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Document Index: 465198416

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 102', '§251', '§251', '§ 251', '§251', '§220', '§220', '§220']

stock exchange rules. The defendants moved to dismiss, noting that SPG had received an e-mail confirmation from the New York Stock Exchange (âNYSEâ...
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in Delaware, however, the California federal court dismissed the California action, with prejudice, on demand futility grounds.161 The Delaware defendants consequently amended their motion to argue that the California judgment precluded the Delaware
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Delaware Quarterly - Winston & Strawn LLP
governance topics, including: advance notice bylaws; ... federal court's earlier dismissal of a substantially similar derivative suit for failure .... Judgmentâ).(20). Two weeks later, the defendants in the. Delaware action supplemented their motio
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error in one of the joint venture agreements during the drafting process. But rather than alert plaintiffs of the .... Vice Chancellor Glasscock, in a letter opinion, held that Edmond D. Costantini (âCostantiniâ), a former ..... concluded; and (i
The Delaware Supreme Court and Delaware Court of Chancery are generally regarded as the country's premier business courts, and their decisions carry significant influence over matters of corporate law throughout the country, both because of the court
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The Delaware Supreme Court and Delaware Court of Chancery are generally regarded as the country's premier business courts, ... preliminary injunctions; settlement approval; standing; and other matters of Delaware practice and ...... A detailed notice
The Delaware Quarterly - Winston & Strawn LLP
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Oct 14, 2013 - China Automotive and its directors, through its counsel Winston & Strawn, have successfully defended against both actions. First, in May a federal district court denied class certification in the securities fraud action against the com
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and typically do, meaning that non-complying Holders will be faced with multistate audits. â¢ Background. Businesses are required to report (escheat) unclaimed property they hold to states in which they conduct business. â Such unclaimed property
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Delaware Quarterly Recent Developments in Delaware Business and Securities Law
April - June 2013 Volume 2, Number 2
The Delaware Supreme Court and Delaware Court of Chancery are generally regarded as the country’s premier business courts, and their decisions carry significant influence over matters of corporate law throughout the country, both because of the courts’ reputation for unsurpassed expertise in the field and because the vast majority of public companies in the United States are incorporated in Delaware and, thus, governed by its substantive law. Accordingly, Delaware’s corporate jurisprudence provides critical guidance to corporations, alternative entities and practitioners in evaluating corporate governance issues and related matters. Each calendar quarter, the Delaware Quarterly analyzes and summarizes key decisions of the Delaware courts on corporate and commercial issues, along with other significant developments in Delaware corporate law.
DQ Highlights Delaware Quarterly: April - June 2013 ................................................ 2 In re MFW Shareholders Litigation................ 2 Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corporation.......................... 8 In re Primedia, Inc. Shareholders Litigation................................................................ 10 Pyott v. Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System...................... 14 Additional Developments in Delaware Business and Securities Law....................... 17 Alternative Entities................................. 17
Appraisals................................................. 17
Attorneys’ Fees........................................ 18
Contracts................................................. 18
Derivative Actions................................... 20
information about this edition of the Delaware Quarterly, readers may contact the Editors, the Authors, or any member of the Advisory Board listed at the end of this publication, as well as their regular Winston & Strawn contact.
Dissolution............................................... 21 Fiduciary Duties...................................... 21 Fraudulent Concealment........................ 21 Jurisdiction.............................................. 22 Laches ...................................................... 22 Practice & Procedure............................. 22 Preliminary Injunctions........................... 25
Settlements.............................................. 26
Delaware Quarterly: April - June 2013 By Jonathan W. Miller, Matthew L. DiRisio, Jill K. Freedman, Ali R. Rabbani, Paul Whitworth, George W. Mustes and Rebecca L. Seif Over the past several months, the Delaware courts have issued a number of significant and potentially far-reaching decisions. Topping this quarter’s list are three decisions from the Court of Chancery and one from the Delaware Supreme Court. Garnering perhaps the most attention is Chancellor Strine’s ruling in In re MFW Shareholder Litigation,1 in which the court for the first time applied a business judgment standard of review, rather than the more onerous entire fairness standard, to a freeze-out merger involving a controlling stockholder that expressly conditioned the transaction on the approval of both: (i) a special committee of independent directors free to select its advisors and definitively empowered to reject the deal; and (ii) a fully informed and uncoerced majority of the minority stockholders. Following on its heels is the much anticipated decision in Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corporation,2 where Chancellor Strine upheld the facial validity of exclusive forum selection bylaw provisions unilaterally adopted by boards whose companies’ certificates of incorporation granted them the power to adopt bylaws without stockholder consent. In yet another notable decision, In re Primedia, Inc. Shareholders Litigation,3 Vice Chancellor Laster declined to dismiss a Parnes4 claim brought by a former stockholder of the acquired company — whose standing to sue derivatively was extinguished by the merger — challenging the adequacy of the merger on the ground that the target board of directors failed to obtain sufficient value in the merger for the underlying derivative claim. And finally, in Pyott v. Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System,5 the Supreme Court effectively stepped on a budding Chancery Court practice by reversing the court’s ruling that the dismissal of a derivative action for failure to plead demand futility under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.1 did not preclude a subsequent derivative action based on the same conduct if the later-filed suit is brought by a different stockholder, because the two plaintiffs were not in “privity” under Delaware law. The Court also made clear that no presumption of inadequacy attaches to stockholder 1 C.A. No. 6566-CS, 2013 WL 2326879 (Del. Ch. May 29, 2013). 2 C.A. Nos. 7220-CS, 7238-CS, 2013 WL 3191981 (Del. June 25, 2013). 3 C.A. No. 6511-VCL, 2013 WL 2169415 (Del. Ch. May 10, 2013). 4 Parnes v. Bally Entm’t Corp., 722 A.2d 1243 (Del. 1999). 5 No. 380, 2012, 2013 WL 1364695 (Del. Apr. 4, 2013).
Winston & Strawn LLP | 2 plaintiffs who file derivative suits without first seeking corporate books and records. All of these matters are discussed in greater detail below, followed by synopses of the past quarter’s other Delaware decisions across a range of topics, including: alternative entities; appraisals; attorneys’ fee awards; contract interpretation; derivative actions; dissolution; fiduciary duties; fraudulent concealment; jurisdiction; preliminary injunctions; settlements; and other matters of Delaware practice and procedure.
In re MFW Shareholders Litigation Chancellor Strine’s decision in In re MFW Shareholders Litigation is the clearest pronouncement to date in a longdebated area of Delaware takeover law: whether a freezeout merger between a controlling stockholder and minority stockholders — as distinct from a tender offer by a controller or the third-party sale of a controlled company — can ever qualify for protection under the deferential business judgment standard of judicial review, under which directors’ decisions are presumed to have been undertaken in good faith and courts will not substitute their business judgment for that of the directors. The Chancellor answered that question affirmatively, holding that the business judgment rule will apply to a going-private merger with a controller where the merger is expressly conditioned, upfront (i.e., from the time of the controller’s first overture), on: (i) negotiation and approval by a special committee of independent directors fully empowered to “say no” to the deal; and (ii) the nonwaivable approval by an uncoerced, fully-informed vote of a majority of the minority shareholders.6
Background On June 13, 2011, MacAndrews & Forbes, the 43.4% owner of M & F Worldwide (“MFW” or the “Company”), sent a proposal to the MFW board to acquire the remaining shares of MFW stock at $24 per share (the “Proposal”).7 The Proposal was expressly conditioned on the approval of both: (i) a special committee of independent directors; and (ii) the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of MFW stock not owned by MacAndrews & Forbes (i.e., a “majority-of-the-minority” provision). Notably, in conjunction with these conditions, MacAndrews & Forbes also indicated in the Proposal that it 6 7
In re MFW, 2013 WL 2326879, at *4. Id. at *7. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly had no interest in selling any of its shares of MFW and would not vote in favor of any alternative sale, merger or similar transaction involving MFW.8 In addition, MacAndrews & Forbes committed to remaining a long-term stockholder if the special committee did not recommend the transaction or the transaction failed to obtain minority approval.9 These terms ensured that MacAndrews & Forbes could not bypass the special committee process with a tender offer if the negotiation process cratered. The following day, the MFW board met and formed the special committee of four independent directors. The broad mandate adopted by the board provided that special committee: (i) was empowered to negotiate with MacAndrews & Forbes rather than just evaluate the Proposal; (ii) had the clear right “to elect not to pursue the Proposal”; and (iii) could retain and employ independent legal and financial advisors and any other agents deemed necessary or desirable.10 Along with retaining Willkie Farr as its legal advisor and Evercore Partners as its financial advisor,11 the committee met eight times over three months and reviewed various financial projections and valuation ranges for the Company.12 It also considered other strategic options available to MFW, including by assessing the presence of other potential buyers and/or other strategic options that might generate more value for MFW’s minority stockholders.13 As to its dealings with MacAndrews & Forbes, the committee initially rejected the Proposal and countered at $30 per share.14 After further negotiations, MacAndrews & Forbes ultimately raised its offer price to a “best and final” $25 per share – a 47% premium to the Company’s closing stock price the day before the Proposal was made.15 Based on its evaluation of alternatives, the protective conditions set forth above and an opinion from its financial advisor that the final offer was fair, from a financial point of view, to the Company’s minority shareholders, the special committee unanimously opted to accept the offer, which was likewise unanimously approved by all of MFW’s outside independent directors.16 Most importantly, the merger was then approved by an affirmative vote of approximately 65% of MFW’s minority stockholders, and the merger closed on December 21, 2011.17 8 Id. 9 Id. 10 Id. at *8. 11 Id. 12 Id. at *12-13. 13 Id. 14 Id. at *13. 15 Id. at *1, 13. 16 Id. at *13. 17 Id. at *1.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 3 Not surprisingly, the announcement of the deal quickly prompted a spate of lawsuits against MacAndrews & Forbes, its sole equity owner Ron Perelman and the MFW board, alleging that the merger was unfair. Plaintiffs initially sought a preliminary injunction to enjoin the stockholder vote on the merger but, after “a good deal of expedited discovery,” ultimately abandoned that request and sought only post-closing damages for breach of fiduciary duty.18 Defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis that the key procedural conditions embedded in the transaction – the approval of an independent special committee fully empowered to turn down the transaction and the affirmative, fully-informed and uncoerced vote of a majority of minority stockholders – replicated an arm’s-length merger under 8 Del. C. §251 and, like statutory mergers governed by that provision, should thus be scrutinized under the business judgment rule.19 Defendants argued that under that standard, which honors the directors’ approval unless the treatment of the parties to the deal was so disparate that no rational person acting in good faith could have found the merger to be fair to the minority, the record before the court required dismissal.20
The Court’s Analysis The Standard Applicable To Freeze-Out Mergers In This Factual Setting Has Not Been Addressed By The Delaware Supreme Court As a threshold matter, the court confronted a trio of binding Delaware Supreme Court cases addressing the standard of review in freeze-out mergers: Kahn v. Lynch Communication Systems, Inc.;21 Kahn v. Tremont Corp.;22 and Southern Peru.23 Recognizing that “there [was] broad language in each of these decisions” that has been interpreted as requiring entire fairness review in any freeze-out merger with a controlling stockholder (regardless of any built-in procedural protections), the court nonetheless concluded that the portions of the opinions so doing were dicta, and that none of the cases answered the precise question at issue: namely, the standard of review applicable to a controller-led freeze-out merger that was conditioned upfront on both approval by an adequately empowered independent committee acting with due care, and on the informed, uncoerced approval of a majority of the minority stockholders.24 18 Id. 19 Id. 20 Id. 21 Lynch, 638 A.2d 1110 (Del. 1994). 22 Kahn v. Tremont Corp., 694 A.2d 422 (Del. 1997). 23 Ams. Mining Corp. v. Theriault, 51 A.3d 1213 (Del. 2012) (“Southern Peru”). 24 Id. at *16. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly Instead, the freeze-out mergers at issue in the Lynch and Tremont cases were subject only to special committee approval, and not a majority-of-the-minority vote,25 and in Southern Peru, defendants expressly stipulated that the entire fairness standard applied. Thus, while Lynch, Tremont and Southern Peru contained language “that [could] be read to control the question asked in this case,” the court concluded that “under traditional jurisprudential principles … the question remain[ed] an open one.”26 The Special Committee Was Independent, Properly Empowered And Fulfilled Its Duty Of Care The court first analyzed the protective measures to which the deal was subject. To be credited with “cleansing” effect under Delaware law, protective mechanisms such as special committee approval and a majority-of-the-minority provision must “hav[e] sufficient integrity to invoke the business judgment standard.”27 As to the viability of the special committee component, the court focused on three main factors: (i) the scope of the special committee’s mandate; (ii) the independence of the special committee members; and (iii) whether the special committee satisfied its duty of care. For the following reasons, the court found MFW’s special committee process sufficient to warrant cleansing effect under Delaware law.28 Scope of Mandate. Among other factors, the court emphasized that the special committee: (i) was indisputably empowered to (and did) hire its own legal and financial advisors who assisted it in considering a full range of financial information and evaluating strategic alternatives;29 (ii) was empowered to conduct actual negotiations with the controller rather than being relegated to “evaluating” the offer as presented “like some committees with weak mandates”;30 (iii) was provided clear authority to “say no” to a deal in the event negotiations did not pan out to its satisfaction; and (iv) could not be circumvented through a tender offer, since MacAndrews & Forbes committed not to proceed with any going-private proposal without committee support – removing any perceived constraints on the committee’s negotiating tactics.31 Independence. Rejecting their challenge to the independence of three of the four members of the special committee,32 the 25 In re MFW, 2013 WL 2326879, at *17-18. 26 Id. at *19. 27 Id. at *6, 14. 28 Id. at *12. 29 Id. at *8-9. 30 Id. at *8. 31 Id. 32 Id. at *9.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 4 court found that plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate, as they must, that any of the directors had sufficiently substantial and material ties to the controller so as to be unable to objectively fulfill his or her fiduciary duties.33 Notably, the court observed that despite receiving extensive discovery, plaintiffs provided no comparative or quantitative relationship between the actual economic circumstances of the challenged directors and the ties plaintiffs contended affected their impartiality.34 Duty of Care. The court found that the committee had exercised its duty of care by, among other things: (i) interviewing multiple financial advisors before hiring Evercore Partners; (ii) considering financial projections and various valuation metrics for the Company; (iii) meeting frequently throughout the process; (iv) rejecting the initial Proposal; and (v) actively negotiating with MacAndrews & Forbes. Conversely, plaintiffs provided no evidence indicating that the special committee members did not meet their duty of care.35 Importantly, the court reasoned that it was not required or entitled to determine the “effectiveness” of the special committee, as such a precondition would be fundamentally inconsistent with the application of the business judgment rule standard of review.36 The Majority-Of-The-Minority Vote Was Fully Informed And Uncoerced The court next determined that the majority-of-the-minority vote was fully informed and uncoerced, thereby entitling the second procedural protection to cleansing effect under the business judgment rule.37 The proxy statement included all relevant and necessary information, and 65% of the minority stockholders had approved the transaction. In addition, plaintiffs themselves did not dispute that the majority-of-theminority vote was fully informed and uncoerced. Thus, both procedural protections, which were present from the outset in the Proposal, qualified as cleansing devices under traditional Delaware corporate law principles.38 The Business Judgment Rule Is The Appropriate Standard Having found that Delaware Supreme Court precedent did not require automatic application of the entire fairness standard, the court set about determining which standard of scrutiny was appropriate on the facts at bar. And, while not strictly controlling according to Chancellor Strine, assessing the proper standard of review in the freeze-out context under 33 Id. 34 Id. 35 Id. at *13. 36 Id. at *15. 37 Id. at *14. 38 Id. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly Delaware law necessarily starts with the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Kahn v. Lynch.39 In Lynch, the Supreme Court made clear that, because of the inherent unequal bargaining power at play and inescapable leverage maintained by controlling stockholders, the default standard of judicial review in controller freeze-out mergers is the exacting entire fairness standard. Moreover, the Court held that conditioning the freeze-out on approval by either (i) a special committee or (ii) a majority of minority stockholders would not permit the merger to avoid entire fairness review; at best the adoption of such a protective device could shift the burden of proof under the fairness standard from the defendant to the plaintiff. Seizing on the disjunctive nature of the Court’s holding, Chancellor Strine observed that the Lynch holding addressed only the standard applicable when one of the protective mechanisms was adopted, but not, like in MFW, when a freeze-out is expressly conditioned, from the get-go, on both. The key question thus became the following: whether a freeze-out conditioned on the approval of both a special committee and a majority of minority shareholders should be subject to a different level of judicial scrutiny than a freezeout conditioned on only one or the other. While not squarely addressed in Lynch, several statements in the opinion (and its progeny) have been interpreted to mean that doubling up on the protective devices would not alter the standard of review – i.e., that controllers who condition a freeze-out merger on both protections would “receive no extra legal credit for doing so.”40 The Chancellor ultimately found this interpretation illogical, largely because of the perverse incentive structure it creates. Specifically, a controller led to believe it would achieve no additional benefit from adopting another protective device – in other words, increasing deal risk and uncertainty while receiving no offsetting litigation benefit – is obviously motivated not to use both procedural devices, since the best it can do, in any event, is to shift the burden of entire fairness (which, as a practical litigation reality, means very little).41 This dynamic was critically important to the Chancellor’s analysis, because of his conclusion that, for several reasons described below, the “potent combination” of a special committee and a majority-of-the-minority provision, in tandem, is materially more protective to minority stockholders than the use of only one or the other in isolation.
coupling of special committee approval with a majority-of-the-minority provision is critical to the
39 Id. at *2. 40 Id. 41 Id.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 5 minority interest because, acting together, they replicate the arm’s-length merger framework set forth in 8 Del. C. §251, thus making the going-private freeze-out merger analogous to a third-party merger which, in turn, is presumptively subject to business judgment protection.42
special committee alone ensures that there is “a bargaining agent who can negotiate a price and address the collective action problem facing stockholders, but it does not provide stockholders any chance to protect themselves.”43 Conversely, a majority-of-the-minority vote “provides stockholders a chance to vote on a merger proposal by a controller-dominated board, but with no chance to have an independent bargaining agent work on their behalf to negotiate the merger price and determine whether it is a favorable one ….”44 Thus, both devices “are complementary and effective in tandem.”45
• On a case-specific level, the fact that both protections
were established up-front and joined with the controller’s commitment to not sell its shares or vote in favor of a different, non-committee-approved transaction vastly limits the threat of coercion and retribution by the controller. Having promised not to bypass the special committee or the majority-of-the-minority conditions through a tender offer or otherwise, reneging would subject the controller to “withering scrutiny from stockholders” and potent remedies under Delaware law.46 As a result, the special committee is free to negotiate vigorously on the minority’s behalf without the latent concern that pushing too hard might lead to the controller taking matters into its own hands by launching an “intrinsically more coercive” tender offer.47
• The special committee understands from the outset that
the deal it reaches will be subject to a majority-of-theminority vote – providing it with incentive to bargain harder in order to avoid the reputational harm of the minority stockholders voting down a deal the committee negotiated and approved on the minority’s behalf.
inclusion of a majority-of-the-minority provision alongside a well-functioning special committee is particularly effective in the current activist environment.
42 Id. at *21. 8 Del. C. § 251(b)-(c) requires that mergers be approved by the board of directors and the stockholders of each merging corporation. 43 Id. at *4. 44 Id. 45 Id. 46 Id. at *24. 47 Id. at *4, 23. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly As the court explained: “the increasing concentration of institutional investors and the demonstrated willingness of stockholders to vote against management’s recommended course of action, the potency of remedies available under [Delaware] law, and statutory protections that prevent controlling stockholders from discriminating against minority stockholders … thus require [controllers] to engage in nihilism if they wish to try to starve minority investors who are probably more diversified than themselves and thus less dependent on the cash flows from the controlled company.”48 In short, there is no rational reason “to conclude that a majority-of-theminority condition employed in the manner described [would] not provide an extremely valuable, fairnessassuring protection to minority investors.”49 Apart from the added protective benefits provided by the special committee/majority-of-the-minority tandem, the court found that a basic cost-benefit analysis militated in favor of applying business judgment review rather than entire fairness, the benefits of which the court found “very slim at best, [with] a good case to be made that [they are] negative overall”50 even in cases where only one procedural protection is in place. Specifically, the court noted that the automatic application of entire fairness in every freeze-out merger litigation makes it practically impossible for defendants to dispose of the case on a motion to dismiss, which gives every such case settlement value regardless of its merits. This, in turn, has resulted in frequent payouts of attorneys’ fees in cases where the minority stockholders received no more than the special committee had already secured – costs invariably borne by investors through higher D&O insurance fees and other costs of capital.51 For all of these reasons, the court held that going-private, freeze-out mergers subject to the panoply of protective devices here, including the conditions unilaterally imposed by the controller itself – should be scrutinized under the business judgment standard, which, Chancellor Strine summarized [will provide]: A strong incentive for controlling stockholders to accord minority investors the transactional structure that respected scholars believe will provide them the best protection, a structure where stockholders get the benefits of independent, empowered negotiating agents to bargain for the best price and say no if 48 Id. at *24. 49 Id. 50 Id. 51 Id.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 6 the agents believe the deal is not advisable for any proper reason, plus the critical ability to determine for themselves whether to accept any deal that their negotiating agents recommend to them.52 At the same time, Chancellor Strine took care to limit the scope of his holding to the specific facts of this case, which he reduced to the following six requirements: (i) the controller conditions the procession of the transaction on the approval of both a special committee and a majority of the minority stockholders; (ii) the special committee is independent; (iii) the special committee is empowered to freely select its own advisors and to say no, definitively, to the proposed transaction; (iv) the special committee fulfills its duty of care; (v) the minority shareholder vote is fully informed; and (vi) the minority shareholder vote is free of coercion.53 Application Of The Business Judgment Rule Requires Dismissal In the context of a controlling shareholder merger, the business judgment rule requires that “the claims against the defendants must be dismissed unless no rational person could have believed that the merger was favorable to MFW’s minority stockholders.”54 The court found that plaintiffs raised no triable issue of disputed fact under this standard. Most notably: (i) the merger was effected at a 47% premium to the closing price the day before the offer; (ii) the special committee’s financial advisors determined the price to be fair from a financial standpoint to the minority shareholders; (iii) strategic alternatives, including remaining independent, were not favorable because of the long-term business challenges MFW faced; and (iv) 65% of the minority stockholders decided for themselves that the price was favorable. For those reasons, the court had little doubt that “a rational mind could have believed the merger price fair, and that is what is relevant under the business judgment rule, which precludes judicial second-guessing when that is the case,”55 and, accordingly, granted summary judgment for defendants.
Takeaways On its face, the court’s decision in In re MFW Shareholders Litigation is, at least, a theoretical game-changer: it negates the long-standing belief amongst merger participants and practitioners that freeze-out mergers are inescapably subject to entire fairness review, and provides a clear roadmap 52 Id. at *4. 53 Id. at *25. 54 Id. at *16. 55 Id. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly to structuring such a transaction so as to secure business judgment protection. If upheld, the opinion will generate significant incentive for controllers to condition freeze-out transactions on both procedural protections, which presumably will provide business judgment protection – a vital weapon in defending against lawsuits that were previously immune to dismissal on the pleadings. Indeed, the impact of this decision has already borne out in the market: just days after Chancellor Strine issued the opinion, Dole Foods’ CEO and 40% stockholder David Murdock made an offer to take the company private at $12 per share. Presumably aware of the MFW holding, Murdock conditioned the offer upfront on the approval of both a majority of disinterested directors and a majority-of-the-minority vote.56 The decision also reconciles the doctrinal inconsistency that had existed for years in the context of controlling shareholder transactions.57 Since Lynch was a “merger” case, it has been interpreted not to cover other deal structures – i.e., a controller’s tender offer followed by a short form merger – even though the practical differences are immaterial. In that regard, several Court of Chancery decisions have reasoned that tender offers by controllers can escape entire fairness review with the appropriate protective devices (special committee approval and a majority-of-the-minority provision), and advocated a single, unified standard applicable to all freezeout transactions, whether structured as a one-step freeze-out merger or two-step tender offer. For the time being, the MFW decision accomplishes that goal. On the other hand, despite the potential for its far-reaching implications, there are several factors that may affect its practical impact in the market and in courtrooms. First, the decision is likely to be appealed, and affirmance is far from a sure thing. Whether dicta or not, the Supreme Court’s language in Lynch makes fairly clear that the Court viewed entire fairness as the exclusive standard in controller-led cash-out merger transactions, such that MFW appears ripe for Supreme Court review.58 And even if it does affirm, one would expect that the high court will not bless Chancellor Strine’s opinion on an “as is” basis, but will almost certainly modify the holding in some respect. One potential vulnerability of the decision is that it seems to provide for less judicial scrutiny 56 See Julie Jargon, Dole’s 90-Year-Old CEO Plots $1.5 Billion Buyout, Wall Street Journal, June 11, 2013. 57 See Krieger v. Wesco Fin. Corp, C.A. No. 6176-VCL (Del Ch. May 10, 2011) (Tr. Ruling), In re CNX Gas Corp. S’holders Litig., 4 A.3d 397 (Del Ch. 2010), In re Cox Commc’ns S’holders Litig., 879 A.2d 604 (Del Ch. 2005), In re Pure Res., Inc. S’holders Litig., 808 A.2d 421 (Del. Ch. 2002). 58 Lynch, 638 A.2d at 1115.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 7 of freeze-out transactions with the proper protective devices (i.e., business judgment review) than of arm’s-length, thirdparty mergers, which are reviewed under the more stringent Revlon standard, which requires that a target board achieve the best value reasonably available for shareholders. That result seems both illogical, given the inherent risk of exploitation in controller transactions, and at odds with the court’s likening a protection-laden freeze-out merger to a third-party merger under 8 Del. C. §251. Second, even if the decision survives any appeal in its entirety, there are a number of market considerations that potentially blunt MFW’s practical impact going forward. To begin with, depending on the makeup of a minority shareholder base, controllers may well choose to forgo a majority-of-theminority condition notwithstanding the benefits of the business judgment rule, opting for deal certainty over litigation leverage. And even then, the litigation and settlement costs between an entire fairness review and a business judgment review may not be appreciably different, particularly where, as is already common, an effective special committee negotiates the merger (albeit without any majority-of-the-minority conditions). Relatedly, controllers also may be leery of handing the functional equivalent of veto power to a minority shareholder community that is growing more activist by the day – and it is worth noting the Chancellor’s decision does not address the practical implications of a controller’s commitments (e.g., whether and by whom they are enforceable, whether they can be modified for additional consideration, like a price increase, how long they remain binding, etc.). Third, utilizing both protections does not guarantee business judgment protection. The MFW case limits the types of freeze-outs that qualify, and any deviation from the prescribed steps could result in the mere shift of the entire fairness burden – hardly worth the deal risk associated with a majority-of-the-minority provision. In that regard, the decision leaves open multiple avenues for plaintiffs to challenge the application of business judgment review. For example, the likely areas of attack include: (i) the independence and disinterestedness of the special committee; (ii) the mandate of the special committee and its ability to say no; (iii) whether a majority-of-theminority vote in the controlling stockholder context can ever be “uncoerced”; (iv) the nature and completeness of the disclosures made to stockholders; (v) the timing of the imposition of the protective conditions, i.e., whether the deal is truly conditioned “upfront”; and (vi) the timing, nature and enforceability of any commitment by the controlling stockholder to not (a) sell its position, (b) go
Delaware Quarterly hostile, or (c) approve an alternative transaction if the freeze-out is not consummated.
Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corporation In a June 25, 2013 consolidated decision in Boilermakers Local 154 Retirement Fund v. Chevron Corporation and ICLUB Investment Partnership v. FedEx Corporation,59 Chancellor Strine upheld the validity of board-adopted forum selection bylaws that make Delaware courts the sole and exclusive forum for stockholder litigation concerning the internal affairs of the corporation. The opinion affirms that such bylaws unilaterally adopted by a board of directors are facially valid under the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”) and as a matter of contract law. In so doing, the Chancellor has effectively given the green light to other Delaware corporations that are looking to adopt similar bylaws as a means to protect against the cost and burden of multi-forum stockholder litigation.
Background The boards of Chevron Corporation (“Chevron”) and FedEx Corporation (“FedEx”) both unilaterally adopted bylaws containing forum-selection provisions making the courts of Delaware the sole and exclusive forum for four types of actions brought by stockholders as stockholders: (i) derivative actions; (ii) breach of fiduciary duty actions; (iii) actions brought under the DGCL; and (iv) actions governed by the internal affairs doctrine. The exclusive forum bylaws were intended to combat the problem of public companies defending multi-forum stockholder litigation. Stockholders subsequently filed complaints against Chevron and FedEx, along with several other corporations with similar bylaws, challenging the provisions as: (i) statutorily invalid because they were beyond the board’s authority; and (ii) contractually invalid because they were adopted without stockholder assent.
The Court’s Analysis Statutory Validity The court rejected plaintiffs’ first argument, finding that: (i) the boards of both companies were empowered in their certificates of incorporation to adopt the bylaws under DGCL Section 109(a); and (ii) the forum selection bylaws addressed
59 The plaintiffs’ complaints in both actions were nearly identical and were filed only a few days apart by clients of the same law firm.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 8 a proper subject matter under DGCL Section 109(b).60 DGCL Section 109(b) provides that “bylaws may contain any provision, not inconsistent with law or with the certificate of incorporation, relating to the business of the corporation, the conduct of its affairs, and its rights or powers or the rights or powers of its stockholders, directors, officers or employees.”61 The court thus considered whether the bylaws related to the business of the corporations, the conduct of their affairs, or the rights of the stockholders.62 The court found that the challenged bylaws, which govern disputes related to the “internal affairs” of the corporation, “easily” met these requirements.63 The court found that the bylaws: (i) addressed the “rights” of the stockholders because they regulated where stockholders can bring lawsuits; and (ii) related to the “conduct” of the corporation because they channeled internal affairs cases into the courts of the state of incorporation.64 Thus, the subject matter of the actions that the bylaws governed “relates quintessentially to ‘the corporation’s business, the conduct of its affairs, and the rights of its stockholders [qua stockholders].’”65 The court noted that the bylaws have a procedural, process-oriented nature as they regulate “where stockholders may file suit, not whether the stockholder may file suit or the kind of remedy that the stockholder may obtain,” and Section 109(b) of the DGCL has “long been understood to allow the corporation to set ‘self-imposed rules and regulations [that] are deemed expedient for its convenient functioning.’”66 Contractual Validity The court also rejected the plaintiffs’ second argument that the bylaws were contractually invalid because the stockholders had not had an opportunity to vote and assent to them in advance of their adoption.67 First, the court noted that Delaware corporate law has long rejected the “vested rights” doctrine, which requires stockholder consent for actions that arguably diminish or divest their pre-existing rights.68 Second, the court explained that bylaws constitute a binding part of the contract between Delaware corporations and their stockholders and that stockholders “are on notice” that, as to the subjects that are regulated under Section 109(b) of the DGCL, the board may act unilaterally to adopt bylaws 60 Boilermakers, 2013 WL 3191981, at *10-13. 61 Id. at *10. 62 Id. 63 Id. at *2. 64 Id. at *10. 65 Id. 66 Id. at *11. 67 Id. at *13-15. 68 Id. at *14. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly addressing those subjects. “In other words, the Chevron and FedEx stockholders have assented to a contractual framework established by the DGCL and the certificates of incorporation that explicitly recognized that stockholders will be bound by bylaws adopted unilaterally by their boards.”69 Thus, the stockholders have assented to “not having to assent to boardadopted bylaws.”70 The court also noted that Delaware’s statutory regime provides various protections for the stockholders, vesting them with an indefeasible right to adopt, amend and repeal the bylaws themselves.71 Thus, stockholders may check the board’s authority by repealing board-adopted bylaws. In addition, stockholders have the right to elect directors and may “discipline boards” that refuse to repeal board-adopted bylaws.72 The court concluded that a corporation’s bylaws “are part of an inherently flexible contract between the stockholders and the corporation under which the stockholders have powerful rights they can use to protect themselves ….”73 The court noted that the bylaws always remain open to “as-applied” challenges by plaintiffs who believe that the bylaws operate against them in a situationally unreasonable or unlawful manner.74 Stockholders have the ability to sue in another forum to challenge bylaws as unreasonable under the U.S. Supreme Court decision in The Bremen v. Zapata OffShore Co.,75 which held that forum selection clauses are valid provided that they are “unaffected by fraud, undue influence or overweening bargaining power.”76 In addition, stockholders may always challenge the board’s use of its power under the bylaws as inconsistent with the board’s fiduciary duties.77
Takeaways As a general matter, the Chevron ruling provides clarity to boards of directors considering an exclusive forum selection bylaw requiring stockholder litigation to be filed in the courts of Delaware as a means to avoid the costs of duplicative and overlapping multi-forum litigation. At a minimum, the opinion sanctions the adoption of such bylaws under the DGCL, which removes at least one hurdle facing Delaware corporations seeking to direct where stockholder litigation is litigated. Given the opportunity to funnel such litigation 69 Id. 70 Id. 71 Id. 72 Id. 73 Id. 74 Id. at *19. 75 Id. at *15-16, 19; Bremen, 407 U.S. 1 (1972). 76 Bremen, 407 U.S. at 10. 77 Boilermakers, 2013 WL 3191981 at *15, 19.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 9 through the Court of Chancery – with all of its attendant advantages, e.g., expeditious proceedings adjudicated by the country’s premier business courts – the decision will likely prompt a surge in bylaw amendments, particularly for those corporations that have no forum selection clause in their charters/certificates of incorporation. At the same time, while the Chevron ruling at first glance creates a “nothing to lose” dynamic, boards should consider the implications for shareholder relations, perhaps gauging the appetite of larger, activist-type investors and proxy advisory firms prior to implementation. Moreover, Chevron’s practical impact on stockholder litigation lodged outside of Delaware is far from clear. As the court itself recognized, “the real-world application of a forum selection bylaw can [still] be challenged as an inequitable breach of fiduciary duty” in non-Delaware courts. Indeed, some non-Delaware courts have already declined to dismiss cases involving such board-adopted provisions, taking issue with the unilateral nature of board-adopted by laws as distinct from shareholder-approved bylaws or contractual forum selection clauses. Most notably, in Galaviz v. Berg,78 the United States District Court for the Northern District of California declined to dismiss a derivative action on grounds of improper venue, holding that the Delaware forum selection clause in the corporation’s bylaws was unenforceable. The court distinguished between contractual forum selection clauses and corporate bylaws, noting that once a contract has been entered into, a party may not unilaterally amend or alter the parties’ agreement as the board had done in amending the bylaws without stockholder consent. On the other hand, courts routinely afford significant deference to Delaware jurisprudence and often turn to Delaware law on issues of corporate governance. In short, time will tell how other courts will treat forum selection bylaws unilaterally imposed by boards of directors. For the time being, however, it behooves boards to review their corporate charters and bylaws and consider the potential benefits of a forum selection bylaw to the company and its stockholders.
763 F. Supp. 2d 1770 (N.D. Cal. 2011). Return to top
In re Primedia, Inc. Shareholders Litigation In the latest chapter of this long-running case, Vice Chancellor Laster declined to dismiss an action by former stockholders of Primedia, Inc. (“Primedia” or the “Company”) alleging a so-called “Parnes claim,”79 under which a former stockholder of an acquired company whose standing to sue derivatively necessarily is extinguished by a merger is nonetheless permitted to pursue a post-merger fiduciary duty claim directly challenging the extinguishing merger on the grounds that the target board agreed to a deal price that failed to account for the value of an underlying derivative claim held by the target company. Perhaps more notably, the underlying derivative claim credited by the court was a common law “Brophy claim”80 for insider trading – the ongoing vitality of which has been a subject of considerable debate in recent years – against Primedia’s controlling shareholder, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. (“KKR”). Finding that (i) the value of the claim was material in relation to the deal price and (ii) the acquirer to whom standing to pursue the Brophy claim passed via the merger was unlikely ever to assert the claim post-merger, the court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss under the entire fairness standard.
Background Primedia is a media company with print and internet assets. From its inception in the early 1990s to its sale to TPG Capital, L.P. (“TPG Capital”) in July 2011, KKR was Primedia’s controlling shareholder.81 To raise capital, Primedia embarked on a series of “Preferred Stock” issuances in the late 1990s82 which: (i) were publicly registered and traded; (ii) provided for an optional redemption period, during which Primedia could redeem the shares at a premium, followed by a mandatory redemption date on which the shares would be redeemed at a fixed price; and (iii) paid annual cash dividends that the stockholder received at redemption.83 Between April 2000 and July 2002, Primedia fell victim to the implosion of the technology industry, with its common stock falling from a high of $29.25 to under $1.84 Primedia’s various series of Preferred Stock suffered a similar precipitous
79 Parnes v. Bally Entm’t Corp., 722 A.2d 1243 (Del. 1999). 80 Brophy v. Cities Serv. Co., 70 A.2d 5 (Del. Ch. 1949). 81 Primedia, 2013 WL 2169415, at *1. At the time of the merger, KKR affiliates controlled roughly 58% of Primedia’s common stock. Id. 82 Id. at *2. 83 Id. 84 Id.
decline, trading well below face value.85 In March 2002, Primedia began repurchasing shares of Preferred Stock with Company common stock in order to avoid having to pay dividends on the Preferred Stock that it repurchased.86 To protect current holders of the Company’s common stock from dilution, Primedia’s board decided to apply a $5 floor on the effective price of the common stock issued in the exchange.87 Primedia continued repurchasing Preferred Stock through the end of June 2002, at which point redemptions became infeasible as a result of Primedia’s common stock falling below the minimum required effective price.88 While this redemption program was on-going, KKR’s representatives on the Primedia board were considering whether KKR should purchase shares of Primedia’s Preferred Stock.89 Indeed, on May 21, 2002, two of KKR’s representatives on the Primedia board drafted a memorandum to KKR’s Investment Committee and Portfolio Committee (the “Memo”).90 The Memo contained considerable nonpublic information about Primedia’s financial performance, which was poised to out-pace previously disclosed guidance,91 and, on that basis, advocated that KKR purchase shares of the Company’s Preferred Stock before the positive outlook was announced or Primedia divested any of its assets.92 The Memo speculated that KKR could purchase the Preferred Stock at 45% to 55% of par value.93 Prior to purchasing any Preferred Stock – and in the hope of heading off a usurpation of corporate opportunities claim – KKR formally offered the investment opportunities to Primedia.94 Unable to make any additional repurchases because of the Company’s low common stock price, Primedia’s directors issued written consents permitting KKR to proceed with its purchases.95 Over the next few months, KKR spent $76.4 million to purchase roughly 2.25 million shares of Primedia Preferred Stock at an average price equal to 32% of face value.96 Evidence in the record suggested that KKR timed certain purchases to occur after it became aware of certain impending asset sales (but before public disclosure of those sales) and that KKR continued to purchase Preferred 85 Id. 86 Id. at *3. 87 Id. 88 Id. at *5. 89 Id. at *3-5. 90 Id. 91 Id. at *4. 92 Id. at *4-5. 93 Id. at *5. 94 Id. at *6. 95 Id. 96 Id. at *6-7. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly Stock even after being informed by Primedia, in November 2002, that the Company would resume exchanging Preferred Stock for common stock.97 In 2005, after a wave of successful asset sales, Primedia redeemed the Preferred Stock held by KKR at par and also paid all accrued dividends.98 As a result of its purchases of Primedia Preferred Stock, KKR earned roughly $190 million in profits.99 A consolidated derivative action (the “Derivative Action”) was thereafter brought in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging that: (i) Primedia’s directors breached their fiduciary duties by prematurely redeeming KKR’s Preferred Stock in order to benefit KKR; and (ii) KKR’s purchases of Preferred Stock usurped a corporate opportunity belonging to Primedia.100 Thereafter, Primedia appointed a two-member Special Litigation Committee (the “SLC”) to investigate these claims.101 As part of the SLC process, Primedia produced the Memo to plaintiffs’ counsel.102 Plaintiffs’ counsel then notified the SLC that the Memo supported a strong Brophy claim for insider trading against KKR.103 The SLC concluded that none of the claims had merit. As to the Brophy claim, the SLC found no evidence that the inside information contained in the Memo was material or that KKR acted with scienter, noting that KKR purportedly had planned to purchase Primedia Preferred Stock months before the issuance of the Memo. On those bases, the SLC moved to dismiss.104 Plaintiffs opposed the motion and filed an amended complaint asserting the Brophy claim.105 In June 2010, Vice Chancellor Laster held a Zapata106 hearing on the SLC’s motion to dismiss the Derivative Action.107 The court initially granted the motion, finding, with regard to the Brophy claim, that while there was strong evidence that (i) KKR possessed material nonpublic information regarding Primedia and (ii) had been motivated by that information 97 Id. 98 Id. at *7. 99 Id. 100 Id. at *8. 101 Id. 102 Id. 103 Id. 104 Id. at *9. 105 Id. 106 Zapata Corp. v. Maldonado, 430 A.2d 779 (Del. 1981). 107 Id. To resolve an SLC’s motion to dismiss a derivative action, a court must first “inquire into the independence and good faith of the com mittee and the bases supporting its conclusions.” Zapata Corp. v. Mal donado, 430 A.2d 779, 788 (Del. 1981). Once the court satisfies itself as to the SLC’s independence and good faith, it must determine whether, using its own business judgment, the motion should be grant ed. Id. at 789. The second prong is satisfied where “the SLC’s recom mended result falls within a range of reasonable outcomes that a disinterested and independent decision maker … could reasonably accept.” Primedia, 2013 WL 2169415, at *10.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 11 to make improper trades,108 the SLC nevertheless acted reasonably in recommending dismissal of the claim because of its low recovery potential. Specifically, the court reasoned that under Delaware law, Primedia could not obtain full disgorgement of KKR’s alleged $190 million in profits and, instead, could only recover for harm to the company resulting from those trades – an amount the court estimated at no more than the “mid seven figures.”109 Plaintiffs appealed, and the Delaware Supreme Court, sitting en banc, heard oral arguments in March 2011.110 In the lead-up to these arguments, Primedia announced that it was pursuing strategic alternatives.111 Before the Supreme Court could issue a ruling, Primedia’s board, on May 15, 2011, approved TPG’s offer to acquire Primedia for $7.10 per share with a 100% equity commitment (the “Acquisition”).112 The Acquisition valued the Company’s equity at $316 million.113 In approving the Acquisition, Primedia’s board concluded that the Brophy claim had little value to the Company and made no effort to secure value for the claim from TPG or otherwise preserve the claim for the Company’s shareholders.114 Actions were then filed against KKR, Primedia’s board members who approved the Acquisition (the “Director Defendants”), and TPG, challenging the fairness of the Acquisition on the grounds that the minority stockholders did not receive any consideration for their pro rata portion of the value of the Brophy claim.115 The complaint contained an additional cause of action alleging that the parties’ merger agreement (the “Merger Agreement”) iolated Delaware law by requiring the board to maintain a current merger recommendation.116 On June 20, 2011, the Delaware Supreme Court reversed the Court of Chancery’s decision insofar as it rested on the premise that full disgorgement was unavailable as a Brophy remedy as a matter of law. Instead, the Supreme Court held that Primedia could, in fact, recover full disgorgement of KKR’s profits if its Brophy claim were successful and remanded the case to the Court of Chancery.117 In the wake of this ruling, Primedia’s board publicly acknowledged the Supreme Court’s ruling but 108 Id. at *11-12. 109 Id. at *14. This number includes the $1.5 to $2 million earned by KKR on the purchase that took place after Primedia announced that it would recommence its exchange program and the costs of the SLC investigation and stockholder action. Id. 110 Id. at *16. 111 Id. at *15. 112 Id. at *16. 113 Id. 114 Id. 115 Id. at *17. 116 Id. at *31. 117 Id. at *17. See Kahn v. Kolberg Kravis Roberts & Co., 23 A.3d 831 (Del. 2011). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly stated that it did not change its conclusion that pursuing the Brophy claim was not in the Company’s best interests. The Acquisition closed on July 13, 2011, extinguishing plaintiffs’ derivative standing vis-à-vis the Brophy claim.118 The parties voluntarily dismissed the derivative claim, and defendants moved to dismiss the now-consolidated lawsuits challenging the Acquisition.
The Court’s Analysis Standing To Pursue A Parnes Claim For their claims to survive a motion to dismiss, plaintiffs must first establish standing.119 Under Parnes v. Bally Entertainment Corp.,120 former stockholders of an acquired company can challenge a consummated merger directly where: (i) there is an underlying derivative claim on which relief can be granted;121 (ii) the value of that claim is material vis-à-vis the merger consideration; and (iii) the complaint supports an inference that the acquirer neither provided value for the claim nor would pursue it post-closing.122 As set forth below, the court found that plaintiffs had adequately alleged each element. Viability of the Brophy Claim. As an initial matter, the court had no trouble finding that the Brophy claim was valid and would “blow by” a motion to dismiss. The Memo’s contents and evidence of KKR timing Preferred Stock purchases to take advantage of asset sales that had yet to be publicly announced created a strong inference that KKR: (i) received inside information from its representatives on Primedia’s board; (ii) was cognizant of that information’s materiality; and (iii) traded on it prior to the information’s public release.123 Indeed, the court went so far as to state that the Memo “appeared to be a proverbial smoking gun document.”124 While the court acknowledged that the defendants had a potentially dispositive statute of limitations defense, the parties had yet to directly brief that issue, so the court deferred consideration of it.125 Materiality of Brophy Claim. In light of the Supreme Court’s ruling on available damages, the court concluded that the Brophy claim’s prospective value was material with respect to the Acquisition consideration – the potentially recoverable 118 Primedia, 2013 WL 2169415, at *17. 119 Id. at *19. 120 722 A.2d 1243 (Del. 1999). 121 The Court held that Rule 12(b)(6), not Rule 23.1, governs this prong. Primedia, 2013 WL 2169415, at *19. 122 Id. 123 Id. at *19-23. 124 Id. at *11. 125 Id. at *23.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 12 disgorged profits totaled $190 million (plus interest), more than half the $316 million paid by TPG for the company’s equity.126 The court distinguished its decision from the recent Massey Energy127 case where Chancellor Strine held that a Caremark128 claim’s value was not material because there: (i) the director defendants could invoke the company’s 102(b) (7) exculpation provision; (ii) it was unlikely that plaintiffs would recover more than the $95 million limit on the relevant director and officer insurance policies; and (iii) the total merger consideration was $8.5 billion.129 Here, by contrast, KKR was not insulated by an exculpation provision (insofar as it was a controlling stockholder that profited from allegedly disloyal trades), and KKR presumably has the means to pay a $190 million judgment.130 Bolstering its conclusion, the court reasoned that even discounting the recovery to a one-in-five chance of success, the value would still be material.131 TPG’s Intentions With Respect To Brophy Claim. The court found no evidence that TPG’s bid ascribed any value to the Brophy claim or that TPG would press the claim going forward.132 Indeed, financial acquirers like TPG purchase businesses, not claims, and the principals of TPG have numerous business and personal connections to KKR’s principals.133 Moreover, TPG is not exposed to liability for KKR’s Preferred Stock purchases, so this is not a case, unlike Massey Energy, where the acquirer would be motivated to press a derivative suit in order to offset its own liability to third parties.134 Fiduciary Duty Claim Having determined that plaintiffs had standing, the court turned to the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ allegations to state a Parnes claim that the merger price was inadequate. As a threshold (and largely dispositive) matter, the court found that entire fairness was the applicable standard of review for determining whether Primedia’s board received adequate consideration for the company’s assets because KKR, Primedia’s controlling stockholder, received a benefit not shared with the minority stockholders.135 Specifically, since KKR knew that TPG would acquire the Brophy claim in the Acquisition but would never 126 Id. 127 In re Massey Energy Co., C.A. No. 5430-VCS, 2011 WL 2176479 (Del. Ch. May 31, 2011). 128 In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). 129 Primedia, 2013 WL 2169415, at *23-24. 130 Id. at *24. 131 Id. 132 Id. at *24-26. 133 Id. at *25-27. 134 Id. at *25-26. 135 Id. at *27. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly assert it, the Acquisition effectively allowed KKR to insulate itself from insider trading liability associated with the Brophy claim, which could be significant.136 By contrast, Primedia’s minority stockholders, who prior to the Acquisition owned a 42% pro rata interest in the Brophy claim – a litigation asset worth up to $80 million137 – received nothing in exchange. Furthermore, the Acquisition did not include any procedural protections – e.g., an independent special committee or a majority-of-the-minority provision – that could spare interested transactions from fairness review.138 Under the entire fairness standard, defendants bear the burden of showing both fair price and fair dealing.139 The court found it “reasonably conceivable”140 that the deal price was unfair to minority stockholders because no value was ascribed to the Brophy claim.141 The defendants offered numerous defenses concerning their subjective belief in the fairness of the merger and the worthlessness of the Brophy claim, which the court observed were unavailable at the motion to dismiss stage when the standard of review is entire fairness.142 As to the Primedia director defendants specifically, the court acknowledged that their individual liability could ultimately turn on their state of mind in approving the Acquisition. However, such defenses were likewise premature.143 Claims Based On Merger Agreement Plaintiffs also claimed that the Merger Agreement violated Delaware law by freezing the board’s recommendation that stockholders approve the Acquisition once KKR executed its written consent in favor of the Acquisition – i.e., once KKR executed its consent, the board’s recommendation could not be modified, regardless of what happened.144 Delaware law requires a board faced with a merger proposal to make a recommendation to the company’s stockholders, and there is a continuing obligation to update this recommendation based on new material events.145 The issue before the court was when that duty to update expires. Because the purpose of the 136 Id. 137 Id. 138 Id. at *28. 139 Id. 140 Delaware’s standard on a 12(b)(6) motion is more plaintiff friendly than the federal standard – plaintiffs must only establish a “possibility” of recovery. Id. at *18. 141 Id. at *28. 142 Id. at *28-30. Likewise, defenses under the exculpatory provision of a corporate charter are also insufficient to defeat a motion to dismiss in entire fairness cases. Id. at *30. 143 Id. at *29-30. In contrast, KKR’s state of mind is not relevant to plaintiffs’ claims – if the merger terms are found to be unfair, KKR will be liable for self-dealing. Id. at *29. 144 Id. at *31. 145 Id. at *31-32.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 13 recommendation requirement is to support informed decisionmaking by stockholders, the court held that the duty to update such a recommendation ends at the time the stockholders approve the merger.146 Here, since KKR was the controlling stockholder, execution of its written consent approved the merger.147 Accordingly, the court considered the execution to be the endpoint of the board’s duty to update and dismissed plaintiffs’ claim.148
Takeaways The Primedia decision breathes new life into Parnes claims challenging the adequacy of merger consideration for failing to account for extant derivative claims and provides extensive guidance on prosecuting (and defending) such claims. In particular, the court’s extended analysis of Massey Energy – a recent Chancery Court decision rejecting Parnes claims – highlights a number of key factors that the court will consider in a Parnes action, including: (i) the value of the asset at issue in relation to the total merger price; (ii) the amount likely to be recovered by plaintiffs should their claim succeed (which can be far less than the full value of the asset); and (iii) the purchaser’s incentive (if any) to pursue the derivative claim once the merger closes. In order to stave off a potential Parnes claim, a board of directors running a sales process would be well-served to consider the value of derivative claims as litigation assets – and to establish a record of its consideration – particularly if those claims are easily calculable. The court’s decision may also lead to an uptick in the prevalence of Brophy claims. The Supreme Court’s 2011 opinion in this action permitting successful Brophy plaintiffs to receive full disgorgement of the insider’s profits – rather than limiting them to damages actually suffered by the corporation – drastically increases the potential value of such claims, along with plaintiffs’ motivation to pursue them. On the other hand, practitioners should bear in mind that the Primedia holding will be limited to its facts, which are in many ways extreme. Indeed, the Vice Chancellor relied heavily on a “smoking gun” memorandum authored by the alleged inside trader that effectively conceded scienter, characterizing plaintiffs’ underlying Brophy claims as strong enough to “blow by” a motion to dismiss.
146 Id. at *34-35. 147 Id. 148 Id. at *36. The court also summarily dismissed plaintiffs’ aiding and abetting claim against TPG on the ground that plaintiffs failed to adequately allege that TPG knowingly acted to deprive the minority shareholders of fair value for their portion of the Brophy claim. Id. Return to top
Delaware Quarterly In all likelihood, plaintiffs will continue to face an uphill battle in seeking to ground Parnes claims on underlying Brophy claims based on more obscure or generalized allegations.
Pyott v. Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System In a terse, 12-page opinion issued on interlocutory appeal, the Delaware Supreme Court, sitting en banc, unanimously reversed the Court of Chancery’s holding in Pyott149 that the dismissal with prejudice of one derivative “Caremark”150 action on demand futility grounds does not bar a subsequent derivative action by a different shareholder – even though based on the same alleged conduct – because: (i) the two plaintiffs are not in “privity” under Delaware law, and (ii) the filing by shareholders of derivative Caremark claims prior to conducting a meaningful investigation through, e.g., a books and records demand under 8 Del. C. §220, creates an irrebuttable presumption that such shareholders are “inadequate” as representative plaintiffs under Court of Chancery Rule 23.1.151 Obviating a recent trend in Court of Chancery case law, the Supreme Court made clear that under the Full Faith and Credit Clause, collateral estoppel issues must be decided entirely under the law of the issuing court, including the question of privity among plaintiffs, which the Court of Chancery analyzed under Delaware law. The Supreme Court likewise rejected the lower court’s application of an irrebuttable presumption that plaintiffs filing Caremark claims prior to seeking inspection of corporate books and records are inadequate representatives under Rule 23.1.
Background Allergan, Inc. (“Allergan”) is a Delaware corporation that develops and markets Botox, a prescription neurotoxin that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) for the treatment of certain muscle disorders and cosmetic uses.152 Although physicians may legally prescribe Botox for therapeutic treatments that have not been approved by the FDA, applicable regulations make it illegal for Allergan to market Botox for such “off-label uses.”153 Beginning in 2007, the U.S. Department of Justice began investigating Allergan’s off-label marketing practices, and, on September 1, 2010, Allergan agreed to plead guilty to a criminal charge 149 46 A.3d 313 (Del. Ch. June 11, 2012). 150 In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). 151 Pyott, 2013 WL 1364695. 152 Id. at *1. 153 Id.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 14 of misdemeanor misbranding and to pay $600 million in civil and criminal fines.154 Just two days after Allergan announced the settlement, Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System (“LAMPERS”) filed a derivative complaint in the Delaware Court of Chancery.155 In the following weeks, similar suits were filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California and consolidated into a single action.156 Allergan and its directors moved to dismiss both the Delaware and California actions for failure to plead demand futility under Rule 23.1. The Court of Chancery postponed briefing to permit another shareholder, U.F.C.W. Local 1776 & Participating Employers Pension Fund (“UFCW”), to inspect Allergan’s books and records under 8 Del. C. §220.157 After obtaining and reviewing Allergan’s internal documents, UFCW intervened and, together with LAMPERS, filed an amended complaint in the Delaware action.158 The California plaintiffs thereafter filed a substantially similar amended complaint in the California federal court.159 Allergan and its directors again moved to dismiss both actions for failure to plead demand futility.160 Prior to oral argument in Delaware, however, the California federal court dismissed the California action, with prejudice, on demand futility grounds.161 The Delaware defendants consequently amended their motion to argue that the California judgment precluded the Delaware action on collateral estoppel grounds.162
The Court of Chancery’s Decision Acknowledging a substantial body of authority to the contrary – including at least one decision by the Chancery Court163 – Vice Chancellor Laster denied the defendants’ motion, holding that the dismissal of one shareholder derivative action under Rule 23.1 does not have preclusive effect on a later-filed derivative action involving the same conduct but a different plaintiff.164 Although generally applying California’s collateral estoppel law, the Vice Chancellor determined that Delaware law should govern the privity prong of the inquiry, i.e., whether 154 Id. 155 Id. 156 Id. 157 Id. 158 Id. 159 Id. 160 Id. 161 Id. 162 Id. 163 In re Career Educ. Corp. Deriv. Litig., 2007 WL 2875203 (Del. Ch. Sept. 28, 2007). 164 Pyott, C.A. No. 5795-VCL, 46 A.3d 313 (Del. Ch. June 11, 2012). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly the plaintiffs in the two actions at issue are in privity with each other or the represented corporation, pursuant to the internal affairs doctrine. The court concluded that under Delaware law, a derivative plaintiff is not in privity with other shareholders for purposes of collateral estoppel until it survives a motion to dismiss based on failure to make a demand.165 Until demand is excused, the court reasoned, the shareholder plaintiff is merely suing for the right to represent the corporation, and a final judgment denying that individual claim has no preclusive effect on other shareholders’ derivative claims.166 The Vice Chancellor also rejected defendants’ collateral estoppel argument on the basis that the California plaintiffs were not adequate representatives under Rule 23.1.167 Specifically, the court found that the California plaintiffs were inadequate representatives because, by failing to conduct a meaningful investigation – i.e., by demanding to inspect the company’s books and records under 8 Del. C. §220 – prior to filing suit, the plaintiffs were acting in their own interests (securing control over the case and lead plaintiff status under the “first-filed doctrine”) and against the interests of Allergan, on whose behalf plaintiffs purported to be acting.168 Going even further, the court implemented and applied a “presumption” of inadequacy for these so-called “fast filing” plaintiffs – a procedural mechanism first suggested by nowChancellor Strine in King v. VeriFone Holdings, Inc.169 In doing so, the court seemingly found a way to give teeth to its oft-repeated admonition that, in the wake of some corporate “trauma,” (would-be) plaintiffs’ counsel initially utilize books and records demands to explore the relevant facts, rather than file wholly uninformed derivative actions in an effort to secure pole position in the proverbial race to the courthouse. Recognizing the uncertainty in collateral estoppel doctrine in the derivative context, the court certified its decision declining dismissal for interlocutory appeal, which the Delaware Supreme Court accepted.
The Intervening South v. Baker Decision Less than three months after the Court of Chancery’s Pyott opinion, that court again confronted derivative Caremark claims filed on the basis of publicized corporate trauma without a predicate books and records demand in South v. Baker.170 Following the disclosure by Hecla Mining Company of lowered silver projections and numerous regulatory safety 165 Pyott, 2013 WL 1364695, at *3. 166 Id. at *3. 167 Id. at *4. 168 Id. at *4. 169 994 A.2d 354, 364 n.34 (Del. Ch. 2010). 170 62 A.3d 1 (Del. Ch. 2012).
Winston & Strawn LLP | 15 violations, plaintiffs filed two lawsuits in federal district court in Idaho alleging that Hecla violated federal securities laws by issuing materially misleading disclosures regarding the safety of its mines. Shortly thereafter, different shareholder plaintiffs filed suit in the Court of Chancery asserting Caremark claims against Hecla’s directors and seeking damages for injury to the company as a result of the federal securities suits. Emphasizing the Delaware plaintiffs’ failure to seek books and records under Section 220 prior to filing suit, the Court of Chancery dismissed the Caremark claims for failure to plead demand futility. Specifically, without any underlying factual support, plaintiffs were unable, in the court’s estimation, to allege particularized facts indicating that a majority of Hecla’s board faced a substantial risk of liability. Following in the steps of the Pyott opinion, the court reaffirmed the “fast-filer presumption,” holding that by not investigating the factual underpinnings of its claims before filing suit, plaintiffs act disloyally to the company they purport to represent and are thus presumptively inadequate to serve as representative plaintiffs.171 In addition, in a further nod to Pyott, the court went out of its way to suggest that its dismissal as to the named plaintiffs should not preclude subsequent derivative suits on behalf of Hecla; in other words, the court sought to preemptively insulate shareholders who do conduct a meaningful investigation into the facts before launching a suit.172 The South opinion differed from its Pyott progenitor in one key respect: it expressly held that the presumption that fastfilers acted disloyally and thus were inadequate plaintiffs is a rebuttable one, so long as plaintiffs can show either that: (i) notwithstanding the absence of a Section 220 demand, they had otherwise conducted a meaningful investigation into the underlying facts or (ii) filing quickly had provided a benefit to the company on whose behalf the suit was brought and not just to plaintiffs’ counsel.173 While the court found that the South plaintiffs failed to rebut the presumption – among other things, plaintiffs’ counsel admitted to filing the suit after spending only a handful of hours analyzing the claims, and that they did so out of concern that other plaintiffs would secure “lead” status and control of the case – the ability to rebut the fast-filer presumption is an important distinction in the collateral estoppel landscape, particularly in light of the Delaware Supreme Court’s subsequent reversal of Pyott on interlocutory appeal.
171 Id. at 19. 172 Id. at 26. 173 Id. at 22-24. Return to top
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The Delaware Supreme Court’s Reversal In an April 4, 2013, opinion authored by Justice Berger, the Delaware Supreme Court reversed the Court of Chancery decision in Pyott in its entirety. 174
As an initial matter, the Court determined that the Chancery Court had erred in applying Delaware law to the issue of privity amongst shareholder plaintiffs. Specifically, the Court concluded that under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the U.S. Constitution, Delaware courts must give full force and effect to the judgments of other jurisdictions, including federal courts.175 That, in turn, requires that the collateral estoppel effect of such a judgment must be analyzed entirely under the law of the issuing court’s jurisdiction. In that regard, the Supreme Court criticized the lower court’s analysis “because it conflated collateral estoppel with demand futility.”176 “Once a court of competent jurisdiction has issued a final judgment,” the Court ruled, “a successive case is governed by the principles of collateral estoppel, under the full faith and credit doctrine, and not by demand futility law, under the internal affairs doctrine.”177 Accordingly, the Court of Chancery should have applied California law or federal common law to analyze the elements of collateral estoppel, under which “the real plaintiff in a derivative suit is the corporation, [and] differing groups of shareholders who can potentially stand in the corporation’s stead are in privity for purposes of issue preclusion.”178 Thus, since California law unambiguously provides that dismissal on demand futility grounds precludes subsequent derivative claims based on the same alleged facts, the Supreme Court did not need to reach the merits of the lower court’s privity analysis under Delaware law.179 The Supreme Court also rejected the “fast filer” presumption of inadequacy employed by the Chancery Court and found “no record of support for the trial court’s” conclusion.180 While the Court acknowledged the potential perils of fast filing, it found no basis for an irrebuttable presumption of inadequacy for shareholders who quickly file suit without first seeking books and records under Section 220.181 Instead, the Supreme Court recommended that the remedies for fast filers should be directed toward lawyers, not shareholder plaintiffs or their complaints.182 Removing the irrebuttable presumption from the equation, the Supreme Court found no basis to conclude 174 Pyott, 2013 WL 1364695. 175 Id. at *2. 176 Id. at *2. 177 Id. at *2. 178 Id. at *3. 179 Id. at *3. 180 Id. at *4. 181 Id. at *4. 182 Id. at *4.
that the California plaintiffs were inadequate representatives, particularly in light of the similarities between the California complaint and the Delaware complaint, which the Court of Chancery held sufficient to state a claim.183
Takeaways The Supreme Court’s ruling essentially returns collateral estoppel law in the demand futility context to its pre-Pyott/ South character by confirming that – in accordance with the weight of authority and earlier Delaware case law – dismissals based on failure to plead demand futility under Rule 23 preclude subsequent litigation based on the same conduct so long as the elements of collateral estoppel under the law of the issuing court’s jurisdiction are satisfied. The Court’s directive to enforce judgments issued by other jurisdictions as a matter of “federalism, comity, and finality,”184 should come as a relief to defendants who, under the Court of Chancery’s recent decisions, feared an onslaught of multi-jurisdictional derivative litigation with the potential for contradictory outcomes (among other unsavory consequences). In addition, the Court reestablishes that the “adequacy” analysis under Rule 23 is a fact-specific construct in which the filing of derivative claims before seeking books and records is a factor to consider, but not dispositive on the issue. At the same time, as discussed below, the ruling appears to leave open certain relevant issues in the area. First, because the application of California law resolved the collateral estoppel question, the Supreme Court did not address the Court of Chancery’s finding that under Delaware law, there is no privity between derivative stockholders where one stockholder’s claims have been dismissed for failure to plead demand futility. In other words, the question of whether Delaware law permits a derivative stockholder to become a representative of the company before demand is excused (and, thus, in privity with subsequent derivative plaintiffs) remains open. That said, the Supreme Court did express skepticism of the Vice Chancellor’s approach, noting that “numerous other jurisdictions have held that there is privity between derivative stockholders.”185 Second, while the Supreme Court’s decision makes clear that filing a derivative claim before exercising inspection rights under Section 220 (i.e., “fast-filing”) does not create an irrebuttable presumption of inadequacy – the Court’s interpretation of Vice Chancellor Laster’s ruling – it does not, on its face, foreclose the possibility of a rebuttable 183 Id. at *4. 184 Id. at *2. 185 Id. at *3. Return to top
presumption of inadequacy as delineated in the Court of Chancery’s subsequent decision in South v. Baker. Whether the “fast-filer” presumption will survive in rebuttable form remains to be seen; given the Court of Chancery’s historicalemphasis on derivative plaintiffs’ and their counsels’ pre-filing conduct, the issue will almost certainly re-emerge in the future.
• In Brinckerhoff v. Enbridge Energy Co.,
the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s dismissal of a derivative and class action complaint brought by a unitholder of Enbridge Energy Partners, L.P. (“EEP”) challenging the approval of a joint venture agreement to fund a pipeline project. Adopting the Chancery Court’s reasoning, the Supreme Court held that: (i) EEP’s general partner was entitled to a conclusive presumption of good faith under the terms of the limited partnership agreement because it relied on the opinion of a qualified financial advisor; (ii) plaintiff failed to plead sufficient facts to allege bad faith against the remaining defendants; and (iii) plaintiff waived his claims for rescission and reformation. 186
GP’s approval of a merger had to have been made in good faith; and (iii) the GP’s approval was conclusively presumed to be made in good faith if it relied on an expert opinion. Because the GP relied on the fairness opinion of an independent financial advisor, the GP presumptively approved the merger in good faith.
• In Gerber v. Enterprise Products Holdings, LLC,
the Delaware Supreme Court upheld fair dealing claims, reversing in part the Court of Chancery, by finding that plaintiff had adequately alleged a claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, despite the good faith provision in Enterprise GP Holdings, LP’s limited partnership agreement (the “LPA”). Adopting the analysis set forth in ASB Allegiance Real Estate Fund v. Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC,189 the Supreme Court reasoned that the LPA’s conclusive presumption of good faith did not “operate retroactively to alter the parties reasonable expectations at the time of contracting” and, thus, could not serve to bar plaintiff’s claim under the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
• In Senior Housing Capital, LLC v. SHP Senior Housing
Fund, LLC,190 Chancellor Strine, in a post-trial opinion, declined to review appraisals obtained through a contractually designated appraisal process. Plaintiff SHP Asset Management (“SHP”) and defendant California Employees’ Retirement System (“CalPERS”) formed a fund (the “Fund”) to invest in retirement homes. When SHP later withdrew from the Fund, CalPERS was obligated, under the LLC Agreement, to pay SHP its membership interests and an incentive distribution. To that end, the LLC Agreement set forth an appraisal process, based on CalPERS’ form contracts, to determine the market value of the Fund and its investments. Unhappy with the appraisals it obtained, however, CalPERS ordered the appraisers to revise their appraisals downward, and ultimately, CalPERS did not make any payments to SHP. SHP filed suit to force CalPERS to make these payments based on the original appraisals. At trial, CalPERS asserted that the court was required to reach a de novo judgment on the matters assigned to the appraisers, while SHP argued that the court could not exercise any judicial review of the appraisals.
• In Norton v. K-Sea Transportation Partners L.P.,
the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s dismissal of a class action complaint brought on behalf of common unitholders of K-Sea Transportation Partners L.P. challenging the acquisition of K-Sea by Kirby Corporation. The Supreme Court confirmed that limited partnership agreements that provide for the presumption of good faith bar claims based on alleged conflicts of interest. Plaintiff had claimed that K-Sea’s general partner (the “GP”) had a conflict of interest when deciding to approve the merger due to compensation payable to the GP that was not payable to other unitholders. The Supreme Court found that the payment to the GP did not create a conflict of interest because the express terms of K-Sea’s limited partnership agreement provided that: (i) only the GP had duties regarding the approval of mergers; (ii) the 187
186 No. 574, 2011, 213 WL 2321598 (Del. May 28, 2013). 187 No. 238, 2012, 2013 WL 2316550 (Del. May 28, 2013).
No. 46, 2012, 2013 WL 2477233 (Del. June 10, 2013). 50 A.3d 434, 440-42 (Del. Ch. 2012), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds, __ A.3d __, 2013 WL 1914714 (Del. May 9, 2013). C.A. No. 4586-CS, 2013 WL 1955012 (Del. Ch. May 13, 2013). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly The court held that, absent a showing of bad faith or contractually improper conduct, the court could not review the appraisals because the parties had agreed to be bound by the contractually designated appraisal process. The court noted that even if it were to review the appraisal methodology, it would still rule in favor of SHP.
Cartanza v. Cartanza,191 Vice Chancellor Parsons granted plaintiff’s request for attorneys’ fees where defense counsel obstructed the efforts of plaintiff’s counsel to depose defendant and purported to require plaintiff to show a “critical need” for the deposition. Plaintiff moved to compel the deposition, and eventually the parties stipulated to take defendant’s deposition. As a result of the stipulation, the only issue before the court was whether plaintiff was entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees under Court of Chancery Rule 37. The court granted plaintiff’s request for attorneys’ fees, finding that defense counsel obstructed plaintiff’s legitimate discovery requests and wasted unnecessarily both plaintiff’s and the court’s time and resources. In so ruling, the court noted that there was no requirement to show a “particularized need” to take a deposition under Delaware law, even when a deponent is ill. Rather, Court of Chancery Rule 26 gives a party the right to take a deposition regarding “any matter ... which is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action.” The information sought need not be critical.
Edgewater Growth Capital Partners L.P. v. H.I.G. Capital, Inc.,192 Chancellor Strine granted H.I.G. Capital, Inc.’s (“HIG”) motion for reargument and denied Edgewater Growth Capital Partners L.P.’s objection to attorneys’ fees and costs. The court granted the motion for reargument finding that it misunderstood a provision of the guaranty agreement and that the error was material and would have changed the outcome of the court’s earlier decision. The court then turned to Edgewater’s objection to HIG’s attorneys’ fees, which was based not on the reasonableness of total cost but rather on the basis that the fees did not stand up to the result achieved. The court noted the eight factors under Rule 1.5(a) of the Delaware Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct, which govern the reasonableness of a fee and expense request. The court addressed factor four (amount involved and results obtained) and found that HIG’s expenses were reasonable because it was required to defend against
191 C.A. No. 7618-VCP, 2013 WL 1615767 (Del. Ch. Apr. 16, 2013). 192 C.A. No. 3601-CS, 2013 WL 1707877 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 2013).
Winston & Strawn LLP | 18 Edgewater’s claims against HIG. Thus, HIG could not be blamed for the fact that its fees of $2.6 million were greater than the $1.8 million it sought from Edgewater. The court also found that the fees were reasonable under the other applicable factors (time and labor required, fee customarily charged in this context, and experience, reputation, and ability of lawyers).
Contracts Agreement to Negotiate in Good Faith; Expectation Damages
• In SIGA Technologies, Inc. v. PharmAthene, Inc.,
the Delaware Supreme Court reaffirmed that an express contractual obligation to negotiate in good faith is enforceable and held, for the first time, that Delaware will award expectation/benefit-of-the-bargain damages for the breach of an agreement to negotiate in good faith if the court is reasonably certain that (i) the parties would have reached an agreement absent bad faith and (ii) those damages can be determined with reasonable certainty. Reviewing the issue de novo, and applying Delaware law, the Supreme Court found that SIGA Technologies, Inc. acted in bad faith by proposing terms for a license agreement with PharmAthene, Inc. that differed dramatically from those contained in the parties’ license agreement term sheet (the “LATS”), even though the LATS was not signed and contained a footer on each page stating “Non Binding Terms.” The Supreme Court reasoned that, by incorporating the LATS into their Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements, SIGA and PharmAthene intended to negotiate a license agreement with economic terms substantially similar to those of the LATS. In addition, the Supreme Court reversed the Chancery Court’s finding that SIGA was liable on the basis of promissory estoppel because an enforceable contract governed the promise at issue. Finally, the Supreme Court reversed and remanded the Chancery Court’s damages award, holding that PharmAthene could recover expectation damages if the trial judge determined that the parties would have reached an agreement but for SIGA’s bad faith negotiations. 193
• In Israel Discount Bank of N.Y. v. First State Depository Co.,194 Vice Chancellor Parsons awarded plaintiff, a New York bank, $7 million in damages for, among other things,
193 No. 314, 2012, 2013 WL 2303303 (Del. May 24, 2013). 194 C.A. No. 7237-VCP, 2013 WL 2326875 (Del. Ch. May 29, 2013). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly defendant First State Depository, Co.’s (“FSD”) breach of a bailment agreement by releasing collateral for a $10 million loan to defendant Certified Assets Management, Inc. (“CAMI”). While defendants asserted a “legion of defenses,” the court ruled that FSD breached the bailment agreement by releasing the collateral to CAMI without plaintiff’s consent and by interfering with plaintiff’s inspection and removal rights under the agreement. The court further ruled that CAMI converted the collateral by wrongfully taking possession and disposing of it. Due to defendants’ bad faith litigation conduct, the court also awarded plaintiff attorneys’ fees and expenses.
Anvil Holding Corporation v. Iron Acquisition Company, Inc.,195 Vice Chancellor Parsons denied a motion to dismiss with respect to claims for fraud and fraudulent inducement and granted the motion with respect to a claim for bad faith breach of contract. Plaintiffs, the purchasers of all outstanding units of Iron Data Solutions, LLC, alleged that the unitholders of Iron Data (the “Sellers”) deliberately withheld material information regarding a forthcoming change in Iron Data’s most important contracts, which significantly reduced the company’s value. Defendants moved to dismiss. The court held that: (i) plaintiffs’ fraud and fraudulent inducement claims against the individual defendants were pled with particularity under Rule 9(b); (ii) the individual defendants could be held liable for fraud based on representations made in the purchase agreement; and (iii) the purchase agreement did not preclude plaintiffs from asserting claims for fraud based on extra-contractual representations. The court also dismissed plaintiffs’ bad faith breach of contract claim as duplicative of the fraud claims and plaintiffs’ breach of contract claims for failure to name all Sellers as defendants.
Blaustein v. Lord Baltimore Capital Corp.,196 Vice Chancellor Noble granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and denied plaintiff’s motion to supplement the complaint as futile. Plaintiff, an initial investor in the closely held Lord Baltimore Capital Corp., alleged that Lord Baltimore’s CEO orally promised her that the company would redeem her shares at full value in ten years. The governing stockholders’ agreement, however, merely provided
195 C.A. No. 7975-VCP, 2013 WL 2249655 (Del. Ch. May 17, 2013) 196 C.A. No. 6685-VCN, 2013 WL 1810954 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2013).
Winston & Strawn LLP | 19 that the company could repurchase shares with approval from either the board of directors or a supermajority of stockholders. According to plaintiff, the CEO only offered to redeem her shares at a discount of half of her pro rata share of the value of the company’s net assets and precluded plaintiff’s access to the board to consider her repurchase proposals. Although the board did not hold a formal vote on any of plaintiff’s proposals until after litigation had commenced, the court held that the record demonstrated the board had considered plaintiff’s proposals and rejected them for valid reasons. The court also held that the company had no obligation to negotiate in good faith because the stockholders’ agreement imposed no obligation on the parties to negotiate at all. Interpretation
• In Recor Medical, Inc. v. Warnking,
Vice Chancellor Noble held that plaintiff Recor Medical, Inc. acquired defendant Reinhard Warnking’s intellectual property in its acquisition of Warnking’s employer, ProRhythm, Inc. Prior to the acquisition, Warnking and ProRhythm entered into an Intellectual Assignment Agreement (“IAA”), which provided that all intellectual property “conceived” by Warnking belonged to ProRhythm. After the acquisition, Warnking assigned one of his pending patents to another company. Recor brought a declaratory judgment action, alleging that the patent should have instead been transferred to Recor. The court held that the IAA broadly defined the term “conceive,” so the pending patents were the property of Recor. The court enjoined Warnking from using the procedures described in the patents and ordered him to transfer the patents to Recor. 197
• In Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC v. ASB
Allegiance Real Estate Fund,198 the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s decision to reform three real estate joint venture agreements on the basis of unilateral mistake and knowing silence by the other party, but reversed the lower court’s award of attorneys’ fees. The Court noted that negligence in discovering an alleged mistake does not bar a reformation claim unless the negligence is so significant that it amounts to a failure to act in good faith and in accordance with reasonable standards of fair dealing. The Court also noted that ratifying a contract does not create an equitable
197 C.A. No. 7387-VCN, 2013 WL 2389873 (Del. Ch. May 31, 2013). 198 No. 437, 2012, 2013 WL 1914714 (Del. May 9, 2013). Return to top
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bar to reformation unless the ratifying party had actual knowledge of the mistake giving rise to the reformation claim.
In re China Agritech, Inc. Shareholder Derivative Litigation,199 Vice Chancellor Laster denied defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to make a demand, finding that the complaint contained sufficient facts to support a reasonable inference that: (i) the board of China Agritech, Inc. breached its duty of oversight under Caremark200; and (ii) a demand on the company’s board would have been futile. Prior to filing suit, plaintiff, a China Agritech stockholder, made a Section 220 demand for books and records. When the company refused to produce any documents, plaintiff filed a books and records action, and the company subsequently produced a total of only 227 pages of documents. Plaintiff thereafter filed a derivative action seeking to recover damages resulting from breaches of fiduciary duties, including breach of the duty of oversight. In the following months, four of the board’s seven directors and the company’s CFO resigned under “highly suspicious circumstances.” Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for, among other things, failure to plead demand futility. The court found that demand would have been futile under the Aronson201 test with respect to the events that involved the board’s actual decisions because the complaint raised a reasonable doubt that a majority of the board could have exercised its independent and disinterested business judgment. The court further found that demand would have been futile under the Rales202 test with respect to plaintiff’s Caremark claim because plaintiff’s allegations supported a reasonable inference that the company’s audit committee consciously disregarded their duties in failing to meet for over a period of two years and in connection with the company’s U.S. and Chinese regulatory filings, which diverged dramatically. The court noted that plaintiff supported its claims with references to the company’s documents obtained through its Section 220 action and with inferences drawn from the absence of documents that the company could be expected to produce.
• In Harold Grill 2 IRA v. Chênevert,
Chancellor Strine dismissed a derivative action brought on behalf of 203
199 C.A. No. 7163-VCL, 2013 WL 2181514 (Del. Ch. May 21, 2013). 200 In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). 201 Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805 (Del. 1984). 202 Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927 (Del. 1993). 203 C.A. No. 7999-CS, 2013 WL 3014120 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2013).
United Technologies Corporation (“UTC”), finding that the complaint failed to plead with particularity that a majority of the board faced a substantial risk of liability. Plaintiff, a UTC stockholder, alleged that the UTC board consciously caused UTC to misrepresent violations of export controls by two of its subsidiaries to the federal government, causing UTC to pay a $55 million fine as part of a plea agreement with the State Department. The court held that demand was not excused because plaintiff failed to allege that defendant directors caused any legal breach or even that they were aware – before the State Department’s determination – that UTC had broken the law. The court further held that plaintiff did not plead any facts to support a pleading stage inference that any particular director should have known that the disclosures were false.
Louisiana Municipal Police Employees Retirement System v. Bergstein,204 Chancellor Strine denied a motion to dismiss a derivative action brought on behalf of Simon Property Group (“SPG”). Plaintiffs alleged that SPG’s board of directors breached its fiduciary duties by approving an amendment to the company’s stock incentive plan, resulting in a $120 million grant to the CEO without shareholder approval as required by applicable stock exchange rules. The defendants moved to dismiss, noting that SPG had received an e-mail confirmation from the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) staff that shareholder approval of the amendment was not required under NYSE rules. The court held that the NYSE staff e-mail was not dispositive at the pleading stage because it was too informal to rely upon, and SPG did not provide the NYSE staff with sufficient background information.
• In Rich v. Chong,
Vice Chancellor Glasscock denied a motion to dismiss a shareholder derivative action brought on behalf of Fuqi International, Inc. (“Fuqi”) alleging breaches of fiduciary duty under Caremark206. Defendants moved to dismiss the derivative complaint under Rule 23.1 on the basis that Fuqi’s board of directors had not yet rejected plaintiff’s demand and under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. The court held that the requirements of Rule 23.1 had been satisfied because plaintiff pled particular facts creating a reasonable doubt that the Fuqi board was acting in good faith and with due care in investigating the facts underlying the demand. 205
204 C.A. No. 7764-CS (Del. Ch. May 30, 2013). 205 C.A. No. 7616-VCG, 2013 WL 1776674 (Del. Ch. Apr. 25, 2013). 206 In re Caremark Int’l Inc. Derivative Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). Return to top
The court rejected the argument that defendants were protected by the business judgment rule because the board had abandoned the demand investigation for several months and this was an abdication of the board’s duty to investigate the demand. Moreover, similar to the court’s recent decision in In re Puda Coal, Inc. Stockholders Litigation207 – which held that directors of companies could be held liable for breaching their fiduciary duty of loyalty by failing to sufficiently monitor the company’s foreign assets and activities – the court found that the Fuqi board knew that the company’s controls were inadequate and nevertheless failed to act. As such, plaintiff stated a claim under Caremark. Finally, the court declined to stay the action in favor of cases pending before a New York federal court because New York likely did not have jurisdiction over the individual defendants.
• In Wiggs v. Summit Midstream Partners, LLC,
Vice Chancellor Glasscock dismissed a variety of claims brought by defendants’ former employees, including, most notably, a judicial dissolution claim based on Sections 18-802 and 18-803 of the Delaware LLC Act. The court noted that the remedy of judicial dissolution is only available where: (i) there is a deadlock that prevents the corporation from operating; or (ii) the defined purpose of the entity is fulfilled or impossible to carry out. The court found that there was no deadlock and that plaintiffs had not sufficiently pled that it was no longer reasonably practicable for the LLC to operate in accordance with its broad purpose clause. 208
Sutherland v. Sutherland,209 Vice Chancellor Noble entered judgment in favor of defendants, the controlling directors of a closely held corporation, on plaintiff’s derivative breach of fiduciary duty claims relating to allegations of self dealing. The court held that: (i) defendants did not breach their duty of loyalty because plaintiff did not establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the expectation of a material benefit affected defendants judgment; and (ii) defendants did not breach their duty of care because they reasonably relied on the advice of a tax professional under Section 141(e) of the Delaware Code.
207 C.A. No. 6476-CS (Del. Ch. Feb. 19, 2013) 208 C.A. No. 7801-VCN, 2013 WL 1286180 (Del. Ch. Mar. 28, 2013). 209 C.A. No. 2399-VCN, 2013 WL 2362263 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2013).
In re Wayport, Inc. Litigation,210 Vice Chancellor Laster, in a post-trial opinion, entered judgment against plaintiffs on all but one claim, finding that corporate fiduciaries do not have a duty to disclose absent knowledge of “special facts.” Plaintiffs alleged that defendants breached their fiduciary duties of loyalty by not disclosing material information prior to purchasing plaintiffs’ shares in Wayport, Inc. (“Wayport”). As an initial matter, the court noted that there are four common scenarios where the duty of disclosure applies: (i) when directors seek approval for a transaction that does not otherwise require a stockholder vote under the Delaware General Corporation Law; (ii) when directors submit to the stockholders a transaction that requires stockholder approval or a stockholder investment decision but is not otherwise an interested transaction; (iii) when a corporate fiduciary speaks outside of the context of soliciting or recommending stockholder action; and (iv) when a corporate fiduciary buys shares directly from or sells shares directly to an existing outside stockholder. Under the last scenario, the court found that the duty to disclose only exists when the fiduciary is in possession of special knowledge of future plans or secret resources and deliberately misleads a stockholder who is ignorant of them. Applying this “special facts doctrine,” the court held that defendants had no duty to disclose because they had no knowledge of “special facts.”
• In Transdigm Inc. v. Alcoa Global Fasteners, Inc.,
Vice Chancellor Parsons denied in part a motion to dismiss a stock purchaser’s claims for fraudulent concealment of material information relating to the company’s future relationship with its key customers. The sellers moved to dismiss, arguing that the terms of the stock purchase agreement (the “SPA”) – including an express disclaimer of reliance on extra-contractual representations (the “Disclaimer”) – precluded the purchaser’s claims. The court held that, under Delaware law, the purchaser stated a claim for fraudulent concealment based on allegations that the sellers knew of and made an effort to hide material information. Moreover, the court found that the Disclaimer did not apply to these allegations because they constituted omissions, rather than representations. The court otherwise granted the sellers’ motion to dismiss as to the purchaser’s fraudulent and negligent 211
210 Consol. C.A. No. 4167-VCL, 2013 WL 1811873 (Del. Ch. May 1, 2013). 211 C.A. No. 7135-VCP, 2013 WL 2326881 (Del. Ch. May 29, 2013). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly misrepresentations claims and certain conspiracy claims, finding that the representations in the SPA did not constitute “half-truths.”
• In Charlotte Broadcasting, LLC v. Davis Broadcasting of Atlanta, LLC,212 Vice Chancellor Glasscock dismissed a complaint for lack of equitable jurisdiction, despite plaintiffs’ claims for equitable relief. Plaintiff brought an action for declaratory judgment of its rights under a contract and for an injunction against defendant from pursuing litigation of its own. The court held that the true nature of the action was for contractual relief under the Declaratory Judgment Act and, therefore, a full and adequate remedy was available at law.
National Industries Group (Holding) v. Carlyle Investment Management L.L.C.,213 the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s entry of default judgment against defendant National Industries Group (“NIG”) and denied NIG’s motion to vacate the order. NIG argued that the Chancery Court lacked personal and subject matter jurisdiction. The Supreme Court held that the parties’ forum selection clause was valid and, therefore, conferred personal jurisdiction on Delaware courts. The Supreme Court further held that the Chancery Court had subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiff Carlyle Investment Management L.L.C.’s (“Carlyle”) request to enforce the forum selection clause by an anti-suit injunction because the Chancery Court has exclusive jurisdiction where injunctive relief is sought and Carlyle lacked an adequate remedy at law. Finally, the Supreme Court held that NIG was not afforded protection under Court of Chancery Rule 60(b)(6), which allows the Chancery Court to vacate a judgment if the movant can sufficiently show “any other reason justifying relief” because NIG intentionally and willfully disregarded service of process and repeatedly ignored communications from Carlyle.
QC Communications Inc. v. Quartarone,214 Vice Chancellor Glasscock denied defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding equitable jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary duty claim. The complaint alleged that an individual defendant misused his position as director and officer of plaintiff corporation to divert plaintiff’s assets to himself and the defendant corporation.
212 C.A. No. 7793-VCG, 2013 WL 1405509 (Del. Ch. Apr. 2, 2013). 213 No. 596, 2012, 2013 WL 2325602 (Del. May 29, 2013). 214 C.A. No. 8218-VCG, 2013 WL 1970069 (Del. Ch. May 14, 2013).
Winston & Strawn LLP | 22 Defendants moved to dismiss, arguing lack of equitable jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claim. The court disagreed, finding that the claim was one for “breach of fiduciary duty, an equitable claim –perhaps the quintessential equitable claim.”
Austin v. Judy,215 the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Chancery’s decision, finding that defendant’s attempt to issue himself, the co-founder and sole director of Preferred Communication System, Inc. (“PCSI”), 800,000 shares of stock in PCSI was a self-interested transaction, the terms of which were not entirely fair to PCSI. The Supreme Court agreed with the lower court’s conclusion that defendant and the other co-founders of PCSI had not entered into an agreement permitting defendant to receive the shares. The Supreme Court further held that plaintiff’s claim was not barred by laches because the evidence showed that defendant had backdated the key documents at issue and had, at different times, made varying representations regarding his ownership interest in PCSI.
• In Gallagher v. Long,
the Delaware Supreme Court held that the Chancery Court: (i) did not err in denying appellant’s motions for oral argument and recusal; and (ii) properly dismissed appellant’s complaint as barred by laches, since the events underlying the breach of fiduciary duty claim occurred more than three years before the complaint was filed. 216
Practice & Procedure Admissibility of Evidence
United Health Alliance, LLC v. United Medical, LLC,217 Vice Chancellor Parsons granted plaintiff’s motion to strike a post-mediation e-mail from a mediator, finding that the e-mail constituted inadmissible hearsay. After the parties reached an oral settlement at mediation, a dispute arose over the scope of the release. Defendant thereafter received an e-mail from the mediator agreeing with its version of the settlement terms and attempted to introduce the e-mail as an exhibit to its motion to enforce the settlement agreement. Plaintiff asserted that: (i) Court of Chancery Rule 174(c) prohibited admission of mediation communications as evidence in litigation; (ii) strong public policy favored confidentiality
215 No. 578, 2012, 65 A.3d 616 (Del. May 9, 2013). 216 No. 102, 2013, 2013 WL 1857552 (Del. Apr. 30, 2013). 217 C.A. No. 7710-VCP, 2013 WL 1874588 (Del. Ch. May 6, 2013). Return to top
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of mediation communications; and (iii) the e-mail constituted hearsay. The court rejected plaintiff’s first two contentions but agreed that the e-mail was inadmissible hearsay not subject to any exception. Attorney-Client Privilege & Work Product Doctrine
AM General Holdings LLC v. The Renco Group, Inc.,218 Vice Chancellor Noble granted in part defendant Renco Group, Inc.’s (“Renco”) motion to compel as to certain categories of documents. Most notably, the court held that: (i) documents created by an attorney are not necessarily privileged, especially when created pursuant to a contract for business reasons; (ii) attachments to privileged e-mails must be independently evaluated for privilege; and (iii) privilege log entries are sufficient if they provide the court with a “basis upon which to weight the application of the privilege.”
• In In re Comverge, Inc. Shareholders Litigation,
Vice Chancellor Parsons denied plaintiffs’ motion to compel documents on the basis of the “at issue exception.” In the underlying derivative action, plaintiffs alleged that Comverge, Inc.’s directors breached their fiduciary duties by failing to enforce the terms of a nondisclosure agreement (the “NDA”). Plaintiffs, therefore, moved to compel privileged documents relating to the interpretation of the NDA, asserting that defendants put such communications “at issue” by relying on them at the preliminary injunction stage. The “at issue” exception applies when a party injects a communication itself into litigation or when a party injects an issue into the litigation that cannot be resolved without the substance of a privileged communication. The court found that defendants did not put the privileged documents “at issue” because: (i) plaintiffs, not defendants, raised the issue of legal advice; and (ii) defendants did not rely on the substance of the privileged communications to prove that they were fully informed, only the fact that such communications took place. 219
JPMorgan Chase & Co. v. American Century Companies, Inc.,220 Vice Chancellor Noble granted in part defendant American Century Companies, Inc.’s (“American”) motion to compel production of documents and responses to interrogatories by plaintiff (“JPMorgan”). JPMorgan brought suit against American, alleging that the valuation of American stock under
218 C.A. No. 7639-VCN, 2013 WL 1668627 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 2013). 219 C.A. No. 7368-VCP (Del. Ch. Apr. 10, 2013). 220 C.A. No. 6875-VCN, 2013 WL 1668393 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 2013).
the parties’ option agreement was improper. American sought discovery of: (i) documents and information relating to JPMorgan’s litigation reserves numbers for a related arbitration (the “Reserves”), arguing that the work product doctrine did not apply to the Reserves because they were created primarily for business purposes, or, alternatively, that JPMorgan put the Reserves “at issue”; (ii) documents regarding JPMorgan’s decision not to disclose its arbitration exposure in publicly filed reporting documents; and (iii) documents used by two director designees concerning the arbitration and JP Morgan’s internal valuations of American’s shares and arbitration exposure. With respect to the first category of documents, the court noted that under Delaware’s “because of litigation test,” documents created for some litigation purpose – even if the “primary purpose” was non-legal – could still be privileged. Thus, the Reserves would generally be considered privileged as documents created “in large part” for litigation purposes. The court ultimately found, however, that the Reserves were subject to the “at issue” exception, since JPMorgan injected the valuation issue into the litigation. The court applied the same analysis to the second category of documents, determining that there was no waiver of privilege because the regulatory filings were confidential and not “at issue.” Finally, the court found that the third category of information would be resolved through upcoming document productions and depositions.
Kalisman v. Friedman,221 Vice Chancellor Laster granted plaintiff’s motion to compel, finding that nominal defendant Morgans Hotel Group Co. (“Morgans”) could not invoke the attorney-client privilege or work product doctrine against plaintiff Jason Toubman Kalisman – a director of Morgans – due to his status as a director. Plaintiff alleged that the other board members of Morgans agreed to a recapitalization without giving him timely notice. After defendants objected to the production of documents based on attorney-client privilege and work product grounds, plaintiff moved to compel. As an initial matter, the court noted that there are three recognized limitations to a director’s ability to access privileged information: (i) the director’s right can be restricted by an ex ante agreement; (ii) a board can act pursuant to Section 141(c) to appoint a special committee so long as the board acts openly and with the knowledge of the excluded director; and (iii) a board or a committee can withhold privileged information once sufficient adversity
221 C.A. No. 8447-VCL, 2013 WL 1668205 (Del. Ch. Apr. 17, 2013). Return to top
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exists between the director and the corporation such that the director could no longer have a reasonable expectation that he was a client of the board’s counsel. The court held that adversity did not exist until after March 30, 2013, when the special committee created a subcommittee comprised of directors (other than plaintiff) to vote on the recapitalization. Moreover, noting Delaware’s presumption that directors will act in good faith, the court rejected defendants’ contention that plaintiff would use the privileged information to harm the company in violation of his fiduciary duties. Discovery Disputes
• In In re El Paso Partners, LP Derivative Litigation,
in a transcript ruling, Chancellor Strine denied plaintiffs’ request for third-party discovery. Plaintiffs issued subpoenas on various third parties, seeking documents relating to the third parties’ transactions with the company – which were unrelated to the transaction at issue. Plaintiffs argued that the valuations were relevant to their damages valuation because the third-party transactions were contemporaneous with and similar to plaintiffs’ transaction with the company. The court denied plaintiffs’ request, noting that granting it would indicate that “anytime you do a market transaction in an asset and there are other cases pending in this Court dealing with similar assets, then you’re going to be subject to discovery.” Rule 45 requires the requesting party to show a “substantial need” for the discovery, and the court found that plaintiffs failed to make that showing. The information plaintiffs sought was either publicly available or readily available from other sources. In addition, the discovery requests were unnecessarily burdensome on the third parties.
In re Rural Metro Corporation Shareholders Litigation,223 Vice Chancellor Laster denied plaintiffs’ motion in limine to exclude several post-merger valuation documents but limited defendants’ use of the documents. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants undersold Rural/Metro and that defendants’ “quasi-appraisal” amounted to a breach of fiduciary duty. Defendants sought to introduce at trial several post-merger documents reflecting company valuations and appraisals. Plaintiffs opposed the introduction of this evidence, arguing that Delaware law precludes the use of post-merger valuations because, among other reasons, they are unreliable as tainted evidence that could have been created for litigation
222 C.A. No. 7141-CS (Del. Ch. Apr. 15, 2013). 223 C.A. No. 6350-VCL (Del. Ch. Apr. 16, 2013).
purposes. Defendants argued that Delaware law allows for the introduction of post-closing documents to determine whether the information relied on at the time of the merger was questionable and that the proffered evidence here showed the reasonableness of their actions. The court allowed defendants to rely on the documents at trial, but only as evidence of defendants’ thinking at the time of the merger. Expedited Discovery
• In Ehlen v. Conceptus, Inc.,
Vice Chancellor Glasscock denied plaintiff’s motion for expedited discovery, finding that plaintiff failed to state a colorable claim. Plaintiff, a stockholder of Conceptus, Inc. (“Conceptus”), sought to preliminarily enjoin a merger between Conceptus and another company, alleging Revlon225, deal-protection, and disclosure claims. The court noted that plaintiff had the burden of demonstrating irreparable harm and a colorable claim. Because plaintiff failed to address its Revlon, deal-protection, and disclosure claims at oral argument, these claims were waived for purposes of the motion to expedite. In connection with plaintiff’s disclosure claims, the court also found that none of the undisclosed information was material. 224
Boulden v. Albiorix, Inc.,226 Vice Chancellor Noble denied plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend as futile. Under Court of Chancery Rule 15(a), an amendment “must be denied, if after assuming the truth of plaintiff’s allegations, plaintiff has failed to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” The court found that plaintiff failed to allege that defendant P. Deo van Wijk could be held liable as a pre-incorporation promoter because van Wijk was acting as another defendant’s agent, not in his personal capacity. Moreover, even if van Wijk were a preincorporation promoter, there was no indication that the parties intended to hold him personally liable on the preincorporation agreement.
Motions for Reargument & Supplementation
In re Mobilactive Media, LLC,227 Vice Chancellor Parsons denied both parties’ motions for reargument, defendants’ motion for supplementation, and plaintiff’s
C.A. No. 8560-VCG, 2013 WL 2285577 (Del. Ch. May 24, 2013). Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., 506 A. 2d 173 (Del. 1996). C.A. No. 7051-VCN, 2013 WL 1455826 (Del. Ch. Apr. 10, 2013). C.A. No. 5725-VCP, 2013 WL 1900997 (Del. Ch. May 8, 2013). Return to top
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request for attorneys’ fees. The court held that plaintiff and defendants failed to show that the court misapprehended facts in calculating plaintiff’s damages. The “new” facts on which the parties were relying were inapposite and/ or immaterial. Moreover, even under the new facts, defendants failed to make out a breach of contract claim, and the outcome of the litigation would be the same. The court also declined plaintiff’s request for attorneys’ fees under Court of Chancery Rule 54(d). The court found that Rule 54(d) does not cover attorneys’ fees, and plaintiff had failed to allege a claim for attorneys’ fees in its pleadings and court filings. Moreover, the court did not have jurisdiction over the issue of attorneys’ fees because the parties’ contract contained a clause that may allow for indemnification in a subsequent lawsuit.
an order requiring expedited discovery and forbidding defendant from soliciting business from plaintiff’s customers. Defendant continued to solicit business from the customers, so plaintiff filed an emergency motion. After the court again warned defendant not to contact plaintiff’s customers, defendant continued to solicit business from the customers, failed to appear at a deposition, and failed to respond to discovery requests. Plaintiff sought judgment against defendant, but the court refused to grant such relief, finding that monetary sanctions were appropriate. However, defendant failed to abide by the court’s order and failed to appear for trial. Plaintiff renewed its motion for judgment in its favor, and after the defendant failed to respond, the court granted this motion.
Landesbank Baden-Wurttenberg v. Walton Seattle Mezz Holdings VI-B, L.L.C.,228 Vice Chancellor Glasscock applied the familiar and well-settled first-filed rule to stay a Delaware action commenced by a plaintiff subject to a Washington state court order enjoining it from doing so. The court applied the McWane229 factors and found that: (i) the Washington court was capable of providing “prompt and complete justice” to the parties; (ii) unnamed, but related, entities could be joined in the Washington action; (iii) the actions addressed the “same issues” under a “common nucleus of operative facts”; and (iv) Delaware had no interest in the outcome of the lawsuit because, among other reasons, the property at issue was in Washington.
• In CHC Companies, Inc. v. Sanders,
Vice Chancellor Glasscock granted plaintiff’s motion for a final judgment as a sanction for defendant’s contempt of court, failure to comply with discovery, and failure to appear at a showcause hearing. Plaintiff CHC Companies, Inc. (“CHC”) alleged that defendant entered into a non-competition and non-solicitation agreement with CHC after plaintiff purchased defendant’s interest in a competing company. Nonetheless, defendant formed and entered into a competing business in violation of the agreement. Plaintiff filed suit, seeking damages and injunctive relief, including a temporary restraining order. The court issued 230
228 C.A. No. 7933-VCG, 2013 WL 1286192 (Del. Ch. Apr. 1, 2013). 229 McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Eng’g Co., 263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970) 230 C.A. No. 8298-VCG, 2013 WL 1952017 (Del. May 13, 2013).
Rich v. Fuqi International, Inc.,231 Vice Chancellor Glasscock appointed a receiver to ensure that Fuqi International, Inc. (“Fuqi”) held a stockholders’ meeting within 90 days of the opinion. Despite violating several earlier orders directing Fuqi to hold a stockholders’ meeting, Fuqi argued that it could not hold a meeting because it had not yet filed audited financial statements and, therefore, would be prohibited by federal law from holding a stockholders’ meeting. The court determined that the appropriate remedy was not to levy a fine or require liquidation of the company since such actions would damage the stockholders. Instead, the court appointed a receiver to: (i) evaluate whether audited financials sufficient to comply with SEC regulations could be filed; (ii) evaluate whether an exemption should be sought from the SEC if such audited financials could not be filed; and (iii) explore any other considerations pertinent to the holding of a stockholders’ meeting.
• In Koehler v. NetSpend Holdings, Inc.,
Vice Chancellor Glasscock denied plaintiff’s motion to preliminarily enjoin the acquisition of defendant NetSpend Holdings, Inc. (“NetSpend”), finding that the risk of harm arising from an injunction outweighed its benefit. As an initial matter, the court found that NetSpend’s board of directors likely failed to satisfy their Revlon duties because the single-bidder sale process was not designed to produce the best price for stockholders, and, therefore, the threatened harm facing stockholders was irreparable. The court declined to enjoin the transaction, however, because the 232
231 C.A. No. 5653-VCG, 2013 WL 2500815 (Del. Ch. June 12, 2013). 232 C.A. No. 8373-VCG, 2013 WL 2181518 (Del. Ch. May 21, 2013). Return to top
Delaware Quarterly injunction presented a possibility that the stockholders would lose their chance to receive a substantial premium over market value and because no other bidders had emerged.
In re Plains Exploration & Production Company Stockholder Litigation,233 Vice Chancellor Noble denied plaintiffs’ motion to preliminarily enjoin Plains Exploration & Production Company (“Plains”) from merging with another company. Plaintiffs alleged that the Plains’ board of directors breached its fiduciary duties by: (i) failing to obtain the best available sales price for Plains; and (ii) providing inadequate disclosures in the definitive proxy. In denying the preliminary injunction, the court found that the Plains board did not breach its Revlon duties because, with one exception, it was disinterested and independent and relied on sophisticated legal and financial advisors to guide it in the sales process. In addition, plaintiffs’ allegations of dominance were inconsistent with the numerous board meetings involving merger discussion. While the board did not shop around to find an alternative deal for the company, the court held that so long as there were no onerous deal protection devices that would unduly impede a competing bid, shopping around was not required. Finally, with respect to plaintiffs’ argument that the proxy was inadequate, the court held that failure to disclose unlevered free cash flows and information regarding the determination of the discount rate was not information that was reasonably likely to affect a stockholder’s vote. Accordingly, the court found that plaintiffs were unlikely to be successful on the merits and denied their request for a preliminary injunction.
Winston & Strawn LLP | 26 (iii) a potential screen to prevent such harm would be ineffective.
• In Whittington v. Dragon Group LLC,
Vice Chancellor Parsons granted defendants’ motion to enforce a settlement agreement in the face of plaintiff’s argument that it was unenforceable because it was not signed by his former attorneys. The Vice Chancellor held that because contract law does not require that a contract be signed to be enforceable and the parties did not specifically express that the settlement agreement would not be binding unless fully executed, plaintiff was bound by the terms of the agreement. 235
Simplexity, LLC v. Zeinfeld,234 Vice Chancellor Glasscock granted plaintiff Simplexity, LLC’s (“Simplexity”) motion for preliminary injunction, finding that Simplexity demonstrated a reasonable probability of success on its claim that the employment of its former CEO, Andrew Zeinfeld, by defendant Brightstar Corp. (“Brightstar”) would violate Simplexity’s noncompetition agreement. In addition, the court found that the employment of Zeinfeld by Brightstar would cause Simplexity irreparable harm because: (i) the record provided ample evidence of such harm; (ii) the non-competition agreement itself acknowledged that a threatened breach would cause irreparable harm; and
233 C.A. No. 8090-VCN, 2013 WL 1909124 (Del. Ch. May 9, 2013). 234 C.A. No. 8171-VCG, 2013 WL 1457726 (Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2013).
235 C.A. No. 2291-VCP, 2013 WL 1821615 (Del. Ch. May 1, 2013). Return to top
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This Quarter’s Authors Jonathan W. Miller and Matthew L. DiRisio are partners, and Jill K. Freedman, Ali R. Rabbani, Paul Whitworth, George W. Mustes and Rebecca L. Seif are associates, in the Litigation Department of Winston & Strawn LLP, resident in the Firm’s New York and Los Angeles offices.
The Delaware Quarterly Advisory Board Chicago Ronald S. Betman Oscar A. David William C. O’Neil Robert Y. Sperling
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