A voluntary plan of reorganization submitted to the Securities
and Exchange Commission under § 11(e) of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 1935, which would enable a registered
holding company to comply with § 11(b) of the Act by
converting itself into an investment company, was approved by the
Commission. The Commission expressly provided in its order of
approval that certain provisions of the plan would not be operative
"until an appropriate United States District Court shall, upon
application thereto, enter an order enforcing said provisions," but
the Commission had not yet applied to the District Court for
enforcement under § 11(e).
Held: on a petition for review under § 24(a) of
the Act, the Court of Appeals was without jurisdiction over those
provisions of the plan which the Commission had made operative on
enforcement by the District Court, but had jurisdiction of the
controversy so far as it related to other provisions of the plan.
Pp.
346 U. S.
522-536.
92 U.S.App.D.C. 172, 203 F.2d 611, affirmed in part and reversed
in part.
The Securities and Exchange Commission approved a reorganization
plan under § 11(e) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 1935. Holding Company Act Releases Nos. 10614, 10643. On review
in the Court of Appeals, the petitioner here was allowed to
intervene, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the Commission's
order. 92 U.S.App.D.C. 172, 203 F.2d 611. This Court granted
certiorari limited to the question of jurisdiction. 346 U.S. 810.
Affirmed in part and reversed on part, p.
346 U. S.
536.
Page 346 U. S. 522
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United Corporation is a holding company registered under the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 803, 15 U.S.C.
§ 79
et seq. Section 11(b) of that Act requires each
holding company, with exceptions not material here, to limit the
operations of the holding company system of which it is a part to a
single integrated public utility system and to businesses
reasonably incidental or economically necessary or appropriate to
that system. Section 11(e) allows a registered holding company to
submit a plan to the Commission which will enable it to comply with
§ 11(b).
United controlled, directly or indirectly, various gas and
electric utility companies in the east. It submitted a plan to the
Commission which, it claimed, would complete its compliance with
§ 11(b). The Commission rejected United's plan. 13 S.E.C. 854,
898-899. The Commission, however, withheld issuance of a
dissolution order so as to afford United an opportunity to comply
with the Act by divesting itself of control over its subsidiaries
and by transforming itself into an investment
Page 346 U. S. 523
company.
Id., p. 899. The Commission accordingly
directed that United cease to be a holding company and limit its
corporate structure to a single class of stock, namely, common
stock. [
Footnote 1]
No review of that order was sought. Thereafter, United retired
its preference stock by exchanging it for underlying portfolio
securities and for cash. Other portfolio securities were disposed
of through market sales and dividend distributions.
As of December 31, 1950, United had outstanding 14,529,491.5
shares of common stock, and option warrants entitling the holders
to purchase 3,732,059 shares of common stock at any time at a price
of $27.50 per share. As of December 31, 1950, United's assets
consisted approximately of $57,000,000 of securities and $2,000,000
in cash and government bonds, which was equivalent to $4.12 per
share of common stock. The securities, which consisted of common
stocks of utility operating and holding companies, included 11.9
percent of the voting stock of Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 28.3
percent of South Jersey Gas Co., 5.8 percent of The United Gas
Improvement Co., 5.5 percent of The Columbia Gas System, Inc., and
voting stocks of other companies in amounts less than 5 percent of
the total outstanding.
United submitted a further plan which provided in essential part
as follows:
First. The sale by United of all of its South Jersey
common stock and of sufficient amounts of its stockholdings in the
other utility companies so that, within one year, its resultant
holdings would not exceed 4.9 percent of the voting stock of any of
those companies.
Page 346 U. S. 524
Second. An offer to United's stockholders who wanted to
withdraw from the company. Holders of 100 or more shares of
United's common stock were offered common stock of Niagara Mohawk
that United had in its portfolio; holders of smaller blocks of
United's common stock were offered cash. These offers were on a
voluntary basis.
Third. Cancellation of the option warrants without any
compensation to the holders.
Fourth. Amendments to the charter and by-aws of United
(without a vote of stockholders) to provide for cumulative voting
in the election of directors and a 50 percent quorum at
stockholders meetings.
The Commission approved the plan with modifications not material
to the issues presented in this case. Holding Company Act Releases
Nos. 10614, 10643.
First. The method of transforming United from a holding
company into an investment company was approved.
Second. Offers to those stockholders who wanted to
withdraw from the enterprise were held to be fair both to them and
to those who chose to remain as investors in United.
Third. The holders of the option warrants were denied
any participation in the reorganization on the ground that there
was no reasonable expectation that the market price of the common
stock would increase to the extent needed to give the warrants a
recognizable value and that continuance of the warrants would be
inherently deceptive to investors and perpetuate useless and
unnecessary complexities in the corporate structure.
Fourth. The changes as respects cumulative voting and
quorum requirements were approved.
The Commission, in its order of approval, stated that the
provisions of the plan relating to the cancellation of the warrants
and the amendment of the charter and bylaws would not be operative
"until an appropriate
Page 346 U. S. 525
United States District Court shall, upon application thereto,
enter an order enforcing said provisions." Holding Company Act
Release No. 10643, p. 3. No such provision was made as respects the
other provisions of the plan.
Some of the common stockholders thereupon filed a petition for
review in the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia under
§ 24(a) of the Act. [
Footnote
2] They
Page 346 U. S. 526
challenged the
First and
Second provisions of
the plan, which we have described above. They also asked that the
Third and
Fourth provisions, the ones which were
made subject to approval by the District Court, be approved by the
Court of Appeals. The petitioner in this Court is a protective
committee representing holders of the option warrants. It moved to
intervene in the review proceedings in the Court of Appeals,
claiming that forfeiture of the warrants was not justified. The
Commission and United opposed the intervention on the ground that,
by reason of the Commission's order and § 11(e) of the Act,
[
Footnote 3] only the District
Court had jurisdiction to
Page 346 U. S. 527
review the provisions of the plan respecting the elimination of
the warrants and the amendments to the charter and bylaws.
The Court of Appeals allowed petitioner to intervene. It held
that, so long as the Commission had not applied to a district court
under § 11(e) to enforce a plan, the Court of Appeals had
exclusive jurisdiction on petition of an aggrieved person under
§ 24(a) to review the entire plan, including those provisions
which the Commission made enforceable by the District Court. The
Court of Appeals further held that, if it affirmed or modified an
order of the Commission approving a plan and the Commission
thereafter applied to the District Court to obtain enforcement, the
District Court would have no function except to enforce, since the
ruling by the Court of Appeals on the fairness of the plan would be
binding on the District Court. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals
reviewed the entire plan, found it fair and equitable in all
respects, and affirmed the Commission's order. 92 U.S. App.D.C.
172, 203 F.2d 611. The case is here on certiorari limited to the
question of jurisdiction. 346 U.S. 810.
The question is not whether there is judicial review of orders
of the Commission. The question is which orders are reviewable in
the District Court, which in the Court of Appeals. The first
reading of the Act may leave the impression that there is conflict
between § 24(a) and § 11(e). Section 24(a) gives review
in the Court of Appeals of "an order" of the Commission, and grants
the
Page 346 U. S. 528
Court of Appeals "exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, or
set aside such order, in whole or in part." This is clearly broad
enough to include an order of the Commission under § 11
respecting a plan of a holding company seeking compliance with
§ 11(b). Section 11(e), however, provides in some instances
for review of such plans on application by the Commission to the
District Court. Moreover, the Commission, by virtue of §
18(f), [
Footnote 4] may apply
to the District Court for enforcement of any of its orders where it
appears that someone is about to commit a violation.
We are tendered several alternatives:
1. That the Court of Appeals, having first acquired
jurisdiction, can and should review the entire plan.
2. That the District Court can and should review all phases of
the plan in an enforcement proceeding and, pending application for
enforcement, no review of any phase of the plan should be
entertained by the Court of Appeals.
3. That a so-alled split review is permissible where, as here,
the Commission has reserved for enforcement proceedings
Page 346 U. S. 529
in the District Court only certain provisions of the plan, the
Court of Appeals being restricted under § 24(a) to those not
so reserved.
We have concluded that the so-alled split review is permissible
under the circumstances here present, and that the Court of Appeals
had jurisdiction under § 24(a) to review all questions
tendered it except those pertaining to the elimination of the
option warrants and the amendments to the charter and bylaws. In
result, we affirm in part and reverse in part the Court of Appeals
on the jurisdictional question to which we restricted the grant of
the petition for certiorari.
It should be noted, to begin with, that the Act marks out two
paths to compliance by a registered holding company with the
requirements of the Act. One is the procedure under § 11(b)
whereby the Commission by order may require that designated steps
be taken by the holding company. Failing that, the Commission may
apply to a District Court for enforcement of its orders under
§ 11(d).
See Commonwealth & Southern Corp. v.
Securities & Exchange Commission, 134 F.2d 747. We are not
concerned here with that method of bringing holding companies into
compliance with the Act. We deal here with the second method of
compliance -- the voluntary reorganization which the company itself
submits under the broad discretion Congress left to management to
determine how to bring their systems into compliance with the Act.
Our problem starts under § 11(e), with the provision that a
holding company
"may . . . submit a plan to the Commission for the divestment of
control, securities, or other assets, or for other action . . .
enabling such company . . . to comply with the provisions of
subsection (b)."
We turn, then, to problems involved in the efforts of registered
holding companies voluntarily to meet the requirements of the
Act.
Page 346 U. S. 530
The Congress contemplated that, under this Act, some holding
companies might satisfy the requirements of § 11 by divesting
themselves of control and converting themselves into investment
companies.
See S.Rep.No. 621, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p.
13. If, in anticipation of that step, a holding company desired to
give its security holders an opportunity to withdraw from the
enterprise and, with the approval of the Commission, made them an
offer to exchange their securities for securities in its portfolio,
there would be no doubt that the fairness of that offer would be
reviewable by the Court of Appeals under § 24(a) on petition
of a security holder. Two cases drawn from United's program of
compliance with the Act are illustrative.
After the Commission ordered United to simplify its capital
structure and cease to be a holding company, United proposed a plan
for eliminating its preference stock by making an offer to exchange
on a voluntary basis securities of subsidiaries and cash for the
preference stock. The Commission approved, and review of that plan
was had in the Court of Appeals under the procedure of § 24(a)
of the Act.
Phillips v. Securities & Exchange
Commission, 153 F.2d 27. Later, United proposed the
pro
rata distribution of shares of a subsidiary to holders of its
common stock. The Commission approved, and review of that plan was
had under § 24(a) in the Court of Appeals.
Phillips v.
Securities & Exchange Commission, 87 U.S.App.D.C. 380, 185
F.2d 746.
If, therefore, United had offered its common stockholders cash
or portfolio securities for their common stock and had put the
offer in a separate plan, not making it physically a part of a more
comprehensive plan, and the Commission had approved the exchange,
there can be no doubt that that plan could have been reviewed by
the Court of Appeals under § 24(a). We are unable to see why
the
Page 346 U. S. 531
mere fact that the offer is not in isolation, but one of several
proposals joined together for presentation to the Commission and
approved by the Commission at the time it approves the other
proposals, should make a difference for purposes of judicial
review.
Mr. Justice Rutledge, writing for the Court in
Securities
& Exchange Commission v. Central-llinois Securities Corp.,
338 U. S. 96,
pointed out that the difference between § 11(e) and §
24(a) is not essentially in the scope of judicial review. Rather,
it is in the function which the two systems of review perform. As
he said, § 11(e) serves "to mobilize the judicial authority in
carrying out the policies of the Act."
Id. at
338 U. S. 125.
The full import of that statement can be understood only if §
11(e) and the functions it performs are appreciated. Section 11(e)
applies to a plan which a holding company submits to the Commission
for purposes of complying with the Act. In other words, it applies
to what traditionally has been known in the field of business and
finance as voluntary reorganizations, that is to say,
reorganizations designed by the management, not those imposed on a
company from without. The holding company proposes the voluntary
reorganization; the Commission, after hearing, approves, if it
finds the plan "necessary to effectuate the provisions of
subsection (b) and fair and equitable to the persons affected by
such plan." If § 11(e) ended there, it would be plain that
judicial review would be had either under § 24(a) on a
petition by an "aggrieved" person or under § 18(f) if and when
the Commission brought an action to enforce compliance with its
order approving a plan. Section 11(e), however, has its own
enforcement procedure, somewhat peculiarly worded. It gives a
registered holding company the standing to ask that the enforcement
machinery of the Act be placed behind its voluntary plan of
reorganization. [
Footnote
5]
Page 346 U. S. 532
Section 11(e) provides,
"the Commission,
at the request of the company, may
apply to a court, in accordance with the provisions of subsection
(f) of section 18, to enforce and carry out the terms and
provisions of such plan."
(Italics added.)
The Commission may or may not accede to the company's
suggestion. Section 11(e) does not make it mandatory for the
Commission to do so. It only says that the Commission "may" do so.
That implies the exercise of discretion. The company might request,
as here, that only some of the terms and provisions of a plan
Page 346 U. S. 533
be submitted to the enforcement proceedings of the Act; or it
might ask that each and every proposal be so treated. The
Commission might refuse the request, or it might grant it in whole
or in part. The considerations governing the exercise of the
Commission's discretion would embrace a variety of factors.
It may be necessary to eliminate one class of stock; an exchange
on a voluntary basis may not be possible because some security
holders object. Therefore, a compulsory retirement of the stock may
be necessary. One step in United's program of compliance involved
that procedure, as is shown by
In re United Corp., 82 F.
Supp. 196. United proposed a plan for the compulsory retirement of
preference stock; the Commission approved and applied to the
District Court for enforcement.
An enforcement decree on one phase of a voluntary plan of
reorganization may be an appropriate and convenient means (if not a
necessary one) to modify a certificate of incorporation. Thus, in
Delaware, the corporation statute directs the Secretary of State to
accept a decree of a federal court enforcing a provision of a plan
which modifies, alters, or repeals the bylaws of a Delaware
corporation or amends its certificate of incorporation. 8 Del.Code
Ann.1953, § 245.
Illustrations could be multiplied. But those we have given
indicate that a holding company may not be able to carry through
without some degree of compulsion all phases of the voluntary plan
it submits, that it may need the force of a judicial decree behind
the Commission's order in order to put through its
reorganization.
On the other hand, the holding company might conclude that
market conditions were so favorable, its own financial situation so
strong, the terms of the voluntary reorganization so attractive,
that it would need no help from any source to effectuate the plan
once the Commission approved.
Page 346 U. S. 534
That is the reason Congress left the choice -- the right to ask
for enforcement help -- to the holding company.
Conceivably, the Commission might refuse to give the help
requested unless other phases of the plan were also put through
enforcement proceedings. That conclusion might be reached where the
several aspects of the plan were so closely and intimately related
one to the other that the fairness of one turned on the fairness of
the other. No such issue arises here, for the question whether the
common stockholders who want to withdraw from United have been
offered enough Niagara Mohawk stock or enough cash has nothing to
do either with the elimination of the option warrants or the
changes in the charter and bylaws to govern stockholders who do not
withdraw from the enterprise.
We have said enough to indicate some of the considerations
confronting the Commission when it decides, in connection with a
voluntary reorganization plan under § 11(e), whether it will
"mobilize the judicial authority in carrying out the policies of
the Act," to use the words of Mr. Justice Rutledge in the
Central-llinois Securities Corp. case,
supra. The
Commission may send only one provision of a plan of voluntary
reorganization into enforcement proceedings, and let all others go
the route of § 24(a) should an aggrieved person desire to take
them there. Here as in other fields (
Phelps Dodge Corp. v.
Labor Board, 313 U. S. 177,
313 U. S. 194)
the relation of remedy to policy is peculiarly for the
administrative agency.
See American Power & Light Co. v.
Securities & Exchange Commission, 329 U. S.
90,
329 U. S. 112.
We cannot say that the Commission abused its discretion in the
present case, for, as we have already observed, the amendments of
the charter and bylaws and the fairness of the elimination of the
option warrants have no apparent relevancy to the manner in which
the common stockholders, who sought review in
Page 346 U. S. 535
the Circuit Court under § 24(a), say they have been
treated.
It may be, as some argue, that it would be a better scheme to
have all or none of a plan go into enforcement proceedings under
§ 11(e). If the entire plan were presented in the enforcement
proceedings, all parties would be notified and heard at one time.
But Congress, in its wisdom, has provided differently. The problem
relates, as we have said, only to voluntary reorganizations -- that
is, to plans submitted by the companies themselves to bring their
operations into compliance with the Act. The history of voluntary
recapitalizations, readjustments, and reorganizations may well have
suggested that the litigious issues would not be numerous, that
over-all judicial review of the total plan need not be made
mandatory, that only select phases and aspects of voluntary
reorganization need be put through enforcement proceedings.
Certainly one who has an isolated point of objection, whose protest
relates only to a single phase of a plan, has an advantage in the
review accorded him by § 24(a). He can bring suit in the Court
of Appeals in the circuit where he resides or has his principal
place of business, or in the District of Columbia. He can sue at
once in his own bailiwick, and not have to await institution of an
enforcement proceeding, perhaps in some faraway place. He can have
a hearing on his own personal grievance without running the risk
that his case may be lost in the large shuffle of an enforcement
proceeding where many parties and many interests are involved.
There is nothing strange or irrational in routing the common
stockholders in this case to the Court of Appeals and the option
warrant holders to the District Court. Each will have his day in
court. Nothing that one court does will impinge on the other. Each
court will be performing a different function. Whether a better
procedure
Page 346 U. S. 536
could be devised is not for us to determine. It is sufficient
that the procedure indicated is permissible under the Act, and that
the Commission, in selecting certain phases of a plan for
submission to enforcement proceedings, did not, to borrow a phrase
from the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, lose"sight of the
law." [
Footnote 6]
We accordingly affirm the Court of Appeals in taking
jurisdiction over the controversy insofar as it related (1) to the
sale by United of its holdings, and (2) to the offers it made to
its stockholders who wanted to withdraw. We reverse the Court of
Appeals in taking jurisdiction over the provisions of the voluntary
plan of reorganization which the Commission in its order made
operative on enforcement by the District Court.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 11(b) places on the Commission the duty to require
registered holding companies and their subsidiaries not only to
limit, with specified exceptions, their operations to a single
integrated public utility system, but also to simplify their
capital structures.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 24(a) provides:
"Any person or party aggrieved by an order issued by the
Commission under this title may obtain a review of such order in
the circuit court of appeals of the United States within any
circuit wherein such person resides or has his principal place of
business, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia, by filing in such court, within sixty days after the
entry of such order, a written petition praying that the order of
the Commission be modified or set aside in whole or in part. A copy
of such petition shall be forthwith served upon any member of the
Commission, or upon any officer thereof designated by the
Commission for that purpose, and thereupon the Commission shall
certify and file in the court a transcript of the record upon which
the order complained of was entered. Upon the filing of such
transcript, such court shall have exclusive jurisdiction to affirm,
modify, or set aside such order in whole or in part. No objection
to the order of the Commission shall be considered by the court
unless such objection shall have been urged before the Commission
or unless there were reasonable grounds for failure so to do. The
findings of the Commission as to the facts, if supported by
substantial evidence, shall be conclusive. If application is made
to the court for leave to adduce additional evidence, and it is
shown to the satisfaction of the court that such additional
evidence is material and that there were reasonable grounds for
failure to adduce such evidence in the proceeding before the
Commission, the court may order such additional evidence to be
taken before the Commission and to be adduced upon the hearing in
such manner and upon such terms and conditions as to the court may
seem proper. The Commission may modify its findings as to the facts
by reason of the additional evidence so taken, and it shall file
with the court such modified or new findings, which, if supported
by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive, and its
recommendation, if any, for the modification or setting aside of
the original order. The judgment and decree of the court affirming,
modifying, or setting side, in whole or in part, any such order of
the Commission shall be final, subject to review by the Supreme
Court of the United States upon certiorari or certification as
provided in §§ 239 and 240 of the Judicial Code, as
amended (U.S.C. Title 28, §§ 346 and 347)."
[
Footnote 3]
Section 11(e) provides:
"In accordance with such rules and regulations or order as the
Commission may deem necessary or appropriate in the public interest
or for the protection of investors or consumers, any registered
holding company or any subsidiary company of a registered holding
company may, at any time after January 1, 1936, submit a plan to
the Commission for the divestment of control, securities, or other
assets, or for other action by such company or any subsidiary
company thereof for the purpose of enabling such company or any
subsidiary company thereof to comply with the provisions of
subsection (b). If, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the
Commission shall find such plan, as submitted or as modified,
necessary to effectuate the provisions of subsection (b) and fair
and equitable to the persons affected by such plan, the Commission
shall make an order approving such plan, and the Commission, at the
request of the company, may apply to a court, in accordance with
the provisions of subsection (f) of section 8, to enforce and carry
out the terms and provisions of such plan. If, upon any such
application, the court, after notice and opportunity for hearing,
shall approve such plan as fair and equitable and as appropriate to
effectuate the provisions of section 11, the court, as a court of
equity, may, to such extent as it deems necessary for the purpose
of carrying out the terms and provisions of such plan, take
exclusive jurisdiction and possession of the company or companies
and the assets thereof, wherever located, and the court shall have
jurisdiction to appoint a trustee, and the court may constitute and
appoint the Commission as sole trustee, to hold or administer,
under the direction of the court and in accordance with the plan
theretofore approved by the court and the Commission, the assets so
possessed."
[
Footnote 4]
Section 18(f) provides:
"Whenever it shall appear to the Commission that any person is
engaged or about to engage in any acts or practices which
constitute or will constitute a violation of the provisions of this
title, or of any rule, regulation, or order thereunder, it may, in
its discretion, bring an action in the proper district court of the
United States, the district court of the United States for the
District of Columbia, or the United States courts of any Territory
or other place subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, to
enjoin such acts or practices and to enforce compliance with this
title or any rule, regulation, or order thereunder, and, upon a
proper showing, a permanent or temporary injunction or decree or
restraining order shall be granted without bond. The Commission may
transmit such evidence as may be available concerning such acts or
practices to the Attorney General, who, in his discretion, may
institute the appropriate criminal proceedings under this
title."
[
Footnote 5]
In speaking of plans of voluntary reorganization under §
11(e), the court in
Commonwealth & Southern Corp. v.
Securities & Exchange Commission, 134 F.2d 747, 751,
said:
"If the plan is one which can be carried out by the sole action
of the parties thereto, no further proceedings are needed. If not,
the subsection authorizes the Commission at the request of the
company proposing the plan, to make application to a district court
to enforce and carry out the plan. In this proceeding, the court,
if it finds the plan fair, equitable, and appropriate, may direct
it to be carried out, taking possession of the company and its
assets if necessary to that end. . . ."
"It will thus be seen that the congressional purpose is to leave
open to the holding companies a broad area of discretion in
determining just how they are to bring their systems into
compliance with the required standards. . . ."
"It is obvious that, in many cases, the desired result may be
reached in more than one way. Congress evidently intended to permit
the Commission to leave to the company involved the initiative in
suggesting from among the available alternative methods that one
which it deems most appropriate. This seems clear in the light of
the fact that, under section 11(e), the company is not restricted
to proposing a plan of compliance which it is in a position to
carry out itself, but it may also propose a plan affecting the
rights of third persons which it may, through the Commission,
request a court to enforce against the opposition of those third
persons. It is only if the company does not propose a plan which
the Commission and the court approve that the Commission, under
section 11(d), itself may propose and seek enforcement of a plan
against the opposition of the company."
[
Footnote 6]
See In re Standard Gas & Electric Co., 151 F.2d
326, 331.