Eaton and Norwich not only join the SEC in urging the validity of the Rule, but make the further defense that the payment of $15,418.96 plus interest made by Eaton to Norwich, and accepted by it, was a good faith settlement of defendant’s liability for the short-swing transaction; and moreover that the defendant cannot be held for additional “profit,” for he had in good faith relied upon the Commission rule. In practical terms what is involved is whether the market increment of the stock from the time Eaton acquired his option up to the short-swing period surrounding the sales herein is to be included in computing the profits of the short-swing transactions.

The essential purpose of section 16(b) as appears from its policy declaration and as repeatedly emphasized by the courts is to assure a fair and honest market and to prevent short-swing speculation and market manipulation by directors, officers and ten per cent stockholders through the use of inside or advance information. 5 To effectuate that purpose, Congress provided that “any profit realized” by an insider on any purchase and sale, or any sale and purchase, of an equity security within any period of less than six months, the so-called swing period, was to inure to the benefit of the corporation. The Act itself does not specify how the “profit realized” is to be computed. The Courts, in the absence of such legislative direction, have fashioned their own rules largely on an ad hoc basis. In enforcing the Act, they have gone upon the assumption that it intended “to squeeze all possible profits out of stock transactions” 6 as the effective means of discouraging short-swing transactions. Thus, in the early and oft cited case of Smolowe v. Delendo Corp. 7 our Court of Appeals, in considering the method for computing “any profit realized,” rejected such concepts as “identity of certificates,” “first in, first out” and “average cost of shares,” as permit *674 ting possible evasion of the purposes of the Act. It reached an empirical judgment that “The only rule whereby all possible profits can be surely recovered is that of lowest price in, highest price out —within six months * * 8 This doctrine was independently examined and adhered to in Gratz v. Claughton 9

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Bluebook (online)
217 F. Supp. 671, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kornfeld-v-eaton-nysd-1963.