Securities & Exchange Commission v. Fiscal Fund, Inc.

48 F. Supp. 712, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2945
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 12, 1943
DocketCiv. A. 283
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 48 F. Supp. 712 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Fiscal Fund, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware 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. Fiscal Fund, Inc., 48 F. Supp. 712, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2945 (D. Del. 1943).

Opinion

LEAHY, District Judge.

This is an action by the Securities and Exchange Commission under Sec. 42(e) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 to enjoin Fiscal Fund, Inc., 1 a Delaware corporation, from violations of Secs. 22(e), 30(b) (1) and 30(d) of the Act and to enforce compliance with those sections. Because of circumstances which I shall detail subsequently, the Commission also asks for a permanent receiver to wind up and liquidate Fiscal. 2 Fiscal is a management 3 investment company of the open end 4 diversified 5 type. It is duly registered under the Act as an investment company 6 . By its constituent agreements it is to be managed by another company which must, for a stated fee, 7 furnish all services, in-eluding management, investment advice and clerical assistance, and pay all operating expenses of the fund.

At the present time, Fiscal has outstanding two series of beneficial shares. One, owned by 589 persons, represents insurance shares; the other, owned by 709 persons, represents bank shares. Total value of all shares is approximately $640,000. No beneficial shares have been sold for the past two years and none can now be sold because of Fiscal’s failure to comply with the prospectus requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. Fiscal has had neither a valid management contract nor a valid investment advisory contract since November 1, 1940.

Fiscal’s most crucial violation of the Act has been of Sec. 22(e) 8 . Under the terms of the beneficial shares and of Fiscal’s custody agreement with Security Trust Company of Wilmington, Delaware, redemption is available to the shareholders at their option by making request of the custodian, who then gives notification to Fiscal which is required to sell from the appropriate underlying securities whatever shares it deems advisable in order to place the custodian in ample funds to carry out the redemption. It thereafter must deliver to the custodian a certificate signed by two officers and stating which securities should be delivered to brokers for sale. Since December 10, 1942, the custodian has been compelled to dishonor all requests for redemption because it has had no cash and has been unable to obtain any because Fiscal has had no management to make the sales or officers to sign the required author *714 ization certificate. Indeed, since its stockholders elected five directors at their last meeting on February 5, 1942, four of them resigned, 9 leaving only Major Howard E. Norris, President of the company, who, though the only director and the only officer, is now out of the country with the armed forces and therefore unavailable. Thus Fiscal has in effect indefinitely suspended the right of redemption of its shares and has postponed the date of payment upon redemption of its redeemable securities for more than seven days after tender.

1. Jurisdiction and venue. As stated, Fiscal has violated Sec. 22(e) of the Act. It has also failed to comply with Sec. 30(b) (1) and Rule N-30 B-1, requiring quarterly reports to the Commission, and with Sec. 30(d) and Rule N-30 D-1, requiring semiannual reports to shareholders. Sec. 42(e) of the Act authorizes the Commission to bring an action in the proper District Court to enjoin any person from any violation of the Act or of rules, regulations or orders thereunder and to enforce compliance with the same.

The venue provisions of Sec. 44 permit such action to be brought in the district wherein the defendant is an inhabitant or transacts business. Fiscal is a Delaware corporation and transacts business here.

2. Injunctive relief. As stated, the section of the Act the violation of which gives the Commission its greatest concern is Sec. 22(e). From the facts presented, it is apparent that Fiscal has been violating and failing to comply with this section by making it impossible for the custodian to redeem. I accordingly shall grant a permanent injunction — mandatory and prohibitory — against violations of Sec. 22(e).

3. Appointment of a permanent receiver. Inasmuch as Fiscal has no functioning management, the Commission suggests that I appoint a receiver to take over control of the company. The appointment of a receiver to carry out its orders is a normal process of a court of equity. As is frequently stated, a receivership is an ancillary remedy to carry out the primary relief granted in a cause. Here, I desire to enforce compliance with Sec. 22 (e), but there is no one to whom my injunction can effectively run. I shall therefore make permanent the appointment of Howard F. McCall as receiver of Fiscal.

4. Liquidation. The question here is whether the receiver should endeavor to reconstruct Fiscal by having a new board of directors elected by the shareholders under court supervision or should simply terminate the existence of an obviously losing proposition and return to the shareholders what remains of their investment.

From the evidence adduced by the Commission at the hearing on January 7, 1943, it is clear to me that there has been a complete and irremediable failure of corporate purpose and of corporate management. As disclosed by the expert testimony of Mr. Harry Heller, the advantages of an invest-, ment company of Fiscal’s type are: (1) The availability for a small investment of an interest in a portfolio of securities selected and supervised by experts and (2) complete liquidity of investment by way of the redemption option. But Fiscal is receiving no investment advice and has defaulted in its redemptions. Its shareholders are receiving none of the service for which they bargained.

Other facets of the complete collapse of Fiscal’s structure include (1) failure to instruct the custodian as to what underlying portfolio securities it is to buy or sell, (2) failure to mail its semiannual report to shareholders, (3) failure to file its quarterly report with the Commission, (4) failure to declare the semiannual dividend required under its custody agreement, (5) failure to pay for the services of its Delaware statutory resident agent, (6) failure to file its annual corporation report as required under the General Corporation Laws of the State of Delaware, (7) failure to pay the bills of two of its accountants, (8) failure to file its semiannual report-with the Department of Licenses of the State of Washington, (9) failure to prosecute its appeal with regard to a certain assessment to the Hudson County, New Jersey, Board of Taxation, (10) failure to defend two lawsuits brought by an alleged former attorney and a director for alleged services, (11) failure to pay certain sums due the custodian, (12) failure to file its Federal capital stock tax return due November 28, 1942, (13) failure to reply to *715 certain communications from the Treasury Department affecting its tax liability, and (14) failure to reply to numerous inquiries from shareholders as to the status of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
48 F. Supp. 712, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-exchange-commission-v-fiscal-fund-inc-ded-1943.