ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LP
8-K, 1999-10-07
INVESTMENT ADVICE
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 8-K

                                 CURRENT REPORT
                        Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
                     of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934


      Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): October 1, 1999


                        ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.
      ------------------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)


            Delaware                       1-9818               13-3434400
- --------------------------------   ----------------------    -----------------
  (State or Other Jurisdiction    (Commission File Number)    (IRS Employer
of Incorporation or Organization)                            Identification No.)



       1345 Avenue of the Americas
           New York, New York                                  10105
- ----------------------------------------               ------------------------
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)                     (Zip Code)



                                 (212) 969-1000
      ------------------------------------------------------------------
              (Registrant's telephone number, including area code)



                                      None
      ------------------------------------------------------------------
         (Former Name or Former Address, if Changed Since Last Report)


===============================================================================


<PAGE>



     ITEM 5.  Other Events.

     As previously announced, at a special meeting of unitholders held on
September 22, 1999, the unitholders of Alliance Capital Management L.P.
("Alliance Holding") approved both the transfer of Alliance Holding's business
to Alliance Capital Management L.P. II ("Alliance Capital"), a newly-formed
private limited partnership, in exchange for all units of Alliance Capital and
the amendment and restatement of Alliance Holding's partnership agreement. In
connection with the reorganization, Alliance Holding is offering to its
unitholders the opportunity to exchange Alliance Holding units for Alliance
Capital units on a one-for-one basis.

     On September 29, 1999, R.S.M. Inc. and Mel Mohr, trustee for the Irene
Mohr Revocable Trust (the "Plaintiffs"), on behalf of themselves and other
unitholders of Alliance Holding, filed a purported class action complaint in
the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware in and for New Castle County
(the "Court") against Alliance Holding, Alliance Capital, Alliance Capital
Management Corporation (the "General Partner"), Dave H. Williams, Bruce W.
Calvert, Robert H. Joseph, Jr. and John D. Carifa (together with Alliance
Holding, Alliance Capital and the General Partner, the "Defendants").

     The complaint seeks, among other things, to: (1) declare the action to be
a proper class action and to designate Plaintiffs as representatives of the
class and their counsel as class counsel; (2) declare that the amended and
restated agreement of limited partnership of Alliance Holding was not adopted
by the vote of partners and unitholders required under the existing Alliance
Holding partnership agreement; (3) enjoin the consummation of the
reorganization and the exchange offer; (4) direct Defendants to pay to
Plaintiffs and the class all damages allegedly caused to them and to account
for all profits and any special benefits obtained by Defendants as a result of
their allegedly unlawful conduct; and (5) award to Plaintiffs their costs and
disbursements of the action, including reasonable fees and expenses of
Plaintiffs' attorneys and experts.

     The complaint alleges, among other things, that: (1) the amended and
restated Alliance Holding partnership agreement adversely affects the existing
rights and benefits of Alliance Holding unitholders and was not approved by the
requisite number of unitholders; (2) Defendants' major and undisclosed purpose
in proposing the reorganization is to take Alliance Holding private at a
substantial discount; (3) Defendants violated their common law duties of
loyalty, care and candor to Alliance Holding unitholders by recommending the
reorganization, which the complaint alleges diminishes the public float for
Alliance Holding units to the detriment of Alliance Holding unitholders and
therefore is neither fair nor in the best interests of unitholders; and (4)
Defendants breached their duties of good faith, fair dealing and candor to
Plaintiffs and the class by intentionally misleading them through false and
misleading disclosures.


<PAGE>



     On October 4, 1999, Plaintiffs filed with the Court a motion for
preliminary injunction seeking to enjoin Defendants from implementing the
amended and restated Alliance Holding partnership agreement and the
reorganization of Alliance Holding's business. No response to the complaint or
motion has yet been made.

     The Defendants intend to vigorously defend this action. The above
description of the complaint and the motion for preliminary injunction is
qualified in its entirety by reference, respectively, to the complete
complaint, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1 and is
incorporated herein by reference, and the complete motion for preliminary
injunction, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.2 and is
incorporated herein by reference.

     ITEM 7(c).  Exhibits.

     99.1      Complaint filed on September 29, 1999 in the Court of Chancery
               of the State of Delaware in and for New Castle County in an
               action titled R.S.M., Inc. et ux v. Alliance Capital Management
               L.P., et al., C. A. No. 17449 NC.

     99.2      Motion for Preliminary Injunction filed on October 4, 1999 in
               the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware in and for New
               Castle County in an action titled R.S.M., Inc. et ux v. Alliance
               Capital Management L.P., et al., C. A. No. 17449 NC.


                                       2

<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURE

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

                                           ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.

                                           ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT
                                           CORPORATION, its General Partner


Dated: October 7, 1999                    By: /s/ David R. Brewer, Jr.
                                               ---------------------------------
                                               Name:  David R. Brewer, Jr.
                                               Title: Senior Vice President and
                                                      General Manager


                                                                    EXHIBIT 99.1


               IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
                         IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY


- ---------------------------------------------------x
R.S.M. INC. and MEL MOHR, TRUSTEE                  :
for the IRENE MOHR REVOCABLE TRUST                 :
on behalf of themselves and all others             :
similarly situated,                                :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                    Plaintiffs,    : Civil Action No. 17449 NC
                                                   :
                  - against -                      :

ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.,                  :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                        :
CORPORATION, ALLIANCE CAPITAL                      :
MANAGEMENT L.P. II, DAVE H. WILLIAMS,              :
BRUCE W. CALVERT, ROBERT H. JOSEPH, JR.            :
and JOHN D. CARIFA,                                :
                                                   :
                                    Defendants.    :
- ---------------------------------------------------x

                            CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT

         Plaintiffs, by their attorneys, allege the following upon information
and belief, except for those allegations which pertain to plaintiffs, which
allegations are based upon personal knowledge.

                            OVERVIEW OF THE ACTION

           1. Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to Rule 23 of the Rules of
the Court of Chancery on their own behalf and as a class action on behalf of
all persons, other than defendants and those in privity with them, who own
limited partnership units of Alliance Capital Management L.P. ("Alliance
Holdings").

<PAGE>


           2. Alliance Holdings is an international investment advisor,
providing investment management services to institutions, primarily pension
funds, insurance companies and banks, and to individuals through a line of
mutual funds.

           3. The United States tax law in effect when Alliance Holdings
conducted its initial public offering in 1987 taxed publicly held limited
partnerships as corporations commencing January 1, 1998. Since 1994, Alliance
Holdings has explored ways to take itself private ostensibly to avoid being
subject to such tax.

           4. On April 8, 1999, Alliance Holdings stated it had decided to
spin-off part of the partnership into a privately-held limited partnership, to
be primarily or exclusively owned by insiders, purportedly to allow insiders
to avoid a federal 3.5% gross receipts tax, which took effect on January 1,
1998.

           5. On August 4, 1999, Alliance Holdings and the newly formed
private limited partnership, Alliance Capital Management L.P. II ("Alliance
Capital II") filed a preliminary registration statement on Form S-4
representing a combined proxy and prospectus with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC"). On August 5, 1999, Alliance Capital Management
Corporation, the General Partner of Alliance Holdings, filed on Schedule 14A
with the SEC a final proxy and combined Alliance Capital II prospectus almost
identical to the S-4 (collectively the "Disclosure Document").

           6. The Disclosure Document and exhibits, totaling over 450 pages,
failed to disclose material facts, contained false and misleading statements,
and buried significant


                                       2

<PAGE>

facts regarding the proposed reorganization of Alliance Holdings, a proposed
amended and restated partnership agreement, and an exchange transaction
(collectively the "Challenged Transaction").

           7. Under the terms of the Challenged Transaction, not only would
the remaining publicly held units still be subject to the 3.5% tax, but there
would be a reduction of at least 66% of the issued and outstanding publicly
traded units. The insiders would not be subject to the 3.5% tax.

           8. This diminished public float will likely weaken the market for
units. Further, pursuant to the Challenged Transaction, the Insiders will have
an enhanced call option that they could exercise more readily upon
consummation of the Challenged Transaction whereby they could redeem all the
remaining publicly traded issued and outstanding units of Alliance Holdings at
"recent trading prices" (the "Call Option"). The Call Option, if exercised,
would not only deprive the public unitholders of a deserved buy-out premium on
their units, but would be at a substantial discount, because of the reduction
in float and other consequences of the announced transaction perceived by the
market to be adverse. In fact, since the Disclosure Document was filed on or
about August 4, 1999, Alliance Holdings' unit price has substantially declined
from its 52-week high on July 2, 1999 of $33.44 to around $27.00 per unit as
of late September, 1999.

           9. Nevertheless, through a series of material omissions, partial
truths, and outright false and misleading statements contained in the
Disclosure Document, defendants

                                      3

<PAGE>


have assured plaintiffs and the Class that the Plan is "fair" and "in the best
interests" of the public unitholders and that "related" amendments contained
in the amended and restated partnership agreement "will not adversely affect
any existing rights or benefits of unitholders who elect to continue to hold
Alliance Holding units." Defendants recommend that unitholders vote for both
the reorganization and the amended and restated partnership agreement
necessary to allow the defendants to implement the reorganization.

          10. Defendants have breached their common law duties of loyalty,
care, and candor in putting forth a plan infected by self-dealing and
conflicts of interests, which only benefits the Insiders and harms the
non-Insiders. They have also breached their duties of good faith and fair
dealing towards plaintiffs and the Class by intentionally misleading them
through the false and misleading disclosures contained in the Disclosure
Document.

          11. Defendants unilaterally dictated the terms of the Challenged
Transaction, which is being proposed solely for their benefit to obtain the
enhanced Call Option and avoid for themselves the 3.5% federal gross receipts
tax. This is an irremediable conflict of interest by which defendants have
acted to benefit themselves and their affiliates to the detriment of
plaintiffs and the Class. At no time were the interests of plaintiffs and the
Class represented by a truly independent person who could protect and advance
their interests.

          12. The Challenged Transaction was initiated and structured by
defendants to enable them to take Alliance Holdings private at a substantial
discount. Through the Challenged Transaction, defendants are attempting to
usurp the continued growth and


                                       4


<PAGE>

profitability of Alliance Holding under the guise of tax avoidance for the
benefit of the non-public unitholders of Alliance Holdings, who are primarily
or exclusively comprised of insiders.

          13. On September 22, 1999, Alliance Holdings announced that it
obtained unitholder approval for the Challenged Transaction. However, as
discussed subsequently, Alliance Holdings both misrepresented the vote
necessary to adopt the proposed amended and restated agreement of limited
partnership and failed to obtain the required vote of partners and
unitholders. As a consequence, the amended and restated partnership agreement
was not properly approved and the Challenged Transaction may not be lawfully
implemented.

          14. For these reasons, plaintiffs seek on behalf of themselves, and
other similarly situated Alliance Holdings' investors, injunctive and other
equitable relief enjoining consummation of the Challenged Transaction until
greater disclosure is made and a proper vote of partners and unitholders
obtained or, alternatively, an award of damages as a result of defendants'
wrongful actions.


                                  THE PARTIES

          15. Plaintiff R.S.M. Inc. ("R.S.M.") is and has been the owner of
6,000 limited partnership units of Alliance Holdings since prior to the August
2, 1999 record date of the Challenged Transaction. As a result of the
Challenged Transaction, R.S.M. will still own units of Alliance Holdings.


                                      5
<PAGE>


          16. Plaintiff Mel Mohr, trustee for the Irene Mohr Revocable Trust
("Mohr"), is and has been the owner of 18,000 limited partnership units of
Alliance Holdings since prior to the August 2, 1999 record date for the
Challenged Transaction. As a result of the Challenged Transaction, Mohr will
own still own units of Alliance Holdings.

          17. Alliance Holdings is a limited partnership organized and
existing under the laws of the State of Delaware with principal partnership
offices at 1345 Avenue of the Americas, 41st Floor, New York, New York 10105.
Alliance Holdings was formed in 1987 to succeed the business of ACMC, Inc.
("ACMC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of
the United States ("Equitable Life"). Equitable Life is a New York stock life
insurance company. ACMC provided investment management services since 1971.
Alliance Holdings is one of the nation's largest publicly traded asset
managers, as measured by assets under management, with greater than $300
billion in client assets under management as of June 30, 1999. Alliance
Holdings manages retirement assets for many of the largest public and private
employee benefit and retirement plans, foundations, endowments, banks and
insurance companies. Alliance Holdings is also one of the nation's largest
mutual fund sponsors.

          18. Defendant Alliance Capital Management Corporation (the "General
Partner" or "Alliance Management") is a corporation organized and existing
under the laws of the State of Delaware. It serves as the sole General Partner
of Alliance Holdings. The directors and officers of the General Partner
perform all Alliance Holdings management functions and


                                      6
<PAGE>


carry out the activities of Alliance Holdings. The General Partner owns a 1%
general partnership interest in Alliance Holdings. Holders of Alliance
Holdings units have no vote in the selection of directors by the General
Partner. The General Partner is wholly owned and controlled by Equitable Life,
a 100% beneficially owned subsidiary of The Equitable Companies Incorporated
("Equitable"), a publicly traded company listed on the New York Stock
Exchange. Directors of the General Partner are designated by the stockholders
of the General Partner and serve until their successors are named.
Approximately 57% of the outstanding Alliance Holdings Units are held by
Equitable Life or its affiliates.

          19. Defendant Alliance Capital Management L.P. II ("Alliance Capital
II") is a private limited partnership, newly formed, to carry on Alliance
Holding's business after implementation of the Challenged Transaction. Equity
interests in Alliance Capital II are represented by partnership interests
denominated as units that do not and will not trade publicly. However, only
Alliance Capital II units held by former non-Insider Alliance Holding public
unit holders will be subject to significant restrictions on transfer.

          20. Defendant Dave H. Williams ("Williams") is chairman of the board
of the General Partner, a position he has held since 1977. His wife, Roba
Williams, is also a member of the eighteen member board of Alliance Capital.
Williams is also a director of Equitable.


                                      7
<PAGE>


          21. Defendant Bruce W. Calvert ("Calvert") is Vice Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer and a director of the General Partner and has been
with Alliance Capital since 1973.

          22. Defendant Robert H. Joseph ("Joseph") is Chief Financial Officer
of the General Partner at all relevant times.

          23. Defendant John D. Carlfa ("Carlfa") is Chief Operating Officer
and director of the General Partner at all relevant times.

          24. The defendants named in paragraphs 18-21 above are hereinafter
referred to as the "Individual Defendants."

          25. The defendants named in paragraphs 15-21 are sometimes referred
to as the "Insiders."

          26. The Individual Defendants have a fiduciary relationship with
plaintiffs and the other limited partners of Alliance Holdings and owe them
the highest obligations of good faith and fair dealing.


                           CLASS ACTION ALLEGATIONS

          27. Plaintiffs bring this action on their own behalf and as a class
action pursuant to Rule 23 of the Rules of the Court of Chancery on behalf of
all limited partners of Alliance Holdings (except the defendants herein and
any person, firm, trust, corporation or other entity related to or affiliated
with any of the defendants) and their successors in interest, who


                                      8
<PAGE>


are or will be threatened with injury arising from defendants' actions as more
fully described herein (the "Class").

          28. This action is properly maintainable as a class action because:

              (a) The class is so numerous that joinder of all class members is
         impracticable. As of June 30, 1999, there were approximately 58.7
         million limited partnership units of Alliance Holdings outstanding,
         excluding 112.4 million units held by Equitable Life and its
         affiliates, and executives and or others of the General Partner, who
         individually own greater than 2% of the outstanding units of Alliance
         Holdings.

              (b) There are questions of law and fact which are common to the
         class including, inter alia, the following:

                     (i) whether defendants have engaged in conduct constituting
                unfair dealing to the detriment of plaintiffs and the Class;

                    (ii) whether the Challenged Transaction is grossly unfair
                to plaintiffs and the Class;

                   (iii) whether plaintiffs and the other members of the
                Class are being or will be damaged by the transactions
                complained of herein;

                    (iv) whether defendants have breached the Alliance
                Holdings partnership agreement, and/or fiduciary and other
                common law duties owed by them to plaintiffs and other
                members of the Class;


                                      9
<PAGE>


                     (v) whether the Alliance Holdings proposed amended and
                restated partnership agreement was adopted in violation of
                the voting rights of unitholders; and

                    (vi) whether defendants caused the issuance of
                materially misleading disclosure documents, which conceal
                one of the primary purposes of the Challenged Transaction,
                and bury relevant facts regarding the Challenged
                Transaction.

              (c) Plaintiffs are committed to prosecuting this action and have
         retained competent counsel experienced in litigation of this nature.
         Plaintiffs' claims are typical of the claims of the other members of
         the Class, and plaintiff has the same interests as the other members
         of the Class. Accordingly, plaintiffs will fairly and adequately
         represent the Class.

              (d) The prosecution of separate actions by individual members of
         the  Class would create a risk of inconsistent or varying adjudications
         with respect to individual members of the Class, and establish
         incompatible standards of conduct for the party opposing the Class.

              (e) Defendants have acted and are about to act on grounds
         generally applicable to the Class, thereby making appropriate
         preliminary injunctive relief with respect to the Class as a whole.


                            SUBSTANTIVE ALLEGATIONS

Background

          29. On April 21, 1988, substantially all of the operating assets of
ACMC were conveyed to Alliance Holdings in exchange for a 1% general
partnership interest in Alliance


                                      10
<PAGE>


Holdings and approximately 55% of the outstanding units. In December 1991,
ACMC transferred its 1% general partnership interest in Alliance Holdings to
the General Partner.

          30. The Alliance Holdings partnership agreement, as in effect prior
to the Challenged Transaction (the "Partnership Agreement"), imposes liability
on the General Partner for acts taken in bad faith, reckless disregard for the
interests of Alliance Holdings, or fraud.

          31. The Partnership Agreement permits transactions between Alliance
Holdings and the General Partner or the affiliates only if the transactions
are on terms determined by the General Partner to be comparable to (or more
favorable to Alliance Holdings than) those that would prevail with any
unaffiliated party.

          32. Equitable Life has, for a considerable period of time,
beneficially owned a controlling, but not consistent interest in Alliance
Holdings. For example, as of March 1, 1995, Equitable Life beneficially owned
45.4 million shares (pre 2:1 split) or 62.23% of the units of Alliance
Holdings. This percentage significantly declined to 57.6% as of March 1, 1997.
As of March 1, 1999, Equitable beneficially owned approximately 96.6 million
shares (post 2:1 split) or 56.7%.

          33. Equitable Life and its affiliates provide services to Allied
Holdings. Item 13 to the December 31, 1998 Form 10-K filed with the SEC on
March 31, 1999 states as follows in this regard:

          The Partnership Agreement permits Equitable and its affiliates to
          provide services to [Alliance Holdings] on terms


                                      11
<PAGE>

          comparable to (or more favorable to [Alliance Holdings than] those
          that would prevail in a transaction with an unaffiliated third
          party. [Alliance Holdings] believes that its arrangements with
          Equitable and its affiliates are at least as favorable to Alliance
          Holdings as could be obtained from an unaffiliated third party,
          based on its knowledge of and inquiry with respect to comparable
          arrangements with or between unaffiliated third parties.

         34. Alliance Holdings acts as the investment manager for Equitable
and its affiliates pursuant to investment advisory agreements. Alliance
Holdings received at least the following fees under such agreements for the
past five years (in thousands of dollars):

         1998            1997           1996           1995           1994
        -------        -------         -------        -------        -------

        $58,051        $52,930         $44,901        $43,978        $41,805

          35. Alliance Holdings also receives "shareholder servicing and
administrative fees" from Equitable and its affiliates, as well makes payments
to Equitable and its affiliates for "distribution" and "general and
administrative" expenses incurred on behalf of Alliance Holdings. Net fees
received from or (paid to) Equitable and its affiliates, including the amounts
in the preceding paragraphs, were as follows for the past five years:

          1998            1997           1996           1995           1994
        --------        -------         -------        -------        -------

       $(20,938)        $(1,268)        $16,051        $22,162        $22,529

Accordingly, over the past five years, fees received from Equitable and its
affiliates have declined steadily to the point where Alliance Holdings
actually has been a net payer to Equitable and its affiliates over the past
two years.


                                      12
<PAGE>


          36. At the time of its formation, publicly traded limited
partnerships such as Alliance Holdings were not subject to federal income tax
at the partnership level. Under provisions of the Revenue Act of 1987, enacted
into law in December 1987, however, Alliance Holdings was to be taxed as a
corporation commencing on January 1, 1998.

          37. On August 5, 1997, the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 was enacted,
which included the option for certain publicly-traded partnerships, including
Alliance Holdings, to maintain partnership tax status permanently after 1997
if they elected to pay a tax, beginning January 1, 1998, of 3.5% on gross
business income.

          38. The Partnership Agreement provides that if fewer than 10% of the
issued and outstanding Alliance Holdings units are held by persons other than
the General Partner, its affiliates (including Equitable and its affiliates),
and officers and employees of the general partner, Alliance Holdings or
persons controlled by Alliance Holdings, the general partner or its designee
(collectively the "Insiders") will have the right to purchase all of the
outstanding Alliance Holdings units for a purchase price based on the recent
trading price of the units.

          39. As of June 30, 1999, at least 58.7 million units or
approximately 36% of the outstanding units were not owned by the Insiders and
their employees.


                                      13
<PAGE>


Alliance Holdings Operating Performance

          40. Alliance Holdings boasts of its performance over the past
several years, and with good reason. With the exception of the year of 1997,
Alliance Holdings has demonstrated sequential growth in revenues, earnings and
unit price, as indicated below. (In millions, except per unit amounts)

Year               1998          1997        1996          1995         1994
- ----            ---------      -------     -------       -------       -------

Revenues:       $1,324.06      $975.34     $788.52       $639.26       $600.95

Earnings
per Unit:       $    1.66      $  0.74       $1.13       $  0.94       $  0.85

          41. Alliance Holdings' profitability is further demonstrated by
selected financial ratios as of July 29, 1999:

              Return on Equity:                  79.21%
              Price-to-earnings vs. industry:    50.57%
              Debt-to-Equity versus industry:    N/A (Alliance Holdings has no
                                                 debt)
              Return-on-equity vs. industry:     324.70%

          42. Alliance Holdings enjoyed an above average industry unit price
until perceived negative impacts of the Challenged Transaction were absorbed
by the market. Alliance Holdings unit price reached a 52-week high to $33.44
per unit on July 2, 1999, and has since the beginning of August, after the
Disclosure Document was filed with the SEC, traded below $30 per unit, and
closed on August 31, 1999 at $26.125 per unit.


                                      14
<PAGE>


The Proposed Reorganization

          43. On April 8, 1999, Alliance Holdings announced a proposed
reorganization of Alliance Holdings into separate public and private
partnerships. According to the announcement, any unitholders could opt to
enter the private partnership. The units of the private partnership would be
subject to substantial restrictions on transfer and would not trade publicly,
but would be exempt from the 3.5% gross receipts tax. The proposed
reorganization was subject to unitholder and regulatory approvals. According
to defendants, the reorganization was designed to address the loss of Alliance
Holdings' tax-exempt status. The April 8, 1999 press release did not mention
that only18.7 million of the 58.7 million non-Insider publicly traded units
could be exchanged for units in the private partnership and that the
reorganization was contingent on approval of a amended and restated
partnership agreement containing new provisions that would adversely affect
the Class. Significantly, the press release also did not mention that the
Challenged Transaction could be vetoed by the General Partner after the vote.

          44. Only twenty days later, on April 28, 1999, Alliance Holdings
announced record quarterly profits and that assets under management had
surpassed the $300 billion mark.

          45. Months later, in the Disclosure Document, defendants informed
unitholders for the first time of self-serving selected details of the
reorganization. However, the more


                                      15
<PAGE>


salient and egregious terms of the Challenged Transaction were buried deep
within the greater than 450 page Disclosure Document.

          46. Under the Challenged Transaction, there are no appraisal rights
or similar rights. Approval of the Challenged Transaction binds all of the
remaining Alliance Holdings unitholders to the terms of the reorganization and
the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement. Amended Partnership
Agreement.

          47. The Disclosure Document states that public Alliance Holdings
unit holders can exchange on a one-to-one basis, their units of Alliance
Holdings for those of Alliance Capital II. The exchange offer will be made, if
not vetoed by the Insiders, pursuant to a separate, yet to be issued,
prospectus.

          48. The Disclosure Document falsely states on the cover page, first
paragraph, that "The reorganization will not adversely affect any existing
rights or benefits of unitholders who elect to continue to hold Alliance
Holdings." On the second page of the Disclosure Document this statement is
repeated. This statement is false and misleading for at least the following
reasons:

              (a) amendments to the Partnership Agreement provide the Insiders
         with the enhanced Call Option described further below, which
         adversely affects plaintiffs and the Class;

              (b) the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement
         provides that Alliance Holdings unitholder meetings cannot be called
         by unitholders unless at least 50%


                                      16
<PAGE>

         of the non-Insider Alliance Holdings unitholders request a meeting,
         whereas at present only 25% is required to call a meeting;

              (c) the reorganization will result in a diminution of liquidity
         and value to plaintiffs' units;

              (d) the reorganization will result in heightened conflicts of
         interest by the general partner, as a result of the new structure;
         and

              (e) under Section 17.3 of the Partnership Agreement, the
         challenged Transaction would not need "Majority Outside Approval",
         which is the vote the defendants sought, unless the Challenged
         Transaction adversely altered the rights of unitholders.

          49. Nonetheless, the cover page of the Disclosure Document goes on
to falsely state that:

              We believe that the reorganization is in the best interests
              of Alliance Holdings and its investors. [Williams] and the
              other members of the Board of Directors have voted
              unanimously to approve the reorganization, and we urge you
              to vote in favor of the reorganization, whether or not you
              are interested in participating in the exchange offer.

          50. The Disclosure Document states that following the
reorganization, "[a]ssuming none of the public accepts the exchange offer,
Equitable (and its affiliates) will hold approximately 54% limited partnership
interests in, and Alliance Holdings will hold an approximately 45.0% limited
partnership interest in Alliance Capital [II]."

          51. Also following the Challenged Transaction, there is anticipated
a minimum float of 40 million units of Alliance Holdings, compared to the
171.1 million units presently


                                      17
<PAGE>


outstanding. The Disclosure Document misleadingly states, however, that the
float will only be reduced by approximately 31.9%, as the Insiders purportedly
rarely trade their units.

          52. The Disclosure Document unequivocally recommends the
reorganization as "fair to" and in the "best interests of," the public unit
holders and states on the third page, despite the fact that the opposite is
true:

              [The General Partner] believes that the reorganization is
              fair to, and in the best interests of, Alliance Holdings
              unitholders. Therefore, whether or not you are interested in
              participating in the exchange offer when it is made, the
              general partner recommends that you vote "FOR" (1) the
              transfer of Alliance Holdings' business to Alliance Capital
              [II] and (2) the adoption of the provisions that facilitate
              and implement the reorganization and that maintain the
              existing rights and benefits of Alliance Holdings
              unitholders following the reorganization and the
              modification or elimination of provisions that are
              inoperative or are no longer relevant or require technical
              revisions.

          53. The Disclosure Document enumerates only six risk factors
relating to both the reorganization and the exchange offer. None of these risk
factors include the most adverse effects on plaintiffs and the Class, e.g.,
the resulting enhanced Call Option afforded defendants, which is buried on
page 66 of the Disclosure Document.

          54. In regard to the reorganization, the enumerated risk factors
were that: (1) present clients of Alliance Capital or Alliance Holdings may
"review their relationships with us and thereby increase the likelihood of
client account losses[; (2)] The IRS may take the position that Alliance
Capital's entire gross business income is subject to the 3.5% tax...


                                      18
<PAGE>


[and; (3)] Congress may pass tax legislation in the future that would result
in adverse tax consequences for partnerships such as ours."

          55. The Disclosure Document also stated that Goldman, Sachs & Co.
("Goldman Sachs") delivered both oral and written opinions to the board of
directors opining on the fairness of the challenged transaction and exchange
ratio (i.e., one-to-one) "from a financial point of view to those unitholders
who remain holders of Alliance Holdings Units...".

          56. However, it is Equitable and its affiliates that will receive
substantial benefits from the reorganization, such as the 3.5% tax benefit and
the Call Option described further below, as they "anticipate that they will
exchange substantially all of their units of Alliance Holdings...".

          57. Further, in addition to the tax benefit, which would amount to
at least $17 million annually (based on 1998 figures), the Insiders, including
Equitable and its affiliates, will be able to transfer blocks of Alliance
Capital II units in accordance with specific IRS regulations applicable to
holders of large numbers of units.

          58. Significantly, Equitable and its affiliates are permitted,
subsequent to the exchange, to exchange freely any 2% or greater block of
Alliance Capital II units for Alliance Holdings units without the permission
of the General partner. Whereas, if any non-Insider Alliance Capital II unit
holder wishes to exchange its units for Alliance Holdings units, either the
General Partner or Equitable may withhold "its consent in its sole discretion"
to such an exchange.


                                      19
<PAGE>


          59. Finally, Equitable's insurance subsidiary obtains a regulatory
benefit relating to valuation of the new investment in Alliance Capital.

The Specified Vote for Adoption of the Proposed Amended and Restated
Agreement of the Limited Partnership Violates the Voting Rights of Unitholders

          60. The proposed reorganization of Alliance Holdings violates the
Partnership Agreement. Accordingly, the defendants could not implement the
reorganization without first amending the Partnership Agreement. As part of
the Challenged Transaction, unitholders were asked to vote on the adoption of
a proposed amended and restated agreement of limited partnership. The
amendments to the Partnership Agreement that the proposed new agreement would
make were not voted on separately. Rather, the proposed amended and restated
agreement of limited partnership was voted on as a whole.

          61. The defendants represented to unitholders that the proposed
amended and restated agreement of limited partnership could be adopted by the
affirmative vote of a majority of partners and unitholders other than the
General Partner, its affiliates and certain other persons, or, in terms of the
Partnership Agreement, a "Majority Outside Approval." In reality, the
Partnership Agreement requires that the proposed amended and restated
agreement of limited partnership be adopted by the unanimous vote of all
partners and unitholders.

          62. Section 17.3(b) of the Partnership Agreement expressly provides
that the Partnership Agreement may not be amended to reduce the vote required
to take any action unless the amendment is approved by at least the number of
votes required by the voting


                                      20
<PAGE>


requirement sought to be reduced. The proposed amended and restated agreement
of limited partnership reduces from unanimity to a simple majority the vote
required to take certain actions. Accordingly, the proposed amended and
restated agreement of limited partnership could not be validly adopted without
the affirmative vote of all partners and unitholders. The defendants did not
receive a unanimous vote in favor of the proposed amended and restated
agreement of limited partnership. For that reason, it was not validly adopted,
and the proposed reorganization cannot proceed.

Amendments to the Partnership Agreement

          63. There are significant amendments to the Partnership Agreement
that adversely affect the public unitholders' rights.

          64. The Disclosure Document fails to properly identify the adverse
amendments to be made to Alliance Holdings' current partnership agreement and
explain why they are adverse. Although the Disclosure Document purports to
summarize many of the principal differences between the terms of the
Partnership Agreement and the proposed amended and restated partnership
agreement, it does not disclose all of the proposed changes nor does it
disclose which provisions are being amended, how they are being amended, or
why each amendment is necessary.

          65. Indeed, the only way a public unitholder can determine specific
changes is to read the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement
appended as Exhibit B to the Disclosure Document line for line against the
Partnership Agreement, which was not


                                      21
<PAGE>


provided to unitholders. This deliberate tactic of not disclosing the
amendments disguises the fact the amendments, which the defendants benignly
describe as amendments "to facilitate and implement the reorganization,"
adversely affect the rights of public unitholders. The adverse affects would
be more clearly apparent if the actual amendments and their purpose were
disclosed. One example is the enhanced Call Option discussed in paragraphs 69
through 84 below. By way of another example, the Insiders have caused the
proposed amended and restated partnership agreement to include a new provision
in Section 6.03 that authorizes the General Partner to "park" units in
entities controlled by the Partnership and declare that such units are not
held by the Partnership, thereby allowing the General Partner to control the
voting of such units. Under the existing Section 6.03, any such unites would
be deemed owned by the Partnership, would be deemed not to be outstanding and
could not be voted. This amendment, which neither facilitates nor implements
the reorganization, is not discussed in the Disclosure Document and can be
uncovered only through a careful and close reading of the proposed amended and
restated partnership agreement. In a similar fashion, a new Section 6.08
expanding the General Partner's insulation from liability is slipped into the
proposed amended partnership agreement without disclosure or discussion.

          66. Finally, the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement
doubles from 25% to 50% the percentage of the public unitholders of Alliance
Holdings necessary to call a meeting.


                                      22
<PAGE>


         67. Further, the partnership agreement amendments do not simply
"facilitate" the reorganization. The defendants concede that without them the
reorganization would violate the express terms of the Partnership Agreement
and could not be legally accomplished. For example, Section 6.10(c)(ii) of
Alliance Holdings' existing partnership agreement prohibits a transaction such
as the reorganization. However, by proposing to amend the definition of
"Affiliate" to exclude Alliance Capital (which but for such an amendment is an
Affiliate of the General Partner under the definition of Affiliate in the
current partnership agreement), the Insiders avoid the operation of Section
6.10(c)(ii). Similarly, absent amendments to the provisions governing the
transfer by the General Partner of its general partner interest in Alliance
Holdings, the Partnership Agreement precludes the proposed reorganization. The
defendants never disclose these important facts, or explain why the
protections against such transactions contained in the current Alliance
Holdings partnership agreement should be disregarded by public unitholders.

          68. In the face of express prohibitions against the kind of
self-dealing contemplated by the reorganization, the defendants have attempted
to circumvent those prohibitions by not disclosing them and instead compelling
the public unitholders to approve undisclosed amendments to "facilitate and
implement" the reorganization at the same time as they vote on the
reorganization.


                                      23
<PAGE>


The Buried Ambiguous Call Option

          69. Among the more onerous Partnership Agreement amendments are
those providing for an enhanced Call Option.

          70. Buried on pages 66-67 of the Proxy Statement, Alliance Holdings
compares the old and new provisions regarding the repurchase of partnership
units. The provisions are ambiguous at best. Notwithstanding the ambiguity,
the new structure of the Alliance partnerships at the very least easily
facilitates the dilution of the non-Insiders' holdings and the repurchase of
their Units at a depressed market price.

          71. The Partnership Agreement appears to provide that the General
Partner may redeem at "recent trading prices," the entire issued and
outstanding units of Alliance Holdings if fewer than 10% of the issued and
outstanding units of Alliance Holdings are held by persons other than the
General Partner, its affiliates and officers and employees of Alliance
Holdings, or persons controlled by any of the preceding persons.

          72. This provision, commonly known as a "street sweep" clause, is
the contractual equivalent of a short form merger under Section 253 of the
Delaware General Corporation Law. Thus, the General Partner and its
affiliates, in the event that they acquire through a public tender offer or
other transaction a 90% or greater interest in Alliance Holdings, can cash out
public unitholders.

          73. Significantly, the proposed amended and restated partnership
agreement provides that if the non-Insiders own less than 10% of Alliance
Capital II, the General


                                      24
<PAGE>


Partners or its Affiliates have the right to redeem at "recent trading
prices," all of the shares of Alliance Holdings.

          74. The only condition precedent is that the General Partner or its
affiliates purchase simultaneously (at no specified price) the outstanding
units of Alliance Capital II not held by the General Partner and its
affiliates, thus assuring a complete buyout of all non-Insider interests in
both partnerships.

          75. It is highly unlikely that the public unitholders of Alliance
Holdings will exchange any of their holdings for Alliance Capital II units.
Statements in the Disclosure Document actually discourage the non-Insiders
from exchanging their Unites for Alliance Capital II units. For example:

              If you participate in the exchange, you will own Alliance
              Capital [II] units that are subject to restrictions on
              transfer that will make your investment highly illiquid.
              There will be no market on which Alliance Capital [II} units
              will be traded. The General Partner and Equitable currently
              intend to approve transfers only pursuant to IRS safe
              harbors... [i.e. generally 2% or greater block holders].

          76. The issuance and repurchase of Alliance Holdings units are
currently highly regulated under applicable SEC and NYSE rules. Included in
these rules are restrictions on the issuance of securities that would dilute
the interests of current Alliance Holdings unitholders without full
disclosure, and in some instances, a vote of the unitholders.

          77. However, the units issued by Alliance Capital II generally will
not be subject to the rules referred to in the immediately preceding
paragraph.


                                      25
<PAGE>


          78. With unitholders stripped of the protections of the SEC and the
NYSE rules, the Insiders will be able to buy out the holders of Alliance
Holdings without the full disclosure associated with a vote and a buy-out
premium.

          79. Notwithstanding the great significance of the preceding to the
plaintiffs and the Class, the Disclosure Document does little to draw
attention to the enhanced Call Option, and in fact, misleadingly states that
on page 3 that all of the amendments to the Partnership Agreement made by the
proposed amended and restated partnership agreement are benign:

              Recommendation to Unitholders - Alliance Capital Management
              Corporation, our general partner, believes that the
              reorganization is fair to, and in the best interests of,
              Alliance Holding unitholders. Therefore, whether or not you
              are interested in participating in the exchange offer when
              it is made, the general partner recommends that you vote
              "FOR"... (2)the adoption of provisions that facilitate and
              implement the reorganization and that maintain the existing
              rights and benefits of Alliance Holdings unitholders
              following the reorganization and the modification or
              elimination of provisions that are inoperative or are no
              longer relevant or that require technical revisions.
              [Emphasis added.]

          80. However, one effect of the proposed amended and restated
partnership agreement is to provide the Insiders with an enhanced Call Option
that they did not have before. Thus, the proposed amended and restated
partnership agreement does anything but "maintain the existing rights and
benefits of Alliance Holdings unitholders...."

          81. Initially, it appears likely that the non-Insiders will
beneficially own through Alliance Holdings approximately 35%-40% of Alliance
capital II. However, provisions of


                                      26
<PAGE>


the Alliance Capital II Partnership Agreement permit the issuance of its units
to any third party, including affiliates of the General Partner, with the
single proviso that such issuance is done on a "good faith" basis. Thus, the
Insiders will more readily be able to dilute the interests of Alliance
Holdings (and indirectly the interest of the non-Insiders) in Alliance Capital
II to below 10%.

          82. Alternatively, the Call Option provision in the proposed amended
and restated partnership agreement could also be read as to ignore the
percentage ownership interest of Alliance Holdings in Alliance Capital II for
purposes of computing the 10% threshold. That provision (section 16.01 of the
proposed amended and restated partnership agreement) reads as follows:

              (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, if at
         any time less than 10% of the issued and outstanding Alliance Capital
         LP Units are held, directly or indirectly, by Persons other than the
         General Partner, its Affiliates and officers and employees of the
         General Partner, the Partnership [i.e., Alliance Holdings] or Persons
         controlled by the Partnership or Alliance Capital..., the General
         Partner shall then have the right, which right it may assign and
         transfer... exercisable in its sole discretion at any time to,
         purchase all, but not less than all, of such Unites that remain
         outstanding and held by Persons other than the General Partner and
         its Affiliates...

          83. Section 16.01(a) may be read to mean that the Call Option can be
exercised if non-Insiders (exclusive of Alliance Holdings) own less than 10%
of Alliance Capital II units. Under this reading, the Call Option will become
exercisable almost immediately following the Challenged Transaction. This is
so because the maximum total number of non-


                                      27
<PAGE>

Insider Alliance Holdings units permitted to be exchanged for Alliance Capital
II units is only 18.7 million. However, all of the Insiders are expected to
exchange their units. Thus, at the outset, even if the plan is adopted and the
public unitholders of Alliance Holdings tender the maximum of 18.7 million
units permitted, only 14.3% of the unitholders of Alliance Capital II will be
public (non-Insider) unitholders.

          84. However, no matter which way Section 16.01(a) is construed, the
Disclosure Document fails to disclose the material significance to plaintiffs
and the Class of the inherent conflicts of interests and risks associated with
the new structure and the amendments to the Partnership Agreement being made
by the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement.

The Illusory Benefit to Public Unitholders

          85. The Disclosure Document misleadingly informs unitholders that
Equitable will provide some consideration to Alliance Holdings for the
transaction in the form of a minimum annual investment advisory fee paid to
Alliance Capital II of $39 million, and that this is a reason to vote for the
reorganization and the amended and restated partnership agreement (but not for
the exchange).

          86. The Disclosure Document goes to great lengths to present a
present value average and incremental value analysis rubber-stamped by Goldman
Sachs to demonstrate that such a minimum fee is beneficial to the public
unitholders of Alliance Holdings who do not elect to exchange their units for
Alliance Capital II units:


                                      28
<PAGE>


              Based on the asset management fee analysis, Goldman Sachs
              concluded that the holder of a unit who does not participate in
              the exchange offer should be better off economically after the
              reorganization than before the reorganization because the
              one-for-one exchange ratio ensures that such unitholder will
              retain the same economic interest after the reorganization,
              while such interest will be enhanced by the incremental benefits
              accruing to Alliance Capital [II] as a result of the minimum fee
              payments. [Emphasis added.]

          87. These disclosures are false and misleading, as they fail to
disclose that:

              (a) the fees paid to Equitable or it affiliates, as enumerated
         above greatly exceeded $38 million for the past five years;

              (b) there is no way to determine what the relevant fee was from
         Equitable or its affiliates prior to 1998;

              (c) Equitable and its affiliates were actual net recipients of
         fees and other amounts in the past two years, even where the purported
         relevant fee exceeded the minimum amount of $38 million in 1998;

              (d) the General Partner and Equitable and its affiliates will
         apparently share in the same fee; and

              (e) the non-Insider Alliance Capital II unitholders will also
         share in the fee.

          88. In fact, the defendants use Goldman Sachs' analysis as further
support for the Challenged Transaction, while at the same time discouraging
public Alliance Holdings unitholders from exchanging their units for Alliance
Capital II units (Disclosure Document page 49), thus ensuring the
effectiveness of the enhanced Call Option.


                                      29
<PAGE>


          89. The major and undisclosed purpose of the Challenged Transaction
is to freeze out or otherwise eliminate the equity interests of Class members
for unfair or inadequate consideration. Even those unitholders who "elect" to
receive interests in Alliance Capital II will ultimately be frozen out of
that private partnership.

          90. The Individual Defendants cannot protect and not have adequately
protected the interests of Alliance Holdings' limited partners, due to their
positions with the General Partner and Equitable and its affiliates. The
Individual Defendants (despite the severity of inherent conflicts of interest)
did not appoint a special committee to review the terms of the Challenged
Transaction, let alone negotiate it terms.

          91. The Individual Defendants have negated any and all terms in the
Partnership Agreement purporting to limit or eliminate their fiduciary duties
to the unitholders by recommending that the plan "fair" and in the "best
interests" of the public unitholders of Alliance Holdings, while engaging
Goldman Sachs to opine on the "fairness" of the transaction and referring
plaintiffs and the Class to Goldman Sach's opinion as support for the
defendants' recommendation to the unitholders to vote for the plan.

          92. The Individual Defendants have engaged in unfair dealing to the
detriment of plaintiffs and the Class to whom they owe the highest fiduciary
duties. The terms of the transaction are not the products of any arm's-length
negotiations but rather the design and plan of the Individual Defendants who
have substantial and admitted conflicts of interest with the Class. Defendants
have used the change in the tax laws as a pretext for a going private step


                                      30
<PAGE>


transaction designed to deprive the Alliance Holdings unitholders of their
valuable equity interest in the limited partnership for unfair and inadequate
consideration that fails to reflect the very substantial increase in the value
of Alliance Holdings over the past decade.

          93. As particularized more fully above, defendants have breached
their duty of candor to plaintiffs and the Class. Defendants falsely state in
the Disclosure Document that the primary or sole reason for the reorganization
and the proposed amended and restated partnership agreement are to provide
unitholders a choice between illiquid tax free units and liquid taxable units,
and that there is no effect on unitholders from the proposed amended and
restated partnership agreement. However, there are severe adverse changes in
the proposed and restated partnership agreement, and the major reasons for the
transactions are to diminish the value of the public unitholders interests and
to obtain a call option to purchase the public unitholders interests at a
discounted value.

          94. The Individual Defendants have breached their duty of loyalty to
Alliance Holdings public unitholders by using their offices to approve a
coercive transaction that will substantially convert a substantial portion of
the public's equity interest into less liquid or completely illiquid units.
This transaction is coercively structured and is ultimately designed to freeze
out virtually all of the current Alliance Holdings public unitholders to their
detriment and for the benefit of the Insiders.

          95. Plaintiffs and the Class have no adequate remedy at law.


                                      31
<PAGE>


         WHEREFORE, plaintiff demand judgment as follows:

                  A.  declaring this to be a proper class action and designating
plaintiffs as representatives of the class and their counsel as class counsel;

                  B.  declaring that the proposed amended and restated
agreement of limited partnership of Alliance Holdings was not adopted by the
vote of the partners and the unitholders required under the existing Alliance
Holdings partnership agreement;

                  C.  enjoining the consummation of the Challenged Transaction;

                  D.  directing the defendants pay to plaintiffs and the Class
all damages caused to them and account for all profits and any special benefits
obtained as a result of their unlawful conduct;

                  E.  awarding to plaintiffs the costs and disbursements of
this action, including a reasonable allowance for the fees and expenses of
plaintiffs' attorneys and experts; and

                  F.  granting such other further relief as the Court deems just
and proper.

                                       SMITH KATZENSTEIN & FURLOW LLP


                                       By /s/ Craig B. Smith
                                          --------------------------------------
                                          Craig B. Smith
                                          The Corporate Place
                                          800 Delaware Avenue
                                          Post Office Box 410
                                          Wilmington, DE 19899
                                          (302) 652-8400
September 29, 1999                        Attorneys for Plaintiff


                                     32




<PAGE>



Of Counsel:

WECHSLER HARWOOD HALEBIAN & FEFFER LLP
Stuart D. Wechsler
Frederick W. Gerkens, III
488 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor
New York, NY 10022
(212) 935-7400

                                      33


                                                                    EXHIBIT 99.2


            IN THE COURT OF THE CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
                         IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
R.S.M. INC. and MEL MOHR, TRUSTEE for              :
the IRENE MOHR REVOCABLE TRUST on                  :
behalf of themselves and all others similarly      :
situated,                                          :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                      Plaintiffs,                  :
                                                   :
                                                   :  Civil Action No. 17449 NC
                                                   :
                - against -                        :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.,                  :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                        :
CORPORATION, ALLIANCE CAPITAL                      :
MANAGEMENT L.P. II, DAVE H. JOSEPH,                :
JR., and JOHN D. CARIFA,                           :
                                                   :
                           Defendants.             :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -  - x

                       NOTICE OF MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY
                                  INJUNCTION
                       --------------------------------


TO:           ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.
              ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT CORPORATION
              DAVE H. WILLIAMS
              BRUCE W. CALVERT
              ROBERT H. JOSEPH, JR.
              JOHN D. CARIFA
              c/o The Corporation Trust Company
                  1209 Orange Street
                  Wilmington, Delaware 19801

              ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P. II
              c/o Corporation Service Company
                  1013 Centre Road
                  Wilmington, Delaware 19805




<PAGE>



         PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the within Motion for Preliminary Injunction
will be presented to the Court at the earliest time convenient to the Court
and to counsel.


                                        SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & FURLOW LLP


                                        /s/ Craig B. Smith
                                        --------------------------------------
                                        Craig B. Smith
                                        800 Delaware Avenue
                                        Post Office Box 410
                                        Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                                        (302) 652-8400
                                        Attorneys for Plaintiffs

Date: October 4, 1999



Of Counsel:

WECHSLER HARWOOD HALEBIAN & FEFFER LLP
Stuart D. Wechsler
Frederick W. Gerkens, III
488 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor
New York, New York
(212) 935-7400


                                      -2-




<PAGE>




             IN THE COURT OF THE CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
                         IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
R.S.M. INC. and MEL MOHR, TRUSTEE for              :
the IRENE MOHR REVOCABLE TRUST on                  :
behalf of themselves and all others similarly      :
situated,                                          :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                    Plaintiffs,                    :
                                                   :  Civil Action No. 17449 NC
                                                   :
                                                   :
              - against -                          :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.,                  :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                        :
CORPORATION, ALLIANCE CAPITAL                      :
MANAGEMENT L.P. II, DAVE H. JOSEPH,                :
JR., and JOHN D. CARIFA,                           :
                                                   :
                           Defendants.             :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x


                       MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

         Plaintiffs move the Court pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 65 for
an order granting a preliminary injunction in the form attached hereto
enjoining defendants from implementing a proposed reorganization of defendant
Alliance Capital Management L.P. The grounds for plaintiffs' motion, as will
be set forth fully in their briefs and supporting documents to be

<PAGE>


filed in accordance with the briefing schedule set by the Court or agreed to
by the parties, are as follows:

         1. The reorganization is prohibited by the current agreement of
limited partnership of defendant, Alliance Management Capital L.P. The
proposed amended and restated agreement of limited partnership of defendant
Alliance Management Capital L.P. necessary to the lawful implementation of the
reorganization has not been validly adopted;

         2. The proposed transfer of units contemplated by the reorganization
violates not only the current agreement of limited partnership of defendant
Alliance Capital Management L.P. but also the proposed amended and restated
agreement of limited partnership purportedly adopted by the unitholders;

         3. The vote of unitholders in favor of the reorganization and the
proposed amended and restated agreement of limited partnership of defendant
Alliance Capital Management L.P. was unfairly obtained through false and
misleading solicitation materials;

         4. The proposed reorganization and amended and restated agreement of
limited partnership involve material conflicts of interest on the part of
defendants, are the product of unfair dealing by defendants and taken together
are grossly unfair to plaintiffs and the class represented by plaintiffs; and

         5. Plaintiffs and other members of the class represented by
plaintiffs will suffer immediate and irreparable harm if the proposed
reorganization of defendant Alliance Capital Management L.P. is implemented.


                                      -2-

<PAGE>


         WHEREFORE, plaintiffs pray for the entry of an order in the form
attached hereto.


                                       SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & FURLOW LLP


                                       /s/ Craig B. Smith
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Craig B. Smith
                                       800 Delaware Avenue
                                       Post Office Box 410
                                       Wilmington, Delaware 19899
                                       (302) 652-8400
                                       Attorneys for Plaintiffs

Date: October 4, 1999

Of Counsel:

WECHSLER HARWOOD HALEBIAN & FEFFER LLP
Stuart D. Wechsler
Frederick W. Gerkens, III
488 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor
New York, New York
(212) 935-7400


                                      -3-




<PAGE>




                       IN THE COURT OF THE CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
                                   IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
R.S.M. INC. and MEL MOHR, TRUSTEE for              :
the IRENE MOHR REVOCABLE TRUST on                  :
behalf of themselves and all others similarly      :
situated,                                          :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                           Plaintiffs,             :  Civil Action No. 17449 NC
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
               - against -                         :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
                                                   :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.,                  :
ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT                        :
CORPORATION, ALLIANCE CAPITAL                      :
MANAGEMENT L.P. II, DAVE H. JOSEPH,                :
JR., and JOHN D. CARIFA,                           :
                                                   :
                           Defendants.             :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x


                                     ORDER

         THIS ____ day of October, 1999, plaintiffs having moved the Court for
entry of a preliminary injunction pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 65, and
the Court having considered the briefs and supporting papers of the parties,
having conducted a hearing and considered the arguments of counsel,

         IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:

         1.   Plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction is granted; and



<PAGE>


         2. Defendants, their directors, officers, employees, partners,
agents, and all persons acting in concert with them are preliminary enjoined
from implementing the proposed amended and restated agreement of limited
partnership of defendant Alliance Capital Management L.P. and the related
reorganization of defendant Alliance Capital Management L.P. pursuant to which
units of limited partnership interest in defendant Alliance Capital
Management L.P. would be exchanged for units of limited partnership interest
in Alliance Capital Management II L.P.

                                        ----------------------------------
                                        Chancellor

                                      -2-




<PAGE>


                       CORRECTED CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE


         The undersigned hereby certifies that on the 4th day of October,
1999, one copy of the Notice and Motion for Preliminary Injunction was served
by facsimile on the defendants as follows:

              ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P.
              ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT CORPORATION
              DAVE H. WILLIAMS
              BRUCE W. CALVERT
              ROBERT H. JOSEPH, JR.
              JOHN D. CARIFA
              c/o The Corporation Trust Company
              1209 Orange Street
              Wilmington, Delaware 19801

              ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L.P. II
              c/o Corporation Service Company
              1013 Centre Road
              Wilmington, Delaware 19805

The undersigned hereby further certifies that on the 5th day of October, 1999,
two copies of the Notice and Motion for Preliminary Injunction will be served
by hand on the defendants as set forth above.

                                       SMITH KATZENSTEIN & FURLOW LLP


                                       /s/ Craig B. Smith
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Craig B. Smith
                                       800 Delaware Avenue
                                       Post Office Box 410
                                       Wilmington, Delaware 19899
                                       (302) 652-8400
                                       Attorneys for Plaintiffs

October 4, 1999


                                      -3-



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