Pierre J. LeLandais & Co., Inc. v. MDS-Atron, Inc.

387 F. Supp. 1310, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11400
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 27, 1974
Docket72 Civ. 2278-CLB
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 387 F. Supp. 1310 (Pierre J. LeLandais & Co., Inc. v. MDS-Atron, Inc.) 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
Pierre J. LeLandais & Co., Inc. v. MDS-Atron, Inc., 387 F. Supp. 1310, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11400 (S.D.N.Y. 1974).

Opinion

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

BRIE ANT, District J udge.

This action was initiated May 25, 1972 and tried before me without a jury commencing on February 11, 1974. The post-trial briefs and memoranda of the parties have been considered.

By their amended complaint filed June 1, 1973, plaintiffs assert numerous and variously stated claims against some or all of the defendants. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction of those claims pleaded under the federal securities laws, and pendent jurisdiction of common law claims pleaded, as well as personal jurisdiction over all of the parties except for defendant Joseph S. Stoutenburgh, upon whom personal service of the summons and complaint was never effected. 1

Plaintiffs seek to recover damages by reason of claimed breach of §§ 14(a) and 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; Rules 14a-9 and 10b-5, arising out of the corporate merger hereinafter described. While eight (8) separate counts or causes of action are pleaded, it is unnecessary to summarize or list them.

A detailed pre-trial order was filed January 3, 1974. The stipulations and concessions of fact contained therein are incorporated herein by reference without specific restatement.

The Parties.

Plaintiffs are purchasers or successors in interest of purchasers of common stock of Atron Corporation (“Atron”), incorporated in Minnesota on November 27, 1968. Pierre J. LeLandais & Co., *1314 Inc., for purposes of this litigation, maybe treated as the alter ego of Pierre J. LeLandais, whose Atron stock it acquired as beneficial owner. See PreTrial Order, If 10. Intercontinental Technology & National Resources, S.A. (hereinafter “ITNR”), a Luxembourg corporation, became on or about November 18, 1969, the beneficial owner of Atron stock, originally purchased by plaintiff Research and Science Investors, Inc. (“RSI”).

RSI is a Maryland corporation which refers to itself as a venture capital fund. ITNR. is an investment fund. Plaintiff Coronet Fund (“Coronet”) is a partnership in which Rudi E. Ludt is general partner. It is a venture capital fund. Ludt is by occupation a professional money manager. Creative Capital Fund (“Creative”) is likewise a partnership operated as a venture capital fund in which Erwin LePow is general partner. LePow’s prior professional experience is that of senior vice-president of a company listed on the American Stock Exchange. Mr. LeLandais’ professional experience has been that of an investment banker and stock broker.

Plaintiffs may be classified as experienced and knowledgeable investors of the sort to whom the relatively meaningless description “sophisticated” is so often applied. Indeed, defendants claim, with some justification, that their adversaries are “super-sophisticated.”

Defendant Mohawk Data Sciences Corp. (“Mohawk”) is a publicly owned New York corporation whose common stock is and was at all relevant times registered and, publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. It is and was engaged in the design, development, manufacture and sale, or disposition by rental arrangements having many characteristics of a sale, of electronic data processing equipment to be used by the ultimate computer customer. Defendant Richard L. Karpen was from January 1st to April 30, 1971 an officer and director of Mohawk, and a director of Atron.- Defendant Joseph S. Stoutenburgh was President and a Director of Atron from its inception until April 30, 1971. Thereafter, until the date of trial, he was employed by a wholly owned subsidiary of Mohawk.

MDS-Atron, Inc. is a Delaware corporation wholly owned by Mohawk. It was formed as a corporate vehicle to effect a statutory merger of Atron whereby shareholders of Atron would acquire common stock of Mohawk, and Mohawk through its sole ownership of MDSAtron stock would become in effect the owner of the business and assets of Atron. Atron merged with MDS-Atron, Inc., and in practical effect merged with Mohawk bn April 30,1971.

Factual Background.

A group of persons having special talents in the electronic data processing ■ field, most of whom had previously been employed by Sperry-Rand, and participated thereby in the early development of “Univac”, formed Atron in 1968 for the purpose of designing, developing and manufacturing computer equipment or components to be sold to original equipment manufacturers. At all relevant times, Mohawk was Atron’s principal customer, to the extent of approximately 90% of sales, and in addition, Mohawk was a supplier of peripheral devices such as line printers and cardreaders to Atron for inclusion as components of Atron’s systems.

In early 1971, Mohawk owned 195,000 shares of Atron common stock, and the Mohawk Pension Trust owned 16,000 shares, making a total of 211,000 shares out of 1,090,110 shares outstanding. Mohawk acquired some of its shares as original issue, and purchased the balance in January, 1969. All Mohawk’s shares of Atron were purchased without registration under the Securities Act of 1933. All were subject to transfer restrictions, pursuant to a so-called investment letter, or otherwise, which prevented sale thereof by Mohawk without registration.

Mohawk, after January, 1971, had the contract right to terminate its purchases of Atron’s principal product, and manufacture the product itself. Atron, in *1315 brief, was a single customer company, faced with the realistic possibility of losing that customer. It was operating at a substantial loss ($1,298,945.00 for its fiscal year ending September 30, 1970, and continuing during the months immediately prior to April 30, 1971), but it possessed $3,000,000.00 in. uninvested cash or cash equivalent.

Most, if not all, of plaintiffs, had acquired their shares directly or indirectly as a result of the efforts of LeLandais, or securities firms with which he had been associated. In December, 1968, Mohawk, together with other principals of Atron, purchased its first stock issue. In the course of these sales to so-called “founders”, SCI Capital, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of LeLandais’ then employer Stralem & Co., investment bankers, bought 3,750 shares. 2 Later, of this stock, 1,668 shares were issued to LeLandais. Each of these shares were restricted as to transfer, and bore the customary legend on the certificates to that effect. In January, 1969, Mohawk purchased 187,500 additional shares. A private placement was effected that same month, in part through the efforts of LeLandais, and it was at that time that plaintiffs Coronet, Creative, LeLandais & Co. and RSI also acquired various holdings of Atron shares, all as detailed in the pre-trial order.

A second private placement took place in September, 1969, effected by Hamershlag, Borg & Co., an investment banking firm which then included LeLandais among its members. In January, 1970 Ladenburg Thalman & Co. sold 300,000 shares to the public pursuant to a registration statement. These shares were sold in units of one warrant and two shares.

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Bluebook (online)
387 F. Supp. 1310, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierre-j-lelandais-co-inc-v-mds-atron-inc-nysd-1974.