| Page 599 316 A.2d 599  Louis S. GIMBEL, III, Plaintiff,
v.
The SIGNAL COMPANIES, INC., et al.,
Defendants. Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County. Jan. 10, 1974.
Page 601
Opinion on plaintiff's
application for preliminary injunction;
granted; amount of security fixed.
Rodney M. Layton, and Charles F.
Richards, Jr., of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, Denis G. McInerney, F. Arnold
Daum, W. Leslie Duffy, William T. Lifland,
and Allen S. Joslyn, of Cahill, Gordon &
Reindel, New York City, for plaintiff.
Richard F. Corroon, Robert K.
Payson, and Peter M. Sieglaff, of Potter,
Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington, Alan N.
Halkett, of Latham and Watkins, and Brewster
L. Arms, Los Angeles, Cal., for defendant
Signal Companies, Inc. and Signal Oil and
Gas Co.
S. Samuel Arsht, of Morris,
Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington,
William J. Manning, and Charles D. Edelman,
of Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett, New York
City, for defendant Burmah Oil Inc.
QUILLEN, Chancellor:
This action was commenced on
December 24, 1973 by plaintiff, a
stockholder of the Signal Companies, Inc.
('Signal'). The complaint seeks, among other
things, injunctive relief to prevent the
consummation of the pending sale by Signal
to Burmah Oil Incorporated ('Burmah') of all
of the outstanding capital stock of Signal
Oil and Gas Company ('Signal Oil'), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Signal. The
effective sale price exceeds 480 million
dollars.
1 The
sale was approved at a special meeting of
the Board of Directors of Signal held on
December 21, 1973.
The agreement provides that the
transaction will be consummated on January
15, 1974 or upon the obtaining of the
necessary governmental consents, whichever
occurs later, but, in no event, after
February 15, 1974 unless mutually agreed.
The consents evidently have been obtained.
On Monday, December 24, 1973, on the
occasion of the plaintiff's application for
a temporary restraining order, counsel for
Signal and Signal Oil reported to this Court
that the parties would not consummate this
transaction prior to this Court's decision
on the plaintiff's application for a
preliminary injunction or January 15, 1974,
whichever should occur first.
In light of that representation,
no temporary restraining order was entered
and the matter was set down for a hearing on
plaintiff's application for a preliminary
injunction. Affidavits and depositions were
submitted. The matter was briefed and a
hearing was held on January 4, 1974. By
agreement, additional affidavits were filed
on January 7th and January 9th. This is the
Court's decision on plaintiff's application
for a preliminary injunction to prevent the
sale of Signal Oil to Burmah pending trial
on the merits of plaintiff's contentions. It
should be noted that the only parties who
have appeared thus far are the plaintiff,
Signal, Signal Oil and Burmah. It should
also be noted that the plaintiff is part of
an investment group which has some 2,400,000
shares representing 12% Of the outstanding
stock of Signal.
While the amount of money
involved in this litigation is enormous and
the values involved hotly disputed, the
issues are basically simple to isolate and
the Delaware law to be applied is, for the
most part, well established and not open to
question. I regret that time has not
permitted needed editing and that this
opinion is therefore longer than desirable.
In applying the law to the transaction in
question, the Court believes it is first
desirable to review the standards for a
preliminary injunction.
An application for a preliminary
injunction 'is addressed to the sound
discretion of the court, to be guided
according
Page 602 to the circumstances of the particular
case.' High on Injunctions, (4th Ed.) Vol.
1, Sec. 11;
Nebeker v. Berg, 13 Del.Ch. 6, 9, 115 A.
310, 311 (Ch.1921). Furthermore, the
preliminary injunction constitutes
extraordinary relief generally employed 'to
do no more than preserve the status quo
pending the decision of the cause at the
final hearing on proofs taken.'
Williamson v. McMonagle, 9 Del.Ch. 380, 386,
83 A. 139, 140 (Ch.1912); High on
Injunctions, Supra, at Sec. 5a.
In exercising its discretion, the
Court must ask itself two familiar
questions, which have long constituted the
backdrop for evaluating the merits of any
plaintiff's plea for a preliminary
injunction.
Stated briefly, the first
question is: 'Has the plaintiff satisfied
the Court that there is a reasonable
probability of his ultimate success on final
hearing?' Chancellor Josiah O. Wolcott, in
an early case involving the sale of
corporate assets, discussed the movant's
burden with regard to this question:
'It is well settled that a preliminary
injunction will not issue unless the
complainant satisfies the court that there
is at least a reasonable probability of
ultimate success upon a final hearing. This
rule has been announced not only in cases
where the improbability of ultimate success
is because of a question of law (citations
omitted), but as well where it appears from
an examination of evidence upon a disputed
question of fact (citations omitted).'
Allied
Chemical & Dye Corporation v. Steel & Tube
Co., 14 Del.Ch. 117, 122, 123, 122 A. 142,
158 (Ch.1923). See also David J. Greene
& Co. v. Schenley Industries, Inc., Del.Ch.,
281 A.2d 30 (1971); High on Injunctions,
Supra, at Sec. 8.
The second question can be stated
as follows: 'Has the plaintiff satisfied the
Court that he will suffer irreparable injury
if the Court fails to issue the requested
preliminary injunction?'
In his treatise on injunctions,
James L. High spoke of this concern of
equity:
'Substantial and positive injury must
always be made no appear to the satisfaction
of a court of equity before it will grant an
injunction (at Sec. 9) . . . An injunction,
being the 'strong arm of equity' should
never be granted except in a clear case of
irreparable injury, and with full conviction
on the part of the court of its urgent
necessity.' (at Sec. 22).
See also,
Bayard v. Martin, 34 Del.Ch. 184, 193, 101
A.2d 329, 334 (Supr.Ct.1953), cert. den.
347 U.S. 944, 74 S.Ct. 639, 98 L.Ed. 1092
(1954).
Consolidated Fisheries Co. v. Consolidated
Solubles Co., 34 Del.Ch. 24, 99 A.2d 253
(Supr.Ct.1953).
Moreover, this second question of
irreparable injury to the plaintiff should
injunctive relief be denied has a corollary
which requires the Court to consider
potential hardship to the defendant. In this
regard, Judge Rodney once wrote:
'In the exercise of a sound judicial
discretion in the award or denial of a
preliminary injunction, the court should
balance the conveniences of the parties and
the possible injuries to them according as
they may be affected by the granting or the
withholding of the injunction.
Yakus v. United States, 321 U.S. 414, 440,
64 S.Ct. 660, 88 L.Ed. 834.'
Aldridge
v. Franco Wyoming Oil Co., 9 F.R.D. 278, 279
(D.Del.1949).
Pauley Petroleum, Inc. v. Continental Oil
Co., 43 Del.Ch. 366, 231 A.2d 450 (Ch.1967),
aff'd 43 Del.Ch. 516,
239 A.2d 629
(Supr.Ct.1968); High on Injunctions, Supra,
at Sec. 13.
And, it is the plaintiff's duty
to 'tip' that balance:
'While the relative convenience and
inconvenience of the parties will prompt
courts to consider questions of harm in
exercising the discretionary power of
injunction, yet a probable case must asways
be made out in support of the moving side
before the writ will issue.'
Page 603
Allied
Chemical & Dye Corp. v. Steel & Tube Co.,
Supra, 14 Del.Ch. at 122, 122 A. at 158.
See also,
Gerity v. Cable Funding, 372 F.Supp. 679
(D.Del.1973).
Justice Tunnell, in his
frequently cited opinion in Bayard v.
Martin, Supra, capsulized the task this
Court faces in this case:
'In acting upon applications for
preliminary injunctions, a court of equity
is bound to 'balance the conveniences' of
the respective parties . . . (citations
omitted). The probability of ultimate
success, being of obvious practical
importance, is one of the elements which
must always be weighed in the balance, along
with the probability of any harm, to be
suffered by one party or the other on
account of giving the requested temporary
relief, or withholding it, as the case may
be.'
34 Del.Ch. at 190, 101 A.2d at
333.
Citing Judge Caleb Wright's
decision
American Smelting and Refining Co. v.
Pennzoil United, Inc., 295 F.Supp. 149
(D.Del.1969), the plaintiff has
contended that, at this stage in the
proceedings, 'where the likelihood of
irreparable harm is (as) great as it is
herein, . . . a finding of probability of
success is not essential' to justify a
preliminary injunction (Plaintiff's Brief at
p. 20). Although, in certain cases, the
'harm' element may weigh more heavily than
the 'probability of success' element in a
court's deliberations, it would clearly be
unwise equity practice to completely ignore
either consideration. Judge Wright did not
ignore the 'probability of success' element.
In fact, in the very case relied upon, Judge
Wright said: 'In other words, plaintiff must
demonstrate a reasonable probability of
success on final hearing.' 295 F.Supp. at
152. This Court will not ignore it either.
Rather, the Court will attempt to weigh and
balance both probability of success and
probability of irreparable harm in reaching
its decision.
'These two elements of probability are in
fact inseparable, and since in practice they
appear in blends of infinite variety, the
weighing and balancing of the strength of
one against the weakness of the other is
often a matter of the utmost delicacy,
calling for a mastery of the technical rules
of law as well as a penetrating common sense
in practical affairs.'
Bayard
v. Martin, Supra, 34 Del.Ch. at 192, 101
A.2d at 334.
A preliminary injunction is 'a
form of relief which will never be granted
unless earned.' Lenahan v. National Computer
Analysts Corp., Del.Ch., 310 A.2d 661, 664
(1973). In order for the plaintiff here to
'earn' his preliminary injunction against
the sale of Signal Oil to Burmah, the Court
must be satisfied, on the present record,
that the plaintiff has a reasonable
probability of succeeding on the merits of
his claim. Further, the Court must also be
satisfied that a preliminary injunction is
necessary to protect the plaintiff from
irreparable injury and that the plaintiff's
need for such protection outweighs any harm
that the Court can reasonably expect to
befall the defendants if the injunction were
granted.
Partly because of the enormous
amount of money involved in this case, it is
easy to discuss the irreparable injury
aspect. From the plaintiff's point of view,
the imminent threat of the closing of the
sale does present a situation where it may
be impossible to 'unscramble the eggs.'
Metro Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. v. Transamerica
Corp., 303 F.Supp. 1344, 1348 (S.D.N.Y.,
1968). While the remedy of rescission is
available (Bowers
v. Columbia General Corp., 336 F.Supp. 609
(D.Del.1971)), it is not difficult to
imagine the various obstacles to such a
remedy including, tax consequences,
accounting practices, business
reorganizations, management decisions
concerning capital investments, dividends,
etc. and a host of other problems which as a
practical matter will make rescission very
difficult indeed. Moreover, when the
plaintiff claims with expert support, a
potential damage in the neighborhood of
$300,000,000, it is doubtful that any damage
claim against the directors can reasonably
be a meaningful alternative. Compare
Page 604 Thomas v. Kempner, C.A. 4138, Del.Ch.,
unreported (March 22, 1973). In short, if
the plaintiff can sustain his legal
position, it seems to me that he has
established he will suffer irreparable harm
if the consummation of the sale is not
enjoined.
On the other hand, the harm to
Signal of entering an injunction is also
massive. Under the contract, if the
transaction is delayed by litigation, Burmah
has a right to withdraw and the Court has no
legal power to prevent such withdrawal.
2 The loss of
Signal's legal right to enforce the contract
is itself irreparable harm. Moreover, it is
clear generally that Signal not only has
excessive Eurodollar loans outstanding but
is also facing a 'cash crunch' and the
transaction, if completed as scheduled,
should return in 1974 in interest expense
saving and earnings some $36,000,000, and
substantially more than the projected short
term annual earnings from Signal Oil
($9,900,000 in 1971 and $12,800,000 in
1972). Chitiea affidavit, docket number 36.
Furthermore, it is common knowledge that the
present world oil market is in a chaotic
state and it is difficult to judge with any
assurance what tomorrow might bring in the
way of economic conditions and government
control including tax policy. The capital
needs of Signal Oil are great and the cost
of pursuing some of its untapped resources
is substantial and of high risk. Even when
walking among giants, a sale involving
$420,000,000 cash is somewhat out of the
routine. In short, if a preliminary
injunction enters and the sale falls through
and Signal ultimately prevails on the
merits, Signal would have no remedy adequate
to compensate it for a transaction which
involves a taxable gain of $220,000,000.
In summary on the question of
irreparable harm, it appears to me that
there is irreparable harm to the losing side
on this preliminary injunction application
in the event the loser should ultimately
prevail on the merits. Thus, in this case,
the Court feels that the emphasis in
analysis on this application for a
preliminary injunction should focus on
whether the plaintiff has a reasonable
probability of success in this lawsuit.
Turning specifically to the
pleadings in this case, the complaint
contains three separate counts. In Count 1
of the complaint, plaintiff asserts that the
special meeting of the Board of Directors of
Signal at which the proposed sale was
approved and authorized and was not properly
noticed and that the proposed sale requires
authorization by the majority of the
outstanding stock of Signal pursuant to 8
Del.C. § 271(a).
In Count 2, plaintiff alleges
that the 480 million dollar sale price is
'wholly inadequate,' and further alleges
certain personal motives by certain
directors in making the business decision.
In Count 3, the plaintiff alleges
a class action on behalf of all Signal
stockholders who, according to the
complaint, were entitled to vote upon the
proposed sale.
In the application for a
preliminary injunction plaintiff has not
pressed the allegations that the special
meeting of the Board of Directors was not
properly noticed and that the directors were
improperly motivated by personal advantage.
Indeed, it appears that 12 out of 14
directors attended the meeting and the other
two did in fact receive the notice. Nothing
in the record would justify a finding at
this stage that the directors acted for any
personal advantage or out of improper motive
or intentional disregard of shareholder
interests. Nor is it important to determine
on this preliminary injunction application
Page 605 whether the case can proceed as a class
action or not, although the discussion
herein does in part relate to that decision.
Thus, in my judgment, the factual
and legal issues are basically reduced to
two. First, does the sale require
authorization by a majority of the
outstanding stock of Signal pursuant to 8
Del.C. § 271(a)?
3
Second, was the action by Signal's Board in
approving the 480 million dollar sale price
reckless as to justify the entry of a
preliminary injunction prohibiting the
consummation of the sale?
Both of these questions require
reference to the facts appearing in the
record, which has been reviewed in its
entirety. I might add that the record is
excellent considering the time factor under
which counsel were laboring and, in my
judgment, except on the crucial question of
evaluation, entirely satisfactory for the
determination of the present application.
Equally helpful were the briefs of counsel
on which heavy reliance has been placed both
as to the facts and the law.
I turn first to the question of 8
Del.C. § 271(a) which requires majority
stockholder approval for the sale of 'all or
substantially all' of the assets of a
Delaware corporation. A sale of less than
all or substantially all assets is not
covered by negative implication from the
statute. Folk, The Delaware General
Corporation Law, Section 271, p. 400, ftnt.
3; 8 Del.C. § 141(a).
It is important to note in the
first instance that the statute does not
speak of a requirement of shareholder
approval simply because an independent,
important branch of a corporate business is
being sold. The plaintiff cites several
non-Delaware cases for the proposition that
shareholder approval of such a sale is
required. But that is not the language of
our statute. Similarly, it is not our law
that shareholder approval is required upon
every 'major' restructuring of the
corporation. Again, it is not necessary to
go beyond the statute. The statute requires
shareholder approval upon the sale of 'all
or substantially all' of the corporation's
assets. That is the sole test to be applied.
While it is true that test does not lend
itself to a strict mathematical standard to
be applied in every case, the qualitative
factor can be defined to some degree
notwithstanding the limited Delaware
authority. But the definition must begin
with and ultimately necessarily relate to
our statutory language.
In interpreting the statute the
plaintiff relies on Philadelphia National
Bank v. B.S.F. Co., 41 Del.Ch. 509,
199 A.2d 557 (Ch.1964), rev'd on other grounds, 42
Del.Ch. 106,
204 A.2d 746 (Supr.Ct.1964). In
that case, B.S.F. Company owned stock in two
corporations. It sold its stock in one of
the corporations, and retained the stock in
the other corporation. The Court found that
the stock sold was the principal asset
B.S.F. Company had available for sale and
that the value of the stock retained was
declining. The Court rejected the
defendant's contention that the stock sold
represented only 47.4% Of consolidated
assets, and looked to the actual value of
the stock sold. On this basis, the Court
held that the stock constituted at least 75%
Of the
Page 606 total assets and the sale of the stock was a
sale of substantially all assets.
But two things must be noted
about the Philadelphia National Bank case.
First, even though shareholder approval was
obtained under § 271, the case did not arise
under § 271 but under an Indenture limiting
the activities of B.S.F. for creditor
financial security purposes. On appeal,
Chief Justice Wolcott was careful to state
the following:
'We are of the opinion that this question
is not necessarily to be answered by
references to the general law concerning the
sale of assets by a corporation. The
question before us is the narrow one of what
particular language of a contract means and
is to be answered in terms of what the
parties were intending to guard against or
to insure.'
42 Del.Ch. at 111--112, 204 A.2d
at 750.
Secondly, the Philadelphia
National Bank case dealt with the sale of
the company's only substantial income
producing asset.
The key language in the Court of
Chancery opinion in Philadelphia National
Bank is the suggestion that 'the critical
factor in determining the character of a
sale of assets is generally considered not
the amount of property sold but whether the
sale is in fact an unusual transaction or
one made in the regular course of business
of the seller.' (41 Del.Ch. at 515, 199 A.2d
at 561). Professor Folk suggests from the
opinion that 'the statute would be
inapplicable if the assets sale is 'one made
in furtherance of express corporate objects
in the ordinary and regular course of the
business" (referring to language in 41
Del.Ch. at 516, 199 A.2d at 561). Folk,
Supra, Section 271, p. 401.
But any 'ordinary and regular
course of the business' test in this context
obviously is not intended to limit the
directors to customary daily business
activities. Indeed, a question concerning
the statute would not arise unless the
transaction was somewhat out of the
ordinary. While it is true that a
transaction in the ordinary course of
business does not require shareholder
approval, the converse is not true. Every
transaction out of normal routine does not
necessarily require shareholder approval.
The unusual nature of the transaction must
strike at the heart of the corporate
existence and purpose. As it is written at
6A Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations
(Perm.Ed. 1968 Rev.) § 2949.2, p. 648:
'The purpose of the consent statutes is
to protect the shareholders from fundamental
change, or more specifically to protect the
shareholder from the destruction of the
means to accomplish the purposes or objects
for which the corporation was incorporated
and actually performs.'
It is in this sense that the
'unusual transaction' judgment is to be made
and the statute's applicability determined.
If the sale is of assets quantitatively
vital to the operation of the corporation
and is out of the ordinary and substantially
affects the existence and purpose of the
corporation, then it is beyond the power of
the Board of Directors. With these
guidelines, I turn to Signal and the
transaction in this case.
Signal or its predecessor was
incorporated in the oil business in 1922.
But, beginning in 1952, Signal diversified
its interests. In 1952, Signal acquired a
substantial stock interest in American
President lines. From 1957 to 1962 Signal
was the sole owner of Laura Scudders, a
nation-wide snack food business. In 1964,
Signal acquired Garrett Corporation which is
engaged in the aircraft, aerospace, and
uranium enrichment business. In 1967, Signal
acquired Mack Trucks, Inc., which is engaged
in the manufacture and sale of trucks and
related equipment. Also in 1968, the oil and
gas business was transferred to a separate
division and later in 1970 to the Signal Oil
subsidiary. Since 1967, Signal has made
acquisition of or formed substantial
companies none of which are involved or
related with the oil and gas industry. See
Walkup affidavit, docket number 34. As
indicated previously, the oil and gas
production development of Signal's business
is now carried on by
Page 607 Signal Oil, the sale of the stock of which
is an issue in this lawsuit.
According to figures published in
Signal's last annual report (1972) and the
latest quarterly report (September 30, 1973)
and certain other internal financial
information, the following tables can be
constructed.
4
Based on the company's figures,
Signal Oil represents only about 26% Of the
total assets of Signal. While Signal Oil
represents 41% Of Signal's total net worth,
it produces only about 15% Of Signal's
revenues and earnings. Moreover, the
additional tables shown in Signal's brief
from the Chitiea affidavit are also
interesting in demonstrating the low rate of
return which has been realized recently from
the oil and gas operation.
| PRE-TAX DOLLAR RETURN ON VALUE OF ASSETS |
| |
9 Mos.Ended |
|
September 30, |
1973 |
1972 |
1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
12.8% |
12.9% |
8.1% |
| Aerospace and industrial |
7.5 |
6.1 |
5.9 |
| Oil and gas |
3.6 |
3.5 |
2.7 |
| PRE-TAX DOLLAR RETURN ON NET WORTH |
| |
9 Mos.Ended |
|
September 30, |
1973 |
1972 |
1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
25.1% |
24.2% |
15.5% |
| Aerospace and industrial |
16.8 |
14.1 |
14.0 |
| Oil and gas |
4.8 |
4.7 |
3.9 |
While it is true, based on the
experience of the Signal-Burmah transaction
and the record in this lawsuit, that Signal
Oil is more valuable than shown by the
company's books, even if, as plaintiff
suggests in his brief, the $761,000,000
value attached to Signal Oil's properties by
the plaintiff's expert Paul V. Keyser, Jr.,
were substituted as the asset figure,
5 the oil and gas
properties would still constitute less than
half the value of Signal's total assets.
Thus, from a straight quantative approach, I
agree with Signal's position that the sale
to Burmah does not constitute a sale of 'all
or substantially all' of Signal's assets.
In addition, if the character of
the transaction is examined, the plaintiff's
position is also weak. While it is true that
Signal's original purpose was oil and gas
and while oil and gas is still listed first
in the certificate of incorporation, the
simple fact is
Page 608 that Signal is now a conglomerate engaged in
the aircraft and aerospace business, the
manufacture and sale of trucks and related
equipment, and other businesses besides oil
and gas. The very nature of its business, as
it now in fact exists, contemplates the
acquisition and disposal of independent
branches of its corporate business. Indeed,
given the operations since 1952, it can be
said that such acquisitions and dispositions
have become part of the ordinary course of
business. The facts that the oil and gas
business was historically first and that
authorization for such operations are listed
first in the certificate do not prohibit
disposal of such interest. As Director
Harold M. Williams testified, business
history is not 'compelling' and 'many
companies go down the drain because they try
to be historic.' Williams' deposition,
docket number 301 p. 28.
It is perhaps true, as plaintiff
has argued, that the advent of
multi-business corporations has in one sense
emasculated § 271 since one business may be
sold without shareholder approval when other
substantial businesses are retained. But it
is one thing for a corporation to evolve
over a period of years into a multi-business
corporation, the operations of which include
the purchase and sale of whole businesses,
and another for a single business
corporation by a one transaction revolution
to sell the entire means of operating its
business in exchange for money or a separate
business. In the former situation, the
processes of corporate democracy customarily
have had the opportunity to restrain or
otherwise control over a period of years.
Thus, there is a chance for some shareholder
participation. The Signal development
illustrates the difference. For example,
when Signal, itself formerly called Signal
Oil and Gas Company, changed its name in
1968, it was for the announced 'need for a
new name appropriate to the broadly
diversified activities of Signal's
multi-industry complex.' Walkup affidavit,
docket number 34.
The situation is also
dramatically illustrated financially in this
very case. Independent of the contract with
Burmah, the affidavit of Signal's Board
Chairman shows that over $200,000,000 of
Signal Oil's refining and marketing assets
have been sold in the past five years.
Walkup affidavit, docket number 34. This
activity, prior to the sale at issue here,
in itself constitutes a major restructuring
of the corporate structure.
I conclude that measured
quantatively and qualitatively, the sale of
the stock of Signal Oil by Signal to Burmah
does not constitute a sale of 'all or
substantially all' of Signal's assets. This
conclusion is supported by the closest case
involving Delaware law which was been cited
to the Court.
Wingate v. Bercut,
146 F.2d 725 (9th Cir.
1944). Accordingly, insofar as the
complaint rests on 8 Del.C. § 271(a), in my
judgment, it has no reasonable probability
of ultimate success.
I turn now to the second and more
difficult question presented on this
application for a preliminary injunction.
The plaintiff attacks the
proposed transaction on the grounds that the
480 million dollar sale price is wholly
inadequate compensation for the assets of
Signal Oil.
In evaluating the merits of this
allegation, precedent requires the Court to
start from the normal presumption that
Signal's Board of Directors acted in good
faith in approving the sale of Signal Oil to
Burmah. Chancellor Josiah Wolcott spoke
thusly of this good faith presumption:
'. . . (T)he directors of the defendant
(selling) corporation are clothed with that
presumption which the law accords to them of
being actuated in their conduct by a Bona
fide regard for the interests of the
corporation whose affairs the stockholders
have committed to their charge. This being
so, the sale in question must be examined
with the presumption in its favor that the
directors who
Page 609 negotiated it honestly believed that they
were securing terms and conditions which
were expedient and for the corporation's
best interests.'
Robinson
v. Pittsburgh Oil Ref. Corp., 14 Del.Ch.
193, 199, 126 A. 46, 48 (Ch.1924).
Butler v. New Keystone Copper Co., 10
Del.Ch. 371, 376, 93 A. 380, 382 (Ch.1915).
This presumption, an important
aspect of what has generally come to be
known as the 'business judgment rule,' has
been consistently reaffirmed and broadened
with respect to the sale of corporate assets
over the past several decades.
Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co., 16 Del.Ch.
318, 325, 147 A. 257, 261 (Ch.1929);
Mitchell v. Highland-Western Glass Co., 19
Del.Ch. 326, 330, 167 A. 831, 833 (Ch.1933);
Gropper v. North Central Texas Oil Co., 35
Del.Ch. 198, 202, 208, 114 A.2d 231, 233,
237 (Ch.1955);
Cottrell v. Pawcatuck Co., 35 Del.Ch. 309,
311, 116 A.2d 787, 788 (Ch.1955) aff'd
36 Del.Ch. 169, 172--175, 128 A.2d 225, 228
(Sup.Ct.1956); and see generally, Folk,
Supra, §§ 144, 271 (1972). Application of
the rule, of necessity, depends upon a
showing that informed directors did, in
fact, make a business judgment authorizing
the transaction under review. Kaplan v.
Centex Corporation, Del.Ch., 284 A.2d 119,
124 (1971);
Mitchell v. Highland-Western Glass Co.,
Supra, 19 Del.Ch. at 329, 167 A. at 833
(Ch.1933).
Although not dealing specifically
with the sale of a substantial corporate
asset, Chief Justice Daniel F. Wolcott
recently recognized the strength of the
presumption inherent in this rule:
'A board of directors enjoys a
presumption of sound business judgment, and
its decisions will not be disturbed if they
can be attributed to any rational business
purpose. A court under such circumstances
will not substitute its own notions of what
is or is not sound business judgment.'
Sinclair Oil Corporation v.
Levien, Del.Supr., 280 A.2d 717, 720 (1971).
Quite recently, Vice Chancellor Brown also
applied the business judgment rule when
called upon to enjoin a large scale
corporate merger. Muschel v. Western Union
Corporation, Del.Ch., 310 A.2d 904, 908
(1973).
This does not mean, however, that
the business judgment rule irrevocably
shields the decisions of corporate directors
from challenge. As Vice Chancellor Marvel
explained in Marks v. Wolfson, the business
judgment rule weighs in favor of the
directors' decision to sell assets unless
the complaining shareholders can prove fraud
or a clearly inadequate sale price:
'In other words, it (is) incumbent on
plaintiffs to prove that the defendants
against whom relief is sought were either
guilty of actual fraud or that the price
fixed for the sale of Highway's assets was
so clearly inadequate as constructively to
carry the badge of fraud.'
41 Del.Ch. 115, 123, 188 A.2d
680, 685 (Ch.1963).
Alcott v. Hyman, 40 Del.Ch. 449,
184 A.2d 90
(Ch.1962); aff'd 42 Del.Ch. 233,
208 A.2d 501 (Supr.Ct.1965).
In challenging the sale of Signal
Oil to Burmah, the plaintiff here does not
seriously charge that the proposed
transaction constitutes fraudulent
self-dealing on the part of Signal's Board
of Directors. In deed, only one member of
the Board, Willis H. Thompson, Jr., is
expected to have any relationship with
Burmah after the sale. Thompson is President
and Chief Executive Officer of Signal Oil.
He plans to continue in that position if
Signal Oil is sold to Burmah. Other than
that, the only benefit any members of the
Board would receive from the sale is that
which would accrue to any ordinary
shareholder according to his holdings in
Signal. It is usually assumed that such
individual benefit also works for the
benefit of the corporation.
Page 610 Cottrell v. Pawcatuck Co., Supra, 36 Del.Ch.
at 182, 128 A.2d at 232. At this stage,
the Court can find no indication of
self-dealing on the part of the Board of
Directors such as would taint the proposed
transaction or neutralize the effect of the
business judgment rule. And, therefore,
plaintiff's argument at pages 33 and 34 of
his brief, that the usual presumption of
director good faith ought not apply, must
fail. Plaintiff relies mistakenly on cases
wherein questionable corporate transactions
involving blatant self-dealing. Such is not
the case here where arm's length bargaining
marked the transaction and the vote of
interested directors was not necessary to
approve the transaction. Folk, Supra,
Section 271, pp. 405--406.
Actual fraud, whether resulting
from self-dealing or otherwise, is not
necessary to challenge a sale of assets.
And, although the language of 'constructive
fraud' or 'badge of fraud' has frequently
and almost traditionally been used, such
language is not very helpful when fraud
admittedly has not been established. There
are limits on the business judgment rule
which fall short of intentional or inferred
fraudulent misconduct and which are based
simply on gross inadequacy of price. This is
clear even if language of fraud is used. The
principles are familiar and should start
with the directors' discretion and the
limits thereof when dealing with price under
the business judgment rule:
'When the question is asked whether in a
given case the price is adequate, it is
readily seen that room is afforded for
honest differences of opinion. While the
parties to the controversy may be guilty of
an intolerance of view towards each other,
yet a court, when called upon to decide the
question, must endeavor, as best it may, to
arrive at the correct answer, making all due
allowance for the range over which honestly
inclined minds may wander. It is further
true that inadequacy of price will not
suffice to condemn the transaction as
fraudulent, unless the inadequacy is so
gross as to display itself as a badge of
fraud. I take it that so long as the
inadequacy of price may reasonably be
referred to an honest exercise of sound
judgment, it cannot be denominated as
fraudulent. When the price proposed to be
accepted is so far below what is found to be
a fair one that it can be explained only on
the theory of fraud, or a reckless
indifference to the rights of others
interested, it would seem that it should not
be allowed to stand.'
Allied
Chemical & Dye Corporation v. Steel & Tube
Co., 14 Del.Ch. 1, 19, 120 A. 486, 494
(Ch.1923).
(F)airness or unfairness of the price . .
. must be judged in the light of the
conditions as they existed at the time of
the execution of the contract.'
Allied
Chemical & Dye Corp. v. Steel & Tube Co.,
Supra, 14 Del.Ch. 64, at 95, 122 A. 142,
at 155.
'It is not every disparity between price
and value that will be allowed to upset a
proposed sale. The disparity must be
sufficiently great to indicate that it
arises not so much from an honest mistake in
judgment concerning the value of the assets,
as from either improper motives underlying
the judgment of those in whom the right to
judge is vested or a reckless indifference
to or a deliberate disregard of the
interests of the whole body of stockholders
including of course the minority.'
Allaun
v. Consolidated Oil Co., Supra, 16 Del.Ch.
at 325, 147 A. at 261 (Ch.1929). See
also Cole v. National Cash Credit Ass'n, 18
Del.Ch. 47, 58, 156 A. 183, 188 (Ch.1931);
Baron v. Pressed Metals of America, Inc., 35
Del.Ch. 325, 332, 117 A.2d 357, 361
(Ch.1955), aff'd 35 Del.Ch. 581,
123 A.2d 848 (Supr.Ct.1956).
One recognized test on the
directors' business judgment is the free
marketplace. In Marks v. Wolfson, Supra,
Vice Chancellor Marvel employed 'the classic
test imposed in the early Delaware cases' in
Page 611 reaching his conclusion that the sale price
established for corporate assets satisfied
the law:
'In actual point of fact the evidence
sustains a finding, in my opinion, that the
bargaining which resulted in the sale here
in issue took place between a willing buyer
who was not required to buy and a willing
seller under no real compulsion to sell and
that such bargaining was genuine and
motivated by self-interest on the part of
those on opposite sides of the bargaining
table.'
41 Del.Ch. at 124, 125, 188 A.2d
at 686 (Ch.1963).
More recently, Vice Chancellor
Short dealt with the problem of conflicting
testimony on the valuation of assets in
applying the business judgment rule to
uphold a corporate decision to exchange a
sizeable amount of stock for certain assets:
'The expert testimony and legal analysis
on these (valuation) issues are in hopeless
conflict. But since I am satisfied that in
any event the methods of valuation used were
not so clearly wrong as to result in an
unconscionable advantage secured to the
(transferors of the assets to the
corporation) resolution of these issues is
not required.
'I conclude that since the transaction
complained of was accomplished as a result
of the exercise of independent business
judgment of the outside, independent
directors whose sole interest was the
furtherance of the corporate enterprise, the
court is precluded from substituting its
uninformed opinion for that of the
experienced, independent board members.'
Puma v. Marriott, Del.Ch., 283
A.2d 693, 695, 696 (1971); Muschel v.
Western Union Corporation, Supra.
Keeping in mind this guidance and
other similar precedent on valuation and
director responsibility to obtain a fair
price for corporate assets, the Court will
now consider those allegations whereby the
plaintiff seeks to hurdle the protections of
the business judgment rule and successfully
challenge the sale of Signal Oil. The
question is: Did the Signal Directors act
recklessly in accepting a wholly inadequate
price for Signal Oil?
Factually, to support his claim
of recklessness, the plaintiff basically
relies on three related factors: the alleged
gross inadequacy of price; the failure of
the Board of Directors to act on such an
important matter with informed reasonable
deliberation; and specifically the failure
of the Board of Directors to obtain an
updated appraisal of Signal Oil's properties
before agreeing to accept Burmah's offer.
Except for the key question of value, there
is not significant dispute over the factual
chronology.
Prior to Burmah's first contact
relating to this agreement, which was on
October 17, 1973,
6
Signal had been negotiating a proposed
merger with United Aircraft. The deal fell
through in September 1973. In connection
with that transaction, a report was drafted
by DeGolyer and MacNaughton, a prominent
independent firm of petroleum geologists.
The report valued Signal Oil's reserves as
of June 30, 1973 at an approximate figure
between 230 and 260 million dollars.
DeGolyer and MacNaughton Appraisal Report,
docket number 45; Shumway deposition, docket
number 29, p. 37. There were other
accounting reports prepared by Price
Waterhouse and Company in connection with
the proposed merger. In addition, Signal
requested Kenneth E. Hill, an expert in the
evaluation of oil properties, to undertake
an evaluation of the petroleum properties of
Signal Oil. Mr. Hill had done so and, as of
September 13, 1973, his opinion of the fair
market value of the oil properties was
$350,000,000. Hill affidavit, docket number
48.
Page 612
On October 17, 1973, in Houston,
Texas, Max Roberts and Clifford Andrews,
representatives of Burmah, approached Willis
H. Thompson, President and Chief Executive
Officer of Signal Oil, about the possibility
of Burmah acquiring some or all of Signal
Oil's properties. Thompson referred them to
Forrest N. Shumway, the President and Chief
Executive Officer of Signal and on October
24, 1973, there was a meeting in Los
Angeles. At that time, N. J. D. Williams,
Chief Executive Officer of Burmah Oil Co.
Ltd., the British parent of Burmah,
indicated that Burmah was interested in
acquiring the assets of Signal Oil in a
range of $400,000,000. Shumway said that any
offer in excess of $400,000,000 would be
submitted to the Board of Directors.
There followed an exchange of
information including the DeGolyer and
MacNaughton report and the accounting
reports of Price Waterhouse. Negotiations
continued through November, including
extensive drafting sessions with Burmah's
attorneys. The matter was not put before
Signal's Board of Directors at the November
27, 1973 meeting although the Board was
advised generally that management had other
inquiries about subsidiaries since the
United transaction fell through. A Burmah
representative was invited to address a
meeting of the Signal Oil Board, at which
was discussed Burmah's history, business and
operating policies. By early December, a
third draft of the purchase agreement had
been prepared, access to confidential data
had been permitted and Burmah had sent
Signal a draft of a press release to
announce the transaction. All this occurred
during a period when there was no
notification to the Board of Directors in
their capacity as Board members of the
developments. An attorney for the minority,
on the basis of rumors, wrote a letter dated
December 3, 1973 indicating opposition to a
sale of oil and gas properties, indicating
further that shareholder approval was
required, and requesting consultation. See
Exhibit 10 of docket number 21.
Burmah's formal offer was
communicated to Signal on December 18, 1973.
The offer required acceptance on or before
December 21, 1973. A special meeting of the
Board of Directors of Signal was called for
December 21. This meeting was called on
notice of only a day and a half and the
outside directors were not notified of the
purpose of the meeting. At least three of
the outside directors were confronted with
the proposed sale for the first time at the
special meeting itself. Plaintiff learned of
the proposed sale when it was reported in
the press on Saturday, December 22, 1973.
At the meeting, a handwritten
outline of the transaction was submitted to
the directors and an oral presentation was
made in support of the transaction. There
was no updated evaluation of the oil and gas
reserves of Signal Oil presented. There was
no effort made at that time to determine if
other companies would offer a higher price.
The meeting lasted a couple of hours and
resulted in the approval of a transaction of
over $480,000,000 and possibly one of the
largest private cash sales ever to take
place.
It is important to note what was
discussed at the special Board of Director's
meeting on December 21. In addition to the
depositions, the handwritten memorandum and
handwritten minutes outlining the
presentation were useful in determining the
discussion. Exhibits 5 and 6 of docket
number 21. It is also important to note that
the discussion took place with the
background of aborted United negotiations
and other inquiries. It appears that there
was some review of the per share value of
Signal stock and it was determined that, as
of the market closing on December 20, the
total market value of Signal stock was
estimated at 440 million dollars. The terms
of the contract were reviewed with an
overall analysis of the tax consequences.
There was discussion of the use of the
proceeds to be gained from the sale of
Signal Oil and, in particular, the advantage
of pre-paying certain indebtedness, the
advantage
Page 613 from increased interest income, and the
needs of the other subsidiaries, which were
giving a greater return. There was
discussion of sales, income, cash flow, the
balance sheet and the general financial
status of the corporation. The current
situation in the oil industry was discussed
including the impact on price and profit and
the potential for additional oil finds. Oil
reserve values received substantial
discussion. Price increases were
contemplated. The risk of price controls and
the limitations that could come from
allocations and excess profit taxes were
reviewed. Capital expenditure requirements
of Signal Oil were reviewed and,
particularly, the risk factor in the North
Sea investment. The advantage of the Signal
Oil investment was compared with the
advantage of having the cash on hand. The
advisability of waiting for a higher price
was discussed. The Burmah offer was the best
suggested price of any discussions with
potential buyers and Burmah could pay it. In
summary, while the meeting was short for a
transaction of this size, there was an
overall view of the situation,
7
generally within the confines of the
material the company already had available.
The plaintiff makes a point 'of
the lack of knowledge on the part of the
directors as to the oil industry in general
and the sale of Signal in particular.'
Plaintiff's Memorandum p. 4. In the first
regard, the plaintiff simply unfairly
overstates his case. The Board of Signal
includes the following twelve people who
were present at the December 21st meeting.
Four members of the Board (William E.
Walkup, Chairman of the Board, Forrest N.
Shumway, President, Andrew J. Chitiea, Sr.,
Vice President-Financial Administration, and
Brewster L. Arms, House Counsel) are
directly involved in the management of
Signal and each had extensive experience. A
fifth, Willis H. Thompson, Jr., is President
of Signal Oil and a geologist. Two others,
Harry H. Wetzel and Donald C. McHone, are
management people in subsidiary
corporations. Clinton R. Stevenson is
partner of Signal's principal outside legal
counsel.
Information in the record on the
four outside directors includes the
following information. James E. Patrick, Jr.
is a retired banker with some banking
experience in the oil industry. Howard M.
Williams is Dean of the Graduate School of
Management at UCLA and a Harvard Law
graduate with extensive tax background.
Robert O. Reynolds is a businessman whose
experience includes 25 years as an
individual oil investor. Arch Manson, Jr. is
President of a theatrical and TV lighting
and staging corporation and also President
of a corporation dealing in fire protection
material.
Suffice it to say that the Board
of Signal is a sophisticated one and one
which by experience and background would
compare favorably to Boards of Directors of
similar corporations.
Moreover, it is apparent that the
Board was aware that Signal had cash needs
and was naturally reluctant to do anything
that might upset a sale which would bring to
the Board $420,000,000 cash and which was
for a total consideration that exceeded by
approximately $75,000,000 the market value
of the total number of Signal shares
currently outstanding.
8
They were understandably fearful of
challenging the time factor imposed by
Burmah's offer of December 18th.
Page 614
But having given full weight to
the legitimate considerations of the Board,
it is necessary, at the risk of repetition,
to pinpoint elements which suggest
imprudence. The circumstances are such as to
raise the question as to whether the Signal
Board, when the sale of Signal Oil stock was
presented, were able to perform their
fiduciary obligation as directors to make an
informed judgment of approving the
transaction. In particular, it is difficult
to ignore the following facts.
The transaction had been in
progress since October. I am satisfied that
management decided early in the game, and
probably in October, that the offer, when
made, would be recommended to the Board.
Certainly by early December the only
reasonable assumption was that management
would recommend the transaction to the
Board.
To highlight the fact that
management did not bring the proposed
transaction to the attention of the Signal
Board, it should be noted that in early
December management did bring the
transaction to the attention of the Signal
Oil Board, evidently because personnel at
Signal Oil were somewhat restless about the
investigation being conducted by the Burmah
people. But the point is management was
ready to go out of its way of relieving
anxiety in the subsidiary that was being
transferred and yet made no advance effort
to educate the directors whose
responsibility it was to approve the
transaction. The point is aggravated by the
fact that there was a regular board meeting
with one hundred per cent attendance on
November 27, 1973. Walkup affidavit, docket
number 34.
9
Even granting that management had
prior legal difficulties with the minority
group of which the plaintiff is a member, it
is hard to overlook the fact the minority
interest wrote to each board member,
expressed opposition to the sale of the oil
and gas interest, further stated its belief
that any such transaction required
shareholders' approval and further requested
to be consulted. Except for obtaining an
opinion of counsel to counter the legal
position on the requirement of shareholder
action, this request was totally ignored by
management and by the Board. Such lack of
consideration for a minority viewpoint of
the substantial block of stock, and perhaps
the largest single block of stock, gives
rise to the allegation, which probably
cannot be established as motivation, that
management was trying to effectively freeze
out a minority interest.
Gerlach v. Gillam, 37 Del.Ch. 244,
139 A.2d 591 (Ch.1958).
There does not appear to be in
the record any effort on the part of
management to slow or seek a delay in the
December 21st deadline which was imposed by
the December 18th offer of Burmah. Rather
the circumstances are consistent with
Signal's management approval of the forced
decision on a tight time schedule. It is
clear that Burmah's strategy was to force a
quick decision. Roberts affidavit, docket
number 20, paragraph 15.
The decision to call a special
meeting of the Board on approximately two
days' notice highlights the failure of
management to advise the Board in their
capacity as Board members of this very
important transaction. Only six directors
(Walkup, Shumway, Chitiea, Arms, Thompson
and Stevenson) knew of the purpose of the
meeting in advance. Walkup affidavit, docket
number 34. Not only was the call short but
management failed to give any notice of the
subject matter in advance. The question is
not one of legality. The question is one of
permitting the Board the
Page 615 opportunity to make a reasonable and
reasoned decision.
There is no question that the
energy crisis has created a drastic change
in the value of oil and gas properties. Even
granting that there may be wide divergence
in expert viewpoint, the situation made
desirable an updated evaluation since the
Hill evaluation as of September 30 and the
De Golyer and MacNaughton evaluation as of
June 30.
10
Indeed, the defendants' own expert in this
proceeding, while he values Signal Oil at
less than the sale price, also values Signal
Oil at $60,000,000 more on December 21 than
he did on September 30. Moreover, questions
on fairness were naturally directed to
Thompson, a director who will continue with
Signal Oil after the sale to Burmah.
In addition, even though the
directors knew of Signal's need for cash,
there had been no precise analysis about the
use of the money to be obtained from the
sale. Indeed, the income projections which
were presented at the director's meeting
showed that income will decrease in the
three years after the sale as compared with
the projections prior to the sale. Even
making allowance for the fact that Signal
Oil has evidently failed to achieve
projections, this presentation is somewhat
out of the ordinary. See Exhibit 5 to docket
number 21; Chitiea deposition, docket number
28, p. 121.
The factors, which suggest
imprudence and perhaps some others such as
the differences that Signal Oil personnel
had with the De Goyler and MacNaughton
report and certain potential liabilities of
Signal which survive the sale, do not in my
judgment raise at this stage a reasonable
probability that the plaintiff will be able
to pierce the 'business judgment' standard.
When considered in light of the whole case,
they do not in themselves justify the
conclusion that the 'direcotrs acted so far
without information that they can be said to
have passed an unintelligent and unadvised
judgment.'
Mitchell v. Highland-Western Glass Co.,
Supra, 19 Del.Ch. at 329--330, 167 A. at 833.
But, and perhaps particularly on this
preliminary application, the full
circumstances surrounding the approval do
relate to the overriding factual issue in
the case. What was Signal Oil worth on
December 21, 1973? Or to put the question in
its legal context, did the Signal directors
act without the bounds of reason and
recklessly in approving the price offer of
Burmah?
Thus, the ultimate question is
not one of method but one of value. The
method does not appear so bad on its face as
to alter the normal legal principles which
control. But hasty method which produces a
dollar result which appears perhaps to be
shocking is significant. On the basis of
affidavits relating to value, the Court has
the tentative belief that plaintiff would
have a reasonable prospect of success on the
merits since limited record indicates a
gross disparity between the fair market
value of Signal Oil on December 21, 1973 and
what the Board of Directors were willing to
sell the company for, namely, $480,000,000.
To the extent the scale tips, on the present
record, the nod is to the plaintiff. But I
hasten to add that an extremely high
security consistent with the figures being
discussed, should be required.
The affidavits dealing with the
value of Signal Oil as of December 21, 1973
have been submitted to the Court. They are
in marked conflict on almost every important
matter. Naturally, what most concerns the
Court is the enormous discrepancy in expert
estimates on the total value of Signal Oil.
But, the tremendous difference that a slight
variation of single factor makes in the
ultimate value is also crucial. In effect,
an unreasonable valuation of one factor
could alter the ultimate result.
Page 616
Signal's primary expert, Kenneth
E. Hill, who valued the fair market value of
Signal Oil's oil and gas properties in
September, 1973, at $350,000,000, now
concludes that their worth had reached
$410,000,000 by December 21, 1973. ( 8 of
Hill Aff.)
11 He
further values Signal Oil's other assets at
approximately $28,000,000 and concludes (at
20 of his affidavit):
'Accordingly, I value Signal Oil in its
entirety as a company at $438,000,000, as
compared to the purchase price of
$480,000,000 plus the North Sea retained
interest which Signal Oil's parent
corporation is to receive from the sale of
the Signal Oil stock to Burmah.'
On the other hand, Paul V.
Keyser, Jr., one of plaintiff's experts,
concludes that Signal Oil's oil reserves
alone can be conservatively valued at
$791,875,000 ( 12 of Keyser's January 3,
1974 aff.); that its total gas reserves are
worth another $124,980,000 ( 13); and that
its other properties are worth $98,000,000 (
14).
12 Mr. Keyser
discounts the total of these values
($1,014,855,000) by a substantial discount
factor of 25% To produce his final fair
market value estimate of $761,000,000 ( 15),
a figure almost twice Mr. Hill's estimate
and $281,000,000 more than the sale price
agreed upon by defendants.
There is general consensus as to
what factors should be considered; namely,
the price of oil, the amount of oil and gas
reserves (which could increase if the future
price of oil makes development economically
feasible), production costs, capital outlay,
taxes, discount and risk factors, etc. But
there is considerable conflict between the
two sides as to their estimates of what
future weight each factor deserves in their
calculations.
For example, with regard to
price, Mr. Hill used an average price over a
future 19 year period of $6.68 per barrel in
reaching his December 21, 1973 valuation.
(Hill Aff. Ex. C). (This was $1.54 more per
barrel than he had used in marking his
September, 1973 appraisal (Hill Aff. Ex.
B).) Mr. Keyser, on the other hand, used an
average price of $8.00 per barrel over a
future 20 year period (Keyser Aff. 7, 8).
Similarly, Mr. Hill used an average
production cost figure of $1.80 per barrel
in his September and December valuations.
(Hill Aff. Exs. B & C). Mr. Keyser used an
average production cost figure of $1.50 in
his calculations. (Keyser Jan. 8, 1974 Aff.
6). Among other variables, the experts also
disagree on capital expenditures, discount
factors, and, especially, various tax
ramifications.
As noted above, while a
differential of a few cents or barrels in
one factor or another may, at first blush,
seem insignificant, such is not the case at
all. Forrest A. Garb, another of plaintiff's
experts, illustrates the disparity which
results. See Garb affidavit of January 8,
1974, docket number 60. He submits a
tabulation which 'merely recomputes the
value of Signal's domestic oil reserves
using the same projections as Mr. Hill
except for substitution of more realistic
oil prices.' Then he says:
'This one change results in increasing
Mr. Hill's evaluation by $116,660,000. Use
of a 10% Discount factor, rather than the
12% Discount factor employed by Mr. Hill
increases the valuation by an additional
$29,190,000. Elimination of Mr. Hill's
provision for income taxes, to reflect
Burmah's expectation, would result in
further increases of $210,500,000 or
$194,560,000, depending upon whether a 10%
Or 12% Discount rate is used. The use of the
De Golyer and MacNaughton expense
projections, rather than those assumed by
Mr. Hill, would further increase the
valuation by an amount approximately $100
million.'
Page 617
I note that Mr. Hill has been
involved in evaluating Signal Oil in several
capacities, that it is claimed he has been
inconsistent in his conclusions and that he
has not properly reflected market
developments as of December 21, 1973. The
weight against his opinion at this stage is
slight indeed but slight weight can produce
gross disparity.
This exemplifies the problem that
so disturbs the Court. Although expert
affidavits have been filed, there has neen
no oral testimony, no cross-examination, and
no real opportunity for the Court to
evaluate the basic figures and assumptions
upon which these experts based their
complicated analysis. In effect, the most
important issue in the case had had the
relative worst form of evidence.
13 Hence, even for
preliminary injunction purposes, the Court
is unable to properly judge the validity of
the ultimate evaluations which conflict so
greatly. The dollars involved are at such
variance as to suggest that someone may be
dead wrong.
Thus, the Court does not want to
overemphasize the ultimate significance of
its conclusion herein although the Court
recognizes the temporary significance. Both
sides have produced experts of high
qualification and the question, especially
in light of the business judgment rule, is
extremely close. Certainly, the affidavits
do not come near to exhausting the potential
differences among the experts on this
complex evaluation. Indeed, it is easy to
speculate beyond the record that there are
other experts who will support the
conclusion voiced by affidavits in support
of the directors' decision. In short, it is
hard to imagine a final record after a full
trial on the merits bearing much resemblance
to the record on which I make the immediate
decision in the plaintiff's favor. The
situation is not to my liking, but
Chancellor Josiah O. Wolcott said in the
Allied Chemical & Dye case, 14 Del.Ch. at
24--25, 120 A. at 496:
'. . . As much as I am loath to issue the
powerful process of injunction, yet where
facts are presented which justify it, no
personal reluctance of the Chancellor should
restrain him. It is needless, of course, to
say that the issuance of the preliminary
injunction against the sale determines
nothing finally. All that I am intending to
now decide is that a case is presented which
calls for fuller investigation; and that the
subject-matter of the suit should remain in
Statu quo pending such investigation.'
In essence, notwithstanding the
affidavits and the conflict in their
content, there remains a serious question
about the reasonable probability that the
plaintiff will succeed in this action.
Therefore, notwithstanding my tentative
conclusion on reasonable probability, I am
convinced that the discrepancy between the
values is so great that an immediate fuller
investigation into this matter of fair value
should be had. I have been mindful that, if
the preliminary injunction is denied now,
the plaintiff may well be barred of any
significant relief upon proof which is not
conclusive against him and which is of a
character sufficiently strong to permit him
at least to have the opportunity to sustain
his contentions. To deny the injunction may
well finally dispose of the case.
Allied Chemical & Dye Corp. v. Steel & Tube
Co., Supra, 14 Del.Ch. at 24, 120 A. at 496.
But I am also mindful of the
possible injuries that may be done to the
Corporation and to those shareholders which
support
Page 618 the Board action. I am particularly mindful
that time may be of the essence in this
situation where there are so many varying
factors in such varying degrees. The longer
the delay, the more likelihood the deal with
be lost. It is not my intention, to the
extent I can avoid, to allow a preliminary
injunction to destroy the Corporation's
opportunity for this transaction.
Preliminary injunctions which allow the
plaintiff all the relief he could hope to
gain are rarely granted. Data General
Corporation v. Digital Computer Controls,
Inc., Del.Supr., 297 A.2d 437 (1972). The
transaction, if its approval was within the
legal power of the Signal Board, should be
allowed to proceed. This means that the
Court is going to have to impose difficult
time standards on counsel and to narrowly
limit the issues to be explored in the
immediate future.
In particular, the Court will
issue a preliminary injunction, to be
effective upon posting of the required
security, restraining the sale until
February 15, 1974, unless the injunction is
lifted or extended earlier by a subsequent
order of the Court. If the preliminary
injunction takes effect, pursuant to Rule
42, whether for further purposes of
preliminary hearing or for purposes of final
hearing I am not certain and would seek
counsel's guidance, I will sever the issue
of evaluation of Signal Oil and will set
aside three trial days, January 23, January
24, and January 25 for trial solely on the
issue of evaluation. If more time is needed
for trial, it will be made available.
Between now and January 21, counsel can take
discovery as time permits. The names of all
experts to be used must be disclosed not
later than January 15.
One other significant factor
remains which itself could be decisive.
Under our Court Rules, Rule 65(c),
Del.C.Ann., '(n)o . .. preliminary
injunction shall issue except upon the
giving of security by the applicant, in such
sum as the court deems proper for the
payment of such costs and damages as may be
incurred or suffered by any party who is
found to have been wrongfully enjoined or
restrained.' Frankly, counsel have been
extremely unhelpful on the question of
security, notwithstanding the fact that the
Court specifically inquired at the hearing
on January 4. The plaintiff suggested no
security be required and the defendant
Signal suggested security in excess of 200
million dollars. As noted, in this case, the
security question is in itself a substantial
one because it is not difficult to imagine
that a security requirement of a high dollar
value might be as effective in denying the
plaintiff an opportunity to be heard as
would the denial of a preliminary
injunction. On the other hand, the
difference between 480 million dollars plus
and 438 million dollars, the value ascribed
to Signal Oil by the Hill affidavit, is 42
million dollars plus, and the simple fact of
the matter is Burmah seems to have an
immediate out if they want to exercise it or
if conditions, highly speculative, change
Burmah's mind.
Judging the risk now in light of
the short time interval now contemplated,
Burmah's now apparent continuing desire to
consummate the transaction, but bearing in
mind the risk of losing the best offer that
Signal has had as well as the potential loss
to Burmah, and giving full weight to the
language of the Rule, the Court fixes
security in the amount of twenty five
million dollars, an amount which is, as far
as I have been able to determine, without
precedent.
The plaintiff should present an
order, on notice, tomorrow.
1 The purchase price consists of 420
million dollars cash to be paid by Burmah at
the closing, the cancellation of
approximately 60 million dollars in
indebtedness of Signal to Signal Oil, and
the transfer by Signal Oil to Signal of a 4
3/4% Net profits interest in the unexplored
portion of Block 211/18 in the
North Sea. Compare Baron v. Pressed Metals
of America, Inc., 35 Del.Ch. 581,
123 A.2d 848 (Supr.Ct.1956).
2 The purchaser has the option not to
consummate the transaction if the following
condition (paragraph 8.07 of the agreement)
has not been met.
'8.07 No suit or action, investigation,
inquiry, or request for information by an
administrative agency, governmental body or
private party, and no legal or
administrative proceeding shall have been
instituted or theatened which questions or
reasonably appears to portend subsequent
questioning of the validity or legality of
this Agreement or the transactions provided
for herein.'
3 'Every corporation may at any meeting
of its board of directors sell, lease, or
exchange all or substantially all of its
property and assets, including its good will
and its corporate franchises, upon such
terms and conditions and for such
consideration, which may consist in whole or
in part of money or other property,
including shares of stock in, and/or other
securities of, any other corporation or
corporations, as its board of directors
deems expedient and for the best interests
of the corporation, when and as authorized
by a resolution adopted by a majority of the
outstanding stock of the corporation
entitled to vote thereon at a meeting duly
called upon at least 20 days notice. The
notice of the meeting shall state that such
a resolution will be considered.'
The predecessor statute was evidently
originally enacted in 1916 in response to
Chancellor Curtis' statement of the common
law rule
Butler v. New Keystone Copper Co., 10
Del.Ch. 371, 377, 93 A. 380, 383 (Ch.1915):
'The general rule as to commercial
corporations seems to be settled that
neither the directors nor the stockholders
of a prosperous, going concern have the
power to sell all, or substantially all, the
property of the company if the holder of a
single share dissent.'
4 The tables that follow are contained in
the Chitiea affidavit, docket number 36.
| SIGNAL'S REVENUES (in millions) |
| 9 Mos.Ended |
|
Sept. 30, 1973 |
Dec. 31, 1972 |
Dec. 31, 1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
$655.9 |
$712.7 |
$552.5 |
| Aerospace and industrial |
407.1 |
478.2 |
448.0 |
| Oil and gas |
185.8 |
267.2 |
314.1 |
| Other |
16.4 |
14.4 |
14.0 |
| SIGNAL'S PRE-TAX EARNINGS (in millions) |
| 9 Mos.Ended |
|
Sept. 30, 1973 |
Dec. 31, 1972 |
Dec. 31, 1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
$55.8 |
$65.5 |
$36.4 |
| Aerospace and industrial |
20.7 |
21.5 |
19.5 |
| Oil and gas |
10.1 |
12.8 |
9.9 |
| SIGNAL'S ASSETS (in millions) |
| 9 Mos.Ended |
|
Sept. 30, 1973 |
Dec. 31, 1972 |
Dec. 31, 1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
$581.4 |
$506.5 |
$450.4 |
| Aerospace and industrial |
365.2 |
351.1 |
331.5 |
| Oil and gas |
376.2 |
368.3 |
369.9 |
| Other |
113.1 |
102.0 |
121.3 |
| SIGNAL'S NET WORTH (in millions) |
| 9 Mos.Ended |
|
Sept. 30, 1973 |
Dec. 31, 1972 |
Dec. 31, 1971 |
| Truck manufacturing |
$295.0 |
$269.7 |
$234.6 |
| Aerospace and industrial |
163.5 |
152.2 |
139.6 |
| Oil and gas |
280.5 |
273.2 |
254.4 |
| Other |
(55.7) |
(42.1) |
(2.0) |
5 In my judgment, it is necessary to
include the 25% Discount factor which Mr.
Keyser states 'it seems prudent to apply.'
Keyser affidavit, docket number 15.
6 Burmah had previously expressed an
earlier interest in Signal Oil in 1968.
7 Shumway sums up the Signal case
pointedly: 'Now, here is a situation where
we have sold 25 percent of our assets and 25
percent or less of last year's earning
power, maybe 30 percent this year, and we've
got 110 percent of our market price and we
are being sued for stupidity. That's just
hard to believe.' Shumway deposition, docket
number 29, p. 49.
8 See paragraph 14 of complaint. Director
Williams testified appropriately: 'It was
cash. Those are the best terms I can think
of.' Williams deposition, docket number 30,
p. 22.
9 As early as October 24th, Burmah had
indicated a price in the range of 400
million dollars, and was advised such an
offer would be taken to the Board of
Directors. Thompson deposition, docket
number 24, p. 48. Shumway indicated the
terms would be satisfactory in October.
Chitiea deposition, docket number 28, p. 25.
10 Contrary to the suggestion of the
plaintiff, competitive bids are not
required. Abelow v. Midstates Oil Corp., 41 Del.Ch.
145, 151, 189 A.2d 675, 678 (Supr.Ct.1963).
11 The Hill affidavit is docket number
48.
12 The January 3, 1974 Keyser affidavit
is docket number 15 and a later affidavit
dated January 8, 1974 is docket number 59.
The later is noted by date in references.
13 I am not criticizing in this regard.
The issue is complex and the affidavits
themselves excellent in light of the time
factor. But they are obviously not a basis
for factual conclusions in this area. As for
the suggestion in the Daum affidavit of
January 8, 1974, docket number 58, that the
defendants are to blame for the lack of live
testimony, I note either side was free to
make an application at the January 4, 1974
hearing. Indeed, perhaps a courtroom
examination at that point was premature. |