| Page 133 474 A.2d 133
ROTHSCHILD INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATION, a corporation of the
State of Washington, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LIGGETT GROUP INC., GM Sub Corporation and
GM Sub II
Corporation, corporations of the State of
Delaware, and Grand Metropolitan
Limited, a corporation of
England, Defendants-Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted Jan. 16, 1984.
Decided March 20, 1984.
Page 135
Upon appeal from Court of
Chancery. Affirmed.
Gerald J. Fields (argued), and
Raymond J. Soffientini of Battle, Fowler,
Jaffin & Kheel, New York City, of counsel,
Thomas S. Lodge of Connolly, Bove, Lodge &
Hutz, Wilmington, for appellant.
Gandolfo V. DiBlasi (argued),
John L. Warden and Ida C. Wurczinger of
Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City, of
counsel, R. Franklin Balotti and Jesse A.
Finkelstein of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, for appellees.
Before McNEILLY, HORSEY and
CHRISTIE, JJ.
HORSEY, Justice.
This appeal is from a summary
judgment Order of the Court of Chancery
dismissing a purported class action filed by
the owners of 7% cumulative preferred stock
in Liggett Group, Inc. ("Liggett"), a
Delaware corporation. The suit arises out of
a combined tender offer and reverse cash-out
merger whereby the interests of the 7%
preferred shareholders were eliminated for a
price of $70 per share, an amount $30 below
the liquidation preference stated in
Liggett's certificate of incorporation.
Plaintiff-appellant asserts claims for
breach of contract and breach of fiduciary
duty based on the non-payment of the $30
premium.
I
Plaintiff, Rothschild
International Corp., filed a class action in
the Court of Chancery on behalf of 7%
cumulative preferred stockholders of Liggett
against defendants Liggett, Grand
Metropolitan Limited ("GM"), a corporation
of England, GM Sub Corporation ("GM Sub"), a
Delaware corporation formed for the purpose
of acquiring Liggett, and GM Sub II, a
wholly-owned Delaware subsidiary of GM. The
class was to consist of those 7%
shareholders who tendered their preferred
stock for $70 per share in response to GM's
tender offer and those who did not so tender
and were cashed out for the same per share
price in the subsequent merger of GM Sub II
into Liggett.
On motion by defendants, GM was
dismissed as a party to the action for lack
of personal jurisdiction; similarly, the
case against GM Sub II was dismissed as GM
Sub II had ceased to exist by virtue of its
merger into Liggett in August, 1980. After
such dismissal, but during the pendency of
plaintiff's motion for class certification,
both sides moved for summary judgment on the
merits of plaintiff's claims. Upon
consolidation of the motions and
presentation of oral argument, the Court
granted defendants' motion for summary
judgment.
On appeal, plaintiff contends
that the takeover of Liggett via the
combined tender offer and merger in essence
effected a liquidation of the company thus
warranting payment to the holders of the 7%
preferred stock of the $100 liquidation
value set forth in Liggett's charter.
Plaintiff's breach of contract and breach of
fiduciary duty claims are premised on a
single assertion--that GM's plan of
acquisition was equivalent to a liquidation.
However, as we view the record, the
transaction did not involve a liquidation of
Liggett's business. Hence, we must affirm.
II
A.
There is no dispute of facts.
Liggett's certificate of incorporation
provided that
Page 136
"[i]n the event of any liquidation of the
assets of the Corporation (whether voluntary
or involuntary) the holders of the 7%
Preferred Stock shall be entitled to be paid
the par amount of their 7% Preferred shares
and the amount of any dividends accumulated
and unpaid thereon...."
1
Under the terms of Liggett's charter, each
share of the 7% security carried a $100 par
value. Plaintiff makes two interrelated
arguments: (1) that the economic effect of
the merger was a liquidation of Liggett's
assets "just as if [Liggett] were sold piece
meal to Grand Met"; and (2) that any
corporate reorganization that forcibly
liquidates a shareholder's interests is
tantamount to a liquidation of the
corporation itself. From this, plaintiff
argues that it necessarily follows that
defendants' failure to pay the preferred
shareholders the full liquidation price
constituted a breach of Liggett's charter.
We cannot agree with either argument.
Preferential rights are
contractual in nature and therefore are
governed by the express provisions of a
company's certificate of incorporation.
Stock preferences must also be clearly
expressed and will not be presumed. See Wood
v. Coastal States Gas Corp., Del.Supr.,
401 A.2d 932 (1979); Ellingwood v. Wolf's Head
Oil Refining Co., Del.Supr., 38 A.2d 743
(1944). See also Hibbert v. Hollywood Park,
Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 339 (1983);
Shanghai Power Co. v. Delaware Trust Co.,
Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 589, 594 (1974).
Liggett's charter stated that the
$100 liquidation preference would be paid
only in the event of "any liquidation of the
assets of the Corporation." The term
"liquidation", as applied to a corporation,
means the "winding up of the affairs of the
corporation by getting in its assets,
settling with creditors and debtors and
apportioning the amount of profit and loss."
W. Fletcher, Corporations § 7968 (1979). See
Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corp.,
Del.Supr., 93 A.2d 107, 112 (1952).
Our view of the record confirms
the correctness of the Chancellor's finding
that there was no "liquidation" of Liggett
within the well-defined meaning of that
term. Clearly the directors and shareholders
of Liggett determined that the company
should be integrated with GM, not that the
corporate assets be liquidated on a "piece
meal" basis. The fact is that Liggett has
retained its corporate identity. Having
elected this plan of reorganization, the
parties had the right to avail themselves of
the most effective means for achieving that
result, subject only to their duty to deal
fairly with the minority interests.
Thus, we must construe Liggett's
liquidation provision as written and
conclude that the reverse cash-out merger of
Liggett did not accomplish a "liquidation"
of Liggett's assets. Only upon a liquidation
of its assets would Liggett's preferred
shareholders' charter rights to payment of
par value "spring into being." Rothschild
International Corp. v. Liggett Group,
Del.Ch., 463 A.2d 642, 647 (1983).
Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel
Corp., supra is in point on this issue.
There, this Court held that a merger is not
equivalent to a sale of assets. In so
holding, the Court followed the well-settled
principle of Delaware Corporation Law that
"action taken under one section of that law
is legally independent, and its validity is
not dependent upon, nor to be tested by the
requirements of other unrelated sections
under which the same final result might be
attained by different means." Orzeck v.
Englehart, Del.Supr., 195 A.2d 375, 378
(1963).
It is equally settled under
Delaware law that minority stock interests
may be eliminated by merger. And, where a
merger of corporations is permitted by law,
Page 137 a shareholder's preferential rights are
subject to defeasance. Stockholders are
charged with knowledge of this possibility
at the time they acquire their shares.
Federal United Corp. v. Havender, Del.Supr.,
11 A.2d 331, 338 (1940). Accord, Langfelder
v. Universal Laboratories, Inc., D.Del., 68
F.Supp. 209 (1946), aff'd, 3rd Cir., 163
F.2d 804, 806-807 (1947); Hottenstein v.
York Ice Machinery Corp., 3rd Cir., 136 F.2d
944, 950 (1943).
Plaintiff claims that reliance on
Sterling and Havender for a finding that
Liggett was not liquidated is misplaced. To
support this claim, plaintiff variously
argues: (1) that as Sterling and Havender
pre-dated cash mergers, they are not
dispositive as to whether a Liggett-like
takeover could constitute a liquidation; (2)
that the relied-on authorities viewed a
merger as contemplating the continuance of a
stockholder's investment in the corporate
enterprise; and (3) that because of the
Sterling/Havender view of a merger and the
unique features of the 7% preferred stock,
the 7% shareholders could reasonably expect
to be paid the $100 liquidation preference
in any circumstance effecting a total
elimination of their investment in Liggett.
The short answer to plaintiff's
arguments is that, as a matter of law, stock
issued or purchased prior to the
Legislature's authorization of cash mergers
does not entitle the stockholder to any
vested right of immunity from the operation
of the cash merger provision. Coyne v. Park
& Tilford Distillers Corp., Del.Supr., 154
A.2d 893 (1959). Further, it is settled that
the State has the reserved power to enact
laws having the effect of amending
certificates of incorporation and any rights
arising thereunder. Id. at 897. As plaintiff
is charged with knowledge of the possible
defeasance of its stock interests upon a
merger, Singer v. Magnavox Co., Del.Supr.,
380 A.2d 969, 978 (1977), plaintiff cannot
successfully argue for relief on the basis
of the uniqueness of the 7% stock and the
stockholders' "reasonable expectations"
theory.
B.
Plaintiff also claims that
Liggett and GM, acting through its
subsidiary GM Sub, breached their fiduciary
duties to accord to the 7% shareholders fair
and equitable terms of conversion. Simply
stated, plaintiff argues that, irrespective
of whether a de facto liquidation occurred,
"[a]ny payment less than the full
liquidation price was not 'entirely fair' to
the 7% Preferred stockholders."
We agree with the Chancellor that
plaintiff's "fairness" argument presumes a
right of the 7% shareholders to receive full
liquidation value and does not per se raise
the issue of the intrinsic fairness of the
$70 price offered at the time of the tender
offer and merger. However, even assuming
arguendo that plaintiff did present a
fairness issue, it is well settled that "the
stockholder is entitled to be paid for that
which has been taken from him, viz., his
proportionate interest in a going concern."
Tri-Continental Corp. v. Battye, Del.Supr.,
74 A.2d 71, 72 (1950). Moreover, the measure
of "fair value" is not "liquidation value."
Rather, the 7% shareholders were entitled
only to an amount equal to their
proportionate interests in Liggett as
determined by "all relevant factors." 8
Del.C. § 262; Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983);
Tri-Continental Corp. v. Battye, supra.
Thus, having reviewed the
transaction, we find that the Chancellor did
not err as a matter of law in granting
defendants' motion for summary judgment.
* * *
Affirmed.
1 The certificate also provided that its
7% Cumulative Preferred stock could not be
redeemed, called or converted into any other
security. The stock also guaranteed a fixed
7% return per annum. |