| Page 701 457 A.2d 701  William B. WEINBERGER, Plaintiff
Below, Appellant,
v.
UOP, INC., et al., Defendants Below,
Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: July 16, 1982.
Decided: Feb. 1, 1983.
Page 702
On appeal and rehearing from the
Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware
in and for New Castle County. Reversed and
remanded.
William Prickett (argued), John
H. Small, and George H. Seitz, III, of
Prickett, Jones, Elliott, Kristol & Schnee,
Wilmington, for plaintiff.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, for defendant UOP, Inc.
Robert K. Payson and Peter M.
Sieglaff, of Potter, Anderson & Corroon,
Wilmington, and Alan N. Halkett (argued) of
Latham & Watkins, Los Angeles, Cal., for
defendant The Signal Companies, Inc.
Before HERRMANN, C.J., McNEILLY,
QUILLEN, HORSEY and MOORE, JJ., constituting
the Court en Banc.
MOORE, Justice:
This post-trial appeal was
reheard en banc from a decision of the Court
of Chancery.
1
Page 703
It was brought
by the class action plaintiff below, a
former shareholder of UOP, Inc., who
challenged the elimination of UOP's minority
shareholders by a cash-out merger between
UOP and its majority owner, The Signal
Companies, Inc.
2
Originally, the defendants in this action
were Signal, UOP, certain officers and
directors of those companies, and UOP's
investment banker, Lehman Brothers Kuhn
Loeb, Inc.
3 The
present Chancellor held that the terms of
the merger were fair to the plaintiff and
the other minority shareholders of UOP.
Accordingly, he entered judgment in favor of
the defendants.
Numerous points were raised by
the parties, but we address only the
following questions presented by the trial
court's opinion:
1) The plaintiff's duty to plead
sufficient facts demonstrating the
unfairness of the challenged merger;
2) The burden of proof upon the
parties where the merger has been approved
by the purportedly informed vote of a
majority of the minority shareholders;
3) The fairness of the merger in
terms of adequacy of the defendants'
disclosures to the minority shareholders;
4) The fairness of the merger in
terms of adequacy of the price paid for the
minority shares and the remedy appropriate
to that issue; and
5) The continued force and effect
of Singer v. Magnavox Co., Del.Supr., 380
A.2d 969, 980 (1977), and its progeny.
In ruling for the defendants, the
Chancellor re-stated his earlier conclusion
that the plaintiff in a suit challenging a
cash-out merger must allege specific acts of
fraud, misrepresentation, or other items of
misconduct to demonstrate the unfairness of
the merger terms to the minority.
4 We approve this rule
and affirm it.
The Chancellor also held that
even though the ultimate burden of proof is
on the majority shareholder to show by a
preponderance of the evidence that the
transaction is fair, it is first the burden
of the plaintiff attacking the merger to
demonstrate some basis for invoking the
fairness obligation. We agree with that
principle. However, where corporate action
has been approved by an informed vote of a
majority of the minority shareholders, we
conclude that the burden entirely shifts to
the plaintiff to show that the transaction
was unfair to the minority. See, e.g.,
Michelson v. Duncan, Del.Supr., 407 A.2d
211, 224 (1979). But in all this, the burden
clearly remains on those relying on the vote
to show that they completely disclosed all
material facts relevant to the transaction.
Here, the record does not support
a conclusion that the minority stockholder
vote was an informed one. Material
information, necessary to acquaint those
shareholders with the bargaining positions
of Signal and UOP, was withheld under
circumstances amounting to a breach of
fiduciary duty. We therefore conclude that
this merger does not meet the test of
fairness, at least as we address that
concept, and no burden thus shifted to the
plaintiff by reason of the minority
shareholder vote. Accordingly, we reverse
and remand for further proceedings
consistent herewith.
In considering the nature of the
remedy available under our law to minority
shareholders in a cash-out merger, we
believe that it is, and hereafter should be,
an appraisal under 8 Del.C. § 262 as
hereinafter construed. We therefore overrule
Lynch v. Vickers Energy Corp., Del.Supr.,
Page 704
429 A.2d 497 (1981) (Lynch II ) to the
extent that it purports to limit a
stockholder's monetary relief to a specific
damage formula. See Lynch II, 429 A.2d at
507-08 (McNeilly & Quillen, JJ.,
dissenting). But to give full effect to
section 262 within the framework of the
General Corporation Law we adopt a more
liberal, less rigid and stylized, approach
to the valuation process than has heretofore
been permitted by our courts. While the
present state of these proceedings does not
admit the plaintiff to the appraisal remedy
per se, the practical effect of the remedy
we do grant him will be co-extensive with
the liberalized valuation and appraisal
methods we herein approve for cases coming
after this decision.
Our treatment of these matters
has necessarily led us to a reconsideration
of the business purpose rule announced in
the trilogy of Singer v. Magnavox Co.,
supra; Tanzer v. International General
Industries, Inc., Del.Supr.,
379 A.2d 1121
(1977); and Roland International Corp. v.
Najjar, Del.Supr., 407 A.2d 1032 (1979). For
the reasons hereafter set forth we consider
that the business purpose requirement of
these cases is no longer the law of
Delaware.
I.
The facts found by the trial
court, pertinent to the issues before us,
are supported by the record, and we draw
from them as set out in the Chancellor's
opinion.
5
Signal is a diversified,
technically based company operating through
various subsidiaries. Its stock is publicly
traded on the New York, Philadelphia and
Pacific Stock Exchanges. UOP, formerly known
as Universal Oil Products Company, was a
diversified industrial company engaged in
various lines of business, including
petroleum and petro-chemical services and
related products, construction, fabricated
metal products, transportation equipment
products, chemicals and plastics, and other
products and services including land
development, lumber products and waste
disposal. Its stock was publicly held and
listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
In 1974 Signal sold one of its
wholly-owned subsidiaries for $420,000,000
in cash. See Gimbel v. Signal Companies,
Inc., Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 599, aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
316 A.2d 619 (1974). While
looking to invest this cash surplus, Signal
became interested in UOP as a possible
acquisition. Friendly negotiations ensued,
and Signal proposed to acquire a controlling
interest in UOP at a price of $19 per share.
UOP's representatives sought $25 per share.
In the arm's length bargaining that
followed, an understanding was reached
whereby Signal agreed to purchase from UOP
1,500,000 shares of UOP's authorized but
unissued stock at $21 per share.
This purchase was contingent upon
Signal making a successful cash tender offer
for 4,300,000 publicly held shares of UOP,
also at a price of $21 per share. This
combined method of acquisition permitted
Signal to acquire 5,800,000 shares of stock,
representing 50.5% of UOP's outstanding
shares. The UOP board of directors advised
the company's shareholders that it had no
objection to Signal's tender offer at that
price. Immediately before the announcement
of the tender offer, UOP's common stock had
been trading on the New York Stock Exchange
at a fraction under $14 per share.
The negotiations between Signal
and UOP occurred during April 1975, and the
resulting tender offer was greatly
oversubscribed. However, Signal limited its
total purchase of the tendered shares so
that, when coupled with the stock bought
from UOP, it had achieved its goal of
becoming a 50.5% shareholder of UOP.
Although UOP's board consisted of
thirteen directors, Signal nominated and
elected only six. Of these, five were either
directors or employees of Signal. The sixth,
a partner in the banking firm of Lazard
Freres & Co., had been one of Signal's
representatives in the negotiations and
bargaining with UOP concerning the tender
offer and purchase price of the UOP shares.
Page 705
However, the president and chief
executive officer of UOP retired during
1975, and Signal caused him to be replaced
by James V. Crawford, a long-time employee
and senior executive vice president of one
of Signal's wholly-owned subsidiaries.
Crawford succeeded his predecessor on UOP's
board of directors and also was made a
director of Signal.
By the end of 1977 Signal
basically was unsuccessful in finding other
suitable investment candidates for its
excess cash, and by February 1978 considered
that it had no other realistic acquisitions
available to it on a friendly basis. Once
again its attention turned to UOP.
The trial court found that at the
instigation of certain Signal management
personnel, including William W. Walkup, its
board chairman, and Forrest N. Shumway, its
president, a feasibility study was made
concerning the possible acquisition of the
balance of UOP's outstanding shares. This
study was performed by two Signal officers,
Charles S. Arledge, vice president (director
of planning), and Andrew J. Chitiea, senior
vice president (chief financial officer).
Messrs. Walkup, Shumway, Arledge and Chitiea
were all directors of UOP in addition to
their membership on the Signal board.
Arledge and Chitiea concluded
that it would be a good investment for
Signal to acquire the remaining 49.5% of UOP
shares at any price up to $24 each. Their
report was discussed between Walkup and
Shumway who, along with Arledge, Chitiea and
Brewster L. Arms, internal counsel for
Signal, constituted Signal's senior
management. In particular, they talked about
the proper price to be paid if the
acquisition was pursued, purportedly keeping
in mind that as UOP's majority shareholder,
Signal owed a fiduciary responsibility to
both its own stockholders as well as to
UOP's minority. It was ultimately agreed
that a meeting of Signal's executive
committee would be called to propose that
Signal acquire the remaining outstanding
stock of UOP through a cash-out merger in
the range of $20 to $21 per share.
The executive committee meeting
was set for February 28, 1978. As a
courtesy, UOP's president, Crawford, was
invited to attend, although he was not a
member of Signal's executive committee. On
his arrival, and prior to the meeting,
Crawford was asked to meet privately with
Walkup and Shumway. He was then told of
Signal's plan to acquire full ownership of
UOP and was asked for his reaction to the
proposed price range of $20 to $21 per
share. Crawford said he thought such a price
would be "generous", and that it was
certainly one which should be submitted to
UOP's minority shareholders for their
ultimate consideration. He stated, however,
that Signal's 100% ownership could cause
internal problems at UOP. He believed that
employees would have to be given some
assurance of their future place in a
fully-owned Signal subsidiary. Otherwise, he
feared the departure of essential personnel.
Also, many of UOP's key employees had stock
option incentive programs which would be
wiped out by a merger. Crawford therefore
urged that some adjustment would have to be
made, such as providing a comparable
incentive in Signal's shares, if after the
merger he was to maintain his quality of
personnel and efficiency at UOP.
Thus, Crawford voiced no
objection to the $20 to $21 price range, nor
did he suggest that Signal should consider
paying more than $21 per share for the
minority interests. Later, at the executive
committee meeting the same factors were
discussed, with Crawford repeating the
position he earlier took with Walkup and
Shumway. Also considered was the 1975 tender
offer and the fact that it had been greatly
oversubscribed at $21 per share. For many
reasons, Signal's management concluded that
the acquisition of UOP's minority shares
provided the solution to a number of its
business problems.
Thus, it was the consensus that a
price of $20 to $21 per share would be fair
to both Signal and the minority shareholders
of UOP. Signal's executive committee
authorized
Page 706 its management "to negotiate" with UOP "for
a cash acquisition of the minority ownership
in UOP, Inc., with the intention of
presenting a proposal to [Signal's] board of
directors ... on March 6, 1978". Immediately
after this February 28, 1978 meeting, Signal
issued a press release stating:
The Signal Companies, Inc. and
UOP, Inc. are conducting negotiations for
the acquisition for cash by Signal of the
49.5 per cent of UOP which it does not
presently own, announced Forrest N. Shumway,
president and chief executive officer of
Signal, and James V. Crawford, UOP
president.
Price and other terms of the
proposed transaction have not yet been
finalized and would be subject to approval
of the boards of directors of Signal and
UOP, scheduled to meet early next week, the
stockholders of UOP and certain federal
agencies.
The announcement also referred to
the fact that the closing price of UOP's
common stock on that day was $14.50 per
share.
Two days later, on March 2, 1978,
Signal issued a second press release stating
that its management would recommend a price
in the range of $20 to $21 per share for
UOP's 49.5% minority interest. This
announcement referred to Signal's earlier
statement that "negotiations" were being
conducted for the acquisition of the
minority shares.
Between Tuesday, February 28,
1978 and Monday, March 6, 1978, a total of
four business days, Crawford spoke by
telephone with all of UOP's non-Signal,
i.e., outside, directors. Also during that
period, Crawford retained Lehman Brothers to
render a fairness opinion as to the price
offered the minority for its stock. He gave
two reasons for this choice. First, the time
schedule between the announcement and the
board meetings was short (by then only three
business days) and since Lehman Brothers had
been acting as UOP's investment banker for
many years, Crawford felt that it would be
in the best position to respond on such
brief notice. Second, James W. Glanville, a
long-time director of UOP and a partner in
Lehman Brothers, had acted as a financial
advisor to UOP for many years. Crawford
believed that Glanville's familiarity with
UOP, as a member of its board, would also be
of assistance in enabling Lehman Brothers to
render a fairness opinion within the
existing time constraints.
Crawford telephoned Glanville,
who gave his assurance that Lehman Brothers
had no conflicts that would prevent it from
accepting the task. Glanville's immediate
personal reaction was that a price of $20 to
$21 would certainly be fair, since it
represented almost a 50% premium over UOP's
market price. Glanville sought a $250,000
fee for Lehman Brothers' services, but
Crawford thought this too much. After
further discussions Glanville finally agreed
that Lehman Brothers would render its
fairness opinion for $150,000.
During this period Crawford also
had several telephone contacts with Signal
officials. In only one of them, however, was
the price of the shares discussed. In a
conversation with Walkup, Crawford advised
that as a result of his communications with
UOP's non-Signal directors, it was his
feeling that the price would have to be the
top of the proposed range, or $21 per share,
if the approval of UOP's outside directors
was to be obtained. But again, he did not
seek any price higher than $21.
Glanville assembled a three-man
Lehman Brothers team to do the work on the
fairness opinion. These persons examined
relevant documents and information
concerning UOP, including its annual reports
and its Securities and Exchange Commission
filings from 1973 through 1976, as well as
its audited financial statements for 1977,
its interim reports to shareholders, and its
recent and historical market prices and
trading volumes. In addition, on Friday,
March 3, 1978, two members of the Lehman
Brothers team flew to UOP's headquarters in
Des Plaines, Illinois, to perform a "due
diligence" visit, during the course of which
they interviewed Crawford as well as UOP's
general counsel, its chief financial
officer, and other key executives and
personnel.
Page 707
As a result, the Lehman Brothers
team concluded that "the price of either $20
or $21 would be a fair price for the
remaining shares of UOP". They telephoned
this impression to Glanville, who was
spending the weekend in Vermont.
On Monday morning, March 6, 1978,
Glanville and the senior member of the
Lehman Brothers team flew to Des Plaines to
attend the scheduled UOP directors meeting.
Glanville looked over the assembled
information during the flight. The two had
with them the draft of a "fairness opinion
letter" in which the price had been left
blank. Either during or immediately prior to
the directors' meeting, the two-page
"fairness opinion letter" was typed in final
form and the price of $21 per share was
inserted.
On March 6, 1978, both the Signal
and UOP boards were convened to consider the
proposed merger. Telephone communications
were maintained between the two meetings.
Walkup, Signal's board chairman, and also a
UOP director, attended UOP's meeting with
Crawford in order to present Signal's
position and answer any questions that UOP's
non-Signal directors might have. Arledge and
Chitiea, along with Signal's other designees
on UOP's board, participated by conference
telephone. All of UOP's outside directors
attended the meeting either in person or by
conference telephone.
First, Signal's board unanimously
adopted a resolution authorizing Signal to
propose to UOP a cash merger of $21 per
share as outlined in a certain merger
agreement and other supporting documents.
This proposal required that the merger be
approved by a majority of UOP's outstanding
minority shares voting at the stockholders
meeting at which the merger would be
considered, and that the minority shares
voting in favor of the merger, when coupled
with Signal's 50.5% interest would have to
comprise at least two-thirds of all UOP
shares. Otherwise the proposed merger would
be deemed disapproved.
UOP's board then considered the
proposal. Copies of the agreement were
delivered to the directors in attendance,
and other copies had been forwarded earlier
to the directors participating by telephone.
They also had before them UOP financial data
for 1974-1977, UOP's most recent financial
statements, market price information, and
budget projections for 1978. In addition
they had Lehman Brothers' hurriedly prepared
fairness opinion letter finding the price of
$21 to be fair. Glanville, the Lehman
Brothers partner, and UOP director,
commented on the information that had gone
into preparation of the letter.
Signal also suggests that the
Arledge-Chitiea feasibility study,
indicating that a price of up to $24 per
share would be a "good investment" for
Signal, was discussed at the UOP directors'
meeting. The Chancellor made no such
finding, and our independent review of the
record, detailed infra, satisfies us by a
preponderance of the evidence that there was
no discussion of this document at UOP's
board meeting. Furthermore, it is clear
beyond peradventure that nothing in that
report was ever disclosed to UOP's minority
shareholders prior to their approval of the
merger.
After consideration of Signal's
proposal, Walkup and Crawford left the
meeting to permit a free and uninhibited
exchange between UOP's non-Signal directors.
Upon their return a resolution to accept
Signal's offer was then proposed and
adopted. While Signal's men on UOP's board
participated in various aspects of the
meeting, they abstained from voting.
However, the minutes show that each of them
"if voting would have voted yes".
On March 7, 1978, UOP sent a
letter to its shareholders advising them of
the action taken by UOP's board with respect
to Signal's offer. This document pointed
out, among other things, that on February
28, 1978 "both companies had announced
negotiations were being conducted".
Despite the swift board action of
the two companies, the merger was not
submitted to UOP's shareholders until their
annual
Page 708 meeting on May 26, 1978. In the notice of
that meeting and proxy statement sent to
shareholders in May, UOP's management and
board urged that the merger be approved. The
proxy statement also advised:
The price was determined after
discussions between James V. Crawford, a
director of Signal and Chief Executive
Officer of UOP, and officers of Signal which
took place during meetings on February 28,
1978, and in the course of several
subsequent telephone conversations.
(Emphasis added.)
In the original draft of the
proxy statement the word "negotiations" had
been used rather than "discussions".
However, when the Securities and Exchange
Commission sought details of the
"negotiations" as part of its review of
these materials, the term was deleted and
the word "discussions" was substituted. The
proxy statement indicated that the vote of
UOP's board in approving the merger had been
unanimous. It also advised the shareholders
that Lehman Brothers had given its opinion
that the merger price of $21 per share was
fair to UOP's minority. However, it did not
disclose the hurried method by which this
conclusion was reached.
As of the record date of UOP's
annual meeting, there were 11,488,302 shares
of UOP common stock outstanding, 5,688,302
of which were owned by the minority. At the
meeting only 56%, or 3,208,652, of the
minority shares were voted. Of these,
2,953,812, or 51.9% of the total minority,
voted for the merger, and 254,840 voted
against it. When Signal's stock was added to
the minority shares voting in favor, a total
of 76.2% of UOP's outstanding shares
approved the merger while only 2.2% opposed
it.
By its terms the merger became
effective on May 26, 1978, and each share of
UOP's stock held by the minority was
automatically converted into a right to
receive $21 cash.
II.
A.
A primary issue mandating
reversal is the preparation by two UOP
directors, Arledge and Chitiea, of their
feasibility study for the exclusive use and
benefit of Signal. This document was of
obvious significance to both Signal and UOP.
Using UOP data, it described the advantages
to Signal of ousting the minority at a price
range of $21-$24 per share. Mr. Arledge, one
of the authors, outlined the benefits to
Signal:
6
Purpose Of The Merger
1) Provides an outstanding
investment opportunity for Signal--(Better
than any recent acquisition we have seen.)
2) Increases Signal's earnings.
3) Facilitates the flow of
resources between Signal and its
subsidiaries--(Big factor--works both ways.)
4) Provides cost savings
potential for Signal and UOP.
5) Improves the percentage of
Signal's 'operating earnings' as opposed to
'holding company earnings'.
6) Simplifies the understanding
of Signal.
7) Facilitates technological
exchange among Signal's subsidiaries.
8) Eliminates potential conflicts
of interest.
Having written those words,
solely for the use of Signal, it is clear
from the record that neither Arledge nor
Chitiea shared this report with their fellow
directors of UOP. We are satisfied that no
one else did either. This conduct hardly
meets the fiduciary standards applicable to
such a transaction. While Mr. Walkup,
Signal's chairman of the board and a UOP
director, attended the March 6, 1978 UOP
board meeting and testified at trial that he
had discussed the Arledge-Chitiea report
with the UOP directors at this meeting, the
record does not support this assertion.
Perhaps it is the result of some confusion
on Mr. Walkup's
Page 709 part. In any event Mr. Shumway, Signal's
president, testified that he made sure the
Signal outside directors had this report
prior to the March 6, 1978 Signal board
meeting, but he did not testify that the
Arledge-Chitiea report was also sent to
UOP's outside directors.
Mr. Crawford, UOP's president,
could not recall that any documents, other
than a draft of the merger agreement, were
sent to UOP's directors before the March 6,
1978 UOP meeting. Mr. Chitiea, an author of
the report, testified that it was made
available to Signal's directors, but to his
knowledge it was not circulated to the
outside directors of UOP. He specifically
testified that he "didn't share" that
information with the outside directors of
UOP with whom he served.
None of UOP's outside directors
who testified stated that they had seen this
document. The minutes of the UOP board
meeting do not identify the Arledge-Chitiea
report as having been delivered to UOP's
outside directors. This is particularly
significant since the minutes describe in
considerable detail the materials that
actually were distributed. While these
minutes recite Mr. Walkup's presentation of
the Signal offer, they do not mention the
Arledge-Chitiea report or any disclosure
that Signal considered a price of up to $24
to be a good investment. If Mr. Walkup had
in fact provided such important information
to UOP's outside directors, it is logical to
assume that these carefully drafted minutes
would disclose it. The post-trial briefs of
Signal and UOP contain a thorough
description of the documents purportedly
available to their boards at the March 6,
1978, meetings. Although the Arledge-Chitiea
report is specifically identified as being
available to the Signal directors, there is
no mention of it being among the documents
submitted to the UOP board. Even when
queried at a prior oral argument before this
Court, counsel for Signal did not claim that
the Arledge-Chitiea report had been
disclosed to UOP's outside directors.
Instead, he chose to belittle its contents.
This was the same approach taken before us
at the last oral argument.
Actually, it appears that a
three-page summary of figures was given to
all UOP directors. Its first page is
identical to one page of the Arledge-Chitiea
report, but this dealt with nothing more
than a justification of the $21 price.
Significantly, the contents of this
three-page summary are what the minutes
reflect Mr. Walkup told the UOP board.
However, nothing contained in either the
minutes or this three-page summary reflects
Signal's study regarding the $24 price.
The Arledge-Chitiea report speaks
for itself in supporting the Chancellor's
finding that a price of up to $24 was a
"good investment" for Signal. It shows that
a return on the investment at $21 would be
15.7% versus 15.5% at $24 per share. This
was a difference of only two-tenths of one
percent, while it meant over $17,000,000 to
the minority. Under such circumstances,
paying UOP's minority shareholders $24 would
have had relatively little long-term effect
on Signal, and the Chancellor's findings
concerning the benefit to Signal, even at a
price of $24, were obviously correct. Levitt
v. Bouvier, Del.Supr., 287 A.2d 671, 673
(1972).
Certainly, this was a matter of
material significance to UOP and its
shareholders. Since the study was prepared
by two UOP directors, using UOP information
for the exclusive benefit of Signal, and
nothing whatever was done to disclose it to
the outside UOP directors or the minority
shareholders, a question of breach of
fiduciary duty arises. This problem occurs
because there were common Signal-UOP
directors participating, at least to some
extent, in the UOP board's decision-making
processes without full disclosure of the
conflicts they faced.
7
Page 710
B.
In assessing this situation, the
Court of Chancery was required to:
examine what information defendants had
and to measure it against what they gave to
the minority stockholders, in a context in
which 'complete candor' is required. In
other words, the limited function of the
Court was to determine whether defendants
had disclosed all information in their
possession germane to the transaction in
issue. And by 'germane' we mean, for present
purposes, information such as a reasonable
shareholder would consider important in
deciding whether to sell or retain stock.
* * *
* * *
... Completeness, not adequacy, is both
the norm and the mandate under present
circumstances.
Lynch v. Vickers Energy Corp.,
Del.Supr., 383 A.2d 278, 281 (1977) (Lynch I
). This is merely stating in another way the
long-existing principle of Delaware law that
these Signal designated directors on UOP's
board still owed UOP and its shareholders an
uncompromising duty of loyalty. The classic
language of Guth v. Loft, Inc., Del.Supr., 5
A.2d 503, 510 (1939), requires no
embellishment:
A public policy, existing through the
years, and derived from a profound knowledge
of human characteristics and motives, has
established a rule that demands of a
corporate officer or director, peremptorily
and inexorably, the most scrupulous
observance of his duty, not only
affirmatively to protect the interests of
the corporation committed to his charge, but
also to refrain from doing anything that
would work injury to the corporation, or to
deprive it of profit or advantage which his
skill and ability might properly bring to
it, or to enable it to make in the
reasonable and lawful exercise of its
powers. The rule that requires an undivided
and unselfish loyalty to the corporation
demands that there shall be no conflict
between duty and self-interest.
Given the absence of any attempt
to structure this transaction on an arm's
length basis, Signal cannot escape the
effects of the conflicts it faced,
particularly when its designees on UOP's
board did not totally abstain from
participation in the matter. There is no
"safe harbor" for such divided loyalties in
Delaware. When directors of a Delaware
corporation are on both sides of a
transaction, they are required to
demonstrate their utmost good faith and the
most scrupulous inherent fairness of the
bargain. Gottlieb v. Heyden Chemical Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
91 A.2d 57, 57-58 (1952). The
requirement of fairness is unflinching in
its demand that where one stands on both
sides of a transaction, he has the burden of
establishing its entire fairness, sufficient
to pass the test of careful scrutiny by the
courts. Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corp.,
Del.Supr., 93 A.2d 107, 110 (1952); Bastian
v. Bourns, Inc., Del.Ch., 256 A.2d 680, 681
(1969), aff'd, Del.Supr.,
278 A.2d 467
(1970); David J. Greene & Co. v. Dunhill
International Inc., Del.Ch., 249 A.2d 427,
431 (1968).
There is no dilution of this
obligation where one holds dual or multiple
directorships, as in a parent-subsidiary
context. Levien v. Sinclair Oil Corp.,
Del.Ch., 261 A.2d 911, 915 (1969). Thus,
individuals who act in a dual capacity as
directors of two corporations, one of whom
is parent and the other subsidiary, owe the
same duty of good management to both
corporations, and in the absence of an
independent negotiating
Page 711 structure (see note 7, supra ), or the
directors' total abstention from any
participation in the matter, this duty is to
be exercised in light of what is best for
both companies. Warshaw v. Calhoun,
Del.Supr., 221 A.2d 487, 492 (1966). The
record demonstrates that Signal has not met
this obligation.
C.
The concept of fairness has two
basic aspects: fair dealing and fair price.
The former embraces questions of when the
transaction was timed, how it was initiated,
structured, negotiated, disclosed to the
directors, and how the approvals of the
directors and the stockholders were
obtained. The latter aspect of fairness
relates to the economic and financial
considerations of the proposed merger,
including all relevant factors: assets,
market value, earnings, future prospects,
and any other elements that affect the
intrinsic or inherent value of a company's
stock. Moore, The "Interested" Director or
Officer Transaction, 4 Del.J.Corp.L. 674,
676 (1979); Nathan & Shapiro, Legal Standard
of Fairness of Merger Terms Under Delaware
Law, 2 Del.J.Corp.L. 44, 46-47 (1977). See
Tri-Continental Corp. v. Battye, Del.Supr.,
74 A.2d 71, 72 (1950); 8 Del.C. § 262(h).
However, the test for fairness is not a
bifurcated one as between fair dealing and
price. All aspects of the issue must be
examined as a whole since the question is
one of entire fairness. However, in a
non-fraudulent transaction we recognize that
price may be the preponderant consideration
outweighing other features of the merger.
Here, we address the two basic aspects of
fairness separately because we find
reversible error as to both.
D.
Part of fair dealing is the
obvious duty of candor required by Lynch I,
supra. Moreover, one possessing superior
knowledge may not mislead any stockholder by
use of corporate information to which the
latter is not privy. Lank v. Steiner,
Del.Supr., 224 A.2d 242, 244 (1966).
Delaware has long imposed this duty even
upon persons who are not corporate officers
or directors, but who nonetheless are privy
to matters of interest or significance to
their company. Brophy v. Cities Service Co.,
Del.Ch., 70 A.2d 5, 7 (1949). With the
well-established Delaware law on the
subject, and the Court of Chancery's
findings of fact here, it is inevitable that
the obvious conflicts posed by Arledge and
Chitiea's preparation of their "feasibility
study", derived from UOP information, for
the sole use and benefit of Signal, cannot
pass muster.
The Arledge-Chitiea report is but
one aspect of the element of fair dealing.
How did this merger evolve? It is clear that
it was entirely initiated by Signal. The
serious time constraints under which the
principals acted were all set by Signal. It
had not found a suitable outlet for its
excess cash and considered UOP a desirable
investment, particularly since it was now in
a position to acquire the whole company for
itself. For whatever reasons, and they were
only Signal's, the entire transaction was
presented to and approved by UOP's board
within four business days. Standing alone,
this is not necessarily indicative of any
lack of fairness by a majority shareholder.
It was what occurred, or more properly, what
did not occur, during this brief period that
makes the time constraints imposed by Signal
relevant to the issue of fairness.
The structure of the transaction,
again, was Signal's doing. So far as
negotiations were concerned, it is clear
that they were modest at best. Crawford,
Signal's man at UOP, never really talked
price with Signal, except to accede to its
management's statements on the subject, and
to convey to Signal the UOP outside
directors' view that as between the $20-$21
range under consideration, it would have to
be $21. The latter is not a surprising
outcome, but hardly arm's length
negotiations. Only the protection of
benefits for UOP's key employees and the
issue of Lehman Brothers' fee approached any
concept of bargaining.
Page 712
As we have noted, the matter of
disclosure to the UOP directors was wholly
flawed by the conflicts of interest raised
by the Arledge-Chitiea report. All of those
conflicts were resolved by Signal in its own
favor without divulging any aspect of them
to UOP.
This cannot but undermine a
conclusion that this merger meets any
reasonable test of fairness. The outside UOP
directors lacked one material piece of
information generated by two of their
colleagues, but shared only with Signal.
True, the UOP board had the Lehman Brothers'
fairness opinion, but that firm has been
blamed by the plaintiff for the hurried task
it performed, when more properly the
responsibility for this lies with Signal.
There was no disclosure of the circumstances
surrounding the rather cursory preparation
of the Lehman Brothers' fairness opinion.
Instead, the impression was given UOP's
minority that a careful study had been made,
when in fact speed was the hallmark, and Mr.
Glanville, Lehman's partner in charge of the
matter, and also a UOP director, having
spent the weekend in Vermont, brought a
draft of the "fairness opinion letter" to
the UOP directors' meeting on March 6, 1978
with the price left blank. We can only
conclude from the record that the rush
imposed on Lehman Brothers by Signal's
timetable contributed to the difficulties
under which this investment banking firm
attempted to perform its responsibilities.
Yet, none of this was disclosed to UOP's
minority.
Finally, the minority
stockholders were denied the critical
information that Signal considered a price
of $24 to be a good investment. Since this
would have meant over $17,000,000 more to
the minority, we cannot conclude that the
shareholder vote was an informed one. Under
the circumstances, an approval by a majority
of the minority was meaningless. Lynch I,
383 A.2d at 279, 281; Cahall v. Lofland,
Del.Ch., 114 A. 224 (1921).
Given these particulars and the
Delaware law on the subject, the record does
not establish that this transaction
satisfies any reasonable concept of fair
dealing, and the Chancellor's findings in
that regard must be reversed.
E.
Turning to the matter of price,
plaintiff also challenges its fairness. His
evidence was that on the date the merger was
approved the stock was worth at least $26
per share. In support, he offered the
testimony of a chartered investment analyst
who used two basic approaches to valuation:
a comparative analysis of the premium paid
over market in ten other tender offer-merger
combinations, and a discounted cash flow
analysis.
In this breach of fiduciary duty
case, the Chancellor perceived that the
approach to valuation was the same as that
in an appraisal proceeding. Consistent with
precedent, he rejected plaintiff's method of
proof and accepted defendants' evidence of
value as being in accord with practice under
prior case law. This means that the
so-called "Delaware block" or weighted
average method was employed wherein the
elements of value, i.e., assets, market
price, earnings, etc., were assigned a
particular weight and the resulting amounts
added to determine the value per share. This
procedure has been in use for decades. See
In re General Realty & Utilities Corp.,
Del.Ch., 52 A.2d 6, 14-15 (1947). However,
to the extent it excludes other generally
accepted techniques used in the financial
community and the courts, it is now clearly
outmoded. It is time we recognize this in
appraisal and other stock valuation
proceedings and bring our law current on the
subject.
While the Chancellor rejected
plaintiff's discounted cash flow method of
valuing UOP's stock, as not corresponding
with "either logic or the existing law" (426
A.2d at 1360), it is significant that this
was essentially the focus, i.e., earnings
potential of UOP, of Messrs. Arledge and
Chitiea in their evaluation of the merger.
Accordingly, the standard "Delaware block"
or weighted average method of valuation,
formerly
Page 713 employed in appraisal and other stock
valuation cases, shall no longer exclusively
control such proceedings. We believe that a
more liberal approach must include proof of
value by any techniques or methods which are
generally considered acceptable in the
financial community and otherwise admissible
in court, subject only to our interpretation
of 8 Del.C. § 262(h), infra. See also D.R.E.
702-05. This will obviate the very
structured and mechanistic procedure that
has heretofore governed such matters. See
Jacques Coe & Co. v. Minneapolis-Moline Co.,
Del.Ch., 75 A.2d 244, 247 (1950);
Tri-Continental Corp. v. Battye, Del.Ch., 66
A.2d 910, 917-18 (1949); In re General
Realty and Utilities Corp., supra.
Fair price obviously requires
consideration of all relevant factors
involving the value of a company. This has
long been the law of Delaware as stated in
Tri-Continental Corp., 74 A.2d at 72:
The basic concept of value under the
appraisal statute is that the stockholder is
entitled to be paid for that which has been
taken from him, viz., his proportionate
interest in a going concern. By value of the
stockholder's proportionate interest in the
corporate enterprise is meant the true or
intrinsic value of his stock which has been
taken by the merger. In determining what
figure represents this true or intrinsic
value, the appraiser and the courts must
take into consideration all factors and
elements which reasonably might enter into
the fixing of value. Thus, market value,
asset value, dividends, earning prospects,
the nature of the enterprise and any other
facts which were known or which could be
ascertained as of the date of merger and
which throw any light on future prospects of
the merged corporation are not only
pertinent to an inquiry as to the value of
the dissenting stockholders' interest, but
must be considered by the agency fixing the
value. (Emphasis added.)
This is not only in accord with
the realities of present day affairs, but it
is thoroughly consonant with the purpose and
intent of our statutory law. Under 8 Del.C.
§ 262(h), the Court of Chancery:
shall appraise the shares, determining
their fair value exclusive of any element of
value arising from the accomplishment or
expectation of the merger, together with a
fair rate of interest, if any, to be paid
upon the amount determined to be the fair
value. In determining such fair value, the
Court shall take into account all relevant
factors ... (Emphasis added)
See also Bell v. Kirby Lumber
Corp., Del.Supr., 413 A.2d 137, 150-51
(1980) (Quillen, J., concurring).
It is significant that section
262 now mandates the determination of "fair"
value based upon "all relevant factors".
Only the speculative elements of value that
may arise from the "accomplishment or
expectation" of the merger are excluded. We
take this to be a very narrow exception to
the appraisal process, designed to eliminate
use of pro forma data and projections of a
speculative variety relating to the
completion of a merger. But elements of
future value, including the nature of the
enterprise, which are known or susceptible
of proof as of the date of the merger and
not the product of speculation, may be
considered. When the trial court deems it
appropriate, fair value also includes any
damages, resulting from the taking, which
the stockholders sustain as a class. If that
was not the case, then the obligation to
consider "all relevant factors" in the
valuation process would be eroded. We are
supported in this view not only by
Tri-Continental Corp., 74 A.2d at 72, but
also by the evolutionary amendments to
section 262.
Prior to an amendment in 1976,
the earlier relevant provision of section
262 stated:
(f) The appraiser shall determine
the value of the stock of the stockholders
... The Court shall by its decree determine
the value of the stock of the stockholders
entitled to payment therefor ...
The first references to "fair"
value occurred in a 1976 amendment to
section 262(f), which provided:
Page 714
(f) ... the Court shall appraise
the shares, determining their fair value
exclusively of any element of value arising
from the accomplishment or expectation of
the merger....
It was not until the 1981
amendment to section 262 that the reference
to "fair value" was repeatedly emphasized
and the statutory mandate that the Court
"take into account all relevant factors"
appeared [section 262(h) ]. Clearly, there
is a legislative intent to fully compensate
shareholders for whatever their loss may be,
subject only to the narrow limitation that
one can not take speculative effects of the
merger into account.
Although the Chancellor received
the plaintiff's evidence, his opinion
indicates that the use of it was precluded
because of past Delaware practice. While we
do not suggest a monetary result one way or
the other, we do think the plaintiff's
evidence should be part of the factual mix
and weighed as such. Until the $21 price is
measured on remand by the valuation
standards mandated by Delaware law, there
can be no finding at the present stage of
these proceedings that the price is fair.
Given the lack of any candid disclosure of
the material facts surrounding establishment
of the $21 price, the majority of the
minority vote, approving the merger, is
meaningless.
The plaintiff has not sought an
appraisal, but rescissory damages of the
type contemplated by Lynch v. Vickers Energy
Corp., Del.Supr., 429 A.2d 497, 505-06
(1981) (Lynch II ). In view of the approach
to valuation that we announce today, we see
no basis in our law for Lynch II 's
exclusive monetary formula for relief. On
remand the plaintiff will be permitted to
test the fairness of the $21 price by the
standards we herein establish, in conformity
with the principle applicable to an
appraisal--that fair value be determined by
taking "into account all relevant factors"
[see 8 Del.C. § 262(h), supra ]. In our view
this includes the elements of rescissory
damages if the Chancellor considers them
susceptible of proof and a remedy
appropriate to all the issues of fairness
before him. To the extent that Lynch II, 429
A.2d at 505-06, purports to limit the
Chancellor's discretion to a single remedial
formula for monetary damages in a cash-out
merger, it is overruled.
While a plaintiff's monetary
remedy ordinarily should be confined to the
more liberalized appraisal proceeding herein
established, we do not intend any limitation
on the historic powers of the Chancellor to
grant such other relief as the facts of a
particular case may dictate. The appraisal
remedy we approve may not be adequate in
certain cases, particularly where fraud,
misrepresentation, self-dealing, deliberate
waste of corporate assets, or gross and
palpable overreaching are involved. Cole v.
National Cash Credit Association, Del.Ch.,
156 A. 183, 187 (1931). Under such
circumstances, the Chancellor's powers are
complete to fashion any form of equitable
and monetary relief as may be appropriate,
including rescissory damages. Since it is
apparent that this long completed
transaction is too involved to undo, and in
view of the Chancellor's discretion, the
award, if any, should be in the form of
monetary damages based upon entire fairness
standards, i.e., fair dealing and fair
price.
Obviously, there are other
litigants, like the plaintiff, who abjured
an appraisal and whose rights to challenge
the element of fair value must be preserved.
8 Accordingly, the
quasi-appraisal remedy we grant the
plaintiff here will apply only to: (1) this
case; (2) any case now pending on appeal to
this Court; (3) any case now pending in the
Court of Chancery which has not yet been
appealed but which may be eligible for
direct appeal to this Court; (4) any case
challenging a cash-out merger, the effective
date of which is on or before February 1,
1983; and (5) any proposed merger to be
Page 715 presented at a shareholders' meeting, the
notification of which is mailed to the
stockholders on or before February 23, 1983.
Thereafter, the provisions of 8 Del.C. §
262, as herein construed, respecting the
scope of an appraisal and the means for
perfecting the same, shall govern the
financial remedy available to minority
shareholders in a cash-out merger. Thus, we
return to the well established principles of
Stauffer v. Standard Brands, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 187 A.2d 78 (1962) and David J.
Greene & Co. v. Schenley Industries, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 281 A.2d 30 (1971), mandating a
stockholder's recourse to the basic remedy
of an appraisal.
III.
Finally, we address the matter of
business purpose. The defendants contend
that the purpose of this merger was not a
proper subject of inquiry by the trial
court. The plaintiff says that no valid
purpose existed--the entire transaction was
a mere subterfuge designed to eliminate the
minority. The Chancellor ruled otherwise,
but in so doing he clearly circumscribed the
thrust and effect of Singer.
Weinberger v. UOP, 426 A.2d at 1342-43,
1348-50. This has led to the thoroughly
sound observation that the business purpose
test "may be ... virtually interpreted out
of existence, as it was in Weinberger".
9
The requirement of a business
purpose is new to our law of mergers and was
a departure from prior case law. See
Stauffer v. Standard Brands, Inc., supra;
David J. Greene & Co. v. Schenley
Industries, Inc., supra.
In view of the fairness test
which has long been applicable to
parent-subsidiary mergers, Sterling v.
Mayflower Hotel Corp., Del.Supr., 93 A.2d
107, 109-10 (1952), the expanded appraisal
remedy now available to shareholders, and
the broad discretion of the Chancellor to
fashion such relief as the facts of a given
case may dictate, we do not believe that any
additional meaningful protection is afforded
minority shareholders by the business
purpose requirement of the trilogy of
Singer, Tanzer,
10
Najjar,
11 and
their progeny. Accordingly, such requirement
shall no longer be of any force or effect.
The judgment of the Court of
Chancery, finding both the circumstances of
the merger and the price paid the minority
shareholders to be fair, is reversed. The
matter is remanded for further proceedings
consistent herewith. Upon remand the
plaintiff's post-trial motion to enlarge the
class should be granted.
* * *
* * *
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
1 Accordingly, this Court's February 9,
1982 opinion is withdrawn.
2 For the opinion of the trial court see
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.Ch., 426 A.2d
1333 (1981).
3 Shortly before the last oral argument,
the plaintiff dismissed Lehman Brothers from
the action. Thus, we do not deal with the
issues raised by the plaintiff's claims
against this defendant.
4 In a pre-trial ruling the Chancellor
ordered the complaint dismissed for failure
to state a cause of action. See Weinberger
v. UOP, Inc., Del.Ch.,
409 A.2d 1262 (1979).
5 Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.Ch., 426
A.2d 1333, 1335-40 (1981).
6 The parentheses indicate certain
handwritten comments of Mr. Arledge.
7 Although perfection is not possible, or
expected, the result here could have been
entirely different if UOP had appointed an
independent negotiating committee of its
outside directors to deal with Signal at
arm's length. See, e.g., Harriman v. E.I.
duPont de Nemours & Co., 411 F.Supp. 133
(D.Del.1975). Since fairness in this context
can be equated to conduct by a theoretical,
wholly independent, board of directors
acting upon the matter before them, it is
unfortunate that this course apparently was
neither considered nor pursued. Johnston v.
Greene, Del.Supr., 121 A.2d 919, 925 (1956).
Particularly in a parent-subsidiary context,
a showing that the action taken was as
though each of the contending parties had in
fact exerted its bargaining power against
the other at arm's length is strong evidence
that the transaction meets the test of
fairness. Getty Oil Co. v. Skelly Oil Co.,
Del.Supr., 267 A.2d 883, 886 (1970); Puma v.
Marriott, Del.Ch., 283 A.2d 693, 696 (1971).
8 Under 8 Del.C. § 262(a), (d) & (e), a
stockholder is required to act within
certain time periods to perfect the right to
an appraisal.
9 Weiss, The Law of Take Out Mergers: A
Historical Perspective, 56 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 624,
671, n. 300 (1981).
10 Tanzer v. International General
Industries, Inc., Del.Supr., 379 A.2d 1121,
1124-25 (1977).
11 Roland International Corp. v. Najjar,
Del.Supr., 407 A.2d 1032, 1036 (1979). |