Zerkle v. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co.

52 F.R.D. 151, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14046
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 25, 1971
DocketNo. 70 Civ. 2507
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 52 F.R.D. 151 (Zerkle v. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron 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
Zerkle v. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co., 52 F.R.D. 151, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14046 (S.D.N.Y. 1971).

Opinion

POLLACK, District Judge.

The parties to two consolidated actions brought by stockholders on behalf of Detroit Steel Corporation derivatively and of i class of certain of its stockholders representatively, have submitted a proposed settlement embracing all claims and issues arising from the pleadings herein.

On February 27, 1971, following an evidentiary hearing, it appeared to the Court that a sufficient showing of fairness and propriety of the proposed adjustment had been made to warrant a hearing on notice to all stockholders of the corporation and members of the affected class to determine the fairness, reasonableness and adequacy of the settlement.

The Court accordingly directed transmission of an approved notice of a further hearing to be held on March 15, 1971 to the stockholders and such a hearing was had. The proponents of the settlement presented further proofs thereon in the form of documentary data and affidavits and submitted the record for the Court’s consideration.

Three (or perhaps four) stockholders or former stockholders claiming interests in approximately 400 shares of the common stock of Detroit Steel appeared and were heard. Three of these holders appeared in person and voiced objections, largely directed to alleged losses which they have sustained either through market decline or sale of their respective stock investments in Detroit Steel without, however, asserting any particular fault with the proposed compromise.

One stockholder owning 100 shares, Acille Ciara, appeared by Chicago counsel and their New York associates. This stockholder is presently the plaintiff in a suit pending in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois commenced in about December, 1970 where he asserts some of the same grievances as are asserted here. This objector questioned the settlement on the ground that the amounts involved in the complaints were disproportionately higher than the value of the consideration being proposed for settlement. Basically, this objector relies on the undocumented and conclusory contention that the valuation of the operating assets of Detroit Steel made by an investment banking firm and accepted by the directors and the plaintiffs in the pending actions as competent, fair and reasonable are so disparate from book value at which those assets were carried as to impair the basic assumption of fairness on which the settlement has been recommended to the Court.

The objector had no supporting proof but hoped to enlist the professional aid of a competent appraiser of the operat[153]*153ing assets to demonstrate his point; he did not request an adjournment of the hearing but requested time to supply information bearing on the appraisal. Nor was any request made for an opportunity to question the appraisers or cross-examine them on their report and evaluation. The Court nonetheless adjourned the hearing until March 17, 1971 to enable the objector to produce a qualified person who would be willing to serve and who could be questioned to determine whether there was some concrete indication that the objection had sufficient preliminary indication of merit to warrant holding up a settlement that the remainder of the stockholders of Detroit Steel seemingly found unobjectionable and which the stockholder plaintiffs in the litigation affirmatively have commended to the Court after thorough study and mature consideration.

On the adjourned date, the objector introduced an expert who posed the query whether there had been any consideration of tax carryforwards and carrybacks in evaluating the assets of Detroit Steel. This was the subject of a speech he had delivered in 1968 to Security Analysts in a discussion of mergers and acquisitions. He thought that taxes were possibly overlooked by the directors, the investment bankers and counsel for the plaintiffs in evaluating the assets and liabilities of Detroit Steel. No proof was offered by the objector. He requested more time to submit more papers which arrived on March 20, 1971 with the suggestion that plaintiffs’ counsel make more inquiry— adversary inquiry.

To avoid any possibility of overlooking any suggestion that might seem constructive the Court reconvened the hearing and heard and received further proof.

The affidavit of objector’s counsel of March 20, 1971 again asserted the supposed oversight of relevant tax considerations ; and that the Loeb Rhoades evaluation omits any expressed analysis or mention of tax losses which could be carried back. The defendants met this point specifically by the testimony of the Loeb Rhoades representative in charge of the appraisal. He established that in reaching the judgment expressed, Loeb Rhoades specifically took into account the effect which the operating losses at Portsmouth may have had upon a prospective purchaser — that was the very heart of the question with which they were faced, he said. Seemingly, the objector had raised an elementary point which a sophisticated investment banker would hardly have overlooked in a determination of value such as here involved. The testimony was unimpeached by the cross-examination conducted on behalf of the objector.

On the morning of the resumed hearing, the objector submitted a new affidavit from his counsel to which was attached a letter from their investment ad-visor.

In this latest submission, the contention was put forth that the Portsmouth plant might be made into a far more efficient facility by spending, say, $65 a ton for new electric and direct reduction capacity rather than by spending the money projected as needed to rehabilitate the facilities. Attached to this contention of the advisor to the objector, was an article taken from the March, 1971 issue of Fortune Magazine entitled “Steel: Recasting an Industry Under Stress.” The article mentions a new technology already in use; that is, the direct reduction of ore to iron in electric furnaces.

The objector’s point was that the capital expenditures estimated to make Portsmouth a competitive, efficient, steelmaking facility, may be considerably more favorable than is suggested in the appraisal “which pointedly omits any references to the new steelmaking technology,” he says. However, the magazine article relied on warns that “like most revolutions it carries high risks as well as great promise”.

[154]*154The defendants produced at the hearing an outstanding expert in steel economies, a professor at a leading University. This expert riddled the notions of the objector with cogent testimony that beyond cavil established the non-feasibility of the contention put forth (really only a hypothesis based on outright speculations) and convincingly established that the road ahead for the peculiar problems at Portsmouth lie in the direction in which the management has planned: the capital expenditures program for relining the blast furnace, equipment for dealing with the problems of water and air pollution, and a variety of other items. It developed that the magazine writer had in fact consulted with defendants’ expert on some of the technical aspects of his paper and had no substantial background of actual underlying experience ; that the article was a good paper, but its application to actual situations necessarily had to be governed by the facts and circumstances involved.

According to the objector, there has been no fraud or misrepresentation nor is there any suggestion here of overreaching and

there is no question of the integrity and sincerity of counsel or the ability and reputation of the investment bankers.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.R.D. 151, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zerkle-v-cleveland-cliffs-iron-co-nysd-1971.