SEC v. Nat'l Presto

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2007
Docket05-4612
StatusPublished

This text of SEC v. Nat'l Presto (SEC v. Nat'l Presto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SEC v. Nat'l Presto, (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-4612 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

NATIONAL PRESTO INDUSTRIES, INC., Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 02 C 5027—Charles R. Norgle, Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 20, 2006—DECIDED MAY 15, 2007 ____________

Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and POSNER and EVANS, Circuit Judges. EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge. Most mutual funds and other investment companies come within the scope of the Investment Company Act of 1940 because they hold themselves out “as being engaged primarily, or propos[ing] to engage primarily, in the business of investing, reinvest- ing, or trading in securities”. 15 U.S.C. §80a-3(a)(1)(A). But firms can be dragged within the Act’s coverage kick- ing and screaming, even though they depict themselves as operating businesses rather than as managing other people’s money. Any issuer that owns “investment securi- ties” worth 40% of its total assets is an investment com- 2 No. 05-4612

pany under §80a-3(a)(1)(C) unless some other provision of the Act takes it outside the definition. For this purpose, however, “Government securities and cash items” are omitted from both the numerator and the denominator. National Presto Industries, a seller of both consumer goods (cookware, diapers, and other household items) and munitions, used to make everything it sold. During the 1970s it began to divest its manufacturing facilities and to contract production to third parties. In 1993 the Depart- ment of Defense closed a facility that Presto had used to make artillery shells. Presto was left with a pile of cash, most of which it retained with a long-term plan to acquire other businesses, and a shrunken book value of operating assets. Financial instruments were 86% of its total assets by 1994 and 92% in 1998. Since 2000 Presto has pur- chased two manufacturers of military supplies and two makers of diapers and puppy pads. But in 2003 financial instruments still represented 62% of its physical and financial assets. Intellectual property, although of consid- erable value to Presto, is not carried on corporate books at its full economic value, so this ratio overstates the significance of its portfolio of securities, but Presto does not argue that it could come under the 40% ratio by marking its patents and trademarks to current market value. All of Presto’s consumer products other than absorbent products are made by subcontractors, so although it has a substantial operating income it does not have operating assets to match—and the Investment Company Act’s main test is asset-based. The SEC concluded that Presto was well past the 40% trigger. When the firm refused to register as an investment company—and make the changes to its corporate structure, management, and financial reporting required of investment companies—or request an administrative exemption, the SEC filed this suit to seek an injunction that would require compliance. No. 05-4612 3

After preliminary maneuvering vindicated the SEC’s choice of forum, see 347 F.3d 662 (7th Cir. 2003), the district court granted summary judgment in the agency’s favor, 397 F. Supp. 2d 943 (N.D. Ill. 2005), and issued an injunction requiring Presto to register under the 1940 Act. The firm has complied pending appeal. After suffering defeat on the merits, Presto replaced enough of its existing portfolio with “Government securi- ties and cash items” to bring investment securities under the 40% threshold. The SEC had proposed an injunction that would have allowed Presto the opportunity to do this (or to seek an administrative exemption) in lieu of registration; the firm thought to avail itself of the opportu- nity even before the injunction was entered. Without inviting comment from the parties, however, the district judge deleted these options from the SEC’s draft and entered an injunction unconditionally requiring Presto to register as an investment company. The judge did not explain why. The result was a regulatory mis- match: a firm that is today required (by statute) to be organized and to report its financial position as an operat- ing company is required (by injunction) to be organized and report its financial position as an investment com- pany. Instead of doing this, the district court would have been well advised to craft an injunction commanding registration only if Presto should revert to its old portfolio design; obliging it to register as an investment company even when its investments do not require this is hard to fathom except as a form of punishment for Presto’s con- duct in past years, and civil injunctions are not supposed to punish litigants. The unconditional injunction has caused considerable trouble. Investment companies are subject to many governance requirements that do not apply to operating companies. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. §§ 80a-16, -17, -18, -19, -29, 4 No. 05-4612

-55, -56 (and the corresponding regulations). Presto’s auditor, Grant Thornton, resigned because the SEC questioned its certification of Presto’s financial state- ments as those of an operating company. Now that Presto is officially an investment company, Grant Thornton has refused to allow the statements it certified to be used for any purpose. This has disabled Presto from complying fully with either the Investment Company Act or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Without the financial statements, it is unable to file quarterly and annual reports. It has hired another auditor, but recreating and re-certifying financial statements for many past years is expensive and time consuming. Meanwhile stock exchanges have threatened to delist its stock because Presto is out of compliance with both statutory and exchange-based financial-reporting requirements. At oral argument we inquired whether Presto’s financial rearrangement has made the case moot. Now that it has complied with the injunction by registering as an invest- ment company, can’t it deregister and go back to its preferred status as an operating company, subject to registration under the Securities Exchange Act, no matter what happens on appeal? Deregistration requires the consent of the SEC, however, and although Presto filed the appropriate papers with the agency in January 2006 the SEC has failed to act on them. One senses from this prolonged silence, and the tenor of the SEC’s brief and oral argument, that the agency (or its senior staff) is in a snit because Presto declined to do what many other firms with excess liquid assets have done—apply to the agency for an exemption. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-3(b)(2). (Microsoft, for example, holds more than 40% of its assets in the form of investment securities but received permission to operate outside the 1940 Act.) The agency’s counsel implied at oral argument that an ex- emption would have been forthcoming if sought. Yet a No. 05-4612 5

firm’s refusal to kowtow to an agency is not a good reason to force its investors to bear unnecessary costs—for it is the investors who must pay to recreate the financial statements, though they did not contribute to this imbroglio—and keep a firm inappropriately registered, as Presto now is.

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SEC v. Nat'l Presto, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sec-v-natl-presto-ca7-2007.