| Page 1346 500 A.2d 1346  54 USLW 2271, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
92,371 John A. MORAN and the
Dyson-Kissner-Moran Corporation,
Plaintiffs Below- Appellants,
and
Gretl Golter, individually and in a
derivative capacity,
Plaintiff Intervenor Below-Appellant,
v.
HOUSEHOLD INTERNATIONAL, INC., a Delaware
Corporation,
Donald C. Clark, Thomas D. Flynn, Mary
Johnston Evans,
William D. Hendry, Joseph W. James, Mitchell
P. Kartalia,
Gordon P. Osler, Arthur E. Rasmussen, George
W. Rauch, James
M. Tait, Miller Upton, Bernard F. Brennan
and Gary G.
Dillon, Defendants Below- Appellees.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: May 21, 1985.
Decided: Nov. 19, 1985.
As Amended: Nov. 20, 1985.
Page 1347
Upon appeal from Court of
Chancery. Affirmed.
Irving S. Shapiro (argued),
Rodman Ward, Jr., Stuart L. Shapiro, Stephen
P. Lamb, Thomas J. Allingham II and Andrew
J. Turezyn of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
& Flom, Wilmington, and Michael W. Mitchell,
Jeffrey Glekel, Jeremy A. Berman and Joseph
A. Guglielmelli of Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, New York City, for
plaintiffs below-appellants.
Joseph A. Rosenthal and Norman M.
Monhait of Morris and Rosenthal, P.A.,
Wilmington, and Marshall Patner of Orlikoff,
Flamm and Patner, Chicago, Frederick Brace
of Brace & O'Donnell, and Geoffrey P. Miller
(argued), Chicago, Ill., of counsel, for
plaintiff intervenor below-appellant.
Page 1348
Charles E. Richards, Jr.
(argued), Donald A. Bussard, Jesse A.
Finkelstein, and Gregory P. Williams of
Richards, Layton & Finger, Wilmington, and
George A. Katz, William C. Sterling, Jr.,
Michael W. Schwartz, Eric M. Roth, Warren R.
Stern and Karen B. Shaer of Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New York City, of
counsel, for defendants below-appellees.
Lawrence C. Ashby, of Ashby,
McKelvie & Geddes, Wilmington, Marc P.
Cherno, Harvey L. Pitt, Pamela Jarvis, of
Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson,
New York City, amicus curiae, and Matthew P.
Fink, Thomas D. Maher, Investment Co.
Institute, Washington, D.C., of counsel, for
Investment Co. Institute.
Robert J. Katzenstein and Clark
W. Furlow of Lassen, Smith, Katzenstein &
Furlow, Wilmington, and Kurt L. Schultz,
Columbus R. Gangemi, Jr., Robert F. Wall,
Jerome W. Pope of Winston & Strawn, Chicago,
Ill., amicus curiae, for the United Food and
Commercial Workers Intern. Union.
Joseph J. Farnan, Jr., U.S.
Atty., Sue L. Robinson, Asst. U.S. Atty.,
Wilmington, Del., Daniel L. Goelzer, Jacob
H. Stillman, Eric Summergrad, Gerard S.
Citera, amicus curiae, and Paul Gonson, of
counsel, for Securities and Exchange Com'n,
Washington, D.C.
Before CHRISTIE, Chief Justice,
and McNEILLY and MOORE, JJ.
McNEILLY, Justice:
This case presents to this Court
for review the most recent defensive
mechanism in the arsenal of corporate
takeover weaponry--the Preferred Share
Purchase Rights Plan ("Rights Plan" or
"Plan"). The validity of this mechanism has
attracted national attention. Amici curiae
briefs have been filed in support of
appellants by the Security and Exchange
Commission ("SEC")
1
and the Investment Company Institute. An
amicus curiae brief has been filed in
support of appellees ("Household") by the
United Food and Commercial Workers
International Union.
In a detailed opinion, the Court
of Chancery upheld the Rights Plan as a
legitimate exercise of business judgment by
Household. Moran v. Household International,
Inc., Del.Ch.,
490 A.2d 1059 (1985). We
agree, and therefore, affirm the judgment
below.
I
The facts giving rise to this
case have been carefully delineated in the
Court of Chancery's opinion. Id. at 1064-69.
A review of the basic facts is necessary for
a complete understanding of the issues.
On August 14, 1984, the Board of
Directors of Household International, Inc.
adopted the Rights Plan by a fourteen to two
vote.
2 The
intricacies of the Rights Plan are contained
in a 48-page document entitled "Rights
Agreement". Basically, the Plan provides
that Household common stockholders are
entitled to the issuance of one Right per
common share under certain triggering
conditions. There are two triggering events
that can activate the Rights. The first is
the announcement of a tender offer for 30
percent of Household's shares ("30%
trigger") and the second is the acquisition
of 20 percent of Household's shares by any
single entity or group ("20% trigger").
Page 1349
If an announcement of a tender
offer for 30 percent of Household's shares
is made, the Rights are issued and are
immediately exercisable to purchase 1/100
share of new preferred stock for $100 and
are redeemable by the Board for $.50 per
Right. If 20 percent of Household's shares
are acquired by anyone, the Rights are
issued and become non-redeemable and are
exercisable to purchase 1/100 of a share of
preferred. If a Right is not exercised for
preferred, and thereafter, a merger or
consolidation occurs, the Rights holder can
exercise each Right to purchase $200 of the
common stock of the tender offeror for $100.
This "flip-over" provision of the Rights
Plan is at the heart of this controversy.
Household is a diversified
holding company with its principal
subsidiaries engaged in financial services,
transportation and merchandising. HFC,
National Car Rental and Vons Grocery are
three of its wholly-owned entities.
Household did not adopt its
Rights Plan during a battle with a corporate
raider, but as a preventive mechanism to
ward off future advances. The
Vice-Chancellor found that as early as
February 1984, Household's management became
concerned about the company's vulnerability
as a takeover target and began considering
amending its charter to render a takeover
more difficult. After considering the
matter, Household decided not to pursue a
fair price amendment.
3
In the meantime, appellant Moran,
one of Household's own Directors and also
Chairman of the Dyson-Kissner-Moran
Corporation, ("D-K-M") which is the largest
single stockholder of Household, began
discussions concerning a possible leveraged
buy-out of Household by D-K-M. D-K-M's
financial studies showed that Household's
stock was significantly undervalued in
relation to the company's break-up value. It
is uncontradicted that Moran's suggestion of
a leveraged buy-out never progressed beyond
the discussion stage.
Concerned about Household's
vulnerability to a raider in light of the
current takeover climate, Household secured
the services of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and
Katz ("Wachtell, Lipton") and Goldman, Sachs
& Co. ("Goldman, Sachs") to formulate a
takeover policy for recommendation to the
Household Board at its August 14 meeting.
After a July 31 meeting with a Household
Board member and a pre-meeting distribution
of material on the potential takeover
problem and the proposed Rights Plan, the
Board met on August 14, 1984.
Representatives of Wachtell,
Lipton and Goldman, Sachs attended the
August 14 meeting. The minutes reflect that
Mr. Lipton explained to the Board that his
recommendation of the Plan was based on his
understanding that the Board was concerned
about the increasing frequency of "bust-up"
4 takeovers, the
increasing takeover activity in the
financial service industry, such as
Leucadia's attempt to take over Arco, and
the possible adverse effect this type of
activity could have on employees and others
concerned with and vital to the continuing
successful operation of Household even in
the absence of any actual bust-up takeover
attempt. Against this factual background,
the Plan was approved.
Thereafter, Moran and the company
of which he is Chairman, D-K-M, filed this
suit. On the eve of trial, Gretl Golter, the
holder of 500 shares of Household, was
permitted to intervene as an additional
plaintiff. The trial was held, and the Court
Page 1350 of Chancery ruled in favor of Household.
5 Appellants now
appeal from that ruling to this Court.
II
The primary issue here is the
applicability of the business judgment rule
as the standard by which the adoption of the
Rights Plan should be reviewed. Much of this
issue has been decided by our recent
decision in Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum
Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946 (1985). In
Unocal, we applied the business judgment
rule to analyze Unocal's discriminatory
self-tender. We explained:
When a board addresses a pending
takeover bid it has an obligation to
determine whether the offer is in the best
interests of the corporation and its
shareholders. In that respect a board's duty
is no different from any other
responsibility it shoulders, and its
decisions should be no less entitled to the
respect they otherwise would be accorded in
the realm of business judgment.
Id. at 954 (citation and footnote
omitted).
Other jurisdictions have also
applied the business judgment rule to
actions by which target companies have
sought to forestall takeover activity they
considered undesirable. See Gearhart
Industries, Inc. v. Smith International, 5th
Cir.,
741 F.2d 707 (1984) (sale of
discounted subordinate debentures containing
springing warrants); Treco, Inc. v. Land of
Lincoln Savings and Loan, 7th Cir., 749 F.2d
374 (1984) (amendment to by-laws); Panter v.
Marshall Field, 7th Cir.,
646 F.2d 271
(1981) (acquisitions to create antitrust
problems); Johnson v. Trueblood, 3d Cir.,
629 F.2d 287 (1980), cert. denied, 450 U.S.
999, 101 S.Ct. 1704, 68 L.Ed.2d 200 (1981)
(refusal to tender); Crouse-Hinds Co. v.
InterNorth, Inc., 2d Cir.,
634 F.2d 690
(1980) (sale of stock to favored party);
Treadway v. Cane Corp., 2d Cir.,
638 F.2d 357 (1980) (sale to White Knight), Enterra
Corp. v. SGS Associates, E.D.Pa.,
600 F.Supp. 678 (1985) (standstill agreement);
Buffalo Forge Co. v. Ogden Corp., W.D.N.Y.,
555 F.Supp. 892, aff'd, (2d Cir.) 717 F.2d
757, cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1018, 104 S.Ct.
550, 78 L.Ed.2d 724 (1983) (sale of treasury
shares and grant of stock option to White
Knight); Whittaker Corp. v. Edgar, N.D.Ill.,
535 F.Supp. 933 (1982) (disposal of valuable
assets); Martin Marietta Corp. v. Bendix
Corp., D.Md.,
549 F.Supp. 623 (1982)
(Pac-Man defense).
6
This case is distinguishable from
the ones cited, since here we have a
defensive mechanism adopted to ward off
possible future advances and not a mechanism
adopted in reaction to a specific threat.
This distinguishing factor does not result
in the Directors losing the protection of
the business judgment rule. To the contrary,
pre-planning for the contingency of a
hostile takeover might reduce the risk that,
under the pressure of a takeover bid,
management will fail to exercise reasonable
judgment. Therefore, in reviewing a
pre-planned defensive mechanism it seems
even more appropriate to apply the business
judgment rule. See Warner Communications v.
Murdoch, D.Del., 581 F.Supp. 1482, 1491
(1984).
Of course, the business judgment
rule can only sustain corporate decision
making or transactions that are within the
power or authority of the Board. Therefore,
before the business judgment rule can be
applied it must be determined whether the
Directors were authorized to adopt the
Rights Plan.
Page 1351
III
Appellants vehemently contend
that the Board of Directors was unauthorized
to adopt the Rights Plan. First, appellants
contend that no provision of the Delaware
General Corporation Law authorizes the
issuance of such Rights. Secondly,
appellants, along with the SEC, contend that
the Board is unauthorized to usurp
stockholders' rights to receive hostile
tender offers. Third, appellants and the SEC
also contend that the Board is unauthorized
to fundamentally restrict stockholders'
rights to conduct a proxy contest. We
address each of these contentions in turn.
A.
While appellants contend that no
provision of the Delaware General
Corporation Law authorizes the Rights Plan,
Household contends that the Rights Plan was
issued pursuant to 8 Del.C. §§ 151(g) and
157. It explains that the Rights are
authorized by § 157
7
and the issue of preferred stock underlying
the Rights is authorized by § 151.
8 Appellants respond by
making several attacks upon the authority to
issue the Rights pursuant to § 157.
Appellants begin by contending
that § 157 cannot authorize the Rights Plan
since § 157 has never served the purpose of
authorizing a takeover defense. Appellants
contend that § 157 is a corporate financing
statute, and that nothing in its legislative
history suggests a purpose that has anything
to do with corporate control or a takeover
defense. Appellants are unable to
demonstrate that the legislature, in its
adoption of § 157, meant to limit the
applicability of § 157 to only the issuance
of Rights for the purposes of corporate
financing. Without such affirmative
evidence, we decline to impose such a
limitation upon the section that the
legislature has not. Compare Providence &
Worchester Co. v. Baker, Del.Supr., 378 A.2d
121, 124 (1977) (refusal to read a bar to
protective voting provisions into 8 Del.C. §
212(a)).
As we noted in Unocal:
[O]ur corporate law is not static. It
must grow and develop in response to, indeed
in anticipation of, evolving concepts and
needs. Merely because the General
Corporation Law is silent as to a specific
matter does not mean that it is prohibited.
493 A.2d at 957. See also Cheff
v. Mathes, Del.Supr.,
199 A.2d 548 (1964).
Secondly, appellants contend that
§ 157 does not authorize the issuance of
sham rights such as the Rights Plan. They
contend that the Rights were designed never
to be exercised, and that the Plan has no
economic value. In addition, they contend
the preferred stock made subject to the
Rights is also illusory, citing Telvest,
Inc.
Page 1352 v. Olson, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 5798, Brown,
V.C. (March 8, 1979).
Appellants' sham contention fails
in both regards. As to the Rights, they can
and will be exercised upon the happening of
a triggering mechanism, as we have observed
during the current struggle of Sir James
Goldsmith to take control of Crown
Zellerbach. See Wall Street Journal, July
26, 1985, at 3, 12. As to the preferred
shares, we agree with the Court of Chancery
that they are distinguishable from sham
securities invalidated in Telvest, supra.
The Household preferred, issuable upon the
happening of a triggering event, have
superior dividend and liquidation rights.
Third, appellants contend that §
157 authorizes the issuance of Rights
"entitling holders thereof to purchase from
the corporation any shares of its capital
stock of any class ..." (emphasis added).
Therefore, their contention continues, the
plain language of the statute does not
authorize Household to issue rights to
purchase another's capital stock upon a
merger or consolidation.
Household contends, inter alia,
that the Rights Plan is analogous to
"anti-destruction" or "anti-dilution"
provisions which are customary features of a
wide variety of corporate securities. While
appellants seem to concede that
"anti-destruction" provisions are valid
under Delaware corporate law, they seek to
distinguish the Rights Plan as not being
incidental, as are most "anti-destruction"
provisions, to a corporation's statutory
power to finance itself. We find no merit to
such a distinction. We have already rejected
appellants' similar contention that § 157
could only be used for financing purposes.
We also reject that distinction here.
"Anti-destruction" clauses
generally ensure holders of certain
securities of the protection of their right
of conversion in the event of a merger by
giving them the right to convert their
securities into whatever securities are to
replace the stock of their company. See
Broad v. Rockwell International Corp., 5th
Cir., 642 F.2d 929, 946, cert. denied, 454
U.S. 965, 102 S.Ct. 506, 70 L.Ed.2d 380
(1981); Wood v. Coastal States Gas Corp.,
Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 932, 937-39 (1979);
B.S.F. Co. v. Philadelphia National Bank,
Del.Supr., 204 A.2d 746, 750-51 (1964). The
fact that the rights here have as their
purpose the prevention of coercive two-tier
tender offers does not invalidate them.
Fourth, appellants contend that
Household's reliance upon § 157 is
contradictory to 8 Del.C. § 203.
9 Section 203 is a
"notice" statute which generally requires
that
Page 1353 timely notice be given to a target of an
offeror's intention to make a tender offer.
Appellants contend that the lack of stronger
regulation by the State indicates a
legislative intent to reject anything which
would impose an impediment to the tender
offer process. Such a contention is a non
sequitur. The desire to have little state
regulation of tender offers cannot be said
to also indicate a desire to also have
little private regulation. Furthermore, as
we explain infra, we do not view the Rights
Plan as much of an impediment on the tender
offer process.
Fifth, appellants contend that if
§ 157 authorizes the Rights Plan it would be
unconstitutional pursuant to the Commerce
Clause and Supremacy Clause of the United
States Constitution. Household counters that
appellants have failed to properly raise the
issues in the Court of Chancery and are,
therefore, precluded from raising them.
Moreover, Household counters that
appellants' contentions are without merit
since the conduct complained of here is
private conduct of corporate directors and
not state regulation.
It is commonly known that issues
not properly raised in the trial court will
not be considered in the first instance by
this Court. Supreme Court Rule 8. We cannot
conclude here that appellants have failed to
adequately raise their constitutional issues
in the Court of Chancery. Appellants raised
the Commerce Clause and Supremacy Clause
contentions in their "pre-trial memo of
points and authorities" and in their opening
argument at trial. The fact that they did
not again raise the issues in their
post-trial briefing will not preclude them
from raising the issues before this Court.
Appellants contend that § 157
authorization for the Rights Plan violates
the Commerce Clause and is void under the
Supremacy Clause, since it is an obstacle to
the accomplishment of the policies
underlying the Williams Act. Appellants put
heavy emphasis upon the case of
Edgar v. MITE Corp., 457 U.S. 624, 102 S.Ct.
2629, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982), in which
the United States Supreme Court held that
the Illinois Business Takeover Act was
unconstitutional, in that it unduly burdened
interstate commerce in violation of the
Commerce Clause.
10
We do not read the analysis in Edgar as
applicable to the actions of private
parties. The fact that directors of a
corporation act pursuant to a state statute
provides an insufficient nexus to the state
for there to be state action which may
violate the Commerce Clause or Supremacy
Clause. See Data Probe Acquisition Corp. v.
Datatab, Inc., 2d Cir., 722 F.2d 1, 5
(1983).
Having concluded that sufficient
authority for the Rights Plan exists in 8
Del.C. § 157, we note the inherent powers of
the Board conferred by 8 Del.C. § 141(a),
11 concerning the
management of the corporation's "business
and affairs " (emphasis added), also
provides the Board additional authority upon
which to enact the Rights Plan. Unocal, 493
A.2d at 953.
B.
Appellants contend that the Board
is unauthorized to usurp stockholders'
Page 1354 rights to receive tender offers by changing
Household's fundamental structure. We
conclude that the Rights Plan does not
prevent stockholders from receiving tender
offers, and that the change of Household's
structure was less than that which results
from the implementation of other defensive
mechanisms upheld by various courts.
Appellants' contention that
stockholders will lose their right to
receive and accept tender offers seems to be
premised upon an understanding of the Rights
Plan which is illustrated by the SEC amicus
brief which states: "The Chancery Court's
decision seriously understates the impact of
this plan. In fact, as we discuss below, the
Rights Plan will deter not only two-tier
offers, but virtually all hostile tender
offers."
The fallacy of that contention is
apparent when we look at the recent takeover
of Crown Zellerbach, which has a similar
Rights Plan, by Sir James Goldsmith. Wall
Street Journal, July 26, 1985, at 3, 12. The
evidence at trial also evidenced many
methods around the Plan ranging from
tendering with a condition that the Board
redeem the Rights, tendering with a high
minimum condition of shares and Rights,
tendering and soliciting consents to remove
the Board and redeem the Rights, to
acquiring 50% of the shares and causing
Household to self-tender for the Rights. One
could also form a group of up to 19.9% and
solicit proxies for consents to remove the
Board and redeem the Rights. These are but a
few of the methods by which Household can
still be acquired by a hostile tender offer.
In addition, the Rights Plan is
not absolute. When the Household Board of
Directors is faced with a tender offer and a
request to redeem the Rights, they will not
be able to arbitrarily reject the offer.
They will be held to the same fiduciary
standards any other board of directors would
be held to in deciding to adopt a defensive
mechanism, the same standard as they were
held to in originally approving the Rights
Plan. See Unocol, 493 A.2d at 954-55, 958.
In addition, appellants contend
that the deterence of tender offers will be
accomplished by what they label "a
fundamental transfer of power from the
stockholders to the directors." They contend
that this transfer of power, in itself, is
unauthorized.
The Rights Plan will result in no
more of a structural change than any other
defensive mechanism adopted by a board of
directors. The Rights Plan does not destroy
the assets of the corporation. The
implementation of the Plan neither results
in any outflow of money from the corporation
nor impairs its financial flexibility. It
does not dilute earnings per share and does
not have any adverse tax consequences for
the corporation or its stockholders. The
Plan has not adversely affected the market
price of Household's stock.
Comparing the Rights Plan with
other defensive mechanisms, it does less
harm to the value structure of the
corporation than do the other mechanisms.
Other mechanisms result in increased debt of
the corporation. See Whittaker Corp. v.
Edgar, supra (sale of "prize asset"), Cheff
v. Mathes, supra, (paying greenmail to
eliminate a threat), Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., supra, (discriminatory
self-tender).
There is little change in the
governance structure as a result of the
adoption of the Rights Plan. The Board does
not now have unfettered discretion in
refusing to redeem the Rights. The Board has
no more discretion in refusing to redeem the
Rights than it does in enacting any
defensive mechanism.
The contention that the Rights
Plan alters the structure more than do other
defensive mechanisms because it is so
effective as to make the corporation
completely safe from hostile tender offers
is likewise without merit. As explained
above, there
Page 1355 are numerous methods to successfully launch
a hostile tender offer.
C.
Appellants' third contention is
that the Board was unauthorized to
fundamentally restrict stockholders' rights
to conduct a proxy contest. Appellants
contend that the "20% trigger" effectively
prevents any stockholder from first
acquiring 20% or more shares before
conducting a proxy contest and further, it
prevents stockholders from banding together
into a group to solicit proxies if,
collectively, they own 20% or more of the
stock.
12 In
addition, at trial, appellants contended
that read literally, the Rights Agreement
triggers the Rights upon the mere
acquisition of the right to vote 20% or more
of the shares through a proxy solicitation,
and thereby precludes any proxy contest from
being waged.
13
Appellants seem to have conceded
this last contention in light of Household's
response that the receipt of a proxy does
not make the recipient the "beneficial
owner" of the shares involved which would
trigger the Rights. In essence, the Rights
Agreement provides that the Rights are
triggered when someone becomes the
"beneficial owner" of 20% or more of
Household stock. Although a literal reading
of the Rights Agreement definition of
"beneficial owner" would seem to include
those shares which one has the right to
vote, it has long been recognized that the
relationship between grantor and recipient
of a proxy is one of agency, and the agency
is revocable by the grantor at any time.
Henn, Corporations § 196, at 518. Therefore,
the holder of a proxy is not the "beneficial
owner" of the stock. As a result, the mere
acquisition of the right to vote 20% of the
shares does not trigger the Rights.
The issue, then, is whether the
restriction upon individuals or groups from
first acquiring 20% of shares before waging
a proxy contest fundamentally restricts
stockholders' right to conduct a proxy
contest. Regarding this issue the Court of
Chancery found:
Thus, while the Rights Plan does
deter the formation of proxy efforts of a
certain magnitude, it does not limit the
voting power of individual shares. On the
evidence presented it is highly conjectural
to assume that a particular effort to assert
shareholder views in the election of
directors or revisions of corporate policy
will be frustrated by the proxy feature
ofthe Plan. Household's witnesses, Troubh
and Higgins described recent corporate
takeover battles in which insurgents holding
less than 10% stock ownership were able to
secure corporate control through a proxy
contest or the threat of one.
Moran, 490 A.2d at 1080.
We conclude that there was
sufficient evidence at trial to support the
Vice-Chancellor's finding that the effect
upon proxy contests will be minimal.
Evidence at trial established that many
proxy contests are won with an insurgent
ownership of less than 20%, and that very
large holdings are no guarantee of success.
There was also testimony that the key
variable in proxy contest success is the
merit of an insurgent's issues, not the size
of his holdings.
IV
Having concluded that the
adoption of the Rights Plan was within the
authority of the Directors, we now look to
whether the Directors have met their burden
under the business judgment rule.
Page 1356
The business judgment rule is a
"presumption that in making a business
decision the directors of a corporation
acted on an informed basis, in good faith
and in the honest belief that the action
taken was in the best interests of the
company." Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr., 473
A.2d 805, 812 (1984) (citations omitted).
Notwithstanding, in Unocal we held that when
the business judgment rule applies to
adoption of a defensive mechanism, the
initial burden will lie with the directors.
The "directors must show that they had
reasonable grounds for believing that a
danger to corporate policy and effectiveness
existed.... [T]hey satisfy that burden 'by
showing good faith and reasonable
investigation....' " Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955
(citing
Cheff v. Mathes, 199 A.2d at 554-55). In
addition, the directors must show that the
defensive mechanism was "reasonable in
relation to the threat posed." Unocal, 493
A.2d at 955. Moreover, that proof is
materially enhanced, as we noted in Unocal,
where, as here, a majority of the board
favoring the proposal consisted of outside
independent directors who have acted in
accordance with the foregoing standards.
Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955; Aronson, 473 A.2d
at 815. Then, the burden shifts back to the
plaintiffs who have the ultimate burden of
persuasion to show a breach of the
directors' fiduciary duties. Unocal, 493
A.2d at 958.
There are no allegations here of
any bad faith on the part of the Directors'
action in the adoption of the Rights Plan.
There is no allegation that the Directors'
action was taken for entrenchment purposes.
Household has adequately demonstrated, as
explained above, that the adoption of the
Rights Plan was in reaction to what it
perceived to be the threat in the market
place of coercive two-tier tender offers.
Appellants do contend, however, that the
Board did not exercise informed business
judgment in its adoption of the Plan.
Appellants contend that the
Household Board was uninformed since they
were, inter alia, told the Plan would not
inhibit a proxy contest, were not told the
plan would preclude all hostile acquisitions
of Household, and were told that Delaware
counsel opined that the plan was within the
business judgment of the Board.
As to the first two contentions,
as we explained above, the Rights Plan will
not have a severe impact upon proxy contests
and it will not preclude all hostile
acquisitions of Household. Therefore, the
Directors were not misinformed or uninformed
on these facts.
Appellants contend the Delaware
counsel did not express an opinion on the
flip-over provision of the Rights, rather
only that the Rights would constitute
validly issued and outstanding rights to
subscribe to the preferred stock of the
company.
To determine whether a business
judgment reached by a board of directors was
an informed one, we determine whether the
directors were grossly negligent. Smith v.
Van Gorkom, Del.Supr., 488 A.2d 858, 873
(1985). Upon a review of this record, we
conclude the Directors were not grossly
negligent. The information supplied to the
Board on August 14 provided the essentials
of the Plan. The Directors were given
beforehand a notebook which included a
three-page summary of the Plan along with
articles on the current takeover
environment. The extended discussion between
the Board and representatives of Wachtell,
Lipton and Goldman, Sachs before approval of
the Plan reflected a full and candid
evaluation of the Plan. Moran's expression
of his views at the meeting served to place
before the Board a knowledgeable critique of
the Plan. The factual happenings here are
clearly distinguishable from the actions of
the directors of Trans Union Corporation who
displayed gross negligence in approving a
cash-out merger. Id.
In addition, to meet their
burden, the Directors must show that the
defensive
Page 1357 mechanism was "reasonable in relation to the
threat posed". The record reflects a concern
on the part of the Directors over the
increasing frequency in the financial
services industry of "boot-strap" and
"bust-up" takeovers. The Directors were also
concerned that such takeovers may take the
form of two-tier offers.
14
In addition, on August 14, the Household
Board was aware of Moran's overture on
behalf of D-K-M. In sum, the Directors
reasonably believed Household was vulnerable
to coercive acquisition techniques and
adopted a reasonable defensive mechanism to
protect itself.
V
In conclusion, the Household
Directors receive the benefit of the
business judgment rule in their adoption of
the Rights Plan.
The Directors adopted the Plan
pursuant to statutory authority in 8 Del.C.
§§ 141, 151, 157. We reject appellants'
contentions that the Rights Plan strips
stockholders of their rights to receive
tender offers, and that the Rights Plan
fundamentally restricts proxy contests.
The Directors adopted the Plan in
the good faith belief that it was necessary
to protect Household from coercive
acquisition techniques. The Board was
informed as to the details of the Plan. In
addition, Household has demonstrated that
the Plan is reasonable in relation to the
threat posed. Appellants, on the other hand,
have failed to convince us that the
Directors breached any fiduciary duty in
their adoption of the Rights Plan.
While we conclude for present
purposes that the Household Directors are
protected by the business judgment rule,
that does not end the matter. The ultimate
response to an actual takeover bid must be
judged by the Directors' actions at that
time, and nothing we say here relieves them
of their basic fundamental duties to the
corporation and its stockholders. Unocal,
493 A.2d at 954-55, 958;
Smith v. Van Gorkom, 488 A.2d at 872-73;
Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812-13; Pogostin v.
Rice, Del.Supr., 480 A.2d 619, 627 (1984).
Their use of the Plan will be evaluated when
and if the issue arises.
* * *
AFFIRMED.
1 The SEC split 3-2 on whether to
intervene in this case. The two dissenting
Commissioners have publicly disagreed with
the other three as to the merits of the
Rights Plan. 17 Securities Regulation & Law
Report 400; The Wall Street Journal, March
20, 1985, at 6.
2 Household's Board has ten outside
directors and six who are members of
management. Messrs. Moran (appellant) and
Whitehead voted against the Plan. The record
reflects that Whitehead voted against the
Plan not on its substance but because he
thought it was novel and would bring
unwanted publicity to Household.
3 A fair price amendment to a corporate
charter generally requires supermajority
approval for certain business combinations
and sets minimum price criteria for mergers.
Moran, 490 A.2d at 1064, n. 1.
4 "Bust-up" takeover generally refers to
a situation in which one seeks to finance an
acquisition by selling off pieces of the
acquired company.
5 The Vice-Chancellor did rule in favor
of appellants on Household's counterclaim,
but that ruling is not at issue in this
appeal.
6 The "Pac-Man" defense is generally a
target company countering an unwanted tender
offer by making its own tender offer for
stock of the would-be acquirer. Block &
Miller, The Responsibilities and Obligations
of Corporate Directors in Takeover Contests,
11 Sec.Reg.L.J. 44, 64 (1983).
7 The power to issue rights to purchase
shares is conferred by 8 Del.C. § 157 which
provides in relevant part:
Subject to any provisions in the
certificate of incorporation, every
corporation may create and issue, whether or
not in connection with the issue and sale of
any shares of stock or other securities of
the corporation, rights or options entitling
the holders thereof to purchase from the
corporation any shares of its capital stock
of any class or classes, such rights or
options to be evidenced by or in such
instrument or instruments as shall be
approved by the board of directors.
8 8 Del.C. § 151(g) provides in relevant
part:
When any corporation desires to issue any
shares of stock of any class or of any
series of any class of which the voting
powers, designations, preferences and
relative, participating, optional or other
rights, if any, or the qualifications,
limitations or restrictions thereof, if any,
shall not have been set forth in the
certificate of incorporation or in any
amendment thereto but shall be provided for
in a resolution or resolutions adopted by
the board of directors pursuant to authority
expressly vested in it by the provisions of
the certificate of incorporation or any
amendment thereto, a certificate setting
forth a copy of such resolution or
resolutions and the number of shares of
stock of such class or series shall be
executed, acknowledged, filed, recorded, and
shall become effective, in accordance with §
103 of this title.
9 8 Del.C. § 203 provides in relevant
part:
(a) No offeror shall make a tender offer
unless:
(1) Not less than 20 nor more than 60
days before the date the tender offer is to
be made, the offeror shall deliver
personally or by registered or certified
mail to the corporation whose equity
securities are to be subject to the tender
offer, at its registered office in this
State or at its principal place of business,
a written statement of the offeror's
intention to make the tender offer....
(2) The tender offer shall remain open
for a period of at least 20 days after it is
first made to the holders of the equity
securities, during which period any
stockholder may withdraw any of the equity
securities tendered to the offeror, and any
revised or amended tender offer which
changes the amount or type of consideration
offered or the number of equity securities
for which the offer is made shall remain
open at least 10 days following the
amendment; and
(3) The offeror and any associate of the
offeror will not purchase or pay for any
tendered equity security for a period of at
least 20 days after the tender offer is
first made to the holders of the equity
securities, and no such purchase or payment
shall be made within 10 days after an
amended or revised tender offer if the
amendment or revision changes the amount or
type of consideration offered or the number
of equity securities for which the offer is
made. If during the period the tender offer
must remain open pursuant to this section, a
greater number of equity securities is
tendered than the offeror is bound or
willing to purchase, the equity securities
shall be purchased pro rata, as nearly as
may be, according to the number of shares
tendered during such period by each equity
security holder.
10 Justice White, joined by Chief Justice
Burger and Justice Blackman also concluded
that the Illinois Business Takeover Act was
pre-empted by the Williams Act. Edgar, 457
U.S. at 630, 102 S.Ct. at 2634.
11 8 Del.C. § 141(a) provides:
(a) The business and affairs of every
corporation organized under this chapter
shall be managed by or under the direction
of a board of directors, except as may be
otherwise provided in this chapter or in its
certificate of incorporation. If any such
provision is made in the certificate of
incorporation, the powers and duties
conferred or imposed upon the board of
directors by this chapter shall be exercised
or performed to such extent and by such
person or persons as shall be provided in
the certificate of incorporation.
12 Appellants explain that the
acquisition of 20% of the shares trigger the
Rights, making them non-redeemable, and
thereby would prevent even a future friendly
offer for the ten-year life of the Rights.
13 The SEC still contends that the mere
acquisition of the right to vote 20% of the
shares through a proxy solicitation triggers
the rights. We do not interpret the Rights
Agreement in that manner.
14 We have discussed the coercive nature
of two-tier tender offers in Unocal, 493
A.2d at 956, n. 12. We explained in Unocal
that a discriminatory self-tender was
reasonably related to the threat of two-tier
tender offers and possible greenmail. |