Northern States Power Co. v. Securities & Exchange Commission

164 F.2d 810, 5 SEC Jud. Dec. 589, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3727, 1947 WL 55583
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1947
DocketNos. 9323, 9384
StatusPublished

This text of 164 F.2d 810 (Northern States Power Co. v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern States Power Co. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 164 F.2d 810, 5 SEC Jud. Dec. 589, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3727, 1947 WL 55583 (3d Cir. 1947).

Opinion

GOODRICH, Circuit Judge.

The Court has before it two petitions by Northern States Power Company, a Delaware corporation, referred to hereafter as the Delaware Company. They are brought under § 24(a)1 ******of the Public Utility Holding Company Act2 to modify two orders of [812]*812the Commission. Since the two petitions raise the same legal point they were briefed together in this Court.3 In brief, what is sought by the petitioner is that the Court modify the order in which the Commission (1) directs that the existence of the Delaware Company be terminated and (2) orders further proceedings pursuant to § 11 (b) (2)4 of the Public Utility Holding Company Act. The theory upon which these petitions for modification are based will be discussed below. But, first, a summary of prior steps with regard to the Delaware Company and its related corporations is necessary.

The Delaware Company, a holding company pure and simple, owns all the shares ■of the Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota corporation, which will be referred to as the Minnesota Company hereafter." The Minnesota Company is an operating public utility company which, however, also owns shares in other companies which are themselves holding companies. The nature and extent of that ownership is not relevant here. The Delaware Company was organized to hold the stock of the Minnesota Company because Minnesota law, at the time, imposed a liability on shareholders in corporations which, it was thought, would interfere with the marketing of the securities of the Minnesota Company. Subsequently, the Minnesota law was changed and the reason for the Delaware Company’s existence terminated with that change. This statement of fact is not a matter of dispute between the parties and it is conceded by all the participants in this litigation that the Delaware Company’s life must come to an end. So far as it is concerned, the question here involved is not “what” but "how.”

The Delaware Company, on June 3, 1942, inaugurated voluntary proceedings for its termination by filing a plan for liquidation and dissolution under § 11(e)5 of the Public Utility Holding Company Act. Two days later, June 5, 1942, the Commission [813]*813started proceedings under § 11 (b) (2)6 and two other Sections not relevant here. The § 11 (b) (2) proceedings and the § 11 (e) proceedings were consolidated by Commission order.

Hearings were had and the plan submitted by the Delaware Company, as amended pursuant to Commission recommendations, met with an order approving the plan by the Commission dated October 31, 1945.7 This plan was taken to the District Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota on the Commission’s application pursuant to § 11 (e) for judicial enforcement. Certain objections developed. The post-war situation had made definite that which had been a subject of prophecy while the war was on and the financial situation both as to earnings and taxes had changed during the three year period between the filing of the plan and the enforcement proceeding. The Commission, therefore, vacated its order of approval and the matter was reopened for further hearings which were duly had.

On November 6, 1946, the Delaware Company filed with the Commission what is called its second amended plan, for liquidation and dissolution under § 11 (e) of the Act. On November 8, 1946, the Commission entered the first order complained of under § 11 (b) (2), one of the terms of which ordered the termination of the existence of the Delaware Company and the filing by it of a plan for its liquidation.8 This portion of the order was opposed by the Delaware Company before the Commission and upon its defeat before that body it raises the question of the legality of the Commission’s action in this Court.

The above recital of facts shows that the question before this Court is a very narrow one. No one is seeking to prolong the life of the doomed Delaware corporation. Nor has this Court before it the merits of a plan for distributing its effects after its corporate death. The sole question is whether exhaustion of the § 11 (e) proceedings is a condition precedent to a commencement of proceedings under § H (b) (2).

Delaware Company’s contention is that it has been acting in good’faith and that it is entitled, both according to the statute and court decisions thereunder, to have the proceedings for liquidation and dissolution carried on through consideration of its voluntary proceedings under § 11(e). It says that the procedure under § 11 (b) (2) is much more risky to it than the vol[814]*814untary proceedings under § 11 (e). It points out that the time in which to comply is limited to one year unless the Commission for cause shown extends the time another year.9 It likewise points out that upon the failure to suggest a plan which the Commission will approve, it may lose control of its corporate enterprise. We think the Commission has stated the petitioner’s position correctly when it says that the latter argues that §§ 11 (b)- (2) and 11 (e) provide mutually exclusive methods of compliance with the Act and that therefore proceedings under § 11 (b) (2) must be held back until voluntary efforts under § 11 (e) have been exhausted without having produced a successful plan. We add to that that we think the petitioner’s position would require the Commission to hold back its § 11 (b) (2) proceedings indefinitely so long as a company submitting a plan cannot be found to have been acting in bad faith under § 11 (e).

Petitioner does not say that he has been, up to this time, hurt by the Commission’s orders. The Commission has not refused to consider the second amended plan; indeed, the Court was advised that at the time the briefs were filed, the plan was soon to have a hearing.10 We do not know whether this hearing has' been held or not. The petitioner’s point, therefore, comes to the proposition that he is entitled, under the law, to have his § 11 (e) plans considered without reference to § 11 (b) (2) proceedings until the efforts result in an approved plan or demonstrated failure of effort to provide one. If the law provides such rigid order of procedure, of course, petitioner is entitled to such benefit as he may derive from it.

We do not think that petitioner’s legal point is well taken. Section 11(a)11 of the statute imposes upon the Commission a duty stated in broad terms to examine holding company structures with a view to simplification, distribution of voting power, and the establishment of an integrated public utility system. In accomplishing that result it has been pointed out by this Court that the companies, themselves, have a broad area of discretion in determining how to bring their systems within the required standards. It was pointed out that orders entered under § 11 (b) are “fundamentally directions that the companies involved achieve a stated result * * * ” and that “Congress intended that the Commission might leave open for later consideration the detailed means by which the result directed should be accomplished.” Commonwealth & Southern Corporation v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 3 Cir., 1943, 134 F.2d 747, 751.

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164 F.2d 810, 5 SEC Jud. Dec. 589, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3727, 1947 WL 55583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-states-power-co-v-securities-exchange-commission-ca3-1947.