Starkman v. Marathon Oil Company

772 F.2d 231, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 23073
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1985
Docket84-3215
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 772 F.2d 231 (Starkman v. Marathon Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starkman v. Marathon Oil Company, 772 F.2d 231, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 23073 (6th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

772 F.2d 231

54 USLW 2183, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 92,290

Irving STARKMAN, M.D., Trustee of the Irving Starkman, M.D.,
S.C. Defined Benefit Pension Fund and Trust, on
behalf of himself and all others
similarly situated, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
MARATHON OIL COMPANY, an Ohio corporation, H.D. Hoopman,
C.H. Barre, V.G. Beghini, H.H. Hering, and W.E.
Swales, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 84-3215.

United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 22, 1985.
Decided Sept. 13, 1985.

Lawrence Walner, Lawrence Walner & Associates, Chicago, Ill., Larry A. Temin, Strauss, Troy & Ruehlmann Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, Edward Slovick, argued, James Gordon, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellant.

Murray S. Monroe, Cincinnati, Ohio, John M. Newman, John W. Edwards, III, Robert R. Weller, John L. Strauch, argued, Cleveland, Ohio, James T. Griffin, Michael P. Mullen, William J. Raleigh, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees.

Before MERRITT and KENNEDY, Circuit Judges, and PECK, Senior Circuit Judge.

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

Like Radol v. Thomas, 772 F.2d 244 (6th Cir.1985), this action arises out of U.S. Steel's November, 1981 acquisition and eventual merger with Marathon Oil Company. The plaintiff here, Irving Starkman, was a Marathon shareholder until selling his shares on the open market for $78 per share on November 18, 1981, the day before U.S. Steel's tender offer for 51% of Marathon's outstanding shares at $125 per share was announced.1 On October 31, 1981, Mobil Oil had initiated its takeover bid for Marathon, a bid which Marathon actively resisted by urging its rejection by Marathon shareholders and by seeking and eventually finding a "white knight" or alternative, friendly merger partner-tender offeror, U.S. Steel. Starkman claims that Marathon's board violated Rule 10b-5 and its fiduciary duty to him as a Marathon shareholder by failing to disclose various items of "soft" information--information of less certainty than hard facts--in its public statements to shareholders during the period after Mobil's hostile tender offer and prior to Steel's friendly tender offer. In particular, he says that Marathon should have told shareholders that negotiations were underway with U.S. Steel prior to the consummation of those negotiations in an agreement, and that internal and externally-prepared asset appraisals and five-year earnings and cash flow projections should have been disclosed to shareholders so that they could make a fully informed choice whether to sell their shares or gamble on receiving a higher price in a possible Steel-Marathon merger.

The District Court granted summary judgment for Marathon, finding that these items of soft information had either been sufficiently disclosed or were not required to be disclosed because their nondisclosure did not render materially misleading Marathon's other affirmative public statements. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of the district Court.

I. BACKGROUND

We have discussed the background and structure of U.S. Steel's acquisition of Marathon Oil at some length in Radol v. Thomas, 772 F.2d 244 (6th Cir.1985), and our attention here will therefore be focused on the facts which are especially relevant to Starkman's Rule 10b-5 claims.2

In the summer of 1981, Marathon was among a number of oil companies considered to be prime takeover targets. In this atmosphere, Marathon's top level management began preparations against a hostile takeover bid. Harold Hoopman, Marathon's president and chief executive officer, instructed the company's vice presidents to compile a catalog of assets. This document, referred to as the "Strong Report" or "internal asset evaluation," estimated the value of Marathon's transportation, refining and marketing assets, its other equipment and structures, and the value of proven, probable, and potential oil reserves as well as exploratory acreage. Hoopman and John Strong, who was responsible for combining materials received from various divisions into the final report, both testified that the Strong report was viewed as a "selling document" which placed optimistic values on Marathon's oil and gas reserves so as to attract the interest of prospective buyers and ensure that Marathon could either ward off an attempt to capture Marathon at a bargain price or obtain the best offer available.

In estimating proven, probable, and potential reserves and exploratory acreage, the Strong Report was based on information that was not available to the general public, for example in annual reports, because only the value of proven reserves was normally included in such public documents. The Strong Report defined proven reserves as those actually producing, probable reserves as reserves for properties where some production had been established and additional production was likely, and potential reserves as reserves for properties where production had not yet been established but where geologic evidence supported wildcat drilling.3 These reserves were valued using a discounted cash flow methodology, under which the present value of oil reserves is calculated by summing risk discounted expected net revenues from the particular field over the life of the field, and then discounted into present value by dividing by an estimated interest rate. This valuation method, a standard procedure for determining the cash value of oil and gas properties, required projections of price and cost conditions prevailing as far as 20 years into the future. For example, the Strong Report assumed that the rate of increase in oil prices would average over 9% per year from 1980-1990.

Using this methodology, the Strong Report valued Marathon's net assets at between $19 billion and $16 billion (depending on which set of interest rates was used to discount back to present value), a per share value of between $323 and $276. The value of oil and gas reserves made up $14 billion of the $19 billion estimate and $11.5 billion of the $16 billion estimate. A similar report using identical methodology was prepared in mid-July 1981 by the investment banking firm of First Boston, which had been hired by Marathon to assist in preparing for potential takeover bids. The First Boston Report was based only upon proven and probable oil reserves and was also intended to be used as a "presentation piece" to avoid a takeover or maximize the price obtained in a takeover. It placed Marathon's value at between $188 and $225 per share.

Some perspective on the values arrived at in the Strong and First Boston reports can be gained from other, publicly available appraisals of Marathon's assets prepared during 1981. The Herold Oil Industry Comparative Appraisal placed Marathon's appraised value at $199 per share, and two other reports by securities analysts said Marathon had an appraised value of between $200 and $210 per share.4

Marathon's market value, however, was well below these appraised values. On October 29, 1981, Marathon closed at $63.75 per share. The next day, Mobil Oil announced its tender offer to purchase up to approximately 68% of outstanding Marathon common stock for $85 per share in cash.

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Bluebook (online)
772 F.2d 231, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 23073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starkman-v-marathon-oil-company-ca6-1985.