| Page 873 508 A.2d 873
Moise KATZ, on behalf of himself and
all other similarly
situated holders of Oak Industries Inc.: 9
5/8% Convertible
Notes due September 15, 1991, 13.50% Senior
Notes due May
15, 1990, 9 5/8% Notes due September 15,
1991, 11 5/8% Notes
due September 15, 1990, 13.65% Debentures
due April 1, 2001,
11 7/8% Subordinated Debentures due February
1, 2002, and 11
7/8% Subordinated Debentures due May 15,
1998, Plaintiff,
v.
OAK INDUSTRIES INC., Defendant. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: March 7, 1986.
Decided: March 10, 1986.
Page 874
Norman M. Monhait of Morris &
Rosenthal, P.A., Wilmington and Stuart D.
Wechsler, Jeffrey A. Baumel and Zachary A.
Page 875 Starr of Goodkind, Wechsler, Labaton &
Rudoff, New York City, for plaintiff.
R. Franklin Balotti, Jesse A.
Finkelstein, Kevin G. Abrams of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington and Selvyn
Seidel, Peter H. Benzian, Mark W. Smith,
James E. Brandt and Karen B. Burrows of
Latham & Watkins, New York City, for
defendant.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
A commonly used word--seemingly
specific and concrete when used in everyday
speech--may mask troubling ambiguities that
upon close examination are seen to derive
not simply from casual use but from more
fundamental epistemological problems. Few
words more perfectly illustrate the
deceptive dependability of language than the
term "coercion" which is at the heart of the
theory advanced by plaintiff as entitling
him to a preliminary injunction in this
case.
Plaintiff is the owner of
long-term debt securities issued by Oak
Industries, Inc. ("Oak"), a Delaware
corporation; in this class action he seeks
to enjoin the consummation of an exchange
offer and consent solicitation made by Oak
to holders of various classes of its
long-term debt. As detailed below that offer
is an integral part of a series of
transactions that together would effect a
major reorganization and recapitalization of
Oak. The claim asserted is in essence, that
the exchange offer is a coercive device and,
in the circumstances, constitutes a breach
of contract. This is the Court's opinion on
plaintiff's pending application for a
preliminary injunction.
I.
The background facts are involved
even when set forth in the abbreviated form
the decision within the time period
currently available requires.
Through its domestic and foreign
subsidiaries and affiliated entities, Oak
manufactures and markets component
equipments used in consumer, industrial and
military products (the "Components
Segment"); produces communications equipment
for use in cable television systems and
satellite television systems (the
"Communications Segment") and manufactures
and markets laminates and other materials
used in printed circuit board applications
(the "Materials Segment"). During 1985, the
Company has terminated certain other
unrelated businesses. As detailed below, it
has now entered into an agreement with
Allied-Signal, Inc. for the sale of the
Materials Segment of its business and is
currently seeking a buyer for its
Communications Segment.
Even a casual review of Oak's
financial results over the last several
years shows it unmistakably to be a company
in deep trouble. During the period from
January 1, 1982 through September 30, 1985,
the Company has experienced unremitting
losses from operations; on net sales of
approximately $1.26 billion during that
period (F-3)
1 it
has lost over $335 million (F-3). As a
result its total stockholders' equity has
first shriveled (from $260 million on
12/31/81 to $85 million on 12/31/83) and
then disappeared completely (as of 9/30/85
there was a $62 million deficit in its
stockholders' equity accounts) (F-6).
Financial markets, of course, reflected this
gloomy history.
2
Unless Oak can be made profitable
within some reasonably short time it will
not continue as an operating company. Oak's
board of directors, comprised almost
entirely of outside directors, has
authorized steps
Page 876 to buy the company time. In February, 1985,
in order to reduce a burdensome annual cash
interest obligation on its $230 million of
then outstanding debentures, the Company
offered to exchange such debentures for a
combination of notes, common stock and
warrants. As a result, approximately $180
million principal amount of the then
outstanding debentures were exchanged. Since
interest on certain of the notes issued in
that exchange offer is payable in common
stock, the effect of the 1985 exchange offer
was to reduce to some extent the cash drain
on the Company caused by its significant
debt.
About the same time that the 1985
exchange offer was made, the Company
announced its intention to discontinue
certain of its operations and sell certain
of its properties. Taking these steps, while
effective to stave off a default and to
reduce to some extent the immediate cash
drain, did not address Oak's longer-range
problems. Therefore, also during 1985
representatives of the Company held informal
discussions with several interested parties
exploring the possibility of an investment
from, combination with or acquisition by
another company. As a result of these
discussions, the Company and Allied-Signal,
Inc. entered into two agreements. The first,
the Acquisition Agreement, contemplates the
sale to Allied-Signal of the Materials
Segment for $160 million in cash. The second
agreement, the Stock Purchase Agreement,
provides for the purchase by Allied-Signal
for $15 million cash of 10 million shares of
the Company's common stock together with
warrants to purchase additional common
stock.
The Stock Purchase Agreement
provides as a condition to Allied-Signal's
obligation that at least 85% of the
aggregate principal amount of all of the
Company's debt securities shall have
tendered and accepted the exchange offers
that are the subject of this lawsuit. Oak
has six classes of such long term debt.
3 If less than 85%
of the aggregate principal amount of such
debt accepts the offer, Allied-Signal has an
option, but no obligation, to purchase the
common stock and warrants contemplated by
the Stock Purchase Agreement. An additional
condition for the closing of the Stock
Purchase Agreement is that the sale of the
Company's Materials Segment contemplated by
the Acquisition Agreement shall have been
concluded.
Thus, as part of the
restructuring and recapitalization
contemplated by the Acquisition Agreement
and the Stock Purchase Agreement, the
Company has extended an exchange offer to
each of the holders of the six classes of
its long-term debt securities. These pending
exchange offers include a Common Stock
Exchange Offer (available only to holders of
the 9 5/8% convertible notes) and the
Payment Certificate Exchange Offers
(available to holders of all six classes of
Oak's long-term debt securities). The Common
Stock Exchange Offer currently provides for
the payment to each tendering noteholder of
407 shares of the Company's common stock in
exchange for each $1,000 9 5/8% note
accepted. The offer is limited to $38.6
million principal amount of notes (out of
approximately $83.9 million outstanding).
The Payment Certificate Exchange
Offer is an any and all offer. Under its
terms, a payment certificate, payable in
cash five days after the closing of the sale
of the Materials Segment to Allied-Signal,
is offered in exchange for debt securities.
The cash value of the Payment Certificate
will vary depending upon the particular
security tendered. In each instance,
however, that payment will be less than the
face amount of the obligation. The cash
payments range in amount, per $1,000 of
principal,
Page 877 from $918 to $655. These cash values however
appear to represent a premium over the
market prices for the Company's debentures
as of the time the terms of the transaction
were set.
The Payment Certificate Exchange
Offer is subject to certain important
conditions before Oak has an obligation to
accept tenders under it. First, it is
necessary that a minimum amount ($38.6
million principal amount out of $83.9 total
outstanding principal amount) of the 9 5/8%
notes be tendered pursuant to the Common
Stock Exchange Offer. Secondly, it is
necessary that certain minimum amounts of
each class of debt securities be tendered,
together with consents to amendments to the
underlying indentures.
4
Indeed, under the offer one may not tender
securities unless at the same time one
consents to the proposed amendments to the
relevant indentures.
The condition of the offer that
tendering security holders must consent to
amendments in the indentures governing the
securities gives rise to plaintiff's claim
of breach of contract in this case. Those
amendments would, if implemented, have the
effect of removing significant negotiated
protections to holders of the Company's
long-term debt including the deletion of all
financial covenants. Such modification may
have adverse consequences to debt holders
who elect not to tender pursuant to either
exchange offer.
Allied-Signal apparently was
unwilling to commit to the $15 million cash
infusion contemplated by the Stock Purchase
Agreement, unless Oak's long-term debt is
reduced by 85% (at least that is a condition
of their obligation to close on that
contract). Mathematically, such a reduction
may not occur without the Company reducing
the principal amount of outstanding
debentures (that is the three classes
outstanding notes constitute less than 85%
of all long-term debt). But existing
indenture covenants (See Offering Circular,
pp. 38-39) prohibit the Company, so long as
any of its long-term notes are outstanding,
from issuing any obligation (including the
Payment Certificates) in exchange for any of
the debentures. Thus, in this respect,
amendment to the indentures is required in
order to close the Stock Purchase Agreement
as presently structured.
Restrictive covenants in the
indentures would appear to interfere with
effectuation of the recapitalization in
another way. Section 4.07 of the 13.50%
Indenture
5
provides that the Company may not "acquire"
for value any of the 9 5/8% Notes or 11 5/8%
Notes unless it concurrently "redeems" a
proportionate amount of the 13.50% Notes.
This covenant, if unamended, would prohibit
the disproportionate acquisition of the 9
5/8% Notes that may well occur as a result
of the Exchange Offers; in addition, it
would appear to require the payment of the
"redemption" price for the 13.50% Notes
rather than the lower, market price offered
in the exchange offer.
In sum, the failure to obtain the
requisite consents to the proposed
amendments would permit Allied-Signal to
decline to consummate both the Acquisition
Agreement and the Stock Purchase Agreement.
As to timing of the proposed
transactions, the Exchange Offer requires
the Company (subject to the conditions
stated therein) to accept any and all
tenders received by 5:00 p.m. March 11,
1986. A meeting of stockholders of the
Company has been called for March 14, 1986
at which time the Company's stockholders
will be asked to approve the Acquisition
Agreement and the Stock Purchase Agreement
as well as certain deferred compensation
arrangements for key employees. Closing of
the Acquisition Agreement may occur on March
14, 1986, or as late as June 20, 1986
Page 878 under the terms of that Agreement. Closing
of the Stock Purchase Agreement must await
the closing of the Acquisition Agreement and
the successful completion of the Exchange
Offers.
The Exchange Offers are dated
February 14, 1986. This suit seeking to
enjoin consummation of those offers was
filed on February 27. Argument on the
current application was held on March 7.
II.
Plaintiff's claim that the
Exchange Offers and Consent Solicitation
constitutes a threatened wrong to him and
other holders of Oak's debt securities
6 appear to be
summarized in paragraph 16 of his Complaint:
The purpose and effect of the
Exchange Offers is to benefit Oak's common
stockholders at the expense of the Holders
of its debt securities, to force the
exchange of its debt instruments at unfair
price and at less than face value of the
debt instruments pursuant to a rigged vote
in which debt Holders who exchange, and who
therefore have no interest in the vote, must
consent to the elimination of protective
covenants for debt Holders who do not wish
to exchange.
As amplified in briefing on the
pending motion, plaintiff's claim is that no
free choice is provided to bondholders by
the exchange offer and consent solicitation.
Under its terms, a rational bondholder is
"forced" to tender and consent. Failure to
do so would face a bondholder with the risk
of owning a security stripped of all
financial covenant protections and for which
it is likely that there would be no ready
market. A reasonable bondholder, it is
suggested, cannot possibly accept those
risks and thus such a bondholder is coerced
to tender and thus to consent to the
proposed indenture amendments.
It is urged this linking of the
offer and the consent solicitation
constitutes a breach of a contractual
obligation that Oak owes to its bondholders
to act in good faith. Specifically,
plaintiff points to three contractual
provisions from which it can be seen that
the structuring of the current offer
constitutes a breach of good faith. Those
provisions (1) establish a requirement that
no modification in the term of the various
indentures may be effectuated without the
consent of a stated percentage of
bondholders; (2) restrict Oak from
exercising the power to grant such consent
with respect to any securities it may hold
in its treasury; and (3) establish the price
at which and manner in which Oak may force
bondholders to submit their securities for
redemption.
III.
In order to demonstrate an
entitlement to the provisional remedy of a
preliminary injunction it is essential that
a plaintiff show that it is probable that
his claim will be upheld after final
hearing; that he faces a risk of irreparable
injury before final judgment will be reached
in the regular course; and that in balancing
the equities and competing hardships that
preliminary judicial action may cause or
prevent, the balance favors plaintiff. See,
Shields v. Shields, Del.Ch.,
498 A.2d 161
(1985).
I turn first to an evaluation of
the probability of plaintiff's ultimate
success on the merits of his claim. I begin
that analysis with two preliminary points.
The first concerns what is not involved in
this case. To focus briefly on this clears
away much of the corporation law case law of
Page 879 this jurisdiction upon which plaintiff in
part relies. This case does not involve the
measurement of corporate or directorial
conduct against that high standard of
fidelity required of fiduciaries when they
act with respect to the interests of the
beneficiaries of their trust. Under our
law--and the law generally--the relationship
between a corporation and the holders of its
debt securities, even convertible debt
securities, is contractual in nature. See,
Norte & Co. v. Manor Healthcare Corp.,
Del.Ch. Nos. 6827 and 6831, Berger, V.C.
(Nov. 21, 1985); Harff v. Kerkorian,
Del.Ch.,
324 A.2d 215 (1974) rev'd on other
grounds, Del.Supr.,
347 A.2d 133 (1975);
American Bar Foundation, Commentaries on
Indentures (1971). Arrangements among a
corporation, the underwriters of its debt,
trustees under its indentures and sometimes
ultimate investors are typically thoroughly
negotiated and massively documented. The
rights and obligations of the various
parties are or should be spelled out in that
documentation. The terms of the contractual
relationship agreed to and not broad
concepts such as fairness define the
corporation's obligation to its bondholders.
7
Thus, the first aspect of the
pending Exchange Offers about which
plaintiff complains--that "the purpose and
effect of the Exchange Offers is to benefit
Oak's common stockholders at the expense of
the Holders of its debt"--does not itself
appear to allege a cognizable legal wrong.
It is the obligation of directors to
attempt, within the law, to maximize the
long-run interests of the corporation's
stockholders; that they may sometimes do so
"at the expense" of others (even assuming
that a transaction which one may refuse to
enter into can meaningfully be said to be at
his expense
8)
does not for that reason constitute a breach
of duty. It seems likely that corporate
restructurings designed to maximize
shareholder values may in some instances
have the effect of requiring bondholders to
bear greater risk of loss and thus in effect
transfer economic value from bondholders to
stockholders. See generally, Prokesch,
Merger Wave: How Stocks and Bonds Fare, N.Y.
Times, Jan. 7, 1986, at A1, col. 1;
McDaniel, Bondholders and Corporate
Governance, 41 Bus.Law. 413, 418-423 (1986).
But if courts are to provide protection
against such enhanced risk, they will
require either legislative direction to do
so or the negotiation of indenture
provisions designed to afford such
protection.
The second preliminary point
concerns the limited analytical utility, at
least in this context, of the word
"coercive" which is central to plaintiff's
own articulation of his theory of recovery.
If, pro arguendo, we are to extend the
meaning of the word coercion beyond its core
meaning--dealing with the utilization of
physical force to overcome the will of
another--to reach instances in which the
claimed coercion arises from an act designed
to affect the will of another party by
offering inducements to the act sought to be
encouraged or by arranging unpleasant
consequences for an alternative sought to be
discouraged, then--in order to make the term
legally meaningful at all--we must
acknowledge that some further refinement is
essential. Clearly some "coercion" of this
kind is legally unproblematic. Parents may
"coerce" a child to study with the threat of
withholding an allowance; employers may
Page 880
"coerce" regular attendance at work by
either docking wages for time absent or by
rewarding with a bonus such regular
attendance. Other "coercion" so defined
clearly would be legally relevant (to
encourage regular attendance by corporal
punishment, for example). Thus, for purposes
of legal analysis, the term "coercion"
itself--covering a multitude of
situations--is not very meaningful. For the
word to have much meaning for purposes of
legal analysis, it is necessary in each case
that a normative judgment be attached to the
concept ("inappropriately coercive" or
"wrongfully coercive", etc.). But, it is
then readily seen that what is legally
relevant is not the conclusory term
"coercion" itself but rather the norm that
leads to the adverb modifying it.
In this instance, assuming that
the Exchange Offers and Consent Solicitation
can meaningfully be regarded as "coercive"
(in the sense that Oak has structured it in
a way designed--and I assume effectively
so--to "force" rational bondholders to
tender), the relevant legal norm that will
support the judgment whether such "coercion"
is wrongful or not will, for the reasons
mentioned above, be derived from the law of
contracts. I turn then to that subject to
determine the appropriate legal test or
rule.
Modern contract law has generally
recognized an implied covenant to the effect
that each party to a contract will act with
good faith towards the other with respect to
the subject matter of the contract. See,
Restatement of Law, Contracts 2d, § 205
(1981); Rowe v. Great Atlantic and Pacific
Tea Company, N.Y.Ct.Apps., 46 N.Y.2d 62, 412
N.Y.S.2d 827, 830, 385 N.E.2d 566, 569
(1978). The contractual theory for this
implied obligation is well stated in a
leading treatise:
If the purpose of contract law is to
enforce the reasonable expectations of
parties induced by promises, then at some
point it becomes necessary for courts to
look to the substance rather than to the
form of the agreement, and to hold that
substance controls over form. What courts
are doing here, whether calling the process
"implication" of promises, or interpreting
the requirements of "good faith", as the
current fashion may be, is but a recognition
that the parties occasionally have
understandings or expectations that were so
fundamental that they did not need to
negotiate about those expectations. When the
court "implies a promise" or holds that
"good faith" requires a party not to violate
those expectations, it is recognizing that
sometimes silence says more than words, and
it is understanding its duty to the spirit
of the bargain is higher than its duty to
the technicalities of the language. Corbin
on Contracts (Kaufman Supp.1984), § 570.
It is this obligation to act in
good faith and to deal fairly that plaintiff
claims is breached by the structure of Oak's
coercive exchange offer. Because it is an
implied contractual obligation that is
asserted as the basis for the relief sought,
the appropriate legal test is not difficult
to deduce. It is this: is it clear from what
was expressly agreed upon that the parties
who negotiated the express terms of the
contract would have agreed to proscribe the
act later complained of as a breach of the
implied covenant of good faith--had they
thought to negotiate with respect to that
matter. If the answer to this question is
yes, then, in my opinion, a court is
justified in concluding that such act
constitutes a breach of the implied covenant
of good faith. See, Martin v. Star
Publishing Co., Del.Supr., 126 A.2d 238
(1956); Danby v. Osteopathic Hospital
Ass'n., Del.Ch., 101 A.2d 308 (1953) aff'd
Del.Supr., 104 A.2d 903 (1954); Broad v.
Rockwell International Corp., 5th Cir., 642
F.2d 929, 957 (1981).
With this test in mind, I turn
now to a review of the specific provisions
of the various indentures from which one may
be best able to infer whether it is apparent
that the contracting parties--had they
negotiated with the exchange offer and
consent
Page 881 solicitation in mind--would have expressly
agreed to prohibit contractually the linking
of the giving of consent with the purchase
and sale of the security.
IV.
Applying the foregoing standard
to the exchange offer and consent
solicitation, I find first that there is
nothing in the indenture provisions granting
bondholders power to veto proposed
modifications in the relevant indenture that
implies that Oak may not offer an inducement
to bondholders to consent to such
amendments. Such an implication, at least
where, as here, the inducement is offered on
the same terms to each holder of an affected
security, would be wholly inconsistent with
the strictly commercial nature of the
relationship.
Nor does the second pertinent
contractual provision supply a ground to
conclude that defendant's conduct violates
the reasonable expectations of those who
negotiated the indentures on behalf of the
bondholders. Under that provision Oak may
not vote debt securities held in its
treasury. Plaintiff urges that Oak's
conditioning of its offer to purchase debt
on the giving of consents has the effect of
subverting the purpose of that provision; it
permits Oak to "dictate" the vote on
securities which it could not itself vote.
The evident purpose of the
restriction on the voting of treasury
securities is to afford protection against
the issuer voting as a bondholder in favor
of modifications that would benefit it as
issuer, even though such changes would be
detrimental to bondholders. But the linking
of the exchange offer and the consent
solicitation does not involve the risk that
bondholder interests will be affected by a
vote involving anyone with a financial
interest in the subject of the vote other
than a bondholder's interest. That the
consent is to be given concurrently with the
transfer of the bond to the issuer does not
in any sense create the kind of conflict of
interest that the indenture's prohibition on
voting treasury securities contemplates. Not
only will the proposed consents be granted
or withheld only by those with a financial
interest to maximize the return on their
investment in Oak's bonds, but the incentive
to consent is equally available to all
members of each class of bondholders. Thus
the "vote" implied by the consent
solicitation is not affected in any sense by
those with a financial conflict of interest.
In these circumstances, while it
is clear that Oak has fashioned the exchange
offer and consent solicitation in a way
designed to encourage consents, I cannot
conclude that the offer violates the
intendment of any of the express contractual
provisions considered or, applying the test
set out above, that its structure and timing
breaches an implied obligation of good faith
and fair dealing.
One further set of contractual
provisions should be touched upon: Those
granting to Oak a power to redeem the
securities here treated at a price set by
the relevant indentures. Plaintiff asserts
that the attempt to force all bondholders to
tender their securities at less than the
redemption price constitutes, if not a
breach of the redemption provision itself,
at least a breach of an implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing associated with
it. The flaw, or at least one fatal flaw, in
this argument is that the present offer is
not the functional equivalent of a
redemption which is, of course, an act that
the issuer may take unilaterally. In this
instance it may happen that Oak will get
tenders of a large percentage of its
outstanding long-term debt securities. If it
does, that fact will, in my judgment, be in
major part a function of the merits of the
offer (i.e., the price offered in light of
the Company's financial position and the
market value of its debt). To answer
plaintiff's contention that the structure of
the offer "forces" debt holders to tender,
one only has to imagine what response this
offer would receive if the price offered did
not reflect a premium over market but rather
was, for example, ten percent of market
value. The exchange offer's success
ultimately depends
Page 882 upon the ability and willingness of the
issuer to extend an offer that will be a
financially attractive alternative to
holders. This process is hardly the
functional equivalent of the unilateral
election of redemption and thus cannot be
said in any sense to constitute a subversion
by Oak of the negotiated provisions dealing
with redemption of its debt.
Accordingly, I conclude that
plaintiff has failed to demonstrate a
probability of ultimate success on the
theory of liability asserted.
V.
An independent ground for the
decision to deny the pending motion is
supplied by the requirement that a court of
equity will not issue the extraordinary
remedy of preliminary injunction where to do
so threatens the party sought to be enjoined
with irreparable injury that, in the
circumstances, seems greater than the injury
that plaintiff seeks to avoid. Eastern Shore
Natural Gas Co. v. Stauffer Chemical Co.,
Del.Supr., 298 A.2d 322 (1972). That
principal has application here.
Oak is in a weak state
financially. Its board, comprised of persons
of experience and, in some instances,
distinction, have approved the complex and
interrelated transactions outlined above. It
is not unreasonable to accord weight to the
claims of Oak that the reorganization and
recapitalization of which the exchange offer
is a part may present the last good chance
to regain vitality for this enterprise. I
have not discussed plaintiff's claim of
irreparable injury, although I have
considered it. I am satisfied simply to note
my conclusion that it is far outweighed by
the harm that an improvidently granted
injunction would threaten to Oak.
For the foregoing reasons
plaintiff's application for a preliminary
injunction shall be denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
1 Parenthical references are to pages in
the Offeror's Circular and Consent
Solicitation appended as Exhibit No. 1 to
the Monhait Affidavit.
2 The price of the company's common stock
has fallen from over $30 per share on
December 31, 1981 to approximately $2 per
share recently. (P-38). The debt securities
that are the subject of the exchange offer
here involved (see note 3 for
identification) have traded at substantial
discounts.
3 The three classes of debentures are:
13.65% debentures due April 1, 2001, 10 1/2%
convertible subordinated debentures due
February 1, 2002, and 11 7/8% subordinated
debentures due May 15, 1998. In addition, as
a result of the 1985 exchange offer the
company has three classes of notes which
were issued in exchange for debentures that
were tendered in that offer. Those are:
13.5% senior notes due May 15, 1990, 9 5/8%
convertible notes due September 15, 1991 and
11 5/8% notes due September 15, 1990.
4 The holders of more than 50% of the
principal amount of each of the 13.5% notes,
the 9 5/8% notes and the 11 5/8% notes and
at least 66 2/3% of the principal amount of
the 13.65% debentures, 10 1/2% debentures,
and 11 7/8% debentures, must validly tender
such securities and consent to certain
proposed amendments to the indentures
governing those securities.
5 See Monhait Aff., Exh. 3, p. 27.
6 It is worthy of note that a very high
percentage of the principal value of Oak's
debt securities are owned in substantial
amounts by a handful of large financial
institutions. Almost 85% of the value of the
13.50% Notes is owned by four such
institutions (one investment banker owns 55%
of that issue); 69.1% of the 9 5/8% Notes
are owned by four financial institutions
(the same investment banker owning 25% of
that issue) and 85% of the 11 5/8% Notes are
owned by five such institutions. Of the
debentures, 89% of the 13.65% debentures are
owned by four large banks; and approximately
45% of the two remaining issues is owned by
two banks.
7 To say that the broad duty of loyalty
that a director owes to his corporation and
ultimately its shareholders is not
implicated in this case is not to say, as
the discussion below reflects, that as a
matter of contract law a corporation owes no
duty to bondholders of good faith and fair
dealing. See, Restatement of Law, Contracts
2d, § 205 (1979). Such a duty, however, is
quite different from the congeries of duties
that are assumed by a fiduciary. See
generally, Bratton, The Economics and
Jurisprudence of Convertible Bonds, 1984
Wis.L.Rev. 667.
8 On the deeper implications of consent
in the establishment of legal norms.
Compare, Posner, The Ethical and Political
Basis of the Efficiency Norm in Common Law
Adjudication, 8 Hofstra L.Rev. 487 (1980)
with West, Authority, Autonomy and Choice:
The Rule of Consent in the Moral and
Political Vision of Franz Kafka and Richard
Posner, 99 Harv.L.Rev. 384 (1985). |