Reserve Life Insurance v. Provident Life Insurance

499 F.2d 715
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1974
DocketNo. 73-1241
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 499 F.2d 715 (Reserve Life Insurance v. Provident Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reserve Life Insurance v. Provident Life Insurance, 499 F.2d 715 (8th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

This lawsuit originates in the efforts of management and directors of Provident Life Insurance Company (Provident), a North Dakota insurance corporation, to thwart attempts by outside interests to obtain a controlling interest in the company. In 1955, the principal officers and certain stockholders of Provident organized a voting trust for a 15-year term expiring November 15, 1970. The trust eventually procured the voting control of more than 60 percent of Provident’s common stock. Prior to the trust’s scheduled expiration date, the trustees sought permission from the trust beneficiaries to extend the trust for an additional 10 years to November 14, 1980. Upon solicitation, about two-thirds of the existing holders of voting trust certificates in Provident, representing 42.44 percent of the common stock of Provident, agreed to the extension.

During this solicitation, appellants Reserve Life Insurance Company (Reserve), a Texas insurance corporation, and Midland National Life Insurance Company (Midland), a South Dakota insurance corporation and a wholly owned subsidiary of Reserve, attempted to block the extension by contacting Provident shareholders and urging them to refuse to consent to the extension. This lawsuit is an adjunct of this attempt and was brought by Reserve and Midland to declare invalid the trustees’ actions in obtaining consents for the extension of the voting trust and to require dissolution of the voting trust.1 The action rests on allegations that, in soliciting for an extension and extending the voting trust, appellee-trustees and Provident violated the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. §§ 77a-77aa), the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. §§ 78a-78hh), and various provisions of the “blue sky” laws of North Dakota and other states.

The district court, Judge Ronald N. Davies,, presiding, denied Reserve and Midland relief. This appeal followed. Federal jurisdiction is established since the complaint in part alleges violations [718]*718of federal securities statutes. The state claims are justiciable in this proceeding as proper matters for pendent jurisdiction.

During the pendency of proceedings in the district court, Reserve and Midland asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to intervene. Representatives of the Commission refused, and thus the district court did not have the benefit of the Commission’s views. Because of the novelty of some of the questions, we invited the SEC to submit its views by way of an amicus curiae brief. The Commission agreed and filed a memorandum with respect to the applicability of the 1933 and the 1934 Securities Acts. This memorandum generally supports the views of the appellants. The appellees have been given an opportunity to respond to the amicus curiae brief and the Commission has filed a reply memorandum. We have taken these additional briefs into consideration.

On appeal, Reserve and Midland now reassert their contentions, previously considered but rejected by the trial court, that:

1) The extension of the voting trust was invalid under applicable provisions of North Dakota law.
2) The solicitation of consents to the extension of the voting trust was invalid because neither the voting trustees nor Provident registered the Provident voting trust agreement under the Securities Act of 1933.
3) The solicitation of consents to the extension of the voting trust was invalid since neither the trustees nor Provident undertook to register the Provident voting trust agreement under various state “blue sky” laws.
4) The trustees failed to register the Provident voting trust agreement under provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended, and thus, solicitation of the consents to extend the voting trust agreement violated the proxy regulations issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission under the 1934 Act.

We sustain the district court on the first three issues, but reverse and remand on the fourth. We examine the factual background and the proceedings in the trial court.

I.

BACKGROUND

The trial court found that the purpose of the 1955 Provident voting trust was to “stabilize [Provident’s] operations, and prevent raids and take-overs.” Approximately 64 percent of Provident's stockholders joined this trust by depositing their stock with the trustees and receiving voting trust certificates in exchange. Provident filed a registration statement for the voting trust certificates pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933.

Although the voting trust expired on November 15, 1970, it contained a provision for the extension of the trust reading:

Extension of Voting Trust. The Trustees and any and all of the Stockholders becoming parties hereto may, by mutual consent, and from time to time, agree to extend said trust and the terms of this agreement. Any individual stockholder not earing to join in the extension of said trust and the terms of this agreement may on any expiration date surrender his or her Voting Trust Certificate or Certificates and receive a certificate of stock of Provident Life Insurance Company for the number of shares to which he or she is entitled.

During 1969, Provident’s directors, as trustees of the voting trust, determined that it was in the corporation’s best interests to extend the voting trust for an additional 10 years. This decision was influenced in part by the announced takeover attempts planned by Reserve and Midland and their Texas parent corporation, Sammons Enterprises, Inc. Accordingly, beginning early in December of 1969, the trustees, with the help of Provident personnel, solicited existing [719]*719members of the voting trust for their consent to a 10-year extension of the trust.

As a preliminary to their attempts to persuade voting certificate holders to deny their consent to any extension of the trust, Reserve and Midland attempted to procure names and addresses of the members of the voting trust as well as names and addresses of shareholders of the corporation. Initially, Reserve made a written demand to inspect and copy such lists. When this demand was refused, Reserve and Midland instituted lawsuits in North Dakota and in Minnesota state courts. The Minnesota state court dismissed the suit in deference to the action being brought in North Dakota, and Reserve and Midland eventually succeeded in obtaining a stockholders’ list from the North Dakota state court. They did not, however, succeed in obtaining the specific names and addresses of members of the first voting trust agreement. Although the trustees filed copies of the voting trust agreement with Provident,2 including copies of the consents obtained from members of the voting trust, Reserve and Midland could not read the signatures on these documents in some instances nor find any of the addresses because the mailing labels had been removed from the consent forms.

Reserve, Midland, and Reserve’s subsidiary, American Security Life Insurance Company,3 had purchased a number of the 1955 voting trust certificates from certificate holders. Reserve and Midland did not consent to the extension of the trust.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
499 F.2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reserve-life-insurance-v-provident-life-insurance-ca8-1974.