Phillips v. Securities and Exchange Commission

185 F.2d 746, 87 U.S. App. D.C. 380, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4303, 1950 WL 79058
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1950
Docket10470
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 746 (Phillips v. Securities and Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Phillips v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 185 F.2d 746, 87 U.S. App. D.C. 380, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4303, 1950 WL 79058 (D.C. Cir. 1950).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Judge.

The petition before us seeks relief based essentially on the contention that the Securities & Exchange Commission has failed to act with proper diligence and dispatch in bringing about the dissolution of United Corporation, a company registered under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935. 49 Stat. 803, 15 U.S.C.A. § 79 et seq.

The petitioner, a stockholder of United Corporation, raises this contention in the following context: On August 14, 1943, after hearings, the Commission issued an order requiring United (1) to cease to be a holding company, (2) to reduce its capitalization to one class of stock, and (3) to proceed to comply with the order with due diligence. The Commission did not determine, in this order, the details of the manner in which United should effectuate compliance. 1 Nor did it determine the major question whether United was to be dissolved, or be permittted to reorganize and become an investment company — the latter course being the one advocated by United’s management.

After the entry of the 1943 order, United took a series of steps in the direction of compliance. It simplified its capital structure by buying up and otherwise extinguishing its preferred stock; since April 30, 1949, it has had only a single outstanding class of stock (the common, of which petitioner is a holder). United also divested itself of a number of its subsidiaries. As of April 30, 1949, there remained two companies, Niagara Hudson Power Corporation and South Jersey Gas Company, of which United held more than the statutory level of ten per cent of the voting securities. Act § 2(a) (7).

The present proceeding for review attacks an order which the Securities & Exchange Commission issued on October 20, 1949, relative to United’s holdings in Niagara Hudson Power Corporation. In June 1949 United brought before the Commission a proposal to distribute to United’s stockholders one share of common stock of Niagara Hudson Power Corporation for each ten shares of United. It would appear that United then held 2,818,397 shares of Niagara Hudson common, and 48,529 shares of preferred, approximating 28.5 per cent of the total voting stock. On October 20, 1949, the Commission issued its order approving the proposed distribution; in consequence, 1,442,973 shares of Niagara Hudson common and $158,401 in cash were distributed to the common stockholders of United. This reduced the figure of 28.5 per cent of control to approximately 14.1 per cent. 2 In attacking the order of *748 October 20, 1949, petitioner accepts the principle of distributing Niagara Hudson shares, but objects because the amount of the distribution was not greater. He advocated a distribution twice as large as the one ordered on October 20, 1949; such a distribution would, of course, have taken United completely out of the Niagara Hudson field. Among other things, his petition requests this Court to compel the larger distribution.

United Corporation, which has intervened in this proceeding, states that it has no desire to continue to retain even as much as a ten per cent interest in the voting securities of Niagara Hudson, or in South Jersey Gas Company. On November 16, 1949, it filed with the Commission a plan which would transform it into an investment company. United states that its plan was filed not only as a further compliance with the 1943 order but also in compliance with a condition which the Commission inserted in the order of October 20, 1949 (here under review), that United “file, promptly as its next step under the Commission’s order of August 14, 1943, a comprehensive plan under Section 11(e) of the Act, detailing the remaining steps to be taken, and the timing thereof, to complete its transformation into an investment company.” The comprehensive plan, says United, will provide for the prompt reduction below the ten per cent level of United’s holdings of voting securities of Niagara Hudson and South Jersey Gas Company, and a further program of reduction which at the end of five years would bring its holdings of any public utility company or utility holding company below a five per cent level. Hearings were commenced on this plan on January 24, 1950, and Mr. Phillips, the petitioner here, has participated therein.

As has been indicated, petitioner asks us to modify the Commission’s order of October 20, 1949, so as to direct immediate distribution in kind to the common stockholders of United of an additional block of shares of Niagara Hudson. He also asks that the October 20 order be modified so as to compel the management of United Corporation “to complete in all other respects no later than 3 months hereafter full compliance with the Holding Company Act.” (Petition, par. 4) (Emphasis added). His brief makes clear what he has in mind in this regard; the first prayer of its concluding paragraph is that “The order of the Commission dated October 20, 1949 should be modified or set aside in such part as to require the Commission to enforce forthwith the plan of petitioner. * * * ” (Br., 46) (Emphasis supplied). He sets forth in full the plan of reorganization advocated by him (App., 56) ; essentially it provides for immediate distribution to United’s stockholders of all the Niagara Hudson stock in the portfolio, and the sale on the open market within three months of all United’s remaining investments in its statutory subsidiaries.

I.

In considering the issues thus raised, we must recall that the Holding Company Act of 1935 does not require that a registered company divest itself instantly and completely of every share of a public utility in which it holds ’more than ten per cent of the voting securities. As the Supreme Court has pointed out, “ * * * the compromise bill which became law omitted the unconditional provision of § 11(b) (3) for the elimination of all holding companies within five years, substituting therefor the ‘great-grandfather clause’ of § 11(b) (2), and gave the Commission discretion to determine the necessary steps for compliance instead of specifying reorganization or' dissolution. * * * ' The Commission is the body which has the statutory duty of 'Considering the possible solutions *749 and choosing that which it considers most appropriate to the effectuation of the policies of the Act. Our review is limited solely to testing the propriety of the remedy so chosen from the standpoint of the Constitution and the statute.” American Power Co. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 329 U.S. 90, 115, 118, 67 S.Ct. 133, 147, 91 L.Ed. 103.

Reading of the Act as a whole shows that simple destruction of holding companies was not what Congress had in mind. Instead, Congress was interested in the protection of the vast number of investors who during the boom years had suffered by being induced to purchase shares in holding companies, without obtaining either adequate information or an adequate degree of representation or control. Other congressional objectives were, of course, to bring about more effective regulation of operating utility companies and holding companies, and better service to users of utility products and services. To this end, Congress provided for the registration of holding companies, and for their continued regulation.

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185 F.2d 746, 87 U.S. App. D.C. 380, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4303, 1950 WL 79058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-securities-and-exchange-commission-cadc-1950.