BANYAN CORP /OR/
10SB12G/A, 2000-10-31
ELECTRONIC COMPUTERS
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                UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C.  20549




                                 AMENDMENT NO. 6


                                       TO

                                   FORM 10-SB


                   GENERAL  FORM FOR  REGISTRATION  OF  SECURITIES  Pursuant  to
     Section 12(b) or (g) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
              -----------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)



             Oregon                                    84-1346327

- -------------------------------------    -------------------------------------
   (State or other jurisdiction of                    (IRS  Employer
   Incorporation  or  Organization)                Identification  No.)


          4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112, Colorado Springs, Colorado  80907
          ------------------------------------------------------------
                    (Address of Principal Executive offices)


Issuer's  Telephone  Number:  (719)  531-5535
                               ---------------


        Securities to be registered pursuant to section 12(b) of the Act:
        -----------------------------------------------------------------

                                      None

        Securities to be registered pursuant to section 12(g) of the Act:
        -----------------------------------------------------------------

                           Common Stock, no par value
                                (Title of Class)

DOCUMENTS  INCORPORATED  BY  REFERENCE:  See  the Exhibit Index attached hereto.


<PAGE>

                               Banyan Corporation
                                   Form 10-SB
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


PART  I                                                                     Page

Item  1.     Description  of  Business                                         3

Item  2.     Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of
             Operation                                                        16

Item  3.     Description  of  Property                                        19

Item  4.     Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
             and  Management                                                  19

Item  5.     Directors,  Executive  Officers, Promoters and
             Control  Persons                                                 20

Item  6.     Executive  Compensation                                          21

Item  7.     Certain Relationships and Related Transactions                   22

Item  8.     Description  of  Securities                                      23


PART  II

Item  1.     Market Price of and Dividends  on the Registrant's
             Common  Equity  and  Other Shareholder Matters                   26

Item  2.     Legal  Proceedings                                               26

Item  3.     Changes  in  and  Disagreements  with  Accountants               27

Item  4.     Recent  Sales  of  Unregistered  Securities                      27

Item  5.     Indemnification  of  Directors  and  Officers                    35


PART  F/S    Financial  Statements                                            36


PART  III

Item  1.     Index  to  Exhibits                                              68

                                        2

<PAGE>

     This  Registration  Statement  contains  forward-looking  statements  which
involve risks and uncertainties.  When used in this Registration Statement,  the
words "believes,"  "anticipates,"  "expects" and other such similar  expressions
are intended to identify such forward-looking statements.  Actual results of the
Company (as defined below) may differ  significantly  from the results discussed
in the  forward-looking  statements.  Factors that might cause such a difference
include,  but are not limited to, those  discussed in "Item 1. - Description  of
Business - Risk  Factors."  Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on
these  forward-looking  statements,  which speak only as of the date hereof. The
Company  undertakes  no  obligation  to  publicly  release  the  results  of any
revisions  to these  forward-looking  statements  which  may be made to  reflect
events or  circumstances  after the date hereof or to reflect the  occurrence of
unanticipated events.

     An investment in Banyan  Corporation (the "Company") is highly  speculative
and involves a high degree of risk.  Prospective  investors  should consider the
risk factors involved in an investment in the Company,  including the following:
(a) that the Company is a development stage company that has a limited operating
history,  (b) the  Company  has not  generated  a profit,  (c) there is  intense
competition  in  the  industry  in  which  the  Company  operates  and  (d)  the
uncertainty of future funding.  Prospective investors should carefully read each
section  of this  registration  statement  which  contain  these and other  risk
factors.

PART  I.
- -------

ITEM  1.     DESCRIPTION  OF  BUSINESS

ORGANIZATION  AND  CHARTER  AMENDMENTS

     Banyan  Corporation  (the "Company") was organized under the laws of Oregon
on June 13, 1978 under the name Omni-Tech  International  Corporation to acquire
the exclusive  licensing rights to an aluminum  analyzing  process and to an oil
absorbent material made from wood fibers.

     The  initial  amount  of  authorized  capital  was  $50,000  consisting  of
5,000,000  shares of Common  Stock,  $0.01 par  value.  A copy of the  Company's
initial  Articles of  Incorporation  is attached  hereto and is  incorporated by
reference. See Part III, Item 1.

     On August 25, 1981, the Company's  Articles of Incorporation were restated.
The  purposes  of the  amendment  were  to:  1) add a  specific  purpose  to the
corporate charter (Article 3.1), 2) to establish a second class of capital stock
consisting of 2,787,500  shares (Article 4), 3) to allow action by a majority of
shareholders in writing without the need for a  shareholders'  meeting  (Article
5), 4) to eliminate  cumulative voting for the election of directors (Article 6)
and 5) to allow the Board of Directors  acting through the by-laws to change the
number of directors  (Article 7). A copy of the Company's  restated  Articles of
Incorporation is attached hereto and is incorporated by reference. See Part III,
Item 1.


                                        3

<PAGE>



     On February 28, 1988, the Company's Articles of Incorporation were amended.
The purpose of the amendment was: 1) to change the name of the corporation  from
Omni-Tech  International  Corporation to Interactive Data Vision,  Inc. (Article
1), 2) to name a new director,  Clyde Feyrer (Article III), and 3) to change the
authorized  capital stock to 50,000,000 shares of Class A common stock having no
par value,  10,000,000  Class B common stock having no par value, and 10,000,000
shares of preferred stock having no par value. A copy of the Company's  Articles
of Amendment is attached hereto and is incorporated by reference.  See Part III,
Item 1.

     On February 28, 1988, the Company acquired 100% of Interactive Data Vision,
Inc.,  an  Oregon  company.   Initially  Interactive  Data  was  a  wholly-owned
subsidiary,  but was  subsequently  merged  with the  Company to create a single
entity. Afterwards the Company changed its name to Interactive Data Vision, Inc.
Daily  operations were suspended in April 1991, at which time the Company became
an inactive corporation.

     On October  27,  1995,  after  several  years of  inactivity,  the  Company
acquired 100% of DoubleCase  Corporation,  a Kansas corporation,  which became a
wholly-owned subsidiary.  DoubleCase designs,  manufactures and markets personal
computer  accessory  products,  most  notably for notebook  computers  and other
portable electronic devices.

     On December 29, 1995, the Company's Articles of Incorporation were amended.
The purpose of the amendment was: 1) to change the name of the corporation  from
Interactive Data Vision to Banyan Corporation  (Article 1), 2) to create a Class
B preferred  stock by authorizing  500,000  shares of Class B Preferred,  No Par
value  (Article  4.1),  and 3) to specify  specific legal powers of the Board of
Directors  (Article  4.2) A copy  of the  Company's  Articles  of  Amendment  is
attached hereto and is incorporated by reference. See Part III, Item 1.


     After  acquiring   DoubleCase  the  Company  changed  its  name  to  Banyan
Corporation  and  filed  a  Form  15(c)211  with  the  National  Association  of
Securities Dealers (NASD) to allow its Common Stock to trade on the OTC Bulletin
Board stock  exchange.  The  Company's  Common  Stock  began  trading on the OTC
Bulleting Board in April 1996. The Company was delisted for non-compliance  with
the OTC Bulletin Board's reporting  requirements in September of 1999, and since
that time the Company's securities have been traded on the pink sheets under the
trading symbol "BANY."


     On November 1, 1999, the Company  entered into an asset purchase  agreement
to purchase  the assets of Showcase  Technologies,  L.L.C.  (a New York  Limited
Liability  Corporation) from Alan Hillsberg.  These assets comprised the product
lines of  TopListing/Designer  Studio and Showcase  carrying  cases for notebook
computers.

     The  TopListing/Designer  Studio  assets and product  line were placed into
TopListing.com  Corporation,  a  Colorado  corporation  which is a wholly  owned
subsidiary  of the Company.  Toplisting  is a web site  optimizing  product that
attempts to place  customers'  URL  addresses on the world wide web in the first
several pages of web search engine  results.  Designer  Studio is the department
within TopListing.com Corporation which designs web sites.

     The  Showcase  assets and product  line,  comprising  of notebook  computer
carrying cases, were placed into DoubleCase  Corporation,  a Kansas  corporation
wholly owned by the Company.


     As  part  of  the  transaction,  Mr.  Hillsberg  became  the  President  of
TopListing.com  Corporation  and of Doublecase  Corporation.  On May 5, 2000 Mr.
Hillsberg  resigned  from his position as president and a director of Doublecase
Corporation,   in  order  to  dedicate   his  full  time  to  his   position  at
TopListing.com, and Lawrence Stanley, the Company's president was elected as the
new president of Doublecase  Corporation.  Mr.  Hillsberg's  resignation did not
modify his employment agreement with the Company.



MATERIAL  CHANGES  IN  CONTROL  SINCE  INCEPTION  AND  RELATED  BUSINESS HISTORY

     On or about  January 10,  1979,  the Company,  under its  original  name of
Omni-Tech   International   Corporation,   undertook  an  offering  pursuant  to
Regulation A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, for 500,000 shares of
Class A common stock. At the time of the offering the Company had 413,857 shares
of  Class  A  common  stock  issued  and  outstanding.  Upon  completion  of the
Regulation  A offering,  the Company had 913,857  shares of Class A common stock
issued and outstanding.

     On or about  August 18,  1981,  the  Company,  under the name of  Omni-Tech
International  Corporation,  undertook an offering in reliance on the  exemption
from registration provided by Section 3(a)(11) of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, and Rule 147 thereunder. The offering was for 787,500 shares of Class B
common stock.  At the time of the offering the Company had  2,817,023  shares of
Class A common stock issued and outstanding.  Pursuant to the Restated  Articles
of  Incorporation  of August 11, 1981, "Upon any transfer of this stock (Class B
common stock) more than ten months after its issuance, the corporation shall

                                        4

<PAGE>

convert (on a one for one basis) the stock transferred into Class A common stock
and issue Class A common  stock to the  transferee."  There is no Class B common
stock issued or outstanding  as of May 7, 1999. The Articles of Amendment  dated
February 29, 1988,  modified  the rights and  preferences  of the Class B common
stock, as it is described later in this document,  so that it no longer converts
to Class A common stock.

     On or about  February  25, 1988 the Company,  under the name of  Omni-Tech,
entered into a Share Exchange Agreement dated February 25, 1988 ("Share Exchange
I")  with  the  shareholders  of  Interactive  Data  Vision,   Inc.,  an  Oregon
corporation,  and Coast Capital, Ltd. A copy of the Share Exchange I is attached
hereto and is incorporated  by reference.  See Part III, Item 1. Pursuant to the
Share  Exchange I, the  Company  issued  8,141,712  shares of its Class A common
stock in exchange for all the issued and outstanding common stock of Interactive
Data Vision,  Inc.  According to the Share  Exchange I, at the time of the share
exchange  2,657,265 shares of the Company's Class A common stock were issued and
outstanding.  Upon completion of the share exchange,  the Company had a total of
10,798,977  shares  of  Class  A  common  stock  issued  and  outstanding,   and
Interactive Data Vision Inc. became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company.

     Pursuant to the Articles of Amendment  dated February 29, 1988, the Company
changed  its  name to  Interactive  Data  Vision,  Inc.,  and its  wholly  owned
subsidiary  changed its name to IDV, Inc.  Subsequently,  on July 10, 1990, IDV,
Inc.  merged with and into the Company,  then known as Interactive  Data Vision,
Inc.

     An additional  4,925,000  shares of the Company's Class A common stock were
issued between the Share  Exchange I and April 1991.  Said shares were issued to
raise working  capital for the Company and were issued exempt from  registration
under Rule 504, Reg. D. Subsequent thereto,  400,000 shares were canceled by the
Company,  resulting in a total of  15,323,977  shares of the  Company's  Class A
common stock issued and outstanding as of April 1991.

     On or about December 9, 1994,  the Board of Director's  approved a 1-for-10
reverse stock split resulting in the Company having  1,532,398 shares of Class A
common stock issued and  outstanding.  Additionally,  on February 15, 1995,  the
Board of Directors  approved a further 1-for-2 reverse stock split and cancelled
210,000 shares of the Company's issued and outstanding Class A common stock, all
of which  resulted in an aggregate of 661,199  shares of the  Company's  Class A
common stock being issued and outstanding at that time.

     Pursuant to a Share  Exchange  Agreement  dated  October  27, 1995  ("Share
Exchange  II"),  the Company  acquired  all of the  outstanding  common stock of
DoubleCase  Corporation,  a Kansas corporation,  and also converted certain debt
owed by  DoubleCase  Corporation  and the  Company,  respectively,  into Class A
common stock of the Company and Class A preferred  stock of the Company.  A copy
of the Share Exchange II is attached hereto and is incorporated by reference.
See  Part  III,  Item  1.

     Upon completion of the Share Exchange II and debt  conversion  described in
the Share Exchange II, there were  4,825,384  shares of Class A Common stock and
187,190 shares of Class A Preferred  stock issued and outstanding as of December
31, 1995.

                                        5

<PAGE>

     Between December 31, 1995 and August 22, 1996, the Company issued 2,250,000
shares of its Class A common stock.  Said shares were issued on May 14, 1996, to
raise  working  capital for the Company.  These shares were  subscribed  to by a
business development company and were issued exempt from registration under Rule
504, Reg. D.

     On August 23, 1996,  the Company  underwent a 1-for-2  reverse split of its
Class A common stock.  After the reverse  split,  there were  3,537,692  Class A
common shares outstanding and 187,190 shares of Class A Preferred stock.



     Between August 24, 1996 and December 10, 1996, the Company issued 2,235,832
shares of its Class A common  stock and  retired  807,500  shares of its Class A
common stock,  all of which resulted in 4,966,024 shares of Class A common stock
issued and outstanding as of December 10, 1996.

     During this period the Company  issued the following  shares of its Class A
common stock: 57,000 shares as compensation for services rendered; 73,651 shares
in exchange for company  debt;  125,000  shares for the exercise of a previously
granted option; 1,055,724 shares to meet certain contractual obligations made by
the Company;  857,143 shares in exchange for preferred stock of another Company;
and  67,314  shares to  correct  an  accounting  mistake  when the  Company  was
restructured.


     The 807,500 shares  cancelled  during this period were shares held by First
Colonial  Funds,  Ltd. The shares were  cancelled on November 5, 1996 after when
First Colonial Funds,  Ltd.  defaulted on a promissory note which it had made to
the Company.


     On December 10, 1996, the Company reversed split its common shares, issuing
one share for every  twenty  shares  previously  outstanding.  After the reverse
split there were 246,669  shares  outstanding  after  accounting  for fractional
rounding.

     On December 7, 1998,  the Company issued a stock dividend of 200,000 shares
of Anything Internet Corporation, an Internet e-commerce company it invested in,
to its shareholders of record on November 3, 1998. As of May 7, 1999 the Company
retained  800,027  shares  of  Anything  Internet,  or  about  26%  of  Anything
Internet's issued and outstanding shares.

     Between  December  10, 1996 and March 31,  1999,  the Company  issued a net
increase of  9,445,335  shares of its Class A common  stock.  There have been no
splits or dividends of the Company's  Class A common stock between  December 10,
1996 and June 30, 1999.  On June 30, 1999,  there were  9,691,804  shares of the
Company's  Class A common  stock and  187,190  shares of the  Company's  Class A
Preferred stock issued and outstanding.


BUSINESS

     Banyan  Corporation  is  a  publicly  traded  holding  company  focused  on
investing  in and  building  a network  of  operating  subsidiaries  engaged  in
designing,  manufacturing  and  marketing  products  and  services  aimed at the
personal  computer  market,  the notebook  computer  segment in particular,  and
Internet e-commerce.

     The notebook  computer  market is currently the fastest  growing segment of
the personal computer industry - growing at an estimated rate of four times that
of the desktop  personal  computer  market.  Banyan  offers a series of products
especially for the notebook computer market through its wholly-owned subsidiary,
DoubleCase Corporation.


     DoubleCase is a U.S.  supplier of hard-side  protective  carrying cases for
notebook  computers.  Compared to the more frequently used soft-side,  or "bag",
type carrying case, the DoubleCase product line of hard-side protective carrying
cases  offers a level of  protection  that  will  protect  even the most  costly
notebook  computer or portable  electronic  device through most sudden  impacts,
drops and rough handling.


                                        6

<PAGE>


     Banyan's  interest in Internet  e-commerce  is a natural  complement to its
personal computer products business  interests.  The largest segment of Internet
sales are expected to be computer  hardware,  software and consumer  electronics
purchases.

     Currently,  Banyan  offers  its  products  directly  to  consumers  via the
Internet through its DoubleCase  Internet site,  www.doublecase.com,  as well as
third  party  resellers  such as  Anything  Internet  Corporation,  an  Internet
e-commerce  company  which Banyan also retains a 26% ownership in. For the three
month period ending June 30, 1999,  Ingram Micro, a  distributor,  accounted for
68% of the Company's sales.



DOUBLECASE  CORPORATION


     DoubleCase  Corporation,  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of the  Company,  is
involved in the design, manufacture and marketing of personal computer accessory
products,  most  notably  a line  of  hard-sided  carrying  cases  for  notebook
computers and portable electronic devices.


     Notebook  computers  and  portable   electronic  devices  are  often  quite
expensive  and  are  typically   extremely   sensitive  to  impact  and  extreme
temperatures. Through modern design and manufacturing techniques, DoubleCase has
created a line of attractive,  functional and affordable  hard-sided  protective
carrying cases for notebook  computers and other sensitive  electronic  devices.
DoubleCase  cases are built using four levels of protection:  an outer shell, an
air  cushion  barrier,  an inner  shell,  and The Perfect  Fit  Protective  Foam
Interior System(tm).

     DoubleCase  cases range in size from the NB-1000  Series,  which  carries a
single  notebook  computer with no accessories or documents,  all the way to the
NB-5000  Series,  which  has  storage  room  for the  notebook  computer,  power
supplies,  extra batteries,  and even a portable printer, as well as a folio for
executive briefs and documents. DoubleCase cases are typically price competitive
with  other  manufacturer's   similarly  configured  and  sized  hard-sided  and
soft-sided offerings.

     Complementing  its line of protective  cases,  DoubleCase also manufactures
and markets a line of custom-fit  "saddlebag"  products which attach securely to
the  outside of the  protective  case to  provide  additional  storage  for less
sensitive  items and reduce the need to carry a  briefcase  in  addition  to the
DoubleCase  product.  Various  sized  saddlebag  products  are  available to fit
DoubleCase's entire line of protective cases.

     In addition to cases for portable computers,  DoubleCase also offers a line
of  hard-sided  carrying  cases that can be  customized  to protect a variety of
other sensitive portable electronic devices, including digital cameras and

                                        7

<PAGE>

external data storage  devices such as the Iomega  Zip(tm) and Jazz(tm)  Drives.
Markets for these devices are expanding  rapidly,  and DoubleCase  seeks to take
advantage  of that growth by  offering  the same level of  protection  for these
devices as it does for notebook computers.

     All DoubleCase products are manufactured and assembled in United States and
carry a  limited  lifetime  warranty.  At the  Company's  facility  in  Colorado
Springs,   final   assembly,   warehousing,   shipping  and  all  marketing  and
administrative  functions  occur. The Company has its carrying cases blow molded
by third party molders in the United States then shipped to Colorado Springs. At
the Colorado  Springs  facility,  the final assembly  consists of assembling the
interior of the case with components (foam, file folders,  partition panels, lid
stays)  purchased from third party  suppliers who make these items  specifically
for DoubleCase. A single case can be assembled,  packaged, warehoused or shipped
in 0.25 man hours.

     Additionally,  DoubleCase is currently evaluating several options to expand
its current product lines.  These options  include  developing new products that
fill niches in the notebook computer  accessory  market,  acquiring new products
and technologies from third party inventors,  and acquiring other companies that
complement DoubleCase's strategic business goals without losing its focus on the
notebook computer market.


MARKETING  AND  SALES

     The Company,  through its  DoubleCase  subsidiary,  has  targeted  notebook
computer users as its primary market.  The notebook computer market is currently
the fastest growing segment of the computer industry. According to BIS Strategic
Decisions, Inc., a market research firm, sales of notebook computers are growing
at about  four  times the rate of desktop  computers.  The  market is  extremely
competitive and is dominated by well-known  manufacturers  such as IBM, Toshiba,
NEC, Texas  Instruments,  and Apple.  Intense  competition has resulted in sharp
price reductions by  manufacturers  and shorter periods of time for bringing new
technologies  to market.  These are the same factors that put desktop  computers
into a large percentage of U.S. homes.  Management  believes notebook  computers
are gaining similar large-scale acceptance.

The Company is focusing its marketing efforts in the following areas:

     CONSUMER MARKET - DoubleCase is currently  selling its products through the
computer  distributor  Ingram  Micro who in turn resells the products to dealers
who in  turn  sell  to the  end  user,  or  consumer.  Additionally,  DoubleCase
maintains a world wide wed site  (www.doublecase.com)  which  illustrates all of
the DoubleCase's  products and allows end-users to purchase DoubleCase products.
Management  has  targeted  several  major  U.S.  computer   retailers  to  offer
DoubleCase  products  although none do so yet.  Currently  the consumer  market,
whether it be through  "distribution/channel sales", company direct, or internet
sales, accounts for approximately 60% of the Company's sales.

     GOVERNMENT/INSTITUTIONAL  MARKET - DoubleCase  is rapidly  becoming a major
supplier  of  protective  carrying  cases to  various  federal,  state and local
government agencies, as well as Fortune 500 companies. DoubleCase products are

                                        8

<PAGE>

currently  listed by two  DoubleCase  government  resellers on the GSA Schedule,
which streamlines the purchasing process by having DoubleCase  products "pricing
approved" so that the  government  agency does not have to acquire  several bids
before  purchasing.  DoubleCase  products are also approved for government  VISA
authorization,  which helps  expedite  government  sales.  This  market  segment
currently accounts for approximately 30% of the company's sales.

     DISTRIBUTION/CHANNEL  SALES - Channel Sales are the primary  method used by
manufacturers  to get their  products to market.  The "channel"  begins with the
manufacturer and ultimately end with the consumer.  Typically,  the manufacturer
will sell its  product  to a  distributor  which in turn  sells the  product  to
resellers,  dealers and value added resellers (VARs) who then sell it to the end
consumer.  This method is preferred by most resellers,  dealers and VARs because
it eliminates their need to coordinate inventory purchases from hundreds, if not
thousands,  of  individual  manufacturers;  in  essence,  the  distributor  is a
"shopping mall" for most resellers,  dealers and VARs.  DoubleCase is working on
increasing  the number of  distributors  from one,  Ingram Micro (NYSE:  IM), to
carry its products in order to expand its channel sales presence.


     ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT  MANUFACTURERS (OEM's) - DoubleCase is just entering the
realm of becoming an OEM supplier,  allowing  DoubleCase  products to be sold as
standard or optional equipment on new notebook computer purchases. In June 1998,
Dell Computer (NASDAQ:  DELL) selected  DoubleCase at its provider of hard-sided
protective carrying cases for its notebook  computers.  Under this non-exclusive
agreement,  DoubleCase  cases are  presently  being  offered as an option on new
notebook  purchases and are being sold under the DoubleCase brand; Dell is under
no obligation to purchase  DoubleCase  products,  now or in the future. To date,
OEMs account for less that 5% of the Company's sales.


     INTERNET  SALES - DoubleCase  is targeting  Internet  e-commerce  sales for
future  growth.  Through  its own site,  www.doublecase.com,  and others such as
www.dell.com  and  www.anythingpc.com,  DoubleCase is building a strong Internet
retail presence. With the growing popularity of shopping from home or the office
via the Internet,  Internet  storefronts  such as these are expected to become a
significant source of future revenues.



     INTERNATIONAL  SALES - Although  DoubleCase has  concentrated its marketing
efforts  primarily  on the United  States,  where  nearly  half of all  notebook
computers  are  purchased,  it  has  also  pursued  opportunities  to  establish
international   sales.   Currently,   DoubleCase   products   are  sold  through
international  dealers in  France,  Canada and  England.  DoubleCase  intends to
continue pursuing growth opportunities in these markets. In 1998,  international
sales account for approximately 14.3% of the Company's sales.



                                        9

<PAGE>
COMPETITION



     Currently,  the  market  for  carrying  cases for  notebook  computers  and
sensitive electronic  equipment is dominated by soft-sided products.  Management
estimates that less than three percent (3%) of notebook computer owners purchase
hard-sided  carrying cases.  This estimate includes owners who purchase standard
briefcases in which to carry their  notebook  computers.  Of the estimated  less
than 3%, management  believes that  approximately 10%, or less than about .3% of
all notebook computer  purchasers  currently buy the present  DoubleCase line of
cases.  Management believes DoubleCase products are in an advantageous  position
as one of the few existing  manufacturers and marketers of hard-sided protective
carrying cases.

The  only  direct  competition  DoubleCase  has  encountered  to  date  for  its
hard-sided  cases is from  Samsonite,  which  offers  only two models of its own
hard-side carrying case, and Zero Haliburton, which does not market its products
through normal retail channels and tends to have significantly  higher suggested
retail prices.  Targus, a large provider of soft-side carrying cases as recently
offered one of its soft side bags in a hard shell design.  It is to soon to tell
what  acceptance  this new Targus hard shell case will have in the market.  What
impact this will have on DoubleCase's  marketing and sales efforts is unknown at
this time. With little direct  competition from hard-side case  manufacturers to
date,  DoubleCase  intends to focus its competitive  efforts on emphasizing that
the DoubleCase designs provide superior protection at affordable prices.


          The  soft-side  carrying  case  market  is  primarily dominated by two
manufacturers:  Targus  and  Kensington  Microware.

          Targus designs and manufactures soft-sided carrying cases for notebook
computers.  Targus has recently  introduced the "Hard Shell Universal Bag" which
is  a  hard-shell  design  of  the  Targus  soft-sided  "Universal  Bag".  Their
literature  represents  that it is not available in retail stores although it is
offered for sale on their web site and also on the Dell computer web site. It is
to soon to evaluate market acceptance of the "Hard Shell Universal Bag" although
Targus  is  well  established  and is  believed  to have  significant  financial
resources available for marketing.

          Kensington  Microware is a wholly owned  subsidiary of ACCO World, the
large office supply company based in San Mateo,  California,  and manufactures a
wide  variety of computer  accessory  products,  including a line of  soft-sided
cases for notebook computers.

          By targeting the soft-sided  carrying case market,  DoubleCase will be
competing  against well established  companies that have  significantly  greater
financial  and  personnel  resources  than the  Company.  Management  will focus
competitive  efforts  on  emphasizing  the  superior  protection  offered by and
affordability of the DoubleCase product line and continue  furthering efforts to
get DoubleCase products into the all appropriate retail markets.


ANYTHING  INTERNET  CORPORATION

     On August 19, 1998,  the Company  entered into a Share  Exchange  Agreement
with Anything,  Inc., subsequently renamed Anything Internet Corporation.  Under
the terms of the agreement,  Anything Internet was  re-capitalized  with 200,000
shares of Banyan  restricted  Common Stock and granted stock options to purchase
300,000  shares of Banyan  Common  Stock  at:  100,000  shares at $0.50 a share,
expiring  February  28, 1999 which were  extended to expire on August 31,  1999;
100,000 shares at $1.00 a share expiring August 31, 1999; and 100,000 shares at

                                       10

<PAGE>

$2.00 a share, expiring August 31, 2000. In return for this equity issuance, the
Company received 1,000,000 shares of Anything Internet Common Stock and, after a
stock dividend to its  shareholders,  the Company now retains 800,027,  or about
26%, of Anything Internet.  In addition,  Banyan appointed two members,  Cameron
Yost and J. Scott Sitra, to Anything Internet's Board of Directors.

     Anything  Internet is an Internet  e-commerce  holding  company  focused on
building a network of successful e-commerce operating companies, joint ventures,
strategic alliances and partnerships.

     Currently  Anything Internet operates through one wholly-owned  subsidiary,
AnythingPC Internet Corporation ("AnythingPC").  AnythingPC is a rapidly growing
Internet based discount  retailer of over 201,000 different  computer  hardware,
software and peripheral  products to end consumers and  businesses.  Through its
Internet   storefronts   -    www.anythingpc.com,    www.anythingmac.com,    and
www.anythingunix.com  - AnythingPC  offers one-stop shopping to its customers 24
hours a day,  seven  days a week.  In  addition  to its wide  array  of  product
offerings, AnythingPC's storefronts feature competitively priced "Hot Products",
an  easy-to-use  graphical  interface,  a powerful  search  engine to locate any
product desired,  a unique "quote monkey" for pricing assistance on hard-to-find
products,  and  a  special  "notify  me"  feature  that  automatically  notifies
customers  when a  backordered  product  arrives in stock and keeps the customer
appraised of the estimated time of arrival.

     At the  present  time the  Company  views its  relationship  with  Anything
Internet as purely a strategic investment. Anything Internet does, however, sell
the Company's products via its Internet  storefronts,  which are responsible for
generating more than 10% of the Company's gross sales. More in depth information
on Anything Internet may on be found through its own SEC filings.


RISK  FACTORS


LIMITED  OPERATING  HISTORY;  LACK  OF  PROFITABILITY.

     The Company was incorporated  under the laws of the state of Oregon on June
13,  1978,  but did not enter the computer  accessory  products  business  until
October 1995 when it acquired  100% of  DoubleCase  Corporation.  Since then the
Company has not been able to generate enough revenue to show a profit,  nor does
it have any significant assets.

     The Company's prospects must be considered in light of the risks,  expenses
and  difficulties  frequently  encountered by companies in their early stages of
growth,  which  include,  but are not  limited  to,  limited  access to capital,
competing against  companies with strong brand names and better  capitalization,
and hiring and  retaining  qualified  personnel.  To address  these  risks,  the
Company  must,  among other  things,  maintain and  increase its customer  base,
maintain and develop  relationships  with suppliers and distributors,  implement
and  successfully  execute its business and  marketing  strategies,  continue to
develop and expand its product line, provide superior customer service and order

                                       11

<PAGE>

fulfillment,  respond  to  competitive  developments,  and  attract,  retain and
motivate qualified personnel. There can be no assurance that the Company will be
successful  in  addressing  such  risks,  and the  failure to do so could have a
material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,  financial  condition and
results of operations.

UNPREDICTABILITY  OF  FUTURE  OPERATING  RESULTS;  SEASONALITY.

     Sales  within the  computer  industry  are  substantially  affected  by new
product  releases  from  manufacturers.  Historically,  such  releases  tend  to
maintain or increase  overall sales revenues.  Therefore,  a lack of or delay in
new product  releases  by  manufacturers  can  negatively  impact the  Company's
revenues.  The Company's  current and future expense levels are based largely on
its  investment  plans and  estimates of future  revenues.  Sales and  operating
results  generally  depend on the volume of,  timing of, and  ability to fulfill
orders received,  which are difficult to forecast.  The Company may be unable to
adjust  spending in a timely manner to  compensate  for any  unexpected  revenue
shortfall. Accordingly, any significant shortfall in revenues in relation to the
Company's  planned  expenditures  would have an immediate  adverse effect on the
Company's business, prospects, financial condition, and results of operations.

     The Company may experience seasonality in its business, reflecting seasonal
fluctuations  in the computer  industry and traditional  retail,  government and
corporate   seasonal   spending  patterns  and  advertising   expenditures.   In
particular,  the computer industry  typically  experiences a slowdown during the
summer months.  Such seasonality may result in lower sales,  unforeseen  revenue
shortfalls and cause quarterly  fluctuations in the Company's  operating results
and could have a material  adverse effect on the Company's  business,  operating
results and financial condition.


NEGATIVE CASH FLOW/LIMITED CAPITAL/DEPENDENCE ON ANYTHING INTERNET STOCK SALES

     The  Company  has  had  since  inception   negative  cash  flows  from  its
operations.  This  negative  cash flow  position has been  aggravated by limited
capital from which to fund this  negative  cash flow.  The Company plans to fund
its future  negative  cash flow by sales of the  Company's  holdings in Anything
Internet. In the event that such sales do not supply sufficient cash to maintain
operations, the Company would be adversely affected.


DEPENDENCE  ON  A  SINGLE  PRODUCT  LINE.


     The Company currently sells a single line of hard-sided protective carrying
cases through its wholly-owned subsidiary, DoubleCase Corporation. The Company's
single product line means that the Company is solely  dependent upon that single
product line for  production of revenues and payment of the Company's  expenses.
If the product  line does not generate  enough sales to produce a positive  cash
flow the  Company  will not have  sufficient  cash to pay its  expenses  or fund
expansion  efforts and the Company will have to raise  capital  through sales of
its stock or assets. The Company attributes recent decreases in sales to reduced
expenditures  on advertising.  If the Company is unable to increase  spending on
advertising sales may continue to decline.


COMPETITION.


     The  market  for  notebook  carrying  cases is  intensely  competitive  and
dominated by soft-sided  manufacturers such as Targus and Kensington  Microware.
In the event consumers and businesses  start buying more hard-sided  cases there
are no  assurances  that  Kensington or any other  manufacturer  may not develop
their own line of hard-sided  cases to compete against the DoubleCase  brand. In
fact,  Targus has already developed its own line of hard sided carrying cases to
compete with DoubleCase products. Additionally, some of these manufacturers have
much better funding and stronger  brands.  Increased  competition from these and
other sources could require the Company to respond to  competitive  pressures by
establishing pricing,


                                       12

<PAGE>


     marketing and other programs, or seeking out additional strategic alliances
or acquisitions,  that may be less favorable to the Company than would otherwise
be established or obtained.  Examples of such pricing and marketing programs are
rebate   programs,   progressive   discounts  for  increased   sales  levels  by
distributors   and   resellers,    cooperative   advertising   campaigns,    and
differentiating  product  lines  so as to  accommodate  price  cuts.  Aggressive
product price cuts or expending more on marketing and  promotional  efforts than
previously  budgeted  could  have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Company's
business, prospects, financial condition and results of operations.


DEPENDENCE  ON  KEY  PERSONNEL;  NEED  FOR  ADDITIONAL  PERSONNEL.


     The  Company's  performance  is  substantially  dependent on the  continued
services  and  on the  performance  of  its  senior  management  and  other  key
personnel,  particularly  its Chairman,  President and Chief Executive  Officer,
Cameron B. Yost. The Company does not have an employment contract with Mr. Yost,
nor does the  Company  maintain  key  person  insurance  on him.  The  Company's
performance  also  depends  on its  ability  to retain  and  motivate  its other
officers and key  employees.  The loss of the  services of any of its  executive
officers  or other key  employees  could have a material  adverse  effect on the
Company's  business,  prospects,  financial condition and results of operations.
The reason for this  dependence  upon key  personnel is in large part due to the
limited  number of  personnel  employed by the  Company.  The  Company's  future
success also depends on its ability to identify,  attract,  hire, train,  retain
and   motivate   other  highly   skilled   technical,   managerial,   editorial,
merchandising,  marketing and customer service  personnel.  Competition for such
personnel  is intense,  and there can be no  assurance  that the Company will be
able  to  successfully  attract,  integrate  or  retain  sufficiently  qualified
personnel.   The  failure  to  attract  and  retain  the  necessary   technical,
managerial, editorial,  merchandising,  marketing and customer service personnel
could have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,  prospects,
financial condition and results of operations.




     CONVICTION AND SUBSEQUENT RESIGNATION OF KEY PERSONNEL;  APPOINTMENT OF NEW
EXECUTIVE STAFF.


     The  Company's  former  Chairman,  President and Chief  Executive  Officer,
Cameron Yost, was convicted on December 20, 1999 in the U.S.  District Court for
the Southern  District of New York for three counts of mail fraud,  one count of
conspiracy,  and one count of  securities  fraud in  connection  with the common
stock of Banyan  Corporation.  Mr. Yost is awaiting a sentencing date. On May 5,
2000 Mr. Yost resigned from all of his corporate positions in order to attend to
his personal  affairs,  and  Lawrence  Stanley was  appointed  as the  Company's
President and Chief Executive Officer.


     The  Company  believes  that  Mr.  Stanley  will be  able  to  successfully
implement  the  Company's  business  plans.  However,  Mr. Yost is the Company's
founder and Mr. Yost's resignation and subsequent absence from the Company could
have a material adverse effect on the Company's business,  prospects,  financial
condition  and results of  operations  by  depriving  the Company of Mr.  Yost's
leadership, insight, and knowledge.





TRADEMARKS  AND  PROPRIETARY  RIGHTS.

     The Company  regards  its  service  marks,  trademarks,  trade  secrets and
similar  intellectual  property as  instrumental  to its success,  and relies on
trademark and copyright law, trade secret protection, and confidentiality and/or
licensing  agreements  with its  employees,  customers,  strategic  partners and
others to protect its proprietary rights.  Such proprietary rights include,  but
are not limited to, the DoubleCase trademark and the Perfect Fit Protective Foam
Interior System trademark. There can be no assurance that the steps taken by the
Company to protect its proprietary rights will be adequate or that third parties
will not infringe or  misappropriate  the Company's  service marks,  trademarks,
trade secrets and other intellectual property rights. In addition,  there can be
no assurance that others will not independently develop

                                       13

<PAGE>

substantially  equivalent  intellectual  property.  A failure by the  Company to
protect its intellectual  property in a meaningful  manner could have a material
adverse effect on the Company's  business,  prospects,  financial  condition and
results of operations. Furthermore, litigation may be necessary in the future to
enforce the Company's  intellectual  property  rights,  to protect the Company's
trade secrets,  or to determine the validity and scope of the proprietary rights
of others.  Such litigation  could result in substantial  costs and diversion of
management  and  technical  resources,  either of which  could  have a  material
adverse effect on the Company's  business,  prospects,  financial  condition and
results of operations.

     In addition,  there can be no assurance  that other parties will not assert
infringement  claims  against the  Company.  The  Company may receive  notice of
claims of infringement  of other parties'  proprietary  rights.  There can be no
assurance  that such  claims  will not be  asserted  or  prosecuted  against the
Company  in the  future  or that  any such  assertion  or  prosecution  will not
materially  adversely  affect  the  Company's  business,  prospects,   financial
condition  and results of  operations.  The defense of any such claims,  whether
such claims are with or without merit, could be time-consuming, result in costly
litigation  and diversion of management and technical  personnel,  cause product
shipment delays, or require the Company to develop non-infringing  technology or
enter  into  royalty  or  licensing   agreements.   Such  royalty  or  licensing
agreements,  if  required,  may not be  available  on  terms  acceptable  to the
Company,  or at all. In the event of a successful claim of product  infringement
against  the  Company  and the  failure or  inability  of the Company to develop
non-infringing  technology or license the  infringed or similar  technology on a
timely basis, the Company's business, prospects, financial condition and results
of operations would be materially adversely affected.

SALES  AND  OTHER  TAXES.

     The Company does not  currently  collect  sales and other  similar taxes in
respect to shipments of goods into states other than Colorado.  However,  one or
more  local,  state or  foreign  jurisdictions  may  seek to  impose  sales  tax
collection  obligations on out of state  companies,  such as the Company,  which
engage in interstate commerce. In addition,  any new operation in states outside
of Colorado could subject  shipments into such states to state sales taxes under
current or future  laws.  A  successful  assertion  by one or more states or any
foreign country that the Company should collect sales or other taxes on the sale
of  merchandise  could  result  in new  liabilities  for back  taxes  and have a
material  adverse  effect  on  the  Company's  business,  prospects,   financial
condition and results of operations.

NO  CASH  DIVIDENDS  AND  NONE  ANTICIPATED.

     The  Company   anticipates  using  all  future  earnings  to  complete  the
marketing, development and expansion of its business, for operating capital, and
for corporate development and expansion activities.  The Company has not paid or
declared any cash  dividends,  nor, by reason of its present stage of growth and
anticipated  financial  requirements,   does  not  anticipate  paying  any  cash
dividends in the foreseeable future. The future payment of cash dividends by the
Company on its Common  Stock,  if any,  rests within the sole  discretion of the
Company's  Board of  Directors  and will  depend on,  among  other  things,  the
Company's earnings, capital requirements and overall financial condition.

                                       14

<PAGE>
ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS.



     Certain provisions of the Company's Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws
may make a change in the control of the Company more  difficult to effect,  even
if a change in control were in the shareholders' best interest. These provisions
include  the  ability of the Board of  Directors,  without  further  shareholder
approval, to issue Preferred Stock with all rights, powers and privileges of the
Common Stock.  The issuance of Preferred  Stock may have the effect of delaying,
deferring  or  preventing  a change in control of the  Company  without  further
action by the  stockholders and may adversely affect the voting and other rights
of the holders of Common  Stock.  The Company has no present  plans to issue any
new  shares of  Preferred  Stock.  Furthermore,  these  same  provisions  of the
Company's Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws and the Oregon law under which
they have been adopted could delay or make more difficult a merger, tender offer
or proxy contest involving the Company.





PENNY  STOCK  RULES

     The SEC has adopted a set of rules that regulate  broker-dealer  securities
with a price of less than $5.00  (other than  securities  registered  on certain
national  securities  exchanges or quoted on the Nasdaq  system,  provided  that
current price and volume information  regarding  transactions in such securities
is  provided  by the  exchange  or  system).  The penny  stock  rules  require a
broker-dealer to deliver to the customer a standardized risk disclosure document
prepared by the SEC that provides  information about penny stocks and the nature
and  level of risks in the  penny  stock  market.  The  broker-dealer  also must
provide the customer with other information.  The penny stock rules require that
prior to a transaction  in a penny stock,  the  broker-dealer  must determine in
writing  that the penny stock is a suitable  investment  for the  purchaser  and
receive the purchaser's  written agreement to the transaction.  These disclosure
requirements  may reduce the level of trading  activity in the secondary  market
for a stock that becomes  subject to the penny stock rules.  Investors in stocks
subject to the penny stock rules may, as a direct result, find it more difficult
to dispose of their shares of stock.

                                       15

<PAGE>
EMPLOYEES


     The Company  believes its success  depends to a  significant  extent on its
ability to attract, motivate and retain highly skilled management and employees.
To this end, the Company  focuses on incentive  programs such as employee  stock
options and competitive  compensation and benefits packages for its employees to
foster a corporate  culture which is challenging  and rewarding,  yet fun. As of
May 7, 1999,  the  Company,  including  its  subsidiaries,  had three  full-time
employees.  Currently the only employee  receiving health and dental benefits is
Cameron B. Yost.  The Company also employs,  from time to time, a limited number
of independent  contractors and temporary employees on a periodic basis. None of
the  Company's  employees  are  represented  by a labor  union  and the  Company
considers its labor relations to be good.


Item  2.  MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION  AND  ANALYSIS  OR  PLAN  OF  OPERATION

Fiscal  Year  1998  Ending  December  31,  1998

     Net sales for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1998 were $206,467, which
marked a decline of 16.7%  compared to net sales of $247,773 for the same period
ending December 31, 1997. The reason for the decline was the Company's marketing
budget was  sharply  reduced due to a lack of working  capital and  Management's
decision to concentrate on cultivating  long-term  relationships  with customers
who will order  product in large volume such as Ingram  Micro and Dell  Computer
relationships.  These efforts did not contribute materially to fiscal 1998 sales
results. In the fiscal year 1998, sales to domestic customers  represented 85.7%
of total sales, and sales to foreign customers represented 14.3% of total sales.
In fiscal 1997  domestic  sales were 72.3% of total sales,  with  foreign  sales
totalling 27.7% of all sales.



     Gross  profits  for fiscal  year 1998 were 66.6%  compared to 53.1% for the
same period a year ago. The  increase in gross  margins  reflects the  Company's
ability  to  purchase  materials  at  lower  prices  by  improving   negotiating
practices.



     Selling,  general  and  administrative  expenses  for fiscal year 1998 were
$573,317,  representing  a decline of 13.7% over  $667,941 for the same period a
year earlier as a result of the Company's  ongoing cost reduction  programs.  In
order to preserve limited working capital the Company has  aggressively  reduced
expenses wherever  possible.  The number of employees has been reduced to three,
all unnecessary subscriptions,  supplies, equipment and communications and other
expenses have been  minimized.  Major  elements of this cost  reduction  program
include a reduction  in  professional  expenses of $95,690 and labor and related
expenses of $25,106. Offsetting these reductions were increases in 1998 expenses
over 1997 for  advertising  of $29,443 and telephone  and  utilities  expense of
$11,009.  Net decreases in other expenses were $14,280.  The Company is not able
to  predict  the  results  of this cost  reduction  program  in future  periods.
Interest  expense  declined  56.6% in fiscal year 1998 to ($22,913)  compared to
($52,843)  for fiscal year 1997 as a result of several note  holders  converting
their  loans into  Common  Stock  through a private  placement  offering.  These
conversions  took place on January  23,  1998,  as payment  for rights that were
exercised into common stock.  $142,525 of notes and $16,900 of accounts  payable
were converted into common stock.



     Additionally,  in fiscal year 1998 the Company acquired a minority interest
in Anything  Internet  Corporation.  For fiscal  year 1998 the Company  recorded
$39,590 as its share of  Anything's  operating  loss under the equity  method of
accounting for investments.



     The net loss for the year ending  December 31, 1998, was $494,910  compared
to a net loss of $589,163, for fiscal year 1997.


                                       16

<PAGE>

See Note 4 in the notes to the audited consolidated financial statements.

Three-Months  Ending  June  30,  1999 Compared to Three-Months Ending June 30,
1998

     Net sales  for the  three-months  ended  June 30,  1999,  were  $33,304,  a
decrease  of 25.71%  compared  to $41,869  for the same  period a year ago.  The
decrease in net sales was driven by reduced marketing budgets and a diversion of
Management's  attention by  contributing  significantly  to the  development and
growth of Anything Internet.


     Gross profits for the  three-months  ended June 30, 1999, were $21,817,  or
65.5% of sales,  compared  to $15,106 or 69.2% of sales,  for the same  period a
year ago.  The  decrease  in gross  profit was due to a price  increase on a key
component in raw material by the one of the Company's vendors



     Selling,  general and  administrative  (SG&A) expenses for the three-months
ended June 30, 1999, were $121,612, an increase of 62% over $74,647 for the same
period a year ago.  The  increase  in SG&A  expenses  reflects  the  increase in
accounting  and  legal  expenses  of  $13,215  in order to comply  with  certain
governmental  regulations,  increased  advertising  and  marketing  expenses  of
$19,781, and other expenses of $13,969.




     The net loss for the three-months  ended June 30, 1999, was ($150,480),  or
($0.02) a share, an increase of 133% over ($64,324), or ($0.01) a share, for the
same  period a year  ago.  The  increase  in net loss is  attributable  to costs
associated with Anything Internet and a sharp increase in SG&A expenses.


     The Company  does not believe  that  inflation  has had a material  adverse
effect on sales or income.  Increases in raw materials or other  operating costs
may adversely affect the Company's operations;  however, the Company believes it
will be able to maintain,  or even improve,  its present gross profit margins by
monitoring and adjusting the prices of the products it sells to offset increases
in costs  of raw  materials  or  other  operating  costs.  Similarly,  quarterly
fluctuations  in sales may be caused by the timing of large  orders  from one or
more  customers,  the timing of  shipments  based on receipt of  materials  from
vendors and the success of specific marketing programs.

     Based on its  experience  to date,  the  Company  believes  that its future
operating  results may be subject to quarterly  variations based on a variety of
factors,  including  seasonal  buying  patterns in the computer  industry.  Such
effects may not be apparent in the Company's  operating  results during a period
of expansion.  However, the Company can make no assurances that its business can
be significantly expanded under any circumstances.

Liquidity  and  Capital  Resources

     The Company's  operations to date have focused on developing  and marketing
personal  computer  accessory  products,  building brand  awareness,  initiating
government,  corporate and consumer sales, and securing the necessary  financing
to fund the development, operations and expansion of its business.

                                       17

<PAGE>


     As of June 30,  1999,  the  Company  had  $16,838  cash on  hand,  accounts
receivable of $68,371, and an investment in Anything Internet Corporation valued
at $36,948.

     As of June 30, 1999, cash used by operating  activities was $150,427.  This
was used to support ongoing operations.

     As of  June  30,  1999,  cash  provided  by  financing  activities  totaled
$152,856.  This was  entirely  from  the  proceeds  of  equity  issued  for cash
financing.




     The Company  anticipates  making  significant  investments in the future to
support  its overall  growth and  substantially  expand its  product  offerings,
including   hiring  a  seasoned  general  sales  manager  that  will  create  an
anticipated increase in payroll expenses of about $75,000 annually.  However, as
indicated in the Company's most recent financial  statements  available  herein,
while operating activities provide some cash flow, the Company is currently cash
flow negative.  There can be no assurances that the Company's ongoing operations
will begin to generate a positive  cash flow or that  unforeseen  events may not
require more working capital than the Company currently has at its disposal.  At
the current time, the Company  intends to fund its capital  requirements  from a
periodic sale of Anything  Internet  stock, or by using this stock as collateral
for a working  capital  loan,  until it is able to meet its needs  from the cash
flow  generated  by sales of  products.  As the Company is able to complete  the
funding of new cases and fund an ongoing marketing  program,  sales are expected
to improve.  The new cases will also have lower manufacturing  costs, thus gross
profit is  expected  to increase at a faster  rate.  With the  exception  of new
product  development and the ongoing marketing program,  all other expenses will
be carefully controlled. If the Company's plans are successful, cash flow should
improve  and  replace  the need to sell  shares  of  Anything  Internet  to meet
operational  requirements.  If the Company's plans are not  successful,  or cash
flow  worsens,  and if the Company is unable to raise  enough  funds to meet its
fiscal requirements through the sale of shares of Anything Internet then it will
need to offset any losses or negative  cashflows by selling its own preferred or
common stock or  debentures.  The Company's  inability to consummate  such sales
would have a material  adverse  effect on the  business  and  operations  of the
Company.







                                       18

<PAGE>


Item  3.  DESCRIPTION  OF  PROPERTY


     The Company, and its wholly-owned subsidiary DoubleCase Corporation,  share
combined headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colorado at 4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112
in a 2,760 square foot  office/warehouse  space. The Company previously occupied
this space on a two year  lease  whereby  it paid  $1,138  per month.  The lease
expired,  and the Company has  negotiated  a new one year lease on the  location
with a one year  extension at a monthly  rental rate of $1,244 per month.  lease
has not yet been  executed,  and in the  interrim  period the  Company  has been
paying $1,244 per month on a month to month tenancy basis for the space.

     Additionally,   the  Company's  whooly  owned   subsidiary   TopListing.com
Corporation rents approximately 1,170 square feet of space at 33 E. Merrisck Rd.
in Valley  Stream,  New York.  The lease for this space is $1,500 per month from
November 1999 through  October,  2000, and has two renewal  periods of two years
each with the rental price going up $100 each year of each renewal period.



Item  4.  SECURITY  OWNERSHIP  OF  CERTAIN  BENEFICIAL  OWNERS  AND  MANAGEMENT

     The  following  table sets forth certain  information  known to the Company
regarding  the  beneficial  ownership of Common Stock as of May 7, 1999,  by (i)
each Director of the Company, (ii) each executive officer of the Company,  (iii)
all directors and executive  officers as a group,  and (iv) each person known to
the Company to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of its outstanding shares
of Common Stock.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                     Shares Beneficially Owned
                                     -------------------------
                                                   Percentage
Directors and Executive Officers      Shares Held   Owned (1)
- --------------------------------      -----------   ---------

<S>                                   <C>          <C>
Cameron B. Yost (2)

   4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112
   Colorado Springs, CO  80907          1,227,154        12.7%
Lloyd Parrish, Jr.
   4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112
   Colorado Springs, CO  80907          1,055,837        10.9%
Lawarance Stanley
   4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112
   Colorado Springs, CO  80907             44,020         0.5%
All current directors and executive
 officers as a group (3 persons)        2,327,011        24.1%

Five Percent Shareholders
- -------------------------
Ann L. Gee (3)
   110 S. Main Street, #510
   Wichita, KS  67202                     581,932         6.0%
- --------------------------------      -----------    ---------
<FN>

(1)     Percentage  of ownership  is based on  9,691,804  shares of Common Stock
        issued and outstanding as of June 30, 1999.
(2)     Includes  a vested stock option to purchase 11,154 at an aggregate price
        of  $0.05  a  share.

(3) Ann L. Gee is Lloyd K. Parrish Jr.'s sister. Mr.Parrish is a Director. </FN>

</TABLE>


                                       19

<PAGE>

Item  5.  DIRECTORS,  EXECUTIVE  OFFICERS,  PROMOTERS  AND  CONTROL  PERSONS


     The  directors,  executive  officers  promoters and control  persons of the
Company,  their ages as of June 30, 2000,  and their  positions with the Company
are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Name                  Age                Position
-----                 ---                ---------

<S>                   <C>  <C>
Cameron B. Yost        46  Former Chairman, President, Chief Executive (1)
                           Officer and Director -- Resigned From All Positions

Lloyd K. Parrish Jr.   61  Director

Lawarance Stanley      51  Chairman, President, Chief Executive
                           Officer and Director (1)

Jeffrey M. Rhodes      35  Director
Alan Hillsberg         43  President, TopListing.com Corporation



(1)  Effective May 5, 2000, Mr. Yost resigned from all of his positions with the
     Company and My. Stanley was appointed to fill all of those positions.


</TABLE>


     The Board of  Directors  of the Company is  comprised  of only one class of
director.  Each director is elected to hold office until the next annual meeting
of shareholders and until his successor has been elected and qualified. Officers
are elected  annually by the Board of Directors and hold office until successors
are duly elected and qualified. The following is a brief account of the business
experience of each director and  executive  officer of the Company.  There is no
family relationship between any Director or Executive Officer of the Company.

CAMERON B. YOST, Chairman,  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director, Mr.
Yost is the founder of  DoubleCase  Corporation,  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary of
Banyan.  He founded  DoubleCase in 1991 and served as President  before  joining
Banyan in 1995 when the two companies merged  together.  Prior to joining Banyan
and  DoubleCase,  from 1984 to 1988 Mr.  Yost was  President  of BYCO,  Ltd.,  a
manufacturer of evaporative  cooler products  located in Greeley,  Colorado.  In
1988 and until he founded  DoubleCase in 1991, Mr. Yost  participated in forming
Vornado Air Circulation  Systems,  Inc., a start-up  venture located in Wichita,
Kansas as a  Co-Founder  and Vice  President.  Mr. Yost is a graduate of Western
State  College in  Gunnison,  Colorado.  Mr.  Yost also  serves as a director at
Anything Internet  Corporation.  Mr. Yost is was recently  convicted in the U.S.
District  Court for the Southern  District of New York for  conspiracy to commit
securities  fraud,  mail fraud and  commercial  bribery in  connection  with the
common stock of Banyan Corporation.

LLOYD  K.  PARRISH  JR.,  Director,  has  held his  position  since  1995 and is
concurrently a director at DoubleCase Corporation.  Mr. Parrish has an extensive
background in business  development and  operations.  Since 1996 he has held the
position of President at Parrish  Corporation,  oil & gas property operation and
management  firm.  He has owned Parrish Oil Company,  oil and gas  production in
Kansas,  Oklahoma  and  Nebraska  since 1972.  In 1996 he served as the National
President to the Society of Independent Professional Earth Scientists. And since
1998 he has helped  manage and is a part owner of  Sandhill  LLC, a natural  gas
gathering, purchasing and marketing corporation.

                                       20

<PAGE>


LAWARANCE  STANLEY,  Secretary and Director.  Mr. Stanley has held his positions
with  the  Company  since  1998.  Mr.  Stanley  has been  the  owner of  Stanley
Accounting  Services,  an independent  accounting  business since 1992, and owns
half of The P3 Group, which has provided management training to companies of all
sizes since 1997. Prior to starting these businesses,  he was President of Kaman
Instrumentation  Corporation, a subsidiary of Kaman Corporation,  and Controller
of a division of Bendix Corporation.


     JEFFREY M. RHODES, Director. Mr. Rhodes became a director of the Company on
May 5,  2000.  From  1996 to the  present  Mr.  Rhodes  has  served as the Chief
Technical Officer of Platte Canyon Multimedia  Software  Corporation of Colorado
Springs,  Colorado.  Prior to that, from 1992 to 1996 Mr. Rhodes was employed as
the  Technical  Lead/Multimedia  Developer,  and then the Director of Multimedia
Software for Titan Information  Systems  Corporation,  also of Colorado Springs,
Colorado.  From 1987 to 1992 Mr.  Rhodes was  employed by the United  States Air
Force  as  the   Chief  of  the   Engineering   &   Operations   Branch  in  the
Communications-Computer   Systems  Division.  Mr.  Rhodes  received  a  B.S.  in
Electrical  Engineering  from the  United  States Air Force  Academy in 1987,  a
Diploma of Science in Economics from the London School of Economics in 1988, and
a Master of Science in Economics from the London School of Economics in 1989.

     ALAN HILLSBERG,  President  Toplisting.com  Corporation.  Mr. Hillsberg has
worked at Toplisting.com  Corporation  since November,  1999, when the assets of
Showcase Technologies,  LLC, a company which Mr. Hillsberg had owned and managed
since May 1995, were purchased by the Company.  From January,  1994 to February,
1995 Mr. Hillsberg worked in sales at Protective Technologies,  Inc. of Yonkers,
New York,  and prior to that he worked at  Showcase  Packaging,  Inc.  of Howard
Beach, New York from 1981 to 1994. Mr. Hillsberg received his B.A. from Brooklyn
College in June of 1974.

     The Company  currently has only one employment  agreement with officers and
management personnel.  The Company has an employment agreement with Mr. Hilsdale
as president of TopListing.com Corporation,  incorporated hereto be reference to
Exhibit 10.2 from the Company's  current Form 8-K filed on January 10, 2000. The
term of this agreement is from November, 1999 to November, 2001. Under the terms
of this agreement Mr.  Hilsdale is compensated at the rate of $116,000 per year,
10% of the Company's net pre-tax profit, payable 45 days after the close of each
calendar quarter for the term of the Agreement, 20% of Double Case Corporation's
net pre-tax profit, payable 45 days after the close of each calendar quarter for
the term of the  Agreement,  and  options to purchase  235,000  shares of common
stock of the  Company at  $0.1187  per share (95% of market  value  October  26,
1999).



Item  6.  EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION


     The following table sets forth the compensation paid during the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1998, to the Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer and each of
the Company's  officers and  directors.  No other person  received  compensation
equal to or exceeding $100,000 in fiscal 1999 and no bonuses were awarded during
fiscal 1999.



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                         Annual  Compensation               Awards             Payouts
                                   ------------------------------  -------------------------  ---------
                                                           Other                                            All
                                                           Annual   Restricted    Securities               Other
                                                          compen-      Stock      Underlying     LTIP     Compen-
                                                           sation    Award(s)    Options/SAR   Payouts    sation
Name and Principal Position  Year  Salary ($)  Bonus ($)    ($)         ($)          (#)         ($)        ($)
- ----------                   ----  ----------  ---------  -------  -----------  ------------  ---------  --------

<S>                          <C>   <C>         <C>        <C>       <C>          <C>           <C>       <C>


Cameron Yost
  (the Company's prior
   President,  CEO and
   Director)                 1999     109,000                                                              $49,400(2)
                             1998      90,400                            14,000
                             1997      86,000                        (1) 66,000
                             1996      74,000

Lloyd Parrish, Jr.
  Director                   1999
                             1998
                             1997
                             1996


Lawrence Stanley
  Secretary
  and Director               1999      6,000
                             1998
                             1997
                             1996

Alan Hillsberg
  President,
  TopListing.com Corp.       1999     19,333                            235,000(3)
                             1998
                             1997
                             1996





<FN>


(1)     For accrued Board of Directors'  fees.  $6,000 annually between 1991 and
        1997 for DoubleCase Corporation  aggregating $42,000 and $8,000 annually
        between 1995 and 1997 for Banyan Corporation aggregating $24,000.

(2)     Includes $49,400 in deferred compensation for previous years and
        spent on Mr. Yost's unsuccessful legal defense to Roger Fidler, Esq. and
        Robert Simels, Esq.

(3)     The  options on the 235,000  shares  were issued at a 'strike  price' of
        $0.1187 per share (95% of market value October 26, 1999) pursuant to the
        employment agreement with Mr. Hillsdale.

</FN>


</TABLE>

     In addition, the Company has adopted an incentive stock option plan for its
officers,  directors and salaried  employees.  The plan is  administered  by the
Board of Directors. The options are exercisable for a period of 10 years, except
in the case of any option holders owning 10% or more of the Company's


                                       21

<PAGE>

outstanding  Common Stock, in which case the exercise period is five years.  The
exercise  price for options  granted  pursuant to the plan is 95% of the closing
market  price of the Common  Stock on the date the option is  granted,  or if no
market  exists,  then as determined  by the Board of Directors.  An Aggregate of
105,345  shares are reserved for issuance  under the plan.  As of June 30, 1999,
options  to  purchase  an  aggregate  of 11,154  shares of Common  Stock,  at an
exercise  price of $0.05 per  share,  had been  granted  to  Cameron  Yost.  The
following table summarizes the current options issued and outstanding.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                   Number of
                                                  Securities        Value of
                                                  Underlying       Unexercised
                                                  Unexercised     In-the-Money
                                                 Options/SARs     Options/SARs
                 Shares                          at FY-end (#)    at FY-end ($)
              Acquired on
                Exercise                         Exercisable/     Exercisable/
Name              (#)       Value Realized ($)   Unexercisable    Unexercisable
- ----          -----------     --------------    --------------    -------------

<S>           <C>           <C>                 <C>              <C>

Cameron Yost
  President,
  CEO and
  Director             -0-                 -0-           11,154  $      8,365.50

</TABLE>


Item  7.  CERTAIN  RELATIONSHIPS  AND  RELATED  TRANSACTIONS

TRANSACTIONS  WITH  MANAGEMENT  AND  OTHERS

     There have been no material  transactions,  series of similar transactions,
currently proposed transactions, or series of similar transactions, to which the
Company or any of its  subsidiaries was or is to be a party, in which the amount
involved exceeds $60,000 and in which any director or executive officer,  or any
security  holder who is known to the  Company  to own of record or  beneficially
more than five  percent  of the  Company's  Common  Stock,  or any member of the
immediate family of any of the foregoing persons, had a material interest.

CERTAIN  BUSINESS  RELATIONSHIPS

     There have been no material  transactions,  series of similar transactions,
currently proposed transactions, or series of similar transactions, to which the
Company or any of its  subsidiaries was or is to be a party, in which the amount
involved exceeds $60,000 and in which any director or executive officer,  or any
security  holder who is known to the  Company  to own of record or  beneficially
more than five  percent  of the  Company's  Common  Stock,  or any member of the
immediate family of any of the foregoing persons, had a material interest.

                                       22

<PAGE>

INDEBTEDNESS  OF  MANAGEMENT


     DoubleCase Corporation is indebted to Mr. Parrish in the amount of $66,589.
This obligation is represented by a promissory  note, bears interest at the rate
of 10% per  annum  and is  secured  by the  DoubleCase's  furniture,  equipment,
inventory and accounts  receivable.  The note was  originally due and payable on
April 1,  2000,  but Mr.  Parrish  has  extended  the due date to April 1, 2001.
DoubleCase used the proceeds of this note for working capital shortfalls.


     As of May 7, 1999,  DoubleCase  was  indebted  to Mr. Yost in the amount of
$21,155 for accrued and unpaid salary.


     As of March 31, 1999,  DoubleCase  was indebted to one  stockholder  for an
aggregate  amount of $38,647.  These  obligations bear interest at rates ranging
from 6% to 12% per annum and are not secured by assets of the  Company,  and was
originally due on April 1, 2000,  however the stockholder  extended the due date
to April 1, 2001.



Item  8.  DESCRIPTION  OF  SECURITIES

     The Company's  authorized  capital  consists of 70,500,000  shares,  no par
value, of which 50,000,000  shares are Class A Common Stock,  10,000,000  shares
are Class B Common Stock,  10,000,000 are Class A Preferred  Stock,  and 500,000
are Class B Preferred Stock. As of June 30, 1999, there were 9,691,804 shares of
Class  A  Common  Stock  and no  shares  of  Class B  Common  Stock  issued  and
outstanding.  There were 187,190 shares of Class A Preferred Stock and no shares
of Class B Preferred Stock issued and outstanding. CLASS A COMMON STOCK

     The Company's Articles of Incorporation, as amended, authorize the issuance
of up to 50,000,000 shares of Class A Common Stock, no par value. Each holder of
record of Class A Common  Stock is  entitled  to one vote for each share held on
all matters properly  submitted to the  shareholders for their vote.  Cumulative
voting is not authorized by the Articles of Incorporation.

     Holders of outstanding Class A Common Stock are entitled to those dividends
declared by the Board of Directors out of legally  available funds,  and, in the
event of  liquidation,  dissolution or winding up of the affairs of the Company,
holders are entitled to receive ratably the net assets of the Company  available
to the  shareholders.  Holders  of  outstanding  Class A  Common  Stock  have no
preemptive,  conversion or redemptive  rights. All of the issued and outstanding
shares of Class A Common Stock are,  and all  unissued  shares of Class A Common
Stock when offered and sold will be, duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid
and non-assessable. To the extent that additional shares of Class A Common Stock
are issued,  the relative  interests of the then  existing  shareholders  may be
diluted.

CLASS  B  COMMON  STOCK

     The Company's Articles of Incorporation, as amended, authorize the issuance
of up to 10,000,000 shares of Class B Common Stock, no par value. Each holder of
record of Class B Common Stock is entitled to one vote for each share held on

                                       23

<PAGE>

all  matters  properly submitted to the shareholders for their vote.  Cumulative
voting  is  not  authorized  by  the  Articles  of  Incorporation.

     Holders of outstanding Class B Common Stock are entitled to those dividends
declared by the Board of Directors out of legally  available funds,  and, in the
event of  liquidation,  dissolution or winding up of the affairs of the Company,
holders are entitled to receive ratably the net assets of the Company  available
to the  shareholders.  Holders  of  outstanding  Class B  Common  Stock  have no
preemptive,  conversion or redemptive  rights. All of the issued and outstanding
shares of Class B Common Stock are,  and all  unissued  shares of Class B Common
Stock when offered and sold will be, duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid
and non-assessable. To the extent that additional shares of Class B Common Stock
are issued,  the relative  interests of the then  existing  shareholders  may be
diluted.

CLASS  A  PREFERRED  STOCK

     The  Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  authorize the issuance of up to
10,000,000  shares of Class A Preferred Stock, no par value per share. The Board
of  Directors  may  divide  the  Preferred  Stock  into  classes  and to fix and
determine the relative rights and preferences of the shares of any such class in
respect to,  among other  things,  (a) the number of shares to  constitute  such
series and the distinctive  designations thereof; (b) the rate and preference of
dividends,  if any,  the time of payment of  dividends,  whether  dividends  are
cumulative  and the date from which any dividend  shall accrue;  (c) whether the
shares  may be  redeemed  and,  if so,  the  redemption  price and the terms and
conditions of redemption;  (d) the liquidation preferences payable on the shares
in the event of involuntary or voluntary liquidation;  (e) sinking fund or other
provisions,  if any, for redemption or purchase of the shares; (f) the terms and
conditions by which the shares may be converted, if the shares of any series are
issued with the privilege of conversion;  (g) voting rights,  if any and (h) any
other  relative  rights and  preferences  of shares of such  series,  including,
without  limitation,  any  restriction on an increase in the number of shares in
any series theretofore authorized and any limitation or restriction of rights or
powers to which shares of any future series shall be subject.

     The Class A Preferred  Stock has  identical  voting rights to the Company's
Common  Stock.  The  Company  has the  right  to  redeem  each  share of Class A
Preferred  Stock,  upon  not  less  than  60 days  prior  written  notice,  at a
redemption  price of $2.75 per share.  Each share of Class A Preferred  Stock is
convertible  into  one  share of  Class A  Common  Stock  at any  time  prior to
redemption upon notice to the Company. Upon dissolution, liquidation and winding
up of the  Company,  holders of Class A  Preferred  Shares  shall be entitled to
receive,  out of the net assets of the  Company,  the amount of $2.75 per share,
and upon receiving that amount,  shall not be entitled to participate further in
any remaining assets of the Company. Holders of Class A Preferred Shares have no
preemptive  or other  rights  to  purchase  any other  securities  issued by the
Company. As of June 30, 1999 the Company had 187,000 shares of Class A Preferred
Stock issued and outstanding;  no other classes of Preferred Stock are currently
issued or outstanding.

                                       24

<PAGE>

CLASS  B  PREFERRED  STOCK

     A total of 500,000 shares have been designated as Class B Preferred  Stock,
and no other rights or preferences have yet been designated. There are no shares
of Class B Preferred  Stock issued or  outstanding as of the date of this filing
and  management  has no  plan  to  issue  any  Class B  Preferred  Stock  in the
foreseeable future.


ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS

     Article 4.2 of the Amended  Articles  of  Amendment,  filed with the Oregon
Secretary  of State on December  29,  1995,  empowers  the Board of Directors to
prescribe  the  classes,  number of each  class,  voting  powers,  designations,
preferences, limitations, restrictions and relative rights of each class without
obtaining  prior  shareholder  approval.  In theory,  the Company  could issue a
series of  Preferred  Stock with  privileges  that could  effectively  prevent a
takeover of the Company,  even if such a takeover  were in the best  interest of
the Company's  shareholders,  by placing large amounts of convertible  preferred
stock in the  possession of persons or entities  other than the person or entity
seeking to effect a hostile takeover.


DIVIDEND  POLICY

     Holders of Common Stock are entitled to dividends in the  discretion of the
Board of Directors and payment thereof will depend upon, among other things, the
Company's  earnings,   its  capital   requirements  and  its  overall  financial
condition. The Company has not paid any cash dividends on its Common Stock since
inception  and intends to follow a policy of  retaining  any earnings to finance
the development and growth of its business.  Accordingly, it does not anticipate
the payment of cash dividends in the foreseeable future.

TRANSFER  AGENT

     The Company has engaged  OTR/California Stock Transfer and Registrar to act
as its transfer  agent for its Common Stock.  The Company acts as transfer agent
for all of its other securities.

INTEREST  OF  NAMED  EXPERTS  AND  COUNSEL

     The financial  statements of the Company at December 31, 1998,  included in
this  Disclosure  Statement,  have been audited by Ronald R.  Chadwick,  P.C. as
indicated  in their  report  with  respect  thereto and are  included  herein in
reliance upon authority of said firm as experts in giving said reports.

                                       25

<PAGE>

PART  II
- -------

Item  1.  MARKET  PRICE  OF  AND DIVIDENDS ON THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND
OTHER  SHAREHOLDER  MATTERS

Market  for  Common  Stock


     The  Company's  Common  Stock is quoted on the pink sheets under the symbol
"BANY." The  following  table sets forth the high and low bid prices as reported
by the National  Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) for the periods ending
March 31, 2000 and prior. These quotations reflect inter-dealer prices,  without
retail  mark-up,   mark-down  or   commissions,   and  may  not  reflect  actual
transactions.  As of July 27, 1999 there were exactly 400 shareholders of Common
Stock and 18 shareholders of the non-trading Preferred Class 'A' Stock.




<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                           High              Low
                          -----              ----

2000
-----

<S>                       <C>               <C>
First Quarter              $0.40            $0.07


1999
-----
Fourth Quarter              0.62             0.06
Third Quarter               1.50             0.12
Second Quarter              1.06             0.62
First Quarter               1.50             0.57


1998
-----
Fourth Quarter              0.92             0.35
Third Quarter               0.56             0.22
Second Quarter              0.40             0.16
First Quarter               0.35             0.14


</TABLE>


Dividends

     The Company has never  declared or paid any cash  dividends  on its capital
stock.  The  Company  currently  intends to retain all  available  funds and any
future  earnings of its  business  for use in the  operation of its business and
does not anticipate  paying any cash dividends in the  foreseeable  future.  The
declaration,  payment and amount of future  dividends,  if any, will depend upon
the future  earnings,  results of  operations,  financial  position  and capital
requirements  of the  Company,  among  other  factors,  and  will be at the sole
discretion of the Board of Directors.


Item  2.  LEGAL  PROCEEDINGS

     The Company has the following pending or threatened litigation:

Paine Webber, Inc. v. Banyan Corp, Case no. CV 99 - 1476 HA in the United States
District  Court for the District of Oregon.  This is a case brought  against the
Company for cancelling shares of stock which Paine Webber subsequently sold. The
Company is and plans to continue to contest  this case  vigorously.  To date the
Company  has  filed  an  answer,  and  has  filed  a  motion  for  dismissal  or
alternatively  to lower  the  amount  of the  claim  allowed.  The  shares  were
cancelled  pursuant to what the Company  believes to be a valid court order, and
therefore the Company believes that it has a substantial  chance of winning this
case upon its merits.  The Company believes that the maximum financial  exposure
it has is $412,280.

                                       26

<PAGE>

Item  3.  CHANGES  IN  AND  DISAGREEMENTS  WITH  ACCOUNTANTS

     On February 18, 1999, the Company  engaged  Ronald R.  Chadwick,  Certified
Public  Accountants  as its public  accountants to handle all aspects of its SEC
reporting requirements.


     Prior to engaging Mr. Chadwick,  the Company used J. Paul Kenote, CPA, P.C.
as its independent public accountants.  J. Paul Kenote resigned as the Company's
auditor when it discontinued conducting SEC audits altogether in January 1999 to
focus solely on performing IRS tax work. The Company had no  disagreements  with
J. Paul  Kenote at the time of their  resignation,  and  there  were no  adverse
opinions issued about the Company.



Item  4.     RECENT  SALES  OF  UNREGISTERED  SECURITIES



     On May 17, 1996, the Company issued 2,250,000 shares of its common stock to
a Business  Development  Company for  consideration  of a $1,000,000  promissory
note.  Each share of common  stock was valued at $0.46178.  This  issuance was a
transaction  exempt from  registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act
and  Regulation D, Rule 504  thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public
offering.  Subsequently, only $75,000 was received and the balance of the unpaid
shares were returned and canceled.


     On September 5, 1996,  the Company  issued 2,000 shares of its common stock
to an employee of DoubleCase  Corporation as a bonus.  The then market price for
the Company's  common stock was $5.75 a share.  This  transaction  was valued at
$11,500,  and was exempt from registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities
Act and Rule 144 thereunder. Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain
resale restrictions and the stock certificates bear restrictive legends.


     On the same date the Company was obligated to issue 1,037,500 of its common
stock to the Business  Development  Company  which  purchased  shares on May 17,
1996, to  reestablish it to "pre-split"  total shares.  The Company  received no
consideration for the issuance of these shares.  This issuance was a transaction
exempt from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Regulation
D, Rule 504 thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     Also on  September 5, 1996,  the Company  exchanged  857,143  shares of its
common  stock for 109,689  preferred  shares of Colonial  Funds Ltd.  This share
exchange  transaction was valued at $142,898.  This  transaction was exempt from
registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.
Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain resale  restrictions and the
stock certificates bear restrictive legends. Subsequently,  this transaction was
reversed and all shares were returned to the original issuers.

     On the same date the Company was  obligated to issue  10,097  shares of its
common stock to a shareholder who had acquired shares in the Company when it was
named Interactive Data Vision. As a result in a change of transfer agents in the
early 1990's, this shareholder's record was lost by the transfer agent

                                       27

<PAGE>

although his ownership was authenticated.  The Company received no consideration
for the issuance of these shares.  This  issuance was a transaction  exempt from
registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Regulation D, Rule 504
thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     Additionally, on September 5, 1996, the Company issued 57,217 shares of its
common stock,  distributed pro rata, to the original DoubleCase shareholders who
exchanged their  DoubleCase  shares for shares in the Company in October,  1995.
This was a result of the above referenced  Interactive  Data Vision  shareholder
who produced an authentic  share  certificate  which was not  represented on the
Company  stock  ledger at the time of the  exchange.  The share  exchange  ratio
required the Company to then issue the above  referenced  shares to the original
DoubleCase shareholders.  The Company received no consideration for the issuance
of these shares.  This issuance was a transaction exempt from registration under
Section 4(2) of the  Securities  Act and  Regulation D, Rule 504 thereunder as a
transaction not involving a public offering.

     On September 5, 1996, the Company entered into a contract for services from
an investor  relations  company.  The Company issued 45,000 shares of its common
stock for said  services  valued at $6,250.  This  transaction  was exempt  from
registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.
Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain resale  restrictions and the
stock certificates bear restrictive legends.

     On September 26, 1996, the Company issued 73,651 shares of its common stock
to  pre-takeover  Interactive  Data Vision  Shareholders  in  exchange  for debt
totaling  $202,540.  These  shares were issued and priced  pursuant to the Share
Exchange  Agreement between  DoubleCase  Corporation and Interactive Data Vision
(IDV) of October  27,  1995,  for the  conversion  of IDV debt to  equity.  This
transaction  was exempt from  registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities
Act and Rule 144 thereunder. Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain
resale restrictions and the stock certificates bear restrictive legends.

     On November 5, 1996,  the Company  retired and cancelled  807,500 shares of
its common stock.  Said shares were issued on May 17 and September 5, 1996, to a
Business  Development  Company who failed to pay the remaining principal balance
of their promissory note. These shares that were retired were valued at $925,000


     On November 15, 1996, the Company issued 125,000 shares of its common stock
to a consultant  who exercised his option to purchases said shares for $0.10 per
share,  for a total  consideration  of  $12,500.  The  Option  was  granted  the
consultant  for management  consulting  services  rendered.  This issuance was a
transaction  exempt from  registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act
and  Regulation D, Rule 504  thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public
offering.


     On December 5, 1996,  the Company was  obligated  to issue,  pursuant to an
Agreement entered into on September 5, 1996, with an investor relations company,
10,000  shares of its common  stock.  Although the Company  received no monetary
consideration for the transaction, the market value of the Company's common

                                       28

<PAGE>

stock on December 5, 1996 was $0.16 per share.  This  issuance was a transaction
exempt from registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Regulation
D, Rule 504 thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.


     On December 6, 1996,  the Company was  obligated to issue 18,224  shares of
common  stock  to  the  Business  Development  Company  under  the  Subscription
Agreement of May 17, 1996. The price per share was  established on May 17, 1996,
so the Company did not receive any additional consideration when the shares were
issued.  This issuance was a transaction  exempt from registration under Section
4(2)  of  the  Securities  Act  and  Regulation  D,  Rule  504  thereunder  as a
transaction not involving a public offering.



     On November,  1996, the Company  offered,  to  shareholders of record as of
December 9, 1996 (the Rights Record Date),  Rights to purchase additional shares
of Class A Common Stock for each share held as of the Rights  Record Date,  at a
price of $0.01 per Right.  Each holder of Class A Common  Stock as of the Rights
Record Date was  entitled to  subscribe  for one Series A Right and One Series B
Right for each share of Class A Common Stock held as of the Rights  Record Date.
Rights were subscribed for and exercised only in pairs of one Series A Right and
one Series B Right for each share of Class A Common  Stock held as of the Rights
Record  Date.  Each Right  entitled  the holder to purchase one share of Class A
Common Stock at an exercise price of $0.125 per share. Each Series A Right could
be exercised  to purchase  one share of Class A Common  Stock  issued  without a
restrictive legend. Each Series B Right could be exercised to purchase one share
of Class A Common  Stock  which was  non-transferable  for a period of two years
after issuance.  The Rights were exercisable in a series of cumulating  portions
commencing  January 27, 1997 and  continuing  through  January 23, 1998,  unless
called for earlier  redemption  by the  Company.  The Rights were not subject to
adjustment  in either the exercise  price or the number of shares for which they
were  exercised as a result of the 1-for-20  reverse  stock split adopted by the
Company as of December  10, 1996.  The Rights were  offered on a "best  efforts"
basis by the Company  through its officers and  directors.  The Rights  Offering
closed on January 24, 1997,  with a total of 2,449,609  Rights Pairs  subscribed
and  issued.  Throughout  the course of 1997 a total of  1,378,120  shares  were
issued in cumulating portions for net consideration of $134,803.  The Rights and
securities were offered without  registration  under the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration
provided by Rule 504 of  Regulation D as a  transaction  not  involving a public
offering.

On January 23, 1998, the Company issued  2,632,802 shares of its common stock to
Rightsholders  who  subscribed to the last  opportunity to exercise their Rights
obtained from the Rights Offering of November 15, 1996. The Company received net
consideration of $220,805, of which $142,525 was debt conversion and $16,900 was
from  conversion  of accounts  payable.  The  securities  were  offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D.







     Also on December  12,  1996,  the Company  escrowed  800,000  shares of its
common stock to the name of First  National  Bank as escrow agent for a proposed
private placement  offering exempt from  registration  under Section 4(2) of the
Securities  Act and  Regulation  D, Rule 504  thereunder  as a  transaction  not
involving a public offering.  The private  placement  offering did not occur and
said shares were  returned to the  Company  from escrow and were  cancelled  and
retired on November 26, 1997.


     On February 3, 1997,  the Company  issued 10,000 shares of its common stock
to a public  and  investor  relations  company  as  retainer  for  service to be
rendered.  Said shares were valued at $0.20 per share, for a total consideration
of $2,000.  This  issuance  was a  transaction  exempt from  registration  under
Section 4(2) of the  Securities  Act and  Regulation D, Rule 504 thereunder as a
transaction not involving a public offering.


                                       29

<PAGE>

     On February  10, 1997,  the Company  issued 2 shares of its common stock to
the Depository  Trust Company  resulting from balance  differences  arising from
fractional  rounding of shares during the reverse split  December 10, 1996.  The
Company received no consideration for these shares.  The securities were offered
without  registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were
offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by Rule 504
of Regulation D.

     On February 10, 1997,  the Company  issued  1,100,000  shares of its common
stock to a Business  Development  Company  for a  promissory  note of  $330,000.
Subsequently,  the Company received consideration on this note totaling $60,000.
With the note in default  and deemed  uncollectable  the  Company  attempted  to
recover the shares  issued but was  unsuccessful.  The  securities  were offered
without  registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were
offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by Rule 504
of Regulation D.


     On June 16, 1997, the Company issued 100,000 shares of its common stock for
entering into an agreement with a public and investor relations company as a fee
for service to be rendered. Said shares were valued at $0.15625 per share, for a
total  consideration  of $15,625.  This issuance was a  transaction  exempt from
registration under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Regulation D, Rule 504
thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On June 30, 1997,  the Company  issued 95,500 shares of its common stock to
two non-affiliated  individuals who had performed services or loaned the Company
funds.  The cumulative  value of said shares was $0.19335 per share, for a total
consideration of $18,465. The securities were offered without registration under
the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the
exemptions from registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.

     Also on June 30, 1997, the Company issued 50,000 shares of its common stock
as severance  pay to an employee.  The shares were valued at $0.20,  for a total
considoration of $10,000. The securities were offered without registration under
the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the
exemptions from registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.

     On July 1, 1997, the Company issued a cumulative total of 694,736 shares of
its common  stock pro rated among the members of the Board of Director of Banyan
Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary,  DoubleCase Corporation,  for their
services  rendered to date.  Said shares were valued at $0.267 per share,  for a
total  consideration of $185,500.  This transaction was exempt from registration
under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.  Stock issued
under  these  exemptions  carries  certain  resale  restrictions  and the  stock
certificates bear restrictive legends.


     On August 26, 1997,  the Company  issued 495,000 shares of its common stock
on  a  promissory  note  totaling  $75,000  to  an  unaffiliated  investor.  The
securities were offered without  registration  under the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration
provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D. No consideration was ever received on the

                                       30

<PAGE>

note and the shares were  subsequently  recovered by the Company,  cancelled and
retired on November 17, 1997.


     On August 27, 1997,  the Company  issued 250,000 shares of its common stock
to an unaffiliated  investor for $0.192 per share, for a total  consideration of
$48,000.  The securities were offered without  registration under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions  from
registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.


     On October 23, 1997,  the Company  issued 31,100 shares of its common stock
to satisfy debt owed a  non-affiliated  vendor of $11,247.  The securities  were
offered without  registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and
were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from registration  provided by Rule
504 of Regulation D.


     On November 7, 1997,  the Company issued 130,000 shares of its common stock
for $0.2577 per share to a non-affiliated  investor for a total consideration of
$33,500.  The securities were offered without  registration under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions  from
registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.


     On November 11, 1997, the Company issued 344,000 shares of its common stock
for net  consideration of $66,327 to a non-affiliated  investor.  The securities
were offered without  registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by
Rule 504 of Regulation D.

     On December 1, 1997,  the Company issued 143,000 shares of its common stock
to a  non-affiliated  investor  for a promissory  note of $40,000.  The note has
subsequently  been extended and remains unpaid.  The Company has received 60,000
shares  of  Oxford  Knight   International,   Inc.  (OTCBB:   "OKTI"),   without
restriction,  as a "fee" for extending  the note.  The  securities  were offered
without  registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were
offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by Rule 504
of Regulation D.



     On February 4, 1998,  the Company issued 172,200 shares of its common stock
to a non-affiliated  management  consulting firm for expenses and fees valued at
$29,123.  The securities were offered without  registration under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions  from
registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.

     On  February 13, 1998, the Company issued 50,000 shares of its common stock
as  severance  pay to an employee.  This was valued at $7,500.  This transaction

                                       31

<PAGE>

was exempt from  registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule
144  thereunder.  Stock issued under these  exemptions  carries  certain  resale
restrictions and the stock certificates bear restrictive legends.

     On February 13, 1998, the Company  entered into a contractual  relationship
with a  non-affiliated  investor  relation  firm.  Developmental,  start-up  and
renewal  fees were  compensated  for by the  issuance of a  cumulative  total of
200,000 shares of the Company's  common stock valued at $29,375 issued:  125,000
shares on February 3, 1998;  25,000  shares  issued  July 13,  1998;  and 50,000
shares  issued July 29, 1998.  Additionally,  the Company  issued  warrants for:
100,000  shares  at $0.16  for 180  days;  200,000  shares at $0.20 for 60 days;
200,000  shares at $0.225  for 180 days;  200,000  shares at $0.30 for 180 days;
115,000  shares at $0.35 for 180 days and 200,000  shares at $0.50 for one year.
The  warrants  and  securities  were  offered  without  registration  under  the
Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended,  and were  offered in  reliance  upon the
exemptions from registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D.

     On March 19, 1998,  the  non-affiliated  investor  relations firm exercised
70,000 shares of their 200,000,  $0.20 warrant. The Company received $14,000 and
issued  70,000  shares of common  stock.  The  securities  were offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On April 1, 1998, the non-affiliated  investor relations firm exercised the
balance of their $0.20 warrant, 130,000 shares. The Company received $26,000 and
issued  130,000  shares of common stock.  The  securities  were offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On June 23, 1998,  the  non-affiliated  investor  relations  firm exercised
their $0.16 warrant for 100,000 shares.  The Company received $16,000 and issued
100,000 shares of common stock. The securities were offered without registration
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon
the exemptions from registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D thereunder
as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On July 2, 1998,  the  non-affiliated  investor  relations  firm  exercised
100,000 shares of their 200,000,  $0.225 warrant.  The Company  received $22,500
and issued 100,000 shares of common stock.  The securities  were offered without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On July 13, 1998, the non-affiliated  investor relations firm exercised the
balance of 100,000 shares of their 200,000, $0.225 warrant. The Company received
$22,500 and issued 100,000 shares of common stock.  The securities  were offered
without  registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were
offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by Rule 504
of Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

                                       32

<PAGE>

     On July 23, 1998,  the  non-affiliated  investor  relations  firm exercised
100,000 shares of their 200,000, $0.30 warrant. The Company received $30,000 and
issued  100,000  shares of common stock.  The  securities  were offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On July 27, 1998, the non-affiliated  investor relations firm exercised the
balance of 100,000 shares of their 200,000,  $0.30 warrant. The Company received
$30,000 and issued 100,000 shares of common stock.  The securities  were offered
without  registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  and were
offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by Rule 504
of Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

     On July 31, 1998,  the  non-affiliated  investor  relations  firm exercised
115,000 shares of their 115,000, $0.35 warrant. The Company received $40,000 and
issued  115,000  shares of common stock.  The  securities  were offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.


     On July 31, 1998,  the Company  entered into a long-term  agreement for the
provision  of  management  consulting  and  investor  relations  services to the
Company.  For said  services,  the Company  issued  300,000 shares of its common
stock, valued at $45,000. Additionally, the Company issued the following options
to purchase the Company's common stock:  37,500 shares at $0.40;  100,000 shares
at $0.80 and 100,000 shares at $1.20.  All of the stated options expire July 31,
2001.  The securities and options were offered  without  registration  under the
Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended,  and were  offered in  reliance  upon the
exemptions from registration  provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D thereunder as
a transaction not involving a public offering.


     On August 2, 1998, the Company issued a cumulative  total of 180,000 shares
of its common  stock pro rated  among the  members of the Board of  Director  of
Banyan Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary,  DoubleCase Corporation, for
their  services  rendered  through  1998.  Said  shares were valued at $0.20 per
share, for a total  considoration  of $36,000.  This transaction was exempt from
registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.
Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain resale  restrictions and the
stock certificates bear restrictive legends.

     Also on August 2, 1998,  the Company  issued a  cumulative  total of 45,070
shares of its common stock to three employees as severance. This transaction was
valued at $4,654.  Of the securities  were offered,  21,070 were offered without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public  offering.  The
balance  of  this   transaction,   24,000  shares,   were  offered  exempt  from
registration  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.
Stock issued under these exemptions carries certain resale  restrictions and the
stock certificates bear restrictive legends



                                       33

<PAGE>



     On August 22, 1998,  the Company  mistakenly  issued  205,000 shares of its
common stock in exchange for 1,000,000 shares of Anything  Internet  Corporation
common stock. This exchange was to be for 200,000 shares of the Company's common
stock.  The Company is  recovering  the 5,000  shares and will retire said 5,000
shares upon their return.  Using equity accounting,  this transaction was valued
at $106,629.00.  The 1,000,000 shares the Company  received from Anything,  Inc.
were issued without  registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from  registration  provided by
Rule 504 of  Regulation D thereunder  as a  transaction  not  involving a public
offering. Additionally, the Company issued the following options to purchase the
Company's common stock: 100,000 shares at $0.50 originally expiring February 28,
1998,  but  extended on February 18, 1999,  to expire  August 31, 1999;  100,000
shares at $1.00,  expiring  on August  31,  1999;  and  100,000  shares at $2.00
expiring August 31, 2000. This  transaction was exempt from  registration  under
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rule 144  thereunder.  Stock issued under
these exemptions carries certain resale  restrictions and the stock certificates
bear restrictive legends.



     On December 4, 1998,  the Company issued 200,000 shares of its common stock
as a result of a warrant to purchase 200,000 at $0.50, issued February 13, 1998,
was presented for exercise.  Upon receipt of $100,000,  the Company  issued said
shares.  The securities were offered without  registration  under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon the exemptions  from
registration  provided by Rule 504 of  Regulation D thereunder  as a transaction
not involving a public offering.

     On December 29, 1998,  the Company issued 62,500 shares of its common stock
as a result of an option to purchase  100,000 at $0.40,  issued  August 2, 1998,
was presented for partial exercise.  Upon receipt of $25,000, the Company issued
62,500  shares.  There remains  37,500  shares to purchase the Company's  common
stock at $0.40 on this option. The securities were offered without  registration
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in reliance upon
the exemptions from registration provided by Rule 504 of Regulation D thereunder
as a transaction not involving a public offering.

On January 15,  1999,  the Company  offered to  exchange  certain  shares of its
common stock that had been previously  issued pursuant to the exercise of Rights
which  required the  subscriber to hold said shares of common stock for a period
of two years even though said shares were issued under  Regulation  D, 504. Said
shares  were  offered  to be  exchanged  for shares  that had no holding  period
restriction.  This  exchange  was  offered to all  holders of said  shares.  Any
shareholder  which  participated  in the  exchange  agreed  to the  terms of the
exchange; one of which is that each holder would receive back 66.6% of the total
number of shares  submitted  to the company for  exchange.  The  exchange  offer
expired February 28, 1999. There were 141,985 shares presented for exchange. All
141,985  shares were  cancelled  and retired and 94,657  shares of the Company's
common  stock were issued in  exchange.  The  securities  were  offered  without
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and were offered in
reliance  upon  the  exemptions  from  registration  provided  by  Rule  504  of
Regulation D thereunder as a transaction not involving a public offering.

                                       34

<PAGE>


     On February 19, 1999,  the Company issued 55,736 shares of its common stock
at $0.897  per share and the  proceeds  from the sale of  $50,000  were used for
working capital. Said shares were issued to a non-affiliate. The securities were
offered without  registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and
were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from registration  provided by Rule
504 of Regulation D thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public offering
and an accredited investor.

     On March 26, 1999, the Company issued 150,376 shares of its common stock at
$0.665  per  share and the  proceeds  from the sale of  $100,000,  were used for
working capital. Said shares were issued to a non-affiliate. The securities were
offered without  registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and
were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from registration  provided by Rule
504 of Regulation D thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public offering
and an accredited investor.

     On April 5, 1999,  the Company issued 187,942 shares of its common stock at
$0.665  per  share and the  proceeds  from the sale of  $125,000,  were used for
working capital. Said shares were issued to a non-affiliate. The securities were
offered without  registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and
were offered in reliance upon the exemptions from registration  provided by Rule
504 of Regulation D thereunder as a transaction  not involving a public offering
and an accredited investor.





ITEM  5.  INDEMNIFICATION  OF  DIRECTORS  AND  OFFICERS

     The Company,  through Article VI of its Bylaws,  grants  indemnification to
the Company's officers and directors,  present and former, for expenses incurred
by them in connection with any proceeding that they are involved in by reason of
their being or having been an officer or  director  of the  Company.  The person
being  indemnified  must  have  acted in good  faith  and in a manner  he or she
reasonably  believed  to be in or not  opposed  to  the  best  interests  of the
Company.

     Insofar as  indemnification  for liability arising under the Securities Act
may be permitted to directors or officers the Company  pursuant to the foregoing
provisions,  or  otherwise,  the Company has been advised that in the opinion of
the Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the
Securities Act and is, therefore,  unenforceable.  In the event that a claim for
indemnification  against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Company
of  expenses  incurred  or paid by a director  or officer of the  Company in the
successful  defense of any  action,  suit or  proceeding)  is  asserted  by such
director or officer in connection  with the  securities  being  registered,  the
Company  will,  unless in the  opinion of its legal  counsel the matter has been
settled by controlling precedent,  submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction
the question of whether such  indemnification  by it is against public policy as
expressed in the Securities  Act and will be governed by the final  adjudication
of such issue.

                                       35

<PAGE>

FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS
- --------------------

AUDITED  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  FOR  THE  FISCAL  YEAR  ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1998

CONTENTS

Independent  Auditor's  Report  on
  the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements                                   37

CONSOLIDATED  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS

Consolidated  Balance  Sheet                                                 38

Consolidated  Statement  of  Operations                                      40

Consolidated  Statement  of  Stockholders'  Deficit                          41

Consolidated  Statement  of  Cash  Flows                                     43

Notes  to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements                               44







J.  PAUL  KENOTE,  CPA,  P.C.  OPINION  LETTER  ON  OCTOBER 8, 1998 AUDIT REPORT

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT To the Board of Directors:

Banyan  Corporation  and  Subsidiary
Colorado  Springs,  Colorado

We  have  audited  the  accompanying   consolidated   balance  sheet  of  Banyan
Corporation  and  subsidiary  as of  December  31, 1997 and 1996 and the related
consolidated statements of operations,  changes in shareholders' equity and cash
flows for the years then ended. These consolidated  financial statements are the
responsibility of the Company's management.  Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about   whether  the   financial   statement  is  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial  statement.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our  opinion,  these  consolidated  financial  statements  referred  to above
present  fairly,  in all material  respects,  the  financial  position of Banyan
Corporation  and  subsidiary  at  December  31, 1997 and 1996 and the results of
their operations and their cash flows for the year then ended in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.

/s/  J.  PAUL  KENOTE,  CPA,  P.C.
Portland,  Oregon
October  8,  1998



                                       36

<PAGE>

                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT


Board  of  Directors
Banyan  Corporation
Colorado  Springs,  Colorado

I have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheet of Banyan Corporation
as of December 31, 1998 and the related  consolidated  statements of operations,
stockholders'  equity and cash flows for the year then  ended.  These  financial
statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. My responsibility
is to express an opinion on these financial  statements  based on my audit.  The
consolidated  statements of operations,  stockholders'  equity and cash flows of
Banyan  Corporation  for the year ended  December 31, 1997 were audited by other
auditors whose report dated October 8, 1998 expressed an unqualified  opinion on
those matters.

I conducted my audit in accordance with generally  accepted auditing  standards.
Those standards  require that I plan and perform the audit to obtain  reasonable
assurance   about   whether  the   financial   statement  is  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial  statement.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
I believe that my audit provides a reasonable basis for my opinion.

In my opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all
material respects,  the financial position of Banyan Corporation at December 31,
1998 and the  results  of its  operations  and its cash flows for the year ended
December 31, 1998 in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.


/s/  Ronald  R.  Chadwick,  P.C.
RONALD  R.  CHADWICK,  P.C.

Aurora,  Colorado
April  18,  1999

                                       37

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                 BANYAN CORPORATION

             COSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                     (audited)

                 December 31, 1998

                      ASSETS


Current assets:

<S>                                      <C>
  Cash                                   $ 30,256
  Accounts receivable                      47,495
  Inventory                                42,956
  Prepaid expenses                          4,914

                                         ---------
                                          125,621
                                         ---------

Furniture and fixtures:
  Office furniture and equipment           11,043
  Equipment and tooling                     5,648
  Less accumulated depreciation           (16,105)
                                         ---------
                                              586
                                         ---------

Other assets:

   Trademarks and licenses, net of
   Accumulated amortization of $49,828     35,227
  Investment in Anything Internet Corp.    47,039
  Other                                     4,700
                                         ---------

                                           86,966
                                         ---------
                                         $213,173
                                         =========


</TABLE>

                                       38
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                      BANYAN CORPORATION

                  CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                          (audited)

                      December 31, 1998

            LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT


Current liabilities:

<S>                                         <C>
  Accounts payable                          $    83,705
  Accrued salaries and related expenses          85,553
  Accrued interest                              222,242
  Notes payable                                 105,234

                                            ------------
                                                496,734
                                            ------------

Stockholders' equity:
  Preferred stock, Class A, no par value;
    500,000 shares authorized;
    187,190 issued and outstanding              334,906
  Common stock, Class A, no par value;
    50,000,000 shares authorized;

    9,292,699 issued and outstanding          2,922,795

  Common stock subscribed (143,000)              40,000
  Stock subscription receivable                 (40,000)


  Accumulated deficit                        (3,541,262)
                                            ------------
                                               (283,561)
                                            ------------
                                            $   213,173
                                            ============

</TABLE>



                                       39

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                               BANYAN CORPORATION

                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                                    (audited)


                                 - Fiscal Years Ending -
                              December 31,       December 31,
                                  1997               1998
                              -------------     ------------

<S>                           <C>               <C>
Sales                              247,773     $     206,467   $


Cost of sales                      116,152            69,006
                              -------------     ------------
Gross profit                       131,621           137,461

Selling, general and
administrative expenses            667,941           573,317

Loss from operations              (536,320)         (435,856)

Other income (expense):
  Interest expense                 (52,843)          (22,913)
  Gain on sale of assets                 -             3,449
  Equity loss in
   Anything Internet Corp.               -           (39,590)
                                 ----------         ----------

Income (loss) before
Provision for income taxes        (589,163)         (494,910)

Net loss for the period           (589,163)         (494,910)
                              =============     ============

Net income (loss) per share
(basic and fully diluted)           ($0.25)           ($0.06)
                              =============     ============
Weighted average number of
common shares outstanding        2,409,898         8,359,433

</TABLE>



                                       40

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                               BANYAN CORPORATION

                           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
                                                   (audited)

                                 For The Years Ended December 31, 1997 and 1998

                          Common Stock,           Preferred Stock,        Common        Stock
                             Class A                  Class A              Stock       Subscrip
                     -----------------------  ------------------------   Subscribed      tion       Accumulated  Stock-holders'
                       Shares       Amount      Shares       Amount     Shares Amount  Received       Deficit      Equity
                     ----------  -----------  ----------  -----------   ------ ------ ----------  ------------  ----------

<S>                 <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>     <C>     <C>         <C>           <C>

Balances at
December 31, 1996      246,669   $1,532,243     187,190   $   334,906                         -   ($2,411,670)  ($544,521)

Prior Period                                                                                          (25,519)    (25,519)
Adjustment

Issuance of
shares pursuant
to rights
offering             1,378,120      134,803                                                                        134,803

Issuance of stock
for services         1,854,738      197,500                                                                        197,500

Sales of common
stock                1,319,000      223,454                                                                        223,454

Conversion of
debt to equity         126,600       29,710                                                                         29,710

Cancellation of
shares due to
default under
terms of
subscription
agreement             (495,000)                                                                                          -

Common Stock
subscribed                                                            143,000  40,000   (40,000)

Net gain (loss)
for the year
ended December
31, 1997                                                                                              (589,163)   (589,163)
                     ----------  -----------  ----------  -----------              --------------  ------------  ----------
Balances as of

December 31, 1997    4,430,127   $2,117,710     187,190   $   334,906 143,000 40,000   ($40,000)  ($3,026,352)  ($573,736)





</TABLE>

                                       41
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                              BANYAN CORPORATION

                          CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                                                  (audited)

                                For The Years Ended December 31, 1997 and 1998



<S>                 <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>     <C>     <C>         <C>           <C>

Issuance of
shares pursuant
to rights
offering             2,632,802     220,805                                                                         220,805

Issuance of stock
for services           952,270     151,651                                                                         151,651

Sales of common
stock                1,077,500     326,000                                                                         326,000

Stock issued for
equity investment      200,000     106,629                                                                         106,629

Property Dividend                                                                                      (20,000)    (20,000)

Net gain (loss)
for the year
ended December
31, 1998                                                                                              (494,910)   (494,910)
                    ----------  -----------  ----------  -----------   -------  ------ ---------  ------------  ----------
Balances as of

December 31, 1998    9,292,699  $2,922,795     187,190   $   334,906   143,000  40,000 ($40,000)   ($3,541,262)  ($283,561)



</TABLE>

                                       42
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS


                                                                 for the years ended
                                                                  December 31, 1997          December 31, 1998
                                                                  -----------------          -----------------

Cash Flows From Operating Activities:
<S>                                                                 <C>                       <C>
     Net income (loss)                                              ($589,163)                ($494,910)


     Adjustments  to  reconcile  net income to net cash  provided  by (used for)
     operating activities:
          Depreciation and amortization                                 15,373                    15,373
          Loss on sale of fixed assets                                                               236
          Loss in Anything Internet Corporation                                                   39,590
          Proceeds from the sales of trading securities                (16,329)                   12,729
          Compensatory stock issuances                                                           151,651

Net changes in operating assets and liabilities:
          Accounts receivable                                         (39,330)                     5,486
          Inventory and prepaid expenses                                28,244                  (26,274)
          Deposits                                                                                 4,319
          Accounts payable and accrued expenses                         47,621                  (57,404)
                                                              -------------------------------------------
               Net cash provided by (used for)
               operating activities                                  (553,584)                 (349,204)


Cash Flows From Investing Activities:
      Proceeds from sales of Fixed assets                                   -                        300
                                                              -------------------------------------------
               Net cash provided by (used for)
               investing activities                                   (16,329)                      300




                                                                 for the years ended
                                                                  December 31, 1997          December 31, 1998
                                                                  -----------------          -----------------




Cash Flows From Financing Activities:
      Receipts from notes payable                                                                  5,000
      Payments on notes payable                                       (30,213)                  (76,640)
      Proceeds from issuance of common stock                           585,467                   447,239
                                                              -------------------------------------------
               Net cash provided by (used for)

               financing activities                                    555,254                   375,599


Net increase (decrease) in c ash                                         1,670                    26,695
Cash at the beginning of the period                                      1,891                     3,561
                                                              -------------------------------------------

Cash at the end of the period                                           $3,561                   $30,256
                                                              ===========================================



</TABLE>

                                       43
<PAGE>




                               BANYAN CORPORATION

                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                    (audited)

                      For the year ended December 31, 1998


NOTE  1.  ORGANIZATION,  OPERATIONS  AND  SUMMARY  OF  SIGNIFICANT  ACCOUNTING
POLICIES:

Banyan Corporation ("Banyan",  the "Company"),  was incorporated in the State of
Oregon on June 13, 1978. The Company  manufactures and distributes hard carrying
cases for portable  notebook  computers and data storage devices.  The Company's
principal  markets  consist of wholesale  and retail  sellers of  computers  and
related devices throughout the United States.

Principles  of  consolidation
- -----------------------------

The  accompanying  consolidated  financial  statements  include the  accounts of
Banyan Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary,  DoubleCase Corporation. All
inter-company accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

Use  of  estimates
- ------------------

The preparation of financial  statements in conformity  with generally  accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of

                                       44

<PAGE>

contingent  assets and  liabilities at the date of the financial  statements and
the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.

Income  tax
- -----------

Deferred taxes are provided on a liability  method  whereby  deferred tax assets
are  recognized  for  deductible   temporary   differences  and  operating  loss
carryforwards  and deferred tax liabilities are recognized for taxable temporary
differences.  Temporary  differences  are the  differences  between the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities  and their tax bases.  Deferred tax assets are
reduced by a valuation allowance when, in the opinion of management,  it is more
likely than not that some  portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be
realized.  Deferred tax assets and  liabilities  are adjusted for the effects of
changes in tax laws and rates on the date of enactment.

Cash  and  cash  equivalents
- ----------------------------

The Company considers all highly liquid investments with an original maturity of
three months or less as cash equivalents.

Net  income  (loss)  per  share
- -------------------------------

The net income (loss) per share is computed by dividing the net income (loss) by
the weighted  average number of shares of common  outstanding.  Warrants,  stock
options,  and common stock issuable upon  conversion of the Company's  preferred
stock are not included in the  computation if the effect of such inclusion would
be anti-dilutive and would increase the earnings or decrease loss per share.

Inventory
- ---------

Inventory  consists of raw materials and consigned  finished goods.  Inventories
are valued at the lower of cost or market using the first-in,  first-out  (FIFO)
method.

Property  and  equipment
- ------------------------

Property and equipment are recorded at cost and  depreciated  under  accelerated
methods over an estimated life of five to seven years.

Other  assets
- --------------

Product  licenses and trademarks are recorded at cost and amortized based on the
straight line method over five to ten years.

                                       45

<PAGE>

Accounts  receivable
- --------------------

The Company reviews  accounts  receivable  periodically for  collectibility  and
establishes an allowance for doubtful accounts and records bad debt expense when
deemed necessary. As of December 31, 1998, the balance in allowance for doubtful
accounts was $1,424.

Products  and  services,  geographic  areas  and  major  customers
- ------------------------------------------------------------------



     All Company  sales were  derived  from a similar  product  line and were to
external  customers.  The  Company  sells to  domestic,  Canadian  and  European
customers,  and had no one major customer  accounting for over 10% of its sales.
The  Company's  long term  assets are all held  domestically.  Of the  Company's
revenues  of  $270,954  in  1998,   approximately   $38,750  (14.3%)  were  from
international sales , and $232,204 (85.7%) from domestic sales.



Revenue  Recognition
- --------------------

Revenue is recognized by the Company when a product is shipped to a customer.

AICPA  Statement  of  Position  98-5
- ------------------------------------

Effective  January 1, 1999,  the  Company has  adopted  the AICPA  Statement  of
Position  ("SOP")  98-5,  which  requires  non-governmental  entities to expense
startup  costs as  incurred.  The  adoption  by the  Company  of SOP 98-5 is not
expected to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.


Financial  Instruments
--------- -----------

The carrying value of the Company's  financial  instruments,  including cash and
cash equivalents,  accounts receivable, accounts payable, and long term debt, as
reported in the accompanying balance sheet, approximates fair value.



NOTE  2.  EQUITY  INVESTMENT




On August 22, 1998  Banyan  Corporation  purchased  1,000,000  common  shares of
Anything Internet Corporation,  a marketer of wholesale and retail products over
the  Internet,  in exchange for 200,000  common  shares of Banyan.  The purchase
represented  35.7%  of  the  outstanding   common  stock  of  Anything  Internet
Corporation,  and was recorded by Banyan at $106,629. After distributing $20,000
of its  Anything  Internet  Corporation  common  stock as a  property  dividend,
Banyan's net equity in the investment  was $49,485,  resulting in a differential
between cost and equity of $37,144.  This  difference  is amortized  over a five
year  period on a straight  line basis,  with  accumulated  amortization  netted
against the  Company's  investment  balance.  At  December  31,  1998,  Anything
Internet  Corporation  had 200,000  common stock purchase  warrants  outstanding
which, if exercised by the holders, would reduce Banyan's common stock ownership
in Anything Internet  Corporation to approximately 24%. As of December 31, 1998,
Banyan  owned  26%  of  the  outstanding   common  stock  of  Anything  Internet
Corporation, and accounts for its investment under the equity method.







                                       46

<PAGE>

Sales,  gross profit,  net income  (loss) from  continuing  operations,  and net
income (loss) of Anything  InternetCorporation  for the year ended  December 31,
1998 are shown below. <TABLE> <CAPTION>


Anything Internet Corporation
(For the year ended December 31, 1998)
--------------------------------------


<S>                      <C>
Sales                    $2,303,692
Gross Profit             $   98,937
Net income (loss) from
continuing operarion     $( 265,311)
Net income (loss)        $( 265,311)




A pro forma  statement  of  operations  for the year ended  December  31,  1998,
showing the results of operations of Banyan  Corporation  and ANything  Internet
Corporation  as combined for the year can be found on page F-18.  The adjustment
of ($29,056) on the pro forma  combined  statement of operations  represents the
activity of Anything  Internet  Corporation  from  January 1, 1998 to August 21,
1998, the period prior to the acquisition by Banyan Corporation.



</TABLE>


NOTE  3.  LEASE  COMMITMENT

Effective May 1, 1998, DoubleCase Corporation entered into a lease agreement for
office and warehouse space; the lease agreement is for a period of twelve months
and can be renewed for an additional  twelve months at the then current  monthly
rental rate plus 3%. Lease  expense  incurred  for the years ended  December 31,
1997 and 1998 was $37,766  and  $33,017,  respectively.  The  remaining  minimum
future rental payment, all in 1999, is $4,420.


NOTE  4.  INCOME  TAXES

Deferred  income taxes arise from the temporary  differences  between  financial
statement  and  income  tax  recognition  of net  operating  losses.  These loss
carryovers  are limited  under the Internal  Revenue  Code should a  significant
change in ownership occur.

At December 31, 1998 the Company had approximately  $3,000,000 of unused federal
net  operating  loss  carryforwards,  which begin to expire in the year 2005.  A
deferred  tax asset has been  offset by 100%  valuation  allowance.  The Company
accounts for income tax assets and liabilities as follows:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                       December 31,    December 31,
                                           1997            1998
                                      --------------  --------------

<S>                                   <C>             <C>
Deferred tax liability                $           -   $           -



Deferred tax asset arising from:
    Net operating loss carryforwards      1,041,465       1,234,480
                                      --------------  --------------
                                          1,041,465       1,234,480


Valuation allowance                      (1,041,465)     (1,235,776)
                                      --------------  --------------
Net Deferred Taxes                    $           -   $           -


Income  taxes at  federal  and  state  statutory  rates  are  reconciled  to the
Company's actual income taxes as follows:



The income tax (benefit) consists of the following:


                                         December 31,     December 31,
                                              1997           1998
                                         --------------  --------------
Tax at federal statutory rate (34%)       ($200,315)      ($168,269)
State income tax (5%)                       (29,485)        (24,746)


Increase in valuation allowance             229,800         193,015
                                         --------------  --------------
                                          ($0)            ($194,311)

The net change in 1998 in the total valuation allowance was 193,015.




</TABLE>



                                       47

<PAGE>

No difference  exists between these amounts and amounts  computed at federal and
state statutory rates.  The net change in 1998 in the total valuation  allowance
was $194,311.


NOTE  5.  NOTES  PAYABLE

At December 31, 1998, the Company had the following notes payable outstanding:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                        Balances at
                                        December 31,
                                            1998
                                        -------------

<S>                                    <C>
Related party notes payable,
Unsecured, interest from 6% to 12%
per annum, maturing April 1, 2000      $       38,647


Related party note payable, Secured by all inventory,  furniture, equipment, and
accounts receivable, interest at 10% per annum, maturing
April 1, 2000                                  66,587

Total notes payable                           105,234
Less current portion                             ( -)

Long term notes payable                $      105,234

</TABLE>


The  schedule  of  maturities  by fiscal  year for all notes  outstanding  is as
follows:

       Years ending December 31,

          1999              $  -
          2000           105,234
                        --------
         Total          $105,234

The fair value of the Company's  long-term  notes payable is estimated  based on
the  current  rates  offered  to the  Company  for  debt of the  same  remaining
maturity. At December 31, 1998, the fair value of the notes payable approximated
the amount recorded in the financial statements.

                                       48

<PAGE>



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

NOTE 6. STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY

Common Stock
------------

The Company as of December 31, 1997 and 1998 had 50,000,000 shares of authorized
Class A common stock, no par value,  with 4,573,127 and 9,292,699  shares issued
and outstanding respectively.


Preferred Stock
---------------

The Company as of December 31, 1997 and 1998 had 50,000,000 shares of authorized
Class  A  preferred  stock,  no  par  value,  with  187,190  shares  issued  and
outstanding  at each date. The Company has the right at any time, to call any or
all  preferred  Class A shares  at a price  of $2.75  per  share.  Each  Class A
preferred  share is  convertible  by the  record  owner  into  one  share of the
Company's  Class A common stock at any time prior to  redemption  upon notice to
the Company.


Stock Options
-------------

At December  31,  1998,  the Company had stock  options  outstanding  from stock
option  awards and from an  incentive  stock option  plan,  which are  described
below.


Non-employee stock options

The Company  accounts for  non-employee  stock options  under SFAS 123,  whereby
options costs are recorded based at the fair value of the consideration received
or the fair value of the equity instruments  issued,  whichever is more reliably
measurable.

In July, 1998, the Company granted stock options,  exercisable immediately, to a
consulting  company as compensation  for services,  to purchase common shares of
Banyan Corporation as follows:


  Amount           Price/share                Expiration date
  ------           -----------                ---------------
  37,500 shares          $ 0.40               August 1, 2001
  100,000 shares         $ 0.80               August 1, 2001
  100,000 shares         $ 1.20               August 1, 2001


     The stock options  granted were issued  pursuant to a consulting  agreement
with no stated fee  amount.  The  Company  incurred  and has accrued no material
compensation expense under these options.

                                   49

<PAGE>

                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued


Employee stock options

The Company applies APB Opinion 25 and related interpretations in accounting for
employee stock options.  Accordingly,  no compensation  cost has been recognized
for its employee stock options,  nor was any  compensation  cost charged against
income under its employee stock options in 1997 or 1998. Had  compensation  cost
for the Company's  employee stock option awards and incentive  stock option plan
been determined  based on the fair value at the grant dates for awards under the
stock option grants and incentive  stock option plan  consistent with the method
of FASB  Statement  123, the  Company's  net income and earnings per share would
have been reduced to pro forma amounts indicated below:



                                             1997                1998
                                           ---------           -------

 Net income (loss)         As reported     $( 589,163)         $(494,910)

                           Pro forma       $( 589,256)         $(494,957)

 Basic and fully diluted   As reported     $(0.25)             $(0.06)
   Earnings per share
                           Pro forma       $(0.25)             $(0.06)


In August, 1998, the Company granted stock options,  exercisable immediately, to
certain officers of Anything Internet Corporation and, to purchase common shares
of Banyan Corporation as follows:

  Amount           Price/share                Expiration date
  ------           -----------                ---------------
  100,000 shares         $ 0.50               August 31, 1999
  100,000 shares         $ 1.00               August 31, 1999
  100,000 shares         $ 2.00               August 31, 2000

These  options  were  issued  as  part of the  purchase  price  paid  by  Banyan
Corporation to acquire a 35.7% interest in Anything Internet Corporation.

Incentive stock option plan

As part of an overall executive  compensation program, the Company has adopted a
tax  qualified  incentive  stock  option  plan.  The plan which is set to expire
September 18, 2005, unless extended by the directors,  allows eligible employees
to receive  options to acquire  Class A common  stock of the  Company at a price
equivalent  to 95% of the fair market  value of the stock on the date the option
is granted.  Each option granted will become  exercisable over a ten year period
unless the optionee owns 10% or more of the stock of the Company,  in which case
the option is exercisable  over a five year period.  The ability to exercise the
options vests at a rate of 20% per year. As of October 10, 1996,  105,345 shares
of Class A common stock of the Company  have been  reserved for sale through the
plan.  Options to acquire  11,154  shares  were  outstanding  (with  6,692 being
exercisable) on December 31, 1998, at an exercise price of $0.05 per share.


     A summary of the status of the  Company's  stock options as of December 31,
1997 and December 31, 1998, and changes during the year ending on those dates is
presented below:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                          December 31, 1997               December 31, 1998
                                   ------------------------------- -------------------------------
                                                     Weighted Avg.                   Weighted Avg.
         Options                        Shares      Exercise Price      Shares      Exercise Price
         -------                   --------------  --------------- --------------  ---------------

<S>                                <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>
Outstanding at beginning of period         11,154  $          0.05         11,154  $          0.05
Granted                                            $                      537,500  $          1.05
Exercised                                       -                -              -                -
Forfeited                                       -                -              -                -

                                   --------------  --------------- --------------  ---------------
Outstanding at end of period                11,154  $                     548,654  $          1.05
                                   --------------  --------------- --------------  ---------------

Options exercisable at period end           4,461                         544,192

Weighted average fair value of
  options granted during the
  period                                                           $         0.0038

</TABLE>



                                       50

<PAGE>



The following table summarizes  information  about stock options  outstanding at
December 31, 1997.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                       Options Outstanding                   Options Exercisable
                       -------------------               ---------------------------
                            Weighted
                              Avg.
Range of       Number      Remaining       Weighted        Number     Weighted Avg.
Exercise     Outstanding  Contractual        Avg.        Exercisable     Exercise
Prices       at 12/31/97      Life      Exercise Price   at 12/31/97      Price
- -----------  -----------  ------------  ---------------  -----------  --------------

<S>          <C>          <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>
$0.05 only      11,154     45.00 months  $     0.05             4,461   $    0.05
</TABLE>



The following table summarizes  information  about stock options  outstanding at
December 31, 1998.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                       Options Outstanding                   Options Exercisable
                       -------------------               ---------------------------
                            Weighted
                              Avg.
Range of       Number      Remaining       Weighted        Number     Weighted Avg.
Exercise     Outstanding  Contractual        Avg.        Exercisable     Exercise
Prices       at 12/31/98      Life      Exercise Price   at 12/31/98      Price
- -----------  -----------  ------------  ---------------  -----------  --------------

<S>          <C>          <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>
$0.05-$2.00      548,654  19.54 months  $          1.05      544,192  $         1.04
</TABLE>


Stock  rights  offering
- -----------------------

On November  15,  1996,  the board of  directors  approved a rights  offering to
shareholders  of record on December 6, 1996. Each right allowed a shareholder to
acquire  two  shares of common  stock for  $0.125  per  share.  The terms of the
offering  provided  that the number of shares  issuable upon exercise as well as
the exercise  price would not be adjusted for any post offering  stock splits or
any other change in the overall  capitalization of the Company.  The rights were
offered for $0.01 per right. Of the 2,449,609 rights that were issued, 2,005,401
were  exercised  and exchanged for 4,010,802 new shares of Class A common stock,
including 1,378,000 shares in 1997 and 2,632,802 shares in 1998.


NOTE  7.  CONTINGENCIES

An officer of the Company is currently under indictment in U.S.  District Court,
Southern  District  of  New  York  for  certain  alleged  securities  violations
occurring  in 1996.  No  allegations  have been made  against the  Company.  The
eventual  effect  of  these  proceedings,  if  any,  on the  Company's  business
undertaking is unknown at the present time.

NOTE 8. RESTATEMENT

During 1999 an error was  discovered in which certain  research and  development
costs which should have been expensed in 1996,  were instead  capitalized in the
same year.  This error was  corrected  in 1999 by  restating  the  opening  1997
accumulated defecit. The effect of the error understated losses in the aggregate
by  $25,519  in 1996.  The 1997 and 1998  net  income  did not  change.  The net
restatement increase to accumulated defecit was $25,519.



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                     BANYAN CORPORATION (and Subsidiary) and
                         ANYTHING INTERNET CORPORATION
                   PRO FORMA COMBINED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                      For The Year Ended December 31, 1998



                               Banyan             Adjustments         End
                               Corporation                          Balance
                              ------------       ------------    ------------

<S>                           <C>                <C>             <C>
Sales                        $     206,467      $           -   $     206,467


Cost of sales                       69,006                             69,006
                              ------------       ------------    ------------
Gross margin                       137,461                            137,461

Research & Development                   -                  -               -

Selling, general and
administrative expenses            576,639                            576,639

Loss from operations              (439,178)                          (439,178)

Other income (expense):
  Interest expense                 (22,913)                           (22,913)
  Gain on sale of assets             3,449                              3,449
  Equity loss in
   Anything Internet Corp.         (39,590)          (29,056)         (68,646)
                                  ----------         ----------      ----------

Income (loss) before
Provision for income taxes        (498,232)          (29,056)        (527,288)

Provision for income tax                 -                  -               -
                                   --------           --------        --------

Net loss for the period           (498,232)          (29,056)        (527,288)
                               ============       ============    ============

Net income (loss) per share
(basic and fully diluted)           ($0.06)
                               ============
Weighted average number of
common shares outstanding        8,359,433




NOTE 9. OPERATIONS IN GEOGRAPHIC AREAS

In   1998,   approximately   14.3%  of   revenues   ($29,509)   were   generated
internationally,  and  approximately  85.7%  ($176,958)  domestically.  In  1997
domestic sales  represented  86.7% ($214,770) of total sales, and  international
sales approximately 13.3% ($33,003).


</TABLE>




                                      52

<PAGE>


J. Paul Kenoti
Certified Public Accountant, P.C.
1618 S.W. First Avenue
Suite 215
Portland, Oregon   97201
(503) 241 - 2977
Fax (503) 224 - 9049
Message (503) 248 - 7849
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT


To  the  Board  of  Directors
Anything, Inc.
Colorado  Springs,  Colorado

We have audited the  accompanying  balance sheet of Anything Inc. as of June 30,
1998 and the related statements of operations,  changes in stockholders'  equity
and cash  flows for the period  from  August 15,  1997 to June 30,  1998.  These
financial  statements are the  responsibility of the Company's  management.  Our
responsibility  is  to  express  an  opinion  on  these  consolidated  financial
statements based on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about   whether  the   financial   statement  is  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial  statement.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Anything, Inc. at June 30, 1998
and the results of their  operations and its cash flows for the period beginning
August  15,  1997 to  June  30,  1998  in  conformity  with  generally  accepted
accounting principles.

The  accompanying  financial  statements  have been  prepared  assuming that the
Company  will  continue  as a  going  concern.  As  discussed  in  Note 6 to the
financial statements,  the Company is attempting to establish itself as a player
in a very competitive market. It also has a substantial need for cash to finance
its  development  stage and ongoing  activities.  These and other  factors raise
substantial  doubt about the Company's  ability to continue as a going  concern.
Management's  plans in regard to these matters are also discussed in Note 6. The
accompanying financial statements do not include any adjustments relating to the
recover ability and  classification  of asset carrying amounts or the amount and
classification  of liabilities that might result should the Company be unable to
continue as a going concern.



/s/  J.  Paul  Kenote
- ----------------------------------
     J.  PAUL  KENOTE,  CPA,  P.C.
     Portland,  Oregon

December  21,  1998

                                      53

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                                  BALANCE SHEET

                                  June 30, 1998

                   ASSETS


<S>                                        <C>
Current assets:

  Cash                                     $42,114
  Accounts receivable, trade                14,591
                                           -------
                                            56,705
                                           -------

Furniture and fixtures:
  Office furniture and equipment            14,461
  Less accumulated depreciation              2,892
                                           -------
                                            11,569
                                           -------

Other assets:
  Software development costs, net of
   Accumulated amortization of $4,088       21,984
  Deferred tax benefit, net of valuation
   Allowance of $7,321 (Note 5)                  -
  Deposits                                   1,380
                                           -------
                                            23,364
                                           -------

                                           $91,638
                                           =======



                                      F-2

</TABLE>



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                                  BALANCE SHEET

                                  June 30, 1998

          LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY


<S>                                                      <C>


Current liabilities:
  Notes payable (Note 2)                                 $ 25,500
  Note payable - line of credit (Note 3)                   32,038
  Accounts payable, trade                                  17,441
  Accrued expenses                                          5,221
                                                         ---------
                                                           80,200
                                                         ---------

Commitment (Note 4)

Stockholders' equity:
  Common stock, no par value, 1,000,000 shares
   Authorized; 5,800 issued and outstanding                36,200
  Deficit accumulated during development stage (Note 6)   (24,762)
                                                         ---------
                                                           11,438
                                                         ---------
                                                         $ 91,638
                                                         =========



                                      F-3

</TABLE>

                                      54
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                             STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS

              For the Period From August 15, 1997 to June 30, 1998



<S>                                            <C>
Sales                                          $ 657,988


Cost of sales                                    613,322
                                               ----------
Gross margin                                      44,666

Selling, general and administrative expenses      69,428
                                               ----------

Excess of expenditures over revenues before
 income tax benefit                              (24,762)

Income tax benefit (Note 5)                            -
                                               ----------
Net loss for the period                         ($24,762)
                                               ==========



</TABLE>
                                        55
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                  STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

              For the Period From August 15, 1997 to June 30, 1998

                             Common Stock Issued
                            ---------------------    Retained     Total
                             Number      Amount      Deficit      Equity
                            ---------  ----------  -----------  -----------

<S>                         <C>        <C>         <C>          <C>
Balance at August 15, 1997          -  $        -  $        -   $        -


Sales of common stock           5,800      36,200           -       36,200

Net loss for the period                               (24,762)     (24,762)
                            ---------  ----------  -----------  -----------
Balance at June 30, 1998        5,800  $   36,200    ($24,762)  $   11,438
                            =========   =========  ===========  ===========



                                      F-4

</TABLE>

                                      56
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                             STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

              For the Period From August 15, 1997 to June 30, 1998



<S>                                                        <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:

  Net operating deficit                                     ($24,762)
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to
   net cash provided by operating activities:
      Depreciation  and  amortization  expense  6,980 Net  changes in  operating
      assets and liabilities:
         Accounts receivable                                 (14,591)
         Deposits                                             (1,380)
         Accounts payable and accrued expenses                22,662
                                                           ----------
  Net cash used by operations                                (11,091)
                                                           ----------

Cash flows from investment activities:
  Acquisition of office equipment                            (14,461)
  Software development costs incurred                        (26,072)
                                                           ----------
  Net cash used by investment activities                     (40,533)
                                                           ----------

Cash flows from financing activities:
  Proceeds from borrowing                                     57,538
  Sale of stock                                               36,200
                                                           ----------
  Net cash provided by financing activities                   93,738
                                                           ----------

Net cash increase                                             42,114

Cash at beginning of the period                                    -
                                                           ----------
Cash at end of the period                                  $  42,114
                                                           ==========

Supplemental schedule of non-cash financing transactions:

  Issuance of 830 shares of common stock for software
   development services                                    $  16,600
                                                           ==========



                                      F-5

</TABLE>


                                      57

<PAGE>

                                 ANYTHING, INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                  June 30, 1998


NOTE  1  -  SUMMARY  OF  SIGNIFICANT  ACCOUNTING  POLICIES AND LINE OF BUSINESS:

Line  of  business:

Anything,  Inc.  was  organized  on August 15, 1997 as a Colorado corporation to
market  and  distribute  computers  and  related accessory products by using the
Internet as the exclusive distribution channel.

Use  of  estimates:

The preparation of financial  statements in conformity  with generally  accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect certain  reported amounts and  disclosures.  Accordingly,  actual results
could differ from those estimates.

NOTE  2  -  NOTES  PAYABLE:

Notes payable consist of the following:

Note  payable  to  a  former  shareholder  of  the  Company
in exchange for the redemption  of  his stock.  The note is
to be paid in four unequal  installments,  is  non-interest
bearing  and  is  personally  guaranteed  by  the principal
shareholder  of  the  Company.                                      $15,000

Note payable to the parents of the principal shareholder of
the company, bearing interest  at  8%  per annum and due on
or before December 31, 1998.  The note is unsecured.                 10,500
                                                                    -------
                                                                    $25,500
                                                                    =======

NOTE  3  -  LINE  OF  CREDIT

To help finance the cost of inventory, Nations Credit Distribution Finance, Inc.
has extended the Company, a credit line not to exceed $35,000. The interest rate
applicable to each transaction will depending upon the vendor and the timeliness
of repayment and will range from 0% to 18%. The credit line is unsecured.


                                      58

<PAGE>

NOTE  4  -  OBLIGATION  UNDER  LEASE  COMMITMENT:

The company  leases  approximately  2,000  square  feet of office  space under a
non-cancelable  lease agreement expiring May 31, 1999. The lease can be extended
based on terms and  conditions to be established at that time. The lease payment
in comprised of a scheduled  monthly base payment plus personal  property taxes,
insurance and utilities.

Future minimum annual lease payments are as follows:



Years Ending
June 30,       Amount
--------       ------

1999          $ 14,080
               -------
              $ 14,080
               =======


Lease expense  incurred for the period from August 15, 1997 to June 30, 1998 was
$4,244.


<PAGE>


NOTE  5  -  DEFERRED  INCOME  TAXES

The provision(benefit) for income taxes is based on transactions included in the
determination  of  pre-tax  accounting  income  or loss,  including  appropriate
provision  (benefit) for deferred  income taxes.  Deferred tax  liabilities  and
assets are recognized for the expected  future tax  consequences  of events that
have been included in the financial  statements or tax returns.  Deferred income
tax assets and  liabilities are computed  annually for  differences  between the
financial  statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities that will result in
taxable or deductible  amounts in the future based on enacted tax laws and rates
applicable  to the  periods  in which the  differences  are  expected  to affect
taxable income.  Valuation  allowances are established  when necessary to reduce
deferred tax assets to the amount expected to be realized.

The net deferred tax assets in the accompanying financial statements at June 30,
1998 consist of the following:

                                      F-7
                                      60

<PAGE>

Deferred tax assets arising from:




Net operating loss carryforward                       $  7,321
Valuation allowance for deferred tax assets             (7,321)
                                                       -------
Net deferred tax assets                               $      -

The  components  of the benefit for income  taxes for the period from August 15,
1997 to June 30, 1998 are as follows:

Federal
   Current                                            $      -
   Deferred                                              6,382
                                                        ------
                                                      $  6,382
                                                        ======

State and local:
   Current                                            $      -
   Deferred                                                939
                                                        ------
                                                      $    939
                                                        ======



As of June 30, 1998,  the Company had net operating  loss  carryovers of $18,721
available to offset future taxable  income,  if any. The ownership  changes that
have  occurred  to date do not  operate  to limit the  utilization  of these net
operating  loss  carryovers in future years.  In the event of ownership  changes
aggregating fifty percent or more in any three-year  period,  the amount of loss
carryover that becomes available for utilization in any year may be limited. The
tax loss carryovers,  if not utilized against taxable income, will expire in the
year 2019.


                                   61


<PAGE>

NOTE  6  -  CONTINUED  OPERATIONS

The  accompanying  financial  statements  have been  prepared  assuming that the
Company will continue as a going  concern.  The Company is a  development  stage
company  as defined in  Financial  Accounting  Standard  No. 7,  Accounting  and
Reporting by Development Stage Enterprises (FAS-7). It is devoting substantially
all of its effort to raise capital, developing markets and training personnel in
order to generate  significant  operations.  It is not certain  that the Company
will be able to obtain the financing  required to fund the planned operations or
retain  sufficient   management  expertise  to  continue  its  planned  business
operations. These factors raise substantial doubt about the company's ability to
continue  as a going  concern.  The  financial  statements  do not  include  any
adjustments  relating to the recoverability and classification of asset carrying
amounts or the amount and classification of liabilities that might result should
the Company be unable to continue as a going concern.

                                      62

<PAGE>


<PAGE>

UNAUDITED  6-MONTHS  INTERIM  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  ENDING  JUNE 30,  1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                                    UNAUDITED
                     for the six months ended June 30, 1999

                                             as of                       as of
                                         June 30, 1999              March 31, 1999
                                         -------------              --------------

ASSETS

 Current assets


<S>                                       <C>                         <C>


  Cash and marketable securities          $16,838                     $14,409

  Accounts receivable                      68,371                      60,821
  Inventory                                44,127                      43,775
  Prepaid expenses                          7,261                       4,914
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                          136,597                     123,919



 Fixed Assets
  Furniture and fixtures                   11,921                      11,921
  Equipment and tooling                     7,594                       5,648
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                           19,515                      17,569

 Less: Accumulated depreciation            16,485                      16,295
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                            3,030                       1,274

 Other assets
  Trademarks and licenses,
  net of accumulated                       29,365                      32,296
  amortization of $55,690 and $52,759,
  respectively

Investment in Anything
  Internet Corporation                     36,948                      13,539
  Other                                     4,700                       4,700
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                           71,013                      50,535
                       -------------------------------------------------------



                                         $210,640                    $175,728
                       =======================================================


LIABILITIES AND  STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

 Current liabilities
  Accounts payable                        $86,311                     $82,621
  Accrued salaries and related expenses    38,076                      88,992
  Accrued interest                        227,847                     225,031
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                          352,234                     396,644
  Notes payable                           105,234                     105,234
                       -------------------------------------------------------
                                          457,468                     501,878

 Stockholders' deficit
 Preferred stock, Class A: no par value;
 500,000 shares authorized;
 187,190 issued and
 outstanding;
 callable at $2.75 per share
 and convertible                          334,906                     334,906
 Common stock, Class A: no par value;
 50,000,000 shares authorized;
 9,691,804 and 9,301,107
 issued and outstanding, respectively   3,202,597                   2,972,795
 Common stock subscribed
 (334,299 and 349,112                     167,233                     190,000
 shares, respectively)
 Stock subscription receivable           (167,233)                   (190,000)
 Accumulated deficit                   (3,784,331)                 (3,633,851)
                        -------------------------------------------------------
                        -------------------------------------------------------
                                         (246,828)                   (326,150)
                        -------------------------------------------------------

                                         $210,640                    $175,728
                        =======================================================

</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
                                    UNAUDITED
                     for the six months ended June 30, 1999




                               Common Stock              Preferred Stock         Stock         Common Stock
                               Class A                   Class A                 Subscription  Subscribed             Accumulated
                               Shares           Amount   Shares      Amount      Receivable    Shares      Amount      Deficit


<S>                            <C>           <C>          <C>        <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>
Balances at December 31, 1998  9,292,699     $2,922,795   187,190    $334,906    ($40,000)    143,000     $40,000     ($3,541,262)


Sales of common stock            446,433        279,802
Common stock subscribed                                                          -127,233     191,299     127,233
    (334,299 shares)
Common stock shares cancelled    -47,328
Net gain (loss) for the year
   ended June 30, 1999                                                                                                   -243,069

Balances at June 30, 1999      9,691,804     $3,202,597   187,190    $334,906   ($167,233)    334,299    $167,233     ($3,784,331)




</TABLE>
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                                    UNAUDITED


                                                         for the three                             for the six
                                                          months ended                             months ended

                                             June 30, 1999       June 30, 1998       June 30, 1999       June 30, 1998
                                             -------------       -------------       -------------       -------------


<S>                                          <C>                  <C>                  <C>                <C>
Sales, net                                   $33,304              $41,869              $64,341            $100,355


Cost of sales                                 11,487               26,763               24,930              78,172
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Gross margin                                  21,817               15,106               39,411              22,183

Selling, general and administrative expenses 121,612               74,647              195,498             170,831
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Loss from operations                         (99,795)             (59,541)            (156,087)           (148,648)

Other income (expense)
Interest expense                              (2,808)              (4,783)              (5,605)            (16,509)

(Loss) on sale of assets                                                                                      (236)

Equity loss of Anything Internet Corporation (47,877)                                  (81,377)
                                             ----------                                ---------

Income (loss) before provision
for income taxes                            (150,480)             (64,324)            (243,069)           (165,393)

Provision for income taxes                         -                    -                    -                   -
                                            -----------------------------------------------------------------------

Net income (loss)                          ($150,480)            ($64,324)            ($243,069)         ($165,393)
                                           ========================================================================

Net income (loss) per share
(Basic and fully diluted)                     ($0.02)              ($0.01)               ($0.03)            ($0.03)
                                           ========================================================================

Weighted average number of
common shares outstanding                   9,496,455           7,735,129             9,428,537          6,590,128
                                           ========================================================================


</TABLE>


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

                                    unaudited


                                                          for the three months ended                for the six months ended
                                                        June 30, 1999    June 30, 1998          June 30, 1999     June 30,1998
                                                        -------------    -------------          -------------     ------------
Cash Flows From Operating Activities:
<S>                                                      <C>               <C>                   <C>              <C>
     Net income (loss)                                   ($150,480)        ($64,324)             ($243,069)       ($165,393)

     Adjustments  to  reconcile  net income to net cash  provided  by (used for)
     operating activities:
          Depreciation and amortization                       6,835            3,231                  9,956            6,462
          Loss in Anything Internet Corporation              47,877                                  81,377
          Loss on sale of assets                                                                                         236
          Proceeds from sales of trading securities                           16,329                                  16,329
          Accounts receivable                               (7,550)           22,147               (20,876)           21,763
          Inventory and prepaid expenses                    (2,700)          (9,025)                (3,519)          (4,894)
          Accounts payable and accrued expenses            (44,409)         (20,953)               (39,265)          (4,169)
                                                        -------------    -------------          -------------     ------------

               Net cash provided by (used for)

               operating activities                       (150,427)         (52,595)              (215,396)        (129,666)

Cash Flows From Investing Activities:
     Proceeds from sales of fixed assets                                                                                 300
     Purchase of fixed assets                               (1,946)                                 (2,824)
     Increase in investment in Anything Internet
       Corporation                                         (75,000)           10,000               (75,000)
                                                        -------------    -------------          -------------     ------------
               Net cash provided by (used for)
               investing activities                        (76,946)           10,000               (77,824)              300

Cash Flows From Financing Activities:

      Proceeds from issuance of common stock                229,802           16,000                279,802          291,678
      Payments of notes payable                                                3,032                               (160,051)

                                                        -------------    -------------          -------------     ------------

               Net cash provided by (used for)
               financing activities                         229,802           19,032                279,802          131,627



Net Increase (Decrease) In Cash                               2,429         (23,563)               (13,418)            2,261
Cash At The Beginning Of The Period                          14,409           29,385                 30,256            3,561
                                                        -------------    -------------          -------------     ------------

Cash At The End Of The Period                               $16,838           $5,822                $16,838           $5,822
                                                        =============    =============          =============     ============


Schedule Of Non-Cash Investing And Financing Activities

No non-cash investing and financing activities occurred during the first quarter
of 1999 and 2000.

Supplemental Disclosure

Cash paid in second quarter of 1998 and 1999 for interest and income taxes:
      None













</TABLE>
<PAGE>



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

NOTE 1. BASIS OF PRESENTATION:

     The  accompanying  unaudited  financial  statements  have been  prepared in
accordance  with the  instructions  to Form 10-QSB and do not include all of the
information and disclosures required by generally accepted accounting principles
for complete financial statements.  All adjustments which are, in the opinion of
management,  necessary for a fair  presentation of the results of operations for
the  interim  periods  have  been  made  and are of a  recurring  nature  unless
otherwise  disclosed herein.  The results of operations for such interim periods
are note necessarily indicative of operations for a full year.

NOTE 2. ORGANIZATION, OPERATIONS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:

     Banyan Corporation ("Banyan", the "Company"), was incorporated in the State
of Oregon on June 13,  1978.  The  Company  manufactures  and  distributes  hard
carrying cases for portable  notebook  computers and data storage  devices.  The
Company's principal markets consist of wholesale and retail sellers of computers
and related devices throughout the United States.

 Unaudited financial statements

     The  financial  statements  for the  period  ending  June 30,  1999 and the
accompanying  footnotes have not been audited.  Adjustments have been made that,
in the opinion of  managemnt , are  necessary  in order to make these  financial
statements not misleading.

 Principles of consolidation

     The accompanying  consolidated financial statements include the accounts of
Banyan Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary,  DoubleCase Corporation. All
intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

 Use of estimates

     The  preparation  of financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported  amounts of assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure of  contingent  assets and  liabilities  at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting
period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

 Income tax


     Deferred  taxes are  provided on a liability  method  whereby  deferred tax
assets are recognized for deductible  temporary  differences  and operating loss
carryforwards  and deferred tax liabilities are recognized for taxable temporary
differences.  Temporary  differences  are the  differences  between the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities  and their tax bases.  Deferred tax assets are
reduced by a valuation allowance when, in the opinion of management,  it is more
likely than not that some  portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be
realized.  Deferred tax assets and  liabilities  are adjusted for the effects of
changes in tax laws and rates on the date of enactment. <PAGE>


                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS- Continued

NOTE 2. ORGANIZATION,  OPERATIONS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
     (Continued):

 Cash and cash equivalents

     The  Company  considers  all highly  liquid  investments  with an  original
maturity of three months or less as cash equivalents.

 Net income (loss) per share

     The net income  (loss) per share is  computed  by  dividing  the net income
(loss) by the weighted average number of shares of common outstanding. Warrants,
stock  options,  and common stock  issuable  upon  conversion  of the  Company's
preferred  stock  are not  included  in the  computation  if the  effect of such
inclusion  would be  anti-dilutive  and would  increase the earnings or decrease
loss per share.

 Inventory

     Inventory   consists  of  raw  materials  and  consigned   finished  goods.
Inventories  are  valued  at the lower of cost or  market  using  the  first-in,
first-out (FIFO) method.

 Property and equipment

     Property  and  equipment  are  recorded  at  cost  and  depreciated   under
accelerated methods over an estimated life of five to seven years.

 Other assets

     Product licenses and trademarks are recorded at cost and amortized based on
the straight line method over five to ten years.

 Accounts receivable

     The Company reviews accounts receivable periodically for collectibility and
establishes an allowance for doubtful accounts and records bad debt expense when
deemed  necessary.  As of June 30, 1999 the balance in  allowance  for  doubtful
accounts was $1,424.

 Products and services, geographic areas, and major customers


     All Company  sales were  derived  from a similar  product  line and were to
external  customers.  The  Company  sells to  domestic,  Canadian  and  European
customers,  and had no one major customer  accounting for over 10% of its sales.
The  Company's  long term  assets are all held  domestically.  Of the  Company's
revenues of $64,341 for the six months ended June 30, 1999, approximately $6,498
(10.1%) were from international sales , and $57,843 (89.9%) from domestic sales.



 Revenue recognition

     The Company recognizes revenue when a product is shipped to a customer.



<PAGE>


                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

NOTE 2. ORGANIZATION,  OPERATIONS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
     (Continued):

  AICPA Statement of Position 98-5

     Effective  January 1, 1999 the Company has adopted the AICPA  Statement  of
Position  ("SOP")  98-5,  which  requires  nongovernmental  entities  to expense
startup  costs as  incurred.  The  adoption  by the  Company  of SOP 98-5 is not
expected to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.

  Financial instruments

     The carrying value of the Company's financial  instruments,  including cash
and cash equivalents. Accounts receivable, accounts payable, and long term debt,
as reported in the accompanying balance sheet, approximates fair market value.

  NOTE 3. EQUITY INVESTMENT


On August 22, 1998  Banyan  Corporation  purchased  1,000,000  common  shares of
Anything Internet Corporation,  a marketer of wholesale and retail products over
the  Internet,  in exchange for 200,000  common  shares of Banyan.  The purchase
represented  35.7%  of  the  outstanding   common  stock  of  Anything  Internet
Corporation,  and was recorded by Banyan at cost of $106,629. After distributing
$20,000  of  its  Anything  Internet  Corporation  common  stock  as a  property
dividend,  Banyan's net equity in the  investment  was  $49,485,  resulting in a
differential  between cost and equity of $37,144.  This  difference is amortized
over a five year period on a straight line basis, with accumulated  amortization
netted against the Company's  investment balance. At December 31, 1998, Anything
Internet  Corporation  had 200,000  common stock purchase  warrants  outstanding
which, if exercised by the holders, would reduce Banyan's common stock ownership
in Anything Internet  Corporation to approximately 24%. As of December 31, 1998,
Banyan  owned  26%  of  the  outstanding   common  stock  of  Anything  Internet
Corporation, and accounts for its investment under the equity method.



  NOTE 4. LEASE COMMITMENT

     Effective  May  1,  1998,  DoubleCase  Corporation  entered  into  a  lease
agreement for office and warehouse space; the lease agreement is for a period of
twelve  months and can be renewed for an  additional  twelve  months at the then
current  monthly rental rate plus 3%. Lease expense  incurred for the year ended
December  31, 1998 and the six months ended June 30, 1999 was $33,017 and $6,696
respectively.





<PAGE>



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

  NOTE 5. INCOME TAXES

     Deferred  income  taxes  arise  from  the  temporary   differences  between
financial  statement and income tax recognition of net operating  losses.  These
loss carryovers are limited under the Internal Revenue Code should a significant
change in ownership occur.

     At December  31, 1998 the Company had  approximately  $3,000,000  of unused
federal  net  operating  loss  carryforwards,  which begin to expire in the year
2005. A deferred tax asset has been offset by a 100%  valuation  allowance.  The
Company  accounts for income taxes  pursuant to SFAS 109. The  components of the
Company's deferred tax assets and liabilities are as follows:


                                        June 30,             December 31,
                                         1999                1998
                                        --------             ------------

Deferred tax liability                 $     -               $     -

Deferred tax asset arising from:


Net operating loss carryforwards     1,330,572             1,235,776
                                     ---------             ---------
                                     1,330,572             1,235,776

Valuation allowance                 (1,330,572)           (1,235,776)

Net Deferred Taxes                  $        -             $       -


  Income  taxes at  Federal  and state  statutory  rates are  reconciled  to the
  Company's actual income tax as follows:


                              Six months            Year ended
                              ended  June 30,       December 31,
                              1999                  1998
                              ---------------       ------------


         Tax at Federal  (34%)    (82,643)          (168,269)
         Statutory Rate
          State income tax (5%)   (12,153)          ( 24,746)
                                   94,796            193,015
         Increase in valuation    -------           ---------
         allowance               $      -        $          -




  The net change in the six months,  1999 in the total  valuation  allowance was
$94,796.



<PAGE>




                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

NOTE 6. NOTES PAYABLE

     At June 30, 1999 the Company had the following notes payable outstanding:

Related party notes payable,
unsecured, interest from 6% to 12% per annum,
maturing April 1, 2000                            $    38,647

Related party note payable, secured by all inventory,  furniture, equipment, and
accounts receivable, interest at 10% per annum, maturing April 1, 2000 66,587
                                                     ------------

Total notes payable                                   105,234

Less current portion                                  (     -)
                                                     ------------

Long term notes payable                            $  105,234

The  schedule  of  maturities  by fiscal  year for all notes  outstanding  is as
follows

   Years ending December 31,

            1999             $      -
            2000                105,234
                             ----------
             Total            $105,234


The fair value of the Company's  long term notes  payable is estimated  based on
the  current  rates  offered  to the  Company  for  debt of the  same  remaining
maturity. At June 30, 1999, the fair value of the notes payable approximated the
amount recorded in the financial statements.





<PAGE>




                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

 NOTE 7. STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

 Common stock

     The Company as of June 30, 1999 and December 31, 1998 had 50,000,000 shares
of authorized  Class A common stock, no par value,  with 9,691,804 and 9,292,699
shares issued and outstanding respectively.

 Preferred stock

     The Company as of June 30, 1999 and December 31, 1998 had 500,000 shares of
authorized Class A preferred stock, no par value, with 187,190 shares issued and
outstanding  at each date. The Company has the right at any time, to call any or
all  preferred  Class A shares  at a price  of $2.75  per  share.  Each  Class A
preferred  share is  convertible  by the  record  owner  into  one  share of the
Company's  Class A common stock at any time prior to  redemption  upon notice to
the Company.

 Stock options


     At June 30,  1999,  the Company had stock  options  outstanding  from stock
option awards and from an incentive stock option plan, which are described below

Non-employee stock options

     The Company accounts for non-employee stock options under SFAS 123, whereby
options costs are recorded based at the fair value of the consideration received
or the fair value of the equity  instruments  issued  whichever is more reliably
measurable.

     In July, 1998, the Company granted stock options,  exercisable immediately,
to a consulting company as compensation for services,  to purchase common shares
of Banyan Corporation as follows:

Amount           Price/share                Expiration date
------           -----------                ---------------
37,500 shares          $ 0.40               August 1, 2001
100,000 shares         $ 0.80               August 1, 2001
100,000 shares         $ 1.20               August 1, 2001

     The stock options were issued  pursuant to a consulting  agreement  with no
stated fee amount. The Company incurred and has accrued no material compensation
expense under these options.


Employee stock options

The Company applies APB Opinion 25 and related interpretations in accounting for
employee stock options.  Accordingly,  no compensation  cost has been recognized
for its employee stock options,  nor was any  compensation  cost charged against
income under its employee stock options in 1997 or 1998. Had  compensation  cost
for the Company's  employee stock option awards and incentive  stock option plan
been determined  based on the fair value at the grant dates for awards under the
stock option grants and incentive  stock option plan  consistent with the method
of FASB  Statement  123, the  Company's  net income and earnings per share would
have been reduced to pro forma amounts indicated below:
                                   For the Six
                                                             Months ending
                                             1998            June 30,  1998
                                           ---------           -------

 Net income (loss)         As reported     $(494,910)         $(243,069)

                           Pro forma       $(497,023)         $(243,069)

 Basic and fully diluted   As reported     $   (0.06)             (0.03)
   Earnings per share
                           Pro forma       $   (0.06)             (0.03)




<PAGE>


                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

NOTE 7. STOCKHOLDERS'EQUITY (Continued)

     In  August,   1998,  the  Company   granted  stock   options,   exercisable
immediately,  to certain  officers of Anything  Internet  Corporation  and to to
purchase common shares of Banyan Corporation as follows:

  Amount           Price/share                Expiration date
  ------           -----------                ---------------

  100,000 shares         $ 0.50               August 31, 2000(1)
  100,000 shares         $ 1.00               August 31, 2000(1)
  100,000 shares         $ 2.00               August 31, 2001(1)

These  options  were  issued  as  part of the  purchase  price  paid  by  Banyan
Corporation to acquire a 35.7% interest in Anything Internet Corporation


Incentive stock option plan

     As part of an overall  executive  compensation  program,  the  Company  has
adopted a tax qualified  incentive  stock option plan.  The plan which is set to
expire  September 18, 2005 unless  extended by the  directors,  allows  eligible
employees to receive options to acquire Class A common stock of the Company at a
price  equivalent  to 95% of the fair market  value of the stock on the date the
option is granted.  Each option granted will become  exercisable over a ten year
period  unless the  optionee  owns 10% or more of the stock of the  Company,  in
which case the option is  exercisable  over a five year  period.  The ability to
exercise  the options  vests at a rate of 20% per year.  As of October 10, 1996,
105,345  shares of Class A common  stock of the Company  have been  reserved for
sale through the plan.  Options to acquire 11,154 shares were outstanding  (with
6,692 being  exercisable)  on June 30, 1999,  at an exercise  price of $0.05 per
share.

     A summary of the status of the Company's stock options as of June 30, 1999,
and changes during the year ending on that date is presented below:

                                                      June 30, 1999
                                                      --------------
                                  Weighted Ave
                                               Shares      Exercise Price
                                               -------     --------------
Options

Outstanding at
   beginning of period                          11,154         $ 0.05
Granted                                        537,500           1.05
Exercised                                            -              -
Forfeited                                            -              -
                                               ----------    -------------
Outstanding at
   end of period                               548,654       $ 1.05
Options exercisable at period end              544,192
Weighted average fair value of options
   granted during the
    period                                    $ 0.0038


<PAGE>



                               BANYAN CORPORATION
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued

NOTE 7. STOCKHOLDERS'EQUITY (Continued)

               The following table  summarizes  information  about stock options
outstanding at June 30, 1999.

                  Options Outstanding                      Options Exercisable
          ---------------------------------------    --------------------------
          Number       Weighted Ave.                 Number
Range of  Outstanding  Remaining     Weighted Ave.   Exercisable   Weighted Ave
Exercise  at 6/30/99   Contractual   Exercise Price  at 6/30/99    Exercise
Price                       life                                   Price
--------  -----------  ------------  --------------  -----------  -------------
$0.05 -   548,654      19.54 months  $1.05            544,192      $ 1.04
$2.00



  Stock rights offering

     On November 15, 1996, the Board of Directors  approved a rights offering to
stockholders  of record on December 6, 1996. Each right allowed a shareholder to
acquire  two  shares of common  stock for  $0.125  per  share.  The terms of the
offering  provided  that the number of shares  issuable upon exercise as well as
the exercise  price would not be adjusted for any post offering  stock splits or
any other change in the overall  capitalization of the Company.  The rights were
offered for $0.01 per right. Of the 2,449,609 rights that were issued, 2,005,401
were  exercised  and exchanged for 4,010,802 new shares of Class A common stock,
including 1,378,000 shares in 1997 and 2,632,802 shares in 1998.

  NOTE 8. CONTINGENCIES

     An officer of the Company is currently  under  indictment in U.S.  District
Court,  Southern District of New York for certain alleged securities  violations
occurring  in 1996.  No  allegations  have been made  against the  Company.  The
eventual  effect  of  these  proceedings,  if  any,  on the  Company's  business
undertakings is unknown at the present time.



<PAGE>







PART  III
- --------

Item  1.  INDEX  TO  EXHIBITS

     The following exhibits are filed as a part of this disclosure statement:


Exhibit
Number      Description
- -------     -----------

3.1**    Articles  of  Incorporation,  filed  on  June  13,  1978
3.2*     Certificate  of  Incorporation
3.3*     Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation,  filed  on  August  25,  1981
3.4*     Amended  Articles  of  Amendment,  filed  on  February  29,  1988
3.5*     Amended  Articles  of  Amendment,  filed  December  29,  1995
3.6*     By-laws
4.1***   Incentive Stock Option Plan
10.1*    Share  Exchange  Agreement  dated  February  25,  1988.
10.2*    Share  Exchange  Agreement  dated  October  27,  1995.
10.3*    Lease  agreement  for  4740 Forge Rd., Bldg. 112, Colorado Springs, CO
         80907
10.4*    Equity  Exchange  Agreement  between  Banyan Corporation and Anything,
         Inc.  Dated  August  19,  1998
16.1**   Letter  on  Change  in  Certifying  Accountants
16.2***  Letter From Prior Accountant
21.1**   List  of  subsidiaries.
23.1**   July  21,  1999  consent  letter  of  Ronald  R.  Chadwick,  P.C.
23.2**   J. Paul Kenote, CPA, P.C. opinion letter on October 8, 1998
         audit report
27.1* Financial Data Schedule for fiscal year ending June 30, 1998 27.2* Interim
Financial Data Schedule for three-months ending March 31, 1999


                                       67

<PAGE>

*  Incorporated  by  reference  to  registration  statement  on  Form 10-SB (No.
000-26065)  filed  May  14,  1999.

** Incorporated  by  reference  to  registration  statement  on  Form 10-SB (No.
000-26065)  filed  August 16,  1999.

*** Incorporated by reference to registration statement on Form 10-SB (No.
000-26065)  filed  October 27,  1999.


                                   SIGNATURES

     In accordance  with Section 13 or 15(d) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of
1934,  the  Registrant  caused  this  report to be  signed on its  behalf by the
undersigned, there unto duly authorized.

                                        BANYAN  CORPORATION
                                        (Registrant)



Date:    October 29, 2000                    By:  /s/ Larry Stanley
                                            ----------------------------
                                             Larry Stanley
                                            President,  Chairman  and
                                            Chief  Executive  Officer

     In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
this  Disclosure  Statement  has been  signed by the  following  persons  in the
capacities and on the dates stated.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Signature                          Title                Date

<S>                       <C>                      <C>

/s/ Lawarance Stanley       President, Chairman and
- ----------------------    Chief Executive Officer  October 29, 2000
Lawarance Stanley

/s/ Lloyd K. Parrish Jr.
- ----------------------    Director                  October 29, 2000
Lloyd K. Parrish Jr.


/s/ Jeffrey M. Rhodes
- ----------------------    Director                  October 29, 2000
Jeffrey M. Rhodes

</TABLE>

                                       68
<PAGE>


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