Court Opinion

ID: 8879916
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 20:15:41.069722+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:06:35.369804
License: Public Domain

MEDINA, Circuit Judge
(dissenting, with whom LUMBARD, Chief Judge, and MOORE, Circuit Judge, concur):
I dissent and adhere to the views expressed in the majority panel opinion of Chief Judge LUMBARD to the effect that, even assuming the contracting parties were possessed of information concerning the oil discovery at the time of the making of the contract to sell to Aquitaine, plaintiff did not make out a case under Rule 10(b)5.
The essence of the claim is that, whenever a corporation through action of its directors sells a block of its own stock, a stockholder can maintain an action in the federal courts under Section 10(b) and Rule 10(b) 5 by merely alleging that the price was too low or too high, that the directors “knew or should have known” it was too low or too high, sealed with the characterization or opinion of the claimant that this was a “fraud” perpetrated against the corporation. This does indeed open the floodgates. For the result is to transform a simple cause of action against directors for waste or the use of bad judgment in the sale of corporate assets into a federal securities fraud case by judicial fiat. In my opinion the Congress never intended the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to be intrepreted so broadly as this.
We proceeded in the panel opinion upon the assumption that both parties to the transaction of purchase and sale of the Banff treasury stock knew Banff had struck oil because Judge Cooper proceeded upon the same hypothesis. In retrospect it is now apparent that it was a mistake to have made this contrary-to-fact assumption, as it has thrown the whole case out of focus. Accordingly, and in the light of the views expressed in the majority en banc opinion of Judge Hays, it becomes essential to make a more complete statement of the factual background and the issues as framed in the complaint.
Confining the discussion to the Aquitaine transaction, as I concur in the disposition of the Paribas charge by the majority, the plaintiff’s claim against Aquitaine and the Banff directors as defendants is that at the time of the sale of the Banff treasury stock to Aquitaine the defendants knew that Banff had made a rich strike of oil, that the true extent of the discovery was withheld for about a year so the defendants could make the sale to Aquitaine at a grossly inadequate price “to enrich themelves, business associates, friends and relatives,” in order to depress the value of Banff stock on the American Stock Exchange and to maintain the price of the stock at an artificially low level.
What is established without a shred of countervailing proof by the summary *221judgment affidavits on personal knowledge filed by defendants is that the sale was authorized by the Banff directors on December 11, 1964, the offer was accepted in writing by Aquitaine on January 5, 1965, the drilling did not even commence until January 11, 1965 and the first flush of oil appeared on February 6, 1965. The transaction of purchase and sale of the stock was consummated on March 16, 1965, after a short delay caused by tax problems and compliance with the regulations of the American and Toronto Stock Exchanges. These are cold facts supported by documentary proof. The charge of enriching the individual defendants and their business associates, friends and relatives turned out to be just another stab in the dark, as did a similar charge made in the complaint with respect to the Paribas transaction. And thus it now appears that the action taken by the Banff directors and the making of the ensuing contract took place at a time when there was no “inside information” about a rich oil strike and when there was no person anywhere who could know that the first drilling or any drilling in the Rainbow area in the future would be successful.
Moreover, information concerning the discovery of oil on February 6, 1965 was released to the public on February 8. On March 18, 1965, after the drilling of the first well was completed on March 17, a further press release was issued stating that no further information would be disclosed in the immediate future ; and on April 20 an additional press release announced to the public that the company was taking advantage of the Alberta law permitting it to withhold information concerning its discovery for one year to reduce competition from other companies in bidding on government oil lands in the discovery area. Later other wells were drilled and extensive purchases were made of millions of acres of land in the vicinity and in other places in Canada where it was hoped similar subsurface confirmations existed. Even plaintiff does not suggest that the public or the shareholders of Banff should have been informed of these developments, as such disclosure would have deprived Banff of the undoubted benefits conferred by the Alberta law.
What the case thus boils down to is the fact that Aquitaine owned a controlling interest in Banff. And because of this circumstance the majority holds that full discovery proceedings should be permitted to probe the minds of the defendants and lay bare their “motives,” because plaintiff has “little or no familiarity with the internal affairs of the corporation.”
What this amounts to is giving carte blanche to every holder of a few shares in any corporation whose stock is traded on the New York or American stock exchanges to give his imagination full rein in the making of any sort of extravagant charges, no matter how ill founded in fact they may be, and then, when faced with a summary judgment motion based upon personal knowledge and documentary proof, say simply “I know nothing whatever about the matter but hope my lawyer will find something if we conduct extensive discovery proceedings and compel the defendants to produce their complete files.” This, while doubtless not so intended, is in my judgment nothing short of a standing invitation to blackmail and extortion. It is perfectly apparent that the expense of such discovery proceedings to the defendants, especially when they are foreigners as in this case, will be enormous; and a plaintiff and his lawyer under these circumstances would seem to have some justification for hoping they will be bought off in one way or another, despite the falsity of the allegations in the complaint. Add all this under the aegis of Rule 10(b)5! This does not seem to be a very practical way of reducing congestion in the federal courts.
Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment appealed from in its entirety.