In this appeal from a judgment denying liability of a tender offeror for a claimed misleading omission in the offer prospectus, we affirm on the opinion below of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Edward Weinfeld, Judge,
Spielman v. General Host Corp.,
But appellant’s class, stockholders of the target company, were, as Judge Weinfeld makes clear, “presumably” aware of their
own
company’s staggered board and cumulative voting procedures.
But this, we make clear, is not a case where the “total mix” of communications alone is relied upon to justify a misleading proxy statement. Generally, the “total mix” would be insufficient to compensate
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for omissions in the prospectus since an investor is all too apt to look upon those communications as self-serving and to consider the prospectus as a more objective, self-contained statement upon which he may justifiably rely to make an informed investment decision. The “mix” in this instance, however, pertains to a subject — the target company’s own staggered board and cumulative voting — of which its own stockholders were
presumably aware,
if they were aware of anything. In this light, Judge Weinfeld’s decision becomes unassailable.
See Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Piper Aircraft Corp., supra,
This is not to say that a shareholder will be presumed to know all the by-law provisions of the corporations in which he owns stock so as to relieve an offeror from discussing relevant provisions in its prospectus. In this specific instance, however, proxies for voting for the board of directors and other information concerning the board had been circulated to shareholders shortly before the effective date of the tender offer. The proxy statement was calculated to alert shareholders to the terms of service of directors to be elected and the method of cumulative voting. In taking the affirmative act of voting, shareholders were likely to take special notice of these facts. In these circumstances, it is fair to say that the shareholders can be presumed to have been aware of the provisions at issue or that the shareholders were unlikely to have been misled by the offeror’s failure to discuss the provisions more thoroughly.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The following two paragraphs were inserted by amendment to the prospectus under the caption “Other Aspects of the Exchange Offer.”
General Host intends to act promptly both before and after consummation of the Exchange Offer to obtain control of the board of directors and management of Armour. In this connection it may engage in the solicitation of proxies for the election of directors of Armour and other matters, both at the February 21, 1969 annual meeting of Armour and Company and otherwise.
General Host may find it desirable upon consummation of the Exchange Offer to propose to stockholders of the relevant corporations a merger or consolidation of it or its present or future subsidiaries with Armour or certain of its'subsidiaries, or General Host may find it desirable to dispose of portions of the assets presently held by it or by Armour. If no such merger or consolidation occurs, and if General Host has not acquired more than 80% of Armour’s Common Stock which would allow it to enter into tax-saving arrangements, General Host may find it necessary or desirable to increase the dividend paid on common stock by Armour, or to incur new indebtedness or issue additional equity securities.
(Emphasis added.) We agree with appellant that this conveyed the impression that General Host, the tender offeror, would be able to satisfy its cash flow requirements out of the target company (Armour & Co.) assets, implying as it did that General Host would gain operating control of Armour as a result of the exchange offer and that operating control would permit General Host to increase Armour’s dividends and sell Armour’s assets, thereby benefiting General Host.
. There was explicit disclosure in the prospectus that the target company had a staggered board and cumulative voting, but this was in an “Annex” or appendix to the prospectus. Even though reference to this Annex was made under the heading “Information Concerning Armour,” we do not, and the district court did not, rely on this disclosure in and of itself to cure the misleading impression conveyed in the body of the prospectus, note 1 supra.
. The necessity for obtaining operating control was to provide cash flow to meet, inter alia, interest requirements on the offeror’s substantial indebtedness, including but not limited to its debentures issued in exchange for the target company’s stock.
