| Page 497 429 A.2d 497
Libby G. LYNCH, Plaintiff,
Appellant,
v.
VICKERS ENERGY CORPORATION, Esmark, Inc.,
William A.
Alexander, Richard J. Boushka, Edward J.
Hudson,
Donald P. Kelly, Robert D. Phillips,
Stormy F. Smith and Jack A.
Vickers, Defendants,
Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted June 9, 1980.
Decided April 3, 1981.
Page 498
Upon appeal from the Court of
Chancery. Affirmed in part, reversed in part
and remanded.
Joseph A. Rosenthal of Morris &
Rosenthal, Wilmington, and Sidney B.
Silverman (argued), Joan T. Harnes and
Martin H. Olesh of Silverman & Harnes, New
York City, of counsel, for
plaintiff-appellant.
Louis J. Finger of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, and Leo Herzel,
Susan Getzendanner (argued), and Scott J.
Davis of Mayer, Brown & Platt, Chicago,
Ill., of counsel, for defendants-appellees
Vickers Energy Corp., Esmark, Inc., Richard
J. Boushka, Donald P. Kelly, Robert D.
Phillips and Jack A. Vickers.
David A. Drexler (argued) of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, and William Key Wilde of
Bracewell & Patterson, Houston Tex., of
counsel, for defendants-appellees William A.
Alexander, Edward J. Hudson and Stormy F.
Smith.
Before the Court en Banc:
HERMANN, C. J., and DUFFY, McNEILLY, QUILLEN
and HORSEY, J.
DUFFY, Justice:
This is a class action on behalf
of stockholders of TransOcean Oil, Inc.
(TransOcean) who sold their shares pursuant
to a tender offer by the majority
stockholder.
1
Page 499 The pertinent facts appear in a prior
opinion of this Court, Lynch v. Vickers
Energy Corp., Del.Supr.,
383 A.2d 278
(1977), and in two opinions by the Court of
Chancery, 402 A.2d 5 (1979), and
351 A.2d 570 (1976), to which reference is made. We
discuss the facts only as necessary for
present purposes.
I
A majority of the issued and
outstanding stock of TransOcean is held by
defendant Vickers Energy Corporation
(Vickers), which is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of defendant Esmark, Inc.
(Esmark).
2
Vickers had acquired through the tender
offer, at $12 each, some 4,228,000
additional shares of TransOcean common.
In the prior appeal, we held
that:
"Vickers, as the majority shareholder of
TransOcean, owed a fiduciary duty to
plaintiff which required 'complete candor'
in disclosing fully 'all of the facts and
circumstances surrounding the' tender
offer."
383 A.2d at 279. And we concluded
that the tender offer made by Vickers to its
fellow shareholders,
"failed to disclose fully two critical
facts: (1) that a 'highly qualified'
petroleum engineer ..., who was a member of
TransOcean's management, had calculated the
net asset value to be worth significantly
more than the minimum amount disclosed in
the offer; and (2) that Vickers' management
had authorized open market purchases of
TransOcean's stock during the period
immediately preceding the $12 per share
tender offer for bids up to $15 per share."
383 A.2d at 280. We then remanded
the case for further proceedings in the
Court of Chancery consistent with our
rulings.
After remand, trial was held on
the remaining issues and the Court entered
judgment for defendants. 402 A.2d 5 (1979).
Plaintiff then docketed this appeal.
In his opinion, the Trial Judge
considered several alternative measures of
damages or formulas for relief and then,
noting the absence of statutory guidelines,
he concluded that:
"a proceeding analogous to an appraisal
hearing such as is provided for in merger
cases is appropriate here, Poole v. N. V.
Deli Maatschappij, supra (Del.Supr., 224
A.2d 260 (1966)), in a situation in which
active fraud has not been alleged or
proved."
402 A.2d at 11. The Court then
weighed and applied the several factors
relevant to fixing the "fair" or "proper"
value of shares in a statutory appraisal
proceeding, 8 Del.C. § 262. See, e. g.,
Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Francis I.
duPont & Co., Del.Supr., 334 A.2d 216
(1975). Those factors are the value of the
corporate assets, the market value of the
stock and its earnings value. The Trial
Judge then adjusted and summarized his
findings of the value of each TransOcean
share, as of the time of the tender offer,
as follows:
"Asset value $ 17.50 x 40% $ 7.00
Market value $ 9.48 x 40% $ 3.80
Earnings value $ 5.25 x 20% $ 1.05
--------
Total $ 11.85"
402 A.2d at 12.
Since members of the class had
been paid $12 per share for the TransOcean
stock which they sold to Vickers, the Court
concluded that plaintiff had not been
damaged by defendants' failure to disclose
the material facts, which was the basis of
our reversal following the prior appeal. See
383 A.2d at 282.
In this Court, plaintiff argues
that the Trial Judge erroneously interpreted
and applied our decision on the first
appeal; that uncontroverted trial testimony
fixed the
Page 500 value of the TransOcean shares to Esmark at
up to $40 per share; that the Chancellor
committed error in valuing and weighing
TransOcean's net assets; and that he
erroneously refused to order rescission.
Defendants respond by saying,
among other things, that the Court of
Chancery used the correct standard in
determining whether plaintiff had been
damaged by the failure to disclose the
material facts; that the Court correctly
applied that standard to the evidence; that
the members of the class had been overpaid
for the TransOcean shares; that plaintiff
must show injury in order to be entitled to
a remedy; and that rescission would be
unwarranted in any event.
II
As we see the controversy in
context following our ruling on the first
appeal, the issue remaining for decision is
very narrow. In ultimate terms, it amounts
to this: Is plaintiff entitled to relief
and, if so, what is it to be?
The choice of relief to be
accorded a prevailing plaintiff in equity is
largely a matter of discretion with the
Chancellor, 1 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence
(5 ed.) § 109, and Delaware, with its long
history of common law equity jurisprudence,
has followed that tradition. Cf. Wilmont
Homes, Inc. v. Weiler, Del.Supr., 202 A.2d
576 (1964). Here, however, there is more to
the appeal than merely testing for abuse of
discretion. As we view it, the issue is not
the manner in which the Court applied an
agreed or undisputed measure of damages, but
whether the Court followed a proper rule of
law in deciding whether the members of
plaintiff's class are entitled to relief.
We conclude that reversal is
required because the Chancellor erroneously
relied on the Poole case and on an appraisal
formula (which has been developed in our
case law under the Statute, 8 Del.C. § 262)
in determining whether relief should be
granted. In short, the case calls for a
different rule of law on damages than the
one which the Chancellor applied.
A.
In Poole, the question raised was
the measure of damages to be applied in an
action for inducing a sale of stock by
fraudulent misrepresentation. While the
corporate defendant in that case (like
Vickers in this case) held more than 50% of
the stock in the corporation whose shares
were acquired from the plaintiffs, Poole was
tried as a misrepresentation case in which
the nature of the relief sought was
significant and, as to that, this Court
said:
"(P)laintiffs seek to recover the
difference between the actual value of the
stock and the price paid, known as the
'out-of-pocket' measure of damages ...."
224 A.2d at 262. Indeed, the
relief sought by plaintiffs was
determinative because the Court, after
noting other measures of damages, said:
"In any event, since the plaintiffs'
action is grounded upon the out-of-pocket
measure of damages, that is the rule to be
applied."
224 A.2d at 262.
Clearly, then, Poole was pleaded
and tried as a fraud case in which the Court
limited plaintiffs to the out-of-pocket
measure of damages on which they had gone to
trial, 224 A.2d at 262, and then applied the
general rule used in determining the "actual
value of stock" involved in a fraud case.
3 In so doing, the
Court used a corporate "going concern" basis
and rejected a claim that a "liquidation"
basis was appropriate. 224 A.2d at 263.
The question, then, is whether
the Poole approach should be applied here.
We think not, for at least one significant
reason: a
Page 501 breach of fiduciary duty was alleged in this
litigation and it was found by this Court,
383 A.2d at 281, but such a claim was
neither charged nor found in Poole. Given
that distinction, we are not persuaded that
plaintiff and the members of her class
should be limited to the measure of damages
which the plaintiffs had pleaded and tried
in Poole and which the Chancellor applied
here.
A rule derived from a case in
which the Court accepted a damage formula
for which the plaintiffs had specifically
asked, may not, in fairness, be applied to
limit the present plaintiff whose claim is
based, not on a similar cause of action nor
on the same damage formula, but on the
violation of a different standard of
conduct. The difference is important because
the appraisal approach adopted in Poole has
a built-in limitation, namely, gain to the
corporation resulting from a statutory
merger is not a factor which is included in
determining the value of the shares, and it
was not considered by the Chancellor. But
that limitation does not apply when a
fiduciary has breached a duty to those to
whom it is owed.
We do not overrule Poole, which
remains appropriate for an action based on
misrepresentation. But a claim founded on a
breach of fiduciary duty permits a different
form of relief, that is, an accounting or
rescission or other remedy afforded for
breach of trust by a fiduciary.
B.
We now consider what relief is
appropriate. Plaintiff has prayed for both
rescission and money damages and the theory
of the claim asserted would support a
judgment in either form. Thus rescission
would restore the parties to the status quo
before sales of the shares were made, and
money damages for non-disclosure of
information germane to the transactions is
akin to a legally based action for fraud and
deceit. Compare Poole, supra.
As to rescission, plaintiff has
argued that the members of her class should
be given the option, on an individual basis,
to rescind their respective sales. There is
precedent for such a ruling because our
Court of Chancery has ruled that materially
misleading representations, which induce a
party to contract, may entitle that party to
rescind the contract. Eastern States
Petroleum Co., Inc. v. Universal Oil
Products Co., Del.Ch., 24 Del.Ch. 11, 3 A.2d
768 (1939); cf. Brittingham v. Huyler's,
N.J.Ch., 118 N.J.Eq. 352, 179 A. 275 (1935),
aff'd, N.J.Ct.E. & A., 120 N.J.Eq. 198, 184
A. 529 (1936). Rescission is the preferable
remedy and if the controversy in its present
form had been here in an earlier stage of
the litigation, it might well be ordered.
But we conclude that rescission is not
feasible at this late date. TransOcean has
been merged into Esmark and time has brought
other corporate changes.
On the present state of affairs,
we conclude that a fair result can be
accomplished without interfering with the
present corporate structure through a
rescission order. That can be accomplished
by ordering damages which are the monetary
equivalent of rescission and which will, in
effect, equal the increment in value that
Vickers enjoyed as a result of acquiring and
holding the TransOcean stock in issue. That
is consistent with the basis for liability
which is the law of the case, and it is a
norm applied when the equitable remedy of
rescission is impractical.
The appropriate measure and
extent of recovery is stated in 12A Fletcher
Cyclopedia Corporations (Perm.Ed.) § 5598:
"Rescission calls for the
cancellation of the bargain and the return
of the parties to the status quo and hence
where this is impossible because of the
disposal or retirement of the stock
involved, the proper measure of damages
should be the equivalent value of the stock
at the time of resale or at the time of
judgment. (Emphasis added.)
See also Fletcher, supra, § 5596,
discussing the award of damages by an equity
court when rescission is not available
because the defendant has parted with the
stock.
Page 502
In Myzel v. Fields, 8 Cir., 386
F.2d 718 (1967), cert. denied, 390 U.S. 951,
88 S.Ct. 1043, 19 L.Ed.2d 1143 (1968), the
Court affirmed a substantial money judgment
in favor of minority stockholders who had
sold shares to corporate "insiders" under
circumstances in which relevant facts
(including those relating to sales and
profit) known to the insiders were not
disclosed. Since defendants had disposed of
the stock they had received, the Trial Court
treated the action as one for damages, 386
F.2d at 741. The Eighth Circuit determined
that under Federal law, 15 U.S.C. § 78cc(b),
the sale was void and that,
"plaintiff was entitled to restitution of
what he sold, or, since restoration of the
stock was here impossible, an equivalent
money judgment." (Emphasis added.)
386 F.2d at 742.
The Court went on to say that:
"(r)ecision calls for
cancellation of the bargain, and the return
of the parties to the status quo ante ;
where this is impossible because of the
disposal or retirement of the stock, then
equivalent value of the stock at the time of
resale (In
re Liebig, 2 Cir., 255 F. 458 (1918)) or
at the time of judgment (cf. Strong v.
Repide, supra, 213 U.S. (419) at 421-422, 29
S.Ct. 521 (522, 53 L.Ed. 853)), should be
the proper measure of damage." (Emphasis in
original.)
386 F.2d at 742.
Compare Barnes v. Eastern and
Western Lumber Co., Or.Supr., 205 Or. 553,
287 P.2d 929 (1955). The Restatement of
Restitution § 151, which is cited in Myzel,
makes the same point:
"Where a person is entitled to a
money judgment against another because by
fraud, duress or other consciously tortious
conduct the other has acquired, retained or
disposed of his property, the measure of
recovery for the benefit received by the
other is the value of the property at the
time of its improper acquisition, retention
or disposition, or a higher value if this is
required to avoid injustice where the
property has fluctuated in value or
additions have been made to it."
In Myzel, the Court concluded
that the value of the stock at the time of
judgment was the appropriate relief, and
noted that the First Circuit had reached a
similar conclusion:
"Janigan
v. Taylor,
344 F.2d 781 (1 Cir. 1965),
the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
faced a similar problem of damages where the
seller of securities was the party
defrauded. As Chief Judge Aldrich
realistically points out, in such an
instance justice required that the 'out of
pocket' theory reflect future accretions."
386 F.2d at 747.
Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Co. v.
Johnson, 5 Cir., 263 F.2d 748, reh. denied
268 F.2d 317, cert. denied, 361 U.S. 885, 80
S.Ct. 156, 4 L.Ed.2d 120 (1959), was an
action for rescission of sales by plaintiffs
to defendants of corporate stock. Defendants
had caused the corporation to be dissolved
after arranging for it to acquire stock from
plaintiffs and others. The Corporation had
bought its own shares from plaintiffs in
1953 for about $400 per share; evidence at
trial showed a fair market value of about
$320 per share. All corporate assets were
sold and the corporation was liquidated in
1956. The Trial Court found that,
"had the plaintiffs and other minority
sellers not sold their stock, it would have
been worth about $2,068 per share on
liquidation or over five times the amount
received. The majority stockholders thus
profited by some $3,458,007 from the
treasury purchases."
263 F.2d at 752.
The Court determined that the
Trial Judge's ruling was "clearly erroneous
in finding that fraud per se of defendant
through its officers was established beyond
a reasonable doubt ...." 263 F.2d at 753.
But the Court concluded that the judgment
was correct; thus:
"However, the results were
correct and are soundly predicated, we
think, upon the liability for breach of the
fiduciary duty owed by a corporation's
officers to its individual stockholders.
Practically
Page 503 all jurisdictions recognize a fiduciary
relationship arising from the directors and
officers to their corporation and to the
stockholders as a whole, while a 'growing
minority' accord this duty to individual
stockholders,
4
especially concerning the purchase of stock
from a shareholder. Whether this
relationship between officers and directors
and their stockholders is termed fiduciary
or quasi-fiduciary or trust or confidence is
immaterial, and, likewise, is it immaterial
whether its breach is described as
constructive fraud, unjust enrichment,
fraudulent breach of trust, breach of
fiduciary obligation, gross negligence, or
otherwise, and whether the remedy is given
by a constructive trust, restitution, or
accounting. These are all relative terms
describing broad equitable concepts. The
standard of a fiduciary's duty to his
beneficiary, depending upon the instant
relation and the facts of the particular
case, lies somewhere between simple
negligence and willful misconduct or fraud
with the intent to deceive. The actual
intent to deceive is not required where one
party is so placed in such an advantageous
position to the other. Actual fraud will
afford redress in the absence of the special
relationship."
263 F.2d at 754.
And the Court concluded that,
"the special relationship between
defendant's officers and the plaintiffs
demanded that restitution be made to
plaintiffs for the difference of price in
their sold shares and their value upon the
almost immediate liquidation especially
where the defendant's officers made promises
concerning curtailment of future dividends
and disclosed plans for no liquidation in
the near future and used economic coercion
to secure the sale of the minority shares."
263 F.2d at 756.
We agree with the approach taken
by the Courts in Myzel and Mansfield
Hardwood and apply it here. Specifically, we
hold that Vickers will be required to pay
rescissory damages to plaintiffs measured by
the equivalent value of the TransOcean stock
at the time of judgment.
5
See the discussion below as to when the
record was closed for that purpose.
C.
Relying
on Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co., 396 U.S.
375, 90 S.Ct. 616, 24 L.Ed.2d 593 (1970),
and similar cases, defendants argue that
plaintiff must show injury or economic loss
in order to be entitled to a remedy.
We do not read Mills so narrowly.
It was, of course, an action under § 14(a)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 in
which the question presented was this: "what
causal relationship must be shown between
such a (materially false or misleading)
statement and the merger to establish a
cause of action" under the Act? 90 S.Ct. at
618.
After concluding that petitioners
had established their case "by showing that
proxies necessary to approval of the merger
were obtained by means of a materially
misleading solicitation," 90 S.Ct. at 622,
the Court reviewed various forms of relief
which might be awarded, and determined that
petitioners were entitled to receive what
they had been led to believe they would get.
In Mills, petitioners were on the
receiving end of the transaction which had
been made possible by the fraudulent
misrepresentation. Here, we focus on the
principle which
Page 504 prohibits a fiduciary from keeping what he
acquired in a transaction preceded by less
than a fair disclosure of facts germane to
the transaction. Nothing in Mills suggests
that, in such a case, a party who gave up
what he had must prove injury or economic
loss as a condition of relief.
III
In developing an argument based
on a duty to mitigate damages, defendants
say that TransOcean stock was traded over
the counter and that members of the class
could have effected a rescission of the
sale, at their respective options, by buying
shares on the open market.
We agree with the general
principle that requires a plaintiff with
out-of-pocket damages to mitigate them,
Restatement of Contracts § 336 (1932), but
whether mitigation is required depends upon
the circumstances of the case, R.E.B., Inc.
v. Ralston Purina Co., 10 Cir., 525 F.2d
749, 756 (1975), and is subject to a rule of
reasonableness. Krauss v. Greenbarg, 3 Cir.,
137 F.2d 569, 573, cert. denied, 320 U.S.
791, 64 S.Ct. 207, 88 L.Ed. 477 (1943).
Given the fact that liability has
been established in the case, we are not
persuaded that members of the class waived
their respective rights to relief or that
they are estopped to assert that right,
merely because open market purchases of
TransOcean stock might have been made. The
purchase of shares at any given time depends
on many factors, including the price of the
stock, one's view of its potential, a
judgment as to management, known corporate
policy
6 and, last
but by no means least, one's own financial
condition, including other investments or
commitments in common shares. A mix of those
kinds of factors would undoubtedly produce
differing consequences for different
shareholders. And another complication
arises from the number of TransOcean shares
traded.
7
In support of its contention that
plaintiff was obliged to mitigate any
out-of-pocket damages by repurchasing the
TransOcean shares she had tendered, Vickers
relies on Mitchell v. Texas Gulf Sulphur
Co., 10 Cir., 446 F.2d 90, cert. denied, 404
U.S. 1004, 92 S.Ct. 564, 30 L.Ed.2d 558
(1971). Whatever the rule of mitigation
which one may derive from that case, it is
not apposite here.
Texas Gulf Sulphur had issued a
press release on April 12, 1964 which, in
effect, denied that the Company had found a
significant ore deposit in Canada, but
corporate insiders had reason to believe
that such a deposit had been located. The
Trial Court found that the press release was
deceptive with respect to material matters
and the Circuit Court agreed. 446 F.2d at
97. Relying on the press release, plaintiffs
and other Texas Gulf Sulphur stockholders
sold their shares between April 12 and April
16. On the latter date, Texas Gulf Sulphur
issued a second press release which revealed
in some detail the facts as to the discovery
of the ore deposit. The Court concluded that
after the curative statement was published
on April 16, stockholders could no longer
rely on the deceptive statement and thus
were obliged to mitigate any loss sustained
after that. 446 F.2d at 103.
The Court rejected rescission and
restitution as inappropriate remedies for
reasons which, on their face, distinguish
that case from this: (a) in Texas Gulf
Sulphur, the sales of the stock were made to
unknown third parties through a securities
exchange; here, there is "privity" and
"direct ... personal dealings" which the
Circuit Court specifically noted were
absent, 446 F.2d at 105;
Page 505 (b) such a measure of damages would visit a
"hardship ... upon (Texas Gulf Sulphur) as a
corporation," 446 F.2d at 105; no such
showing (or argument) has been made here.
And, finally, the Court made it clear that
the Texas Gulf Sulphur rule was limited to
the "unprecedented circumstances" in that
case, and was not one for "broad application
to all securities cases." Thus:
"The divergent approaches taken by the
litigants verify the suspicion that a set
rule of damages has not been tested in this
kind of case. Furthermore, because of the
uniqueness of the litigation, it would be
unwise to set forth a uniform rule with
broad applications to all securities cases.
Thus, the rule styled by this court is
fashioned for these unprecedented
circumstances."
446 F.2d at 105.
It should also be noted that,
unlike Texas Gulf Sulphur, Vickers did not
release a corrective press notice or
communication to TransOcean stockholders or
to those who had sold their shares. Indeed,
any obligation to cover would have to be
considered in light of the Chancellor's
finding after the trial on liability that
the TransOcean stock was actually worth less
than $12 per share.
Requiring plaintiff to mitigate
her damages under the record circumstances
would be unreasonable, or, to put it more
accurately, in the factual setting of this
case, we refuse to deny to members of the
class relief which would otherwise be
available to each of them, or to limit such
relief because he or she had not repurchased
TransOcean stock after learning of the
misrepresentation.
IV
For the guidance of the Trial
Court after remand, we make three other
comments about relief.
First, rescissory damages are to
be determined as of or prior to the date on
which the trial on damages ended, that is,
July 15, 1978. The parties agreed to close
the record on that date and it is the date
by which damages are ordinarily proved. It
also seems to be a reasonable accommodation
between the date on which the shares were
sold (1974) and the date on which a third
trial will be held (1981).
Second, at trial each side
offered experts with impressive credentials
who testified to a range of values running
from $10 to about $41.40 for each share of
TransOcean common. As we understand the
record, much of the difference was grounded
in the respective values assigned to
TransOcean's assets. And the value which the
Chancellor fixed was influenced
significantly by the percentage which he
assigned to assets in the formula he used.
It seems to us that assigning the same
factor (40%) to both asset value and to
market value was highly questionable. We say
this because oil was (and is) a limited and
much needed energy source which
significantly affected its value as a
corporate asset; in contrast, Vickers'
dominance of TransOcean and its announced
plan to acquire all of the TransOcean stock
undoubtedly had an influence on the value
assigned by the market to the shares traded.
8
Third, in determining the amount
of rescissory damages, the Court should be
considering a TransOcean per share price
between a minimum of $15 and a maximum of
$41.40. The stock should not be valued at
less that $15 per share, because that was
the amount Vickers had authorized to be paid
to third parties for open market purchases
of TransOcean stock. Given the fiduciary
relationship, the arms-length bargaining
employed in the purchases should not have
resulted in the minority stockholders
receiving less than Vickers was ready to pay
strangers for the same stock. And, by the
same token, plaintiff should not be
permitted to now seek more than the maximum
amount she has sought to date, that is,
$41.40 per share.
Page 506
Finally, before any judgment is
entered, Vickers is entitled to credit for
the $12 which it paid to each member of the
class for each share of TransOcean stock it
purchased. And it is entitled to credit for
interest on that sum in the hands of the
seller. In other words, Vickers is entitled
to credit arising from the fact that
plaintiff (and each other member of the
class) has had the use of $12 per share
since the transaction was made in October
1974. Dick v. Reves, Del.Supr., 206 A.2d
671, 676 (1965); Hegarty v. American
Commonwealths Power Corp., Del.Ch., 19
Del.Ch. 86, 163 A. 616, 619 (1932); Baumel
v. Rosen, D.Md., 283 F.Supp. 128 (1968),
modified, 4 Cir., 412 F.2d 571 (1969), cert.
denied, 396 U.S. 1037, 90 S.Ct. 681, 24
L.Ed.2d 681 (1970). However, we cannot
accept the 13.1% rate of return which was
imposed by the Trial Court without
explanation. Considerations of fairness play
a part in fixing an interest rate,
Board of Commissioners v. United States, 308
U.S. 343, 352, 60 S.Ct. 285, 289, 84 L.Ed.
313 (1939); Small v. Schuncke,
N.J.Supr., 42 N.J. 407, 201 A.2d 56 (1964),
and here we are reviewing a rate which is
without Delaware precedent,
9
in a situation in which the victims of a
breach of fiduciary duty will be paying
interest to the violators. Invoking the
fairness principle in this factual setting,
and by analogy to the statutory interest
rate at the time of the trial on damages, 6
Del.C. § 2301(a),
10
and the rate applied in appraisal cases, we
conclude that interest at the rate of 7% is
fair. Compare Baumel, supra, in which the
Court required plaintiffs to pay "simple
interest at the rate of 5%," an amount which
the Court concluded they could have "safely
earned" by use of the money. 283 F.Supp. at
148.
V
In conclusion, we turn to the
arguments made by three of the individual
defendants, Stormy F. Smith, William A.
Alexander and Edward J. Hudson. All of them
were Directors of TransOcean, and Smith was
the President of the Company.
In their prior appeal, these
defendants argued that they were exonerated
from any personal liability because of good
faith reliance upon the advice of counsel,
because of the business judgment rule and
for other reasons. The Court of Chancery had
not ruled on those contentions, nor did we.
We remanded, saying,
"We make no judgment or comment about the
ultimate liability of any individual
defendant nor of any defense alleged, except
to direct that on remand the Trial Court
consider such matters and make whatever
findings and state whatever conclusions it
deems appropriate as part of its final
judgment."
383 A.2d 282. Because the
Chancellor again found for all defendants he
did not consider the personal status of
Smith, Alexander and Hudson.
Defendants have renewed their
arguments that proper application of the
business judgment rule, see Warshaw v.
Calhoun, Del.Supr.,
221 A.2d 487 (1966);
David J. Greene and Co. v. Dunhill
International, Inc., Del.Ch.,
249 A.2d 427
(1968), exonerates them from personal
liability. Plaintiff, on the other hand,
contends that the issue is
Page 507 not properly before us and, in any event,
the business judgment rule does not apply.
We think the time has come to end
this lawsuit against these defendants. We
have determined that plaintiff and the
members of her class are entitled to a new
trial on damages arising from the
transaction by which Vickers acquired the
stock owned by each of them, respectively.
That relates only to the class claim against
Vickers, which had bought the TransOcean
shares. We are unable to perceive, on the
present record and from the briefs, any
basis for liability against these individual
defendants which arises from or which is
related to our determination that Vickers
must pay rescissory damages to the class. It
follows, therefore, that these defendants
are entitled to judgment and, accordingly,
so much of the order of the Court of
Chancery entering judgment in their favor
will be affirmed.
We should add that, in lengthy
briefs, each side argued a number of
propositions not specifically reviewed
herein. Our failure to do that reflects a
decision as to what to write about, not a
failure to consider all arguments.
Affirmed in part, reversed and
remanded for proceedings consistent
herewith.
QUILLEN, Justice, with whom
McNEILLY, Justice, joins, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. Since my
view has not persuaded by colleagues, and
therefore is of no effect, I will state it
as briefly as I can.
It should be noted that in this
litigation there never has been any judicial
disagreement over the "complete candor"
test. See the Chancellor's initial 1976
opinion. Lynch v. Vickers Energy
Corporation, Del.Ch., 351 A.2d 570, 573
(1976).
1a There
can be and is none now. Moreover, as to the
two particular facts cited as violations of
fiduciary duty in this Court's initial
opinion, Lynch v. Vickers Energy Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
383 A.2d 278 (1977), reh. denied
(1978), the application of the legal test to
the facts is the law of the case and not
open to review again. Compare
Massey-Ferguson, Inc. v. Wells, Del.Supr.,
421 A.2d 1320 (1980).
It should also be noted that this
Court in its 1977 reversal of the
Chancellor's 1976 opinion "remanded (the
case) for proceedings consistent herewith."
383 A.2d at 282. Nothing in the Chancellor's
latest effort, Lynch v. Vickers Corp.,
Del.Ch., 402 A.2d 5 (1979), violated that
mandate as no guidance was given as to
damages, let alone any suggestion that a
single rule of damages mandatorily governed.
While I find the opinion of the
majority to be well-stated, I am primarily
concerned about the implications of the
decision on the discretionary power of the
Chancellor and the consequent implications
on the corollary role of this Court in the
evaluation of evidence and choice of relief.
Insofar as today's majority
suggests that the Chancellor as a matter of
law did not have discretion to apply an
out-of-pocket, appraisal damage remedy, it
seems to me the opinion is in error. 1
Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence (5th ed.
1941) § 109. See also Wilmont Homes, Inc. v.
Weiler, Del.Supr., 202 A.2d 576, 580 (1964);
Tenney v. Jacobs, Del.Supr., 43 Del.Ch. 526,
240 A.2d 138, 140 (1968); Wilmington Trust
Company v. Barry, Del.Supr. 397 A.2d 135,
138 (1979). "Equity adapts its decrees to
fit the nature and gravity of the breach and
the consequences to the beneficiaries and
trustee." Bogert, Trust & Trustees (2d ed.
rev. 1978) § 543(V), p. 387. It is one thing
to analogize to the disloyal trustee of an
express
Page 508 trust who uses trust property for personal
benefit but it is quite another to be
absolutely bound by that analogy to the
exclusion of all others. To say there is a
fiduciary duty "only begins analysis" and
"gives direction to further inquiry."
Securities and Exchange Commission v.
Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 86, 63 S.Ct.
454, 458, 87 L.Ed. 626, 632 (1943).
Given the Chancellor's emphasis on the
situation before him, I find no legal error
in his giving by analogy discretionary
consideration to the methodology used in
Poole v. N. V. Deli Maatschappij, Del.Supr.,
43 Del.Ch. 283, 224 A.2d 260 (1966). Compare
Blackie v. Barrack, 9th Cir., 524 F.2d 891,
909 (1975).
The real question is whether the
Chancellor abused his discretion in choosing
the remedy he did. His choice appears to
have been motivated by at least three
factors.
First, he relied on the evidence
before him after ten trial days over a
three-month period in the second trial after
remand. 402 A.2d at 10, 12-13. In choosing
the remedy, he took the case as he found the
evidence warranted. I cannot say his view of
the evidence, insofar as choice of remedy is
concerned, was wrong.
Second, and more particularly, he
properly and carefully made an assessment of
the nature of the particular fiduciary duty
involved in the factual context and found it
"not as compelling" as some others. 402 A.2d
at 11. Insofar as the opinion of the
majority may suggest that the two particular
nonfraudulent breaches of fiduciary duty
found in this Court's first opinion were
ones of major culpability and may take issue
with the Chancellor on that account, not
only are the Chancellor's views entitled to
the usual deference given those of the
fact-finder, but, in my judgment, he clearly
has the better of the argument.
Third, the Chancellor in passing
viewed the issue of mitigation of damages
differently than the majority. 402 A.2d at
8-9. Since the omissions creating the two
breaches were publicly disclosed not later
than the first trial in 1975 and the price
of Trans-Ocean stock remained below twelve
dollars a share in the limited market, it is
difficult for me to say from the appellate
perch that it was legally improper to
consider that "no genuine effort to replace
tendered shares appears to have been made".
402 A.2d 9.
There was, in my judgment, no
abuse of discretion in the remedy chosen. I
recognize the legal forest involves an
important principle of accountability, but I
fear the Court has lost track of the factual
trees and the prime responsibility of equity
to focus on the determined circumstances of
the case at hand. Courts of equity in
particular decide cases.
Were the thoughtful opinion of
the majority an opinion of the Trial Court,
it would be entitled to deference. But it is
not. This is emphasized by the particularly
distressing chronology of this case. The
complaint was filed on October 18, 1974. A
multi-week trial was held in May and June of
1975. After this Court's initial opinion, a
second trial was held in May, June and July
of 1978. The decision today will require yet
a third trial, on a mandated damage theory,
presumably in 1981. Given the history,
surely we must question whether we have our
appellate role in perspective. Application
of Delaware Racing Ass'n, Del.Supr., 213
A.2d 203, 207 (1965).
The luxury of dissent makes it
unnecessary for me to determine whether or
not the Chancellor's application of the
appraisal remedy to these facts as of
September 1974 reached a clearly erroneous
result. Rather than face that difficult
question to no effect, I will merely refer
any overzealous, surviving reader to the
general comments of my concurrence in Bell
v. Kirby Lumber Corp., Del.Supr., 413 A.2d
137, 150-51 (1980).
1 During oral argument, we were advised
by counsel that many members of the class
have participated in a settlement of their
respective claims in a companion suit in
Illinois. While the remaining members of the
class are not identified in the record, we
understand from counsel that about 200,000
shares did not participate in the settlement
and are represented in this action. In this
opinion, all references to "plaintiff"
include members of her class, unless the
text indicates otherwise.
2 We were advised also at argument that
TransOcean had been merged into Esmark. For
discussion purposes, we do not distinguish
between Vickers and Esmark; unless the text
indicates otherwise, reference to one
includes the other.
3 The Court said:
"The general rule is that in determining
the actual value of stock, consideration
should be given to the various relevant
factors of value including earnings,
dividends, market price, assets, and any
other pertinent factors on a 'going concern'
basis. This is the rule in fraud cases."
224 A.2d at 263.
4 Delaware law clearly recognizes and
enforces such fiduciary relationship. Singer
v. Magnavox Co., Del.Supr.,
380 A.2d 969
(1977); Guth v. Loft, Inc., Del.Supr., 23
Del.Ch. 255, 5 A.2d 503 (1939); Allied
Chemical & Dye Corp. v. Steel & Tube Co. of
America, 14 Del.Ch.1, 120 A. 486 (1923).
5 Compare the well settled law that
entitles a beneficiary to claim all
advantages actually gained by a fiduciary as
a result of a breach of trust, 4 Pomeroy's
Equity Jurisprudence (5 ed.) § 1075; 3 Scott
The Law of Trusts (3 ed.) § 205; Bogert
Trusts and Trustees (2 ed. rev.) § 543(V).
That standard has been applied to corporate
affairs and directors in this State. Singer
v. Magnavox Co., supra; Guth v. Loft, Inc.,
supra.
6 For example: after the merger, Vickers
held 88% of the outstanding shares of
TransOcean and had announced (in the
Offering Circular) its intention to acquire
the remainder, by merger if necessary.
Vickers' position of overwhelming dominance,
in conjunction with its attitude, may have
discouraged reinvestment in the Company.
7 Approximately 4,228,000 shares were
acquired by Vickers as a result of the
tender offer. The record shows that the
average trading in TransOcean shares after
the tender offer was 600 per day. Clearly,
that quantity of trading would not support
purchase requirements if all selling
shareholders had opted to rescind (on a
personal basis) by buying TransOcean on the
open market.
8 One expert who testified for plaintiff
noted that, after Vickers had acquired some
88% of the outstanding shares of TransOcean,
the market price was artificially low
because of the "inability to float," that
is, there were insufficient shares available
(the average trading was about 600 shares
per day) to permit large investors to buy
the stock.
9 Compare the amount of interest allowed
in the appraisal cases: In Gibbons v.
Schenley Industries, Inc., Del.Ch., 339 A.2d
460 (1975), the Chancery Court awarded 5.73%
in interest, and in In Re Creole Petroleum
Corp., Del.Ch., C. A. 4860 (New Castle
County), 1978, interest at the rate of 7%
was ordered; in Universal City Studios,
Inc., supra, interest of 5.23% was awarded.
And in Felder v. Anderson, Clayton & Co., 39
Del.Ch. 76, 159 A.2d 278 (1960),
interest was fixed at the rate of 43/4%;
Sporborg v. City Specialty Stores, Inc., 35
Del.Ch. 560, 123 A.2d 121 (1956), a rate
of 4% was fixed.
10 6 Del.C. § 2301(a) then provided, as
follows:
"The legal rate of interest for the loan
or use of money, where no express contract
has been made for a less rate, shall be 6
percent per annum, except that any borrower
may agree to pay, and any lender may charge
and collect from such borrower, interest at
any rate agreed upon in writing in excess of
6 percent per annum, but not in excess of 4
percent over the discount rate charged by
the Federal Reserve Board of Governors to
its member banks."
See 62 Del. Laws c. 228, effective April
18, 1980, for the current Statute.
1a Indeed, if anything, the Chancellor's
1976 statement of the law seems stronger
than others uttered by Delaware courts. See
Resource Document on Delaware Corporation
Law, 3 Del.J.Corp.L. 20, 26-29, particularly
n. 38 (1977);
In re TransOcean Tender Offer Securities
Litigation, N.D. Ill., 427 F.Supp. 1211,
1220-1221 (1977). Compare Lynch v.
Vickers Energy Corp., Del.Supr., 383 A.2d
278, 281 (1977) incorporating federal
standards in the definition of "germane".
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426
U.S. 438, 450, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2133, 48
L.Ed.2d 757, 766 (1976). I note this not
to disagree with such incorporation, which
makes good sense, but rather to emphasize
the Chancellor's contribution to and empathy
for the legal standard of liability. |