Securities & Exchange Commission v. Amster & Co.

762 F. Supp. 604
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 21, 1991
Docket88 Civ. 8587 (CSH)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 762 F. Supp. 604 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Amster & Co.) 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
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Amster & Co., 762 F. Supp. 604 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

HAIGHT, District Judge:

In this civil action plaintiff Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) sues all defendants for alleged violations of section 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d), and accompanying regulations; and all defendants but one for alleged violation of section 10(b) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and its regulations. Defendants move under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R.Civ.P., to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim, or in the alternative for summary judgment under Rule 56(c). Because all parties rely upon materials outside the pleadings, I treat defendants’ motion as one for summary judgment.

Background

Defendant Amster & Co. is a New York limited partnership and the successor partnership of Lafer, Amster & Co. (“LACO”). The principal business of both Amster & Co. and LACO was and is risk arbitrage investing.

Defendant Arnold Marvin Amster was and is a general partner and the senior managing partner of Amster & Co.

Defendant Barry Stuart Lafer was at the relevant times a general and managing partner of Amster & Co. Lafer left Am-ster & Co. and founded his own investment firm in the summer of 1988.

Defendant Joel Richard Packer was at the relevant times a general partner of Amster & Co. Packer left Amster & Co. in approximately June 1988.

Risk arbitrageurs do not purchase the shares of companies for long-term invest *606 ment purposes. Rather, they purchase shares in the expectation or hope that some anticipated event occurring in the short term will drive the price of the shares up, setting the stage for resale and profit. Corporate mergers may have this happy effect; so may take-overs, friendly or hostile; so may the liquidation of the company. If arbitrageurs have reason to believe that a company will soon be liquidated, they are motivated to purchase its shares if their calculations indicate that the breakup value per share will exceed the then existing market price.

This last-described investment strategy brought a company called Graphic Scanning Corp. (“Graphic”) to the attention of LACO in August 1984. At that time Graphic owned and operated radio paging and cellular telephone franchises throughout the United States. In August 1984 Graphic publicly announced a liquidation. LACO, anticipating the liquidation to occur within a year and a half of the announcement, began purchasing shares of Graphic. LACO made these investments on its own account, and also indirectly on behalf of its limited partners, the largest of which was the General Electric Pension Fund.

Eventually LACO’s purchases of Graphic shares amounted to a 5% interest in Graphic. LACO was therefore required to comply with the disclosure provisions of § 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act. LACO’s Schedule 13(D), dated August 18, 1985, described the purpose of its transactions in Graphic in part as follows:

Each of LACO and the Other Filing Persons has acquired the shares of Common Stock which he owns (see Item 5 below) for the purpose of making an investment in the Company and not with the present intention of acquiring control of the Company’s business.
The shares of the Common Stock reported as being owned by LACO were acquired in connection with arbitrage and other activities in the ordinary course of LACO’s business. Certain general partners and employees of LACO have had telephone conversations with the Company. LACO does not believe that it received any material information during those conversations which had not then been publicly disseminated by the Company.
Each of LACO and the Other Filing Persons supports the Company’s public announcement on September 24, 1984 and February 15, 1985 regarding its intention to develop a plan of asset distribution to its stockholders complying with Section 337 of the Internal Revenue Code. LACO presently intends to continue to purchase shares of Common Stock in the over-the-counter market or in private transactions if appropriate opportunities to do so are available, on such terms and at such times as it considers desirable. If the Company abandons its intention referred to above, either by public announcement or through of a course of action or inaction which leads LACO to believe that a distribution of the Company’s assets to its stockholders will not be effected within a reasonable period of time, LACO intends to review its position and take any such action as it deems appropriate at the time.

On January 28, 1989, Graphic filed with the SEC a Form S-l Registration statement in which Graphic indicated for the first time that the announced liquidation might not go forward. The Form S-l stated in part: “Although the Company is currently considering the sale of all of its operations and assets, if appropriate offers are not received for all of the assets, it is possible that the Board may determine to sell only portions of the Company’s operations and assets.” The form also indicated that the Graphic Board was negotiating with the Company’s founder and chairman, Barry Yampol, with respect to claims Yam-pol had against Graphic, one possible resolution being the transfer to Yampol of “certain cellular radio telephone properties and other assets of the Company.”

These statements in Graphic’s Form S-l came as unwelcome news to LACO, which had invested in Graphic in anticipation of liquidation. On January 31, 1986, Lafer telephoned Graphic’s general counsel, Jonathan Dodge, and asked what the Form S-l *607 meant. Lafer asked Dodge if the tax reform bill pending in Congress could impact upon the Section 337 liquidation originally contemplated by Graphic. Dodge replied that the tax bill could alter the liquidation plan, and added, in the context of Graphic’s registration statement, that the use of the proceeds would be partially applied to assets acquisition. Lafer told Dodge that LACO and those associated with it were “unhappy shareholders.”

There then ensued a series of meetings involving LACO officers, representatives of other Graphic shareholders, and various attorneys. It is not necessary for purposes of supplying the background of this litigation to describe those meetings and related documents in detail. They are dealt with in the discussion which follows.

For purposes of background, it is sufficient to say that on March 3, 1986, LACO and others affiliated with it filed Amendment 7 to their Schedule 13D with an effective date of February 28, 1986. Amendment 7 stated that defendants had decided to join a group to engage in a proxy contest to obtain control of Graphic. Amendment 7 had been preceded by Amendment 5, filed on or about February 10, 1986, and Amendment 6, filed on or about February 18. Amendment 5 made no changes in the description of defendants’ purpose of their transactions in Graphic. Amendment 6 stated that the defendants had begun to consider “on a preliminary basis” waging a proxy contest for control of Graphic as the result of information disclosed in a Form 8-K filed by Graphic on February 7, 1986.

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Bluebook (online)
762 F. Supp. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-exchange-commission-v-amster-co-nysd-1991.