| Page 584 509 A.2d 584  54 USLW 2626 Marilyn JEDWAB, Plaintiff,
v.
MGM GRAND HOTELS, INC., Tracinda
Corporation, Kirk
Kerkorian, James D. Aljian, Alvin Benedict,
Fred Benninger,
Barrie K. Brunet, Cary Grant, Peter M.
Kennedy, Frank E.
Rosenfelt, Bernard J. Rothkopf, Walter M.
Sharp, Robert Van
Buren, Bally Manufacturing Corporation, and
Bally
Manufacturing Corporation International,
Defendants. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: March 31, 1986.
Decided: April 11, 1986.
Page 586
William Prickett and Michael J.
Hanrahan or Prickett, Jones, Elliott,
Kristol & Schnee, Wilmington, and Ronald
Litowitz of Bernstein, Litowitz, Berger &
Grossman, New York City, for plaintiff.
Henry N. Herndon, Jr., Esquire,
Edward M. McNally, Esquire, and Mary M.
Johnston, Esquire, of Morris, James,
Hitchens and Williams, Wilmington, and
Christina A. Snyder, Esquire, of Wyman,
Bautzer, Rothman, Kuchel & Silbert,
California, Attorneys for defendants MGM
Grand Hotels, Inc., James D. Aljian, Barrie
K. Brunet, Cary Grant, Frank E. Rosenfelt,
Bernard J. Rothkopf and Walter M. Sharp.
Robert K. Payson, Donald J.
Wolfe, Jr., and John E. James of Potter,
Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington, for
defendants Alvin Benedict, Peter M. Kennedy
and Robert Van Buren.
Allen M. Terrell, Jr., of
Richards, Layton & Finger, Wilmington, for
defendant Fred Benninger.
Stephen J. Rothschild of Skadden,
Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, Wilmington, for
defendants Bally Mfg. Corp. and Bally Mfg.
Corp. Inter.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
MGM Grand Hotels, Inc., a
Delaware corporation ("MGM Grand" or the
"Company") that owns and operates resort
hotels and gaming establishments in Las
Vegas
Page 587 and Reno, Nevada, has entered into an
agreement with Bally Manufacturing
Corporation, also a Delaware corporation,
("Bally") contemplating a merger between a
Bally subsidiary and the Company. On the
effectuation of such merger, all classes of
the Company's presently outstanding stock
will be converted into the right to receive
cash.
Defendant Kerkorian individually
and through Tracinda Corporation, which he
wholly owns, beneficially owns 69% of MGM
Grand's issued and outstanding common stock
and 74% of its only other class of stock,
its Series A Redeemable Preferred Stock (the
"preferred stock" or simply the
"preferred"). Mr. Kerkorian took an active
part in negotiating the proposed merger with
Bally and agreed with Bally to vote his
stock in favor of the merger. Since neither
the merger agreement nor the Company's
charter contains a provision conditioning
such a transaction on receipt of approval by
a greater than majority vote, Mr.
Kerkorian's agreement to vote in favor of
the merger assured its approval.
Neither Kerkorian nor any
director or officer of MGM Grand is
affiliated with Bally either as an owner of
its stock, or as an officer or director.
Nor, so far as the record discloses, has any
such person had a business or social
relationship with Bally or any director,
officer or controlling person of Bally.
Bally--at least prior to its obtaining an
option on Kerkorian's shares as part of the
negotiation of the agreement of merger--has
owned no stock in MGM Grand.
Plaintiff is an owner of the
Company's preferred stock. She brings this
action as a class action on behalf of all
owners of such stock other than Kerkorian
and Tracinda and seeks to enjoin
preliminarily and permanently the
effectuation of the proposed merger. The
gist of the theory urged as justifying the
relief sought is that the effectuation of
the proposed merger would constitute a
breach of a duty to deal fairly with the
preferred shareholders owed to such
shareholders by Kerkorian, as a controlling
shareholder of MGM Grand, and by the
directors of the Company. The merger is said
to constitute a wrong to the preferred
shareholders principally in that it
allegedly contemplates an unfair
apportionment among the Company's
shareholders of the total consideration to
be paid by Bally upon effectuation of the
merger. Pending is plaintiff's motion for a
preliminary injunction.
I.
Recitation of the relevant facts,
as they appear at this preliminary stage,
may helpfully be divided into two parts: the
facts relating to the 1982 creation of the
preferred stock on whose behalf this action
is prosecuted and the more current events
that have lead to the proposed Bally merger,
including the terms of that proposed
transaction. Under plaintiff's theory, the
circumstances surrounding the 1982 creation
of the preferred stock are significant
because those circumstances help to
demonstrate the essential equivalence of the
preferred and the common stock.
A. The Creation of the Preferred Stock
MGM Grand, through wholly-owned
subsidiaries, owns and operates the MGM
Grand Hotel-Las Vegas and the MGM Grand
Hotel-Reno. Prior to May 30, 1980, the
Company had been called Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,
Inc., and included both the present hotel
business and a film production business now
conducted through unrelated corporations.
The Company entered the hotel
business in December, 1973, with the opening
of its Las Vegas facility. That luxury hotel
and casino now consists of some 2,800 guest
rooms and a 62,500 square foot casino. In
addition, tennis courts, swimming pools,
restaurants, meeting rooms, shops and other
facilities associated with a resort hotel
are located on the hotel's 44-acre site. The
Las Vegas hotel was very profitable from the
outset and in May, 1978, the Company opened
its Reno hotel which was constructed on a
similarly large scale.
Page 588
In November, 1980, tragedy struck
at the MGM Grand Hotel-Las Vegas. That night
a fire consumed the 25-story hotel and 84
lives were lost. The fire required the
closing of the Las Vegas hotel for over 8
months and required almost total renovation
of that facility. It gave rise as well to
protracted litigation relating both to the
personal injuries sustained in the fire and
the loss of property by the Company.
Hundreds of suits were brought against the
Company seeking, in total, more than $650
million in compensatory damages and more
than $2 billion in punitive damages. In
addition, the Company was required to sue
its property insurance carriers seeking
recovery of losses occasioned by the fire.
Following the Las Vegas disaster
there was a significant fall-off in the
market value of MGM Grand's common stock.
Closing the week of November 14, 1980, at 13
1/4, the price of the Company's common stock
closed at 10 the following week and closed
the week of December 12 at 7 1/2.
Apparently in response to the
reduced price of the Company's stock and to
the risks to stockholders' investment
represented by the fire-related litigation
claims, on April 1, 1982, the Company
publicly offered to exchange one share of
common stock for one share of a new class of
stock, the Series A Redeemable Preferred
Stock. The offer extended to a maximum of 10
million shares of the Company's then
outstanding 32,500,000 shares. The offering
document stated that Mr. Kerkorian (who at
that time controlled very slightly in excess
of 50% of the issued and outstanding common
stock) would tender into the offer that
number of shares equal to the total numbered
tendered by all other shareholders, but in
no event would he tender less than 5 million
shares.
The preferred stock issued in
connection with the 1982 exchange offer
carries a cumulative $.44 annual dividend
(the same dividend paid with respect to the
common stock both at the time of the
exchange offer and now), is non-convertible,
elects no directors unless dividends remain
unpaid for six quarters, has a liquidation
preference of $20 per share and carries a
complex redemption right.
The redemption provisions require
the Company to acquire each year a number of
preferred shares determined by a formula set
forth in the certificate designating the
rights, preferences, etc. of the preferred.
The Company, however, is required to redeem
stock at $20 per share in any year only if
it is unable privately to purchase, on the
market or through a tender offer, the number
of preferred shares required to be
"redeemed" that year. In fact, during fiscal
years 1982-84 the Company purchased a total
of 766,551 shares of preferred stock on the
open market at an average cost of $7.92 per
share and has been required to redeem no
shares at $20 per share.
The offering document explained
the reasons for the exchange offer as
follows:
Prior to the announcement of the
Exchange Offer, in management's opinion the
earnings and possible future performance of
MGM Grand were not being adequately
reflected in the market price of the Common
Stock. Accordingly, management decided that
present stockholders should be given an
opportunity to liquidate all or a portion of
their Common Stock holdings in exchange for
Preferred Stock. Assuming continued earnings
of MGM Grand which are available for
redemption of Preferred Stock, stockholders
accepting the Exchange Offer who hold their
Preferred Stock until their shares are
called for redemption will receive $20 per
share, without regard to future market
fluctuations in the Common Stock. To the
extent that MGM Grand has only minimal
future net profits or has net losses,
redemptions of Preferred Stock could extend
over a significant number of years.... MGM
Grand presently intends to satisfy its
redemption obligations to the extent
possible by acquiring Preferred Stock in the
open market or otherwise so long as such
stock can be acquired at a price of less
than $20 per share. Accordingly, no
assurance
Page 589 can be given as to whether any significant
number of shares of Preferred Stock will
ultimately be redeemed at the $20 per share
redemption price.
With respect to the effect of the
exchange on the rights of persons accepting
the offer, the offering document stated in
part:
An exchange of Common Stock will result
in the holder receiving a security which MGM
Grand must redeem (as net profits become
available ...) at a price substantially
above the market price for MGM Grand's
Common Stock prior to the announcement of
the Exchange Offer.... Since the rate of
redemption depends upon several factors,
including MGM Grand's future net profits and
dividend levels on the Common Stock
(increased dividend levels will result in a
slower rate of redemption, while decreased
dividends will result in a faster rate),
exchanging stockholders will have no
assurance as to when their Preferred Stock
will be redeemed, and such holders will
receive no income other than annual
dividends of $.44 per share (payable $.11 a
quarter when and as declared by the Board of
Directors) for the time the Preferred Stock
is held.... Furthermore, all or a portion of
the Preferred Stock to be redeemed may be
acquired through open market or other
purchases by MGM Grand at prices which are
substantially less than $20 per share.
MGM Grand's Board of Directors
will continue to exercise the discretion it
is granted by law in the management of MGM
Grand, and MGM Grand is under no obligation
to adhere to or adopt policies which might
maximize short-term income and the rate of
redemption of the Preferred Stock at the
expense of MGM Grand's long range best
interests.
Through the exchange offer,
9,315,403 common shares were exchanged,
including 5 million shares by Mr. Kerkorian
and his corporation, Tracinda.
1
B. Negotiation of the Proposed Merger
On June 6, 1985, Tracinda and
Kerkorian announced an intention to pursue a
cash-out merger transaction that would
eliminate the public common stockholders
from the Company at $18 per share, but would
leave the preferred stock in place. In
response, the board of the Company created a
special committee to review and evaluate
such a proposal. The committee retained
legal counsel and hired Bear Stearns & Co.,
Inc., to act as its financial advisor. While
events mooted the Tracinda offer before Bear
Stearns rendered a formal opinion on the
proposed deal, its internal documents
reflect the fact that its experts had
apparently concluded by July 29 that the
proposed offer at $18 per share was fair to
the common stockholders from a financial
point of view.
Plaintiff suggests that Kerkorian
did not entertain a serious interest in
acquiring the remaining common stock of the
Company but rather announced the proposed
Tracinda deal in order to stimulate other
offers. Be that as it may, shortly after
Tracinda made its announcement, it was
approached about a possible acquisition of
MGM Grand's hotel properties. Kerkorian was
receptive to exploring such alternatives,
but no actual offer was forthcoming.
In August, 1985, the Drexel
Burnham firm was engaged to explore
alternatives to the Tracinda offer. That
firm made a significant effort to instigate
possible alternative deals--apparently some
50 firms were contacted, but the only
indication of serious interest it apparently
received was from Bally Manufacturing Corp.
2
Page 590
In early November, 1985,
Kerkorian, Stephen Silbert, his principal
legal advisor, and representatives of Drexel
Burnham met with Robert Mullane, the
chairman and chief executive officer of
Bally to discuss Bally's interest. At that
meeting Bally apparently ultimately took the
position that it thought all of the
Company's equity was worth $440 million and
said it would be willing to make a cash
offer at that price for all the Company's
stock--common and preferred. (Silbert Dep.
at p. 92).
It seems agreed by all parties
that Bally made a total price offer and had
no real input into the way in which that
consideration would be divided among classes
of MGM Grand's stock (Romans Dep., pp.
45-46), although its concurrence was
obviously required. Kerkorian and Silbert
had, however, discussed that question prior
to the meeting, and Kerkorian had expressed
the view that the common stock should get
$18 a share since Tracinda had already
announced an offer at that price. (Silbert
Dep. at pp. 94-95).
Kerkorian, after discussions with
his lawyer Silbert and with Drexel Burnham
(Kerkorian Dep., pp. 65-67), apparently
determined that $14 was the price that would
be paid for the preferred. (Silbert Dep. at
pp. 99-102). However, a $14 per share price
for the outstanding preferred, when added to
an $18 price for all the common stock, would
result in a cash price in excess of $440
million for all of the Company's stock. To
solve this problem, Kerkorian agreed to take
$12.24 per share for his common stock
together with certain other property,
including transfer of the exclusive rights
to the name MGM Grand Hotels and certain
contingent rights in litigation proceeds.
3 This non-cash
property has been the subject of an
appraisal and, in part on the basis of that
appraisal, Bear Stearns has opined that the
total value of the consideration Kerkorian
will receive for his common stock is less
than $18 per share.
The detailed terms of the Bally
merger and the documents reflecting them
were negotiated over a week of meetings
commencing a few days after the
Kerkorian/Mullane meeting at which the cash
price was agreed upon. On November 14, a
special meeting of the MGM Grand board was
held to consider the proposed Bally merger.
At that meeting Drexel Burnham reported on
its efforts to locate parties with an
interest in acquiring the Company, the
results of its work, and its evaluation of
the Bally proposal as negotiated. Although
not retained to render an opinion on the
fairness of the proposed transaction, Drexel
Burnham did report its opinion that the
price contemplated by the proposal for the
common stock and the preferred stock was
fair. (Humphreville Aff., p 9). The
directors were presented with copies of the
proposed agreement of merger. After
discussing the proposal, the meeting was
adjourned without board action. The meeting
was reconvened the following morning and,
after further discussion, the board approved
the transaction. (Benedict Aff., pp 12-14).
The amended and restated agreement and plan
of merger was executed shortly thereafter.
At the time the Company's board
authorized the execution of the merger
agreement, it had no advice from an
independent investment banker as to the
fairness of the proposed deal to the
minority stockholders of the Company.
Thereafter Bear Stearns, who had earlier
done some work in evaluating the fairness of
an $18 price for the common in connection
with the proposed Tracinda deal, was
retained to opine on the fairness from a
financial point of view of
Page 591 the terms of the merger agreement. The
merger agreement, however, contains no
condition that would permit the board to
abandon the transaction if an acceptable
opinion of the company's investment banker
was not obtainable.
The opinion that was requested
was to reflect Bear Stearns' view of the
fairness of the $14 price for the preferred
and its view whether the consideration to be
received by Kerkorian for his common stock
had a value that was less than that to be
received by the public common stockholders.
Bear Stearns' opinion was rendered on
February 11, 1986, and concluded that "the
aggregate consideration [to be] received by
Tracinda and Mr. Kerkorian for their shares
of Common Stock [on a per share basis] is
less than the consideration per share to be
received by the Public Shareholders of the
Company's Common Stock ..." and that "the
price to be paid for the Preferred Stock ...
is fair from a financial point of view ...".
After receipt of that opinion,
the directors authorized distribution of the
proxy materials relating to the proposed
transaction. At the Company's annual meeting
of stockholders, held on March 14, 1986,
17,675,942 shares of the Company's common
stock (77.5% of all of the issued and
outstanding common stock) voted in favor of
the proposed merger and 148,145 shares
(7.11% of the voting shares not controlled
by Kerkorian) voted against the merger. The
preferred stock had not right to vote on the
merger. Only 5,081 preferred shares (less
than 1/2 of 1% of the outstanding preferred
shares not controlled by Mr. Kerkorian) have
requested an appraisal of their stock in
lieu of the consideration offered by the
merger.
II.
Plaintiff claims that the
proposed merger constitutes a breach of a
fiduciary duty owed by the directors of MGM
Grand and its controlling shareholder to the
preferred stockholders. As developed at oral
argument, the central aspect of plaintiff's
theory of liability involves a breach of the
duty of loyalty, although plaintiff contends
as well that the manner in which the merger
was negotiated and approved constitutes a
breach of a duty of care.
The main argument advanced by
plaintiff is premised upon the assertion
that the directors of a Delaware corporation
have a duty in a merger transaction to
negotiate and approve only a merger that
apportions the merger consideration fairly
among classes of the company's stock. To
unfairly favor one class of stock over
another is, on this view, a breach of the
duty of loyalty that a director owes to the
corporation and, by extension, that he owes
equally to all of its shareholders.
Asserting factually that under all the
circumstances the two outstanding classes of
MGM Grand's stock represent equivalent
values, plaintiff contends that the proposed
Bally merger which does not apportion the
merger consideration equally breaches this
duty.
Several evidentiary factors are
pointed to in order to establish the factual
predicate of the argument: the equivalency
implied in the original one-for-one exchange
offer; the fact that the Company's auditors
treated the preferred as equivalents for the
purpose of stating the Company's per-share
earnings; the fact that one possible merger
candidate apparently considered making the
same offer to both classes of stock; and
that Kerkorian himself offered $12 per share
for both common and preferred in his 1984
tender offer. Finally it is asserted that
the market treated both securities as
reflecting equivalent value (a contention
that is warmly contested).
Plaintiff thus compares the $18
per share price that the public common
stockholders are to receive with the $14 per
share into which the preferred stock is to
be converted and perceives an unfairness.
Plaintiff offers an explanation of why this
unfairness to the preferred resulted--an
explanation that seems required by the fact
that the controlling shareholder owns a
greater proportion of the preferred (74%)
than of the common stock (69%). That
explanation
Page 592 posits that in apportioning the merger
consideration, Kerkorian felt compelled to
allocate $18 per share to the common in
order to protect himself from possible
lawsuits arising from persons who had
purchased MGM Grand common stock after the
market price for that stock had risen in
response to Kerkorian's announcement of a
forthcoming $18 cash out merger with
Tracinda. Abandonment of that deal for
another that would yield the common less, it
is contended, would have exposed Kerkorian
to charges of manipulation and to
litigation. Thus, in allotting the proceeds
of the merger among the Company's two
classes of stock, plaintiff complains that
Kerkorian sought to avoid a potential
personal liability. Moreover, he was not
only self-interested in the allocation as a
result but he cannot, it is asserted, meet
his burden to establish that the resulting
apportionment was fair to the preferred.
Intertwined with this central
contention, are a host of other liability
theories, including arguments (1) that the
board of MGM Grand violated its duty of care
in negotiating and approving the merger
(relying heavily in that connection on the
recent holding of our Supreme Court in Smith
v. Van Gorkom, Del.Supr.,
488 A.2d 858
(1985)); (2) that in instigating the merger
at this time and in arrogating to himself
the power to negotiate the terms of the
merger on behalf of the corporation,
Kerkorian (without regard to the specific
terms ultimately agreed upon) acted without
legal authority and in breach of duties to
the preferred; and (3) that the merger
constitutes a manipulation of the corporate
machinery of the Company in order to avoid
paying the preferred a $20 redemption price.
Finally, plaintiff seeks to cast
the net of his liability theories over Bally
as well by arguing that it is a knowing
participant in the breach of duty ascribed
to Kerkorian and the members of the MGM
Grand board. It is elementary, of course,
that one who knowingly participates with a
fiduciary in a breach of trust may share a
resulting liability to an injured cestui que
trust. See, e.g., Penn Mart Realty Co. v.
Becker, Del.Ch., 298 A.2d 349 (1972);
Gilbert v. El Paso Co., Del.Ch.,
490 A.2d 1050 (1984); cf, Restatement (Second) of
Trusts § 290 (1959).
III.
The test justifying the issuance
of a preliminary injunction has frequently
been reiterated by this Court. In each case
it is necessary for plaintiff to establish a
reasonable probability that her claims will
be vindicated at final hearing; that unless
the provisional remedy is granted she will
suffer irreparable injury before her claims
may be finally adjudicated; and that any
threatened injury to the defendant (or
others) that may result from the improvident
issuance of a preliminary injunction does
not outweigh the injury with which she is
presently threatened. Shields v. Shields,
Del.Ch.,
498 A.2d 161 (1985).
For the reasons more fully set
forth below, I conclude that plaintiff has
failed to demonstrate the requisite
probability of ultimate success that is
essential in these circumstances. In
summary, I conclude for the limited purpose
of determining this motion that plaintiff
has not established a legal right of the
preferred to equivalent consideration in a
merger and that with respect to the distinct
right to a fair apportionment of the merger
proceeds, plaintiff has not established a
reasonable probability that such a right
will be transgressed by the effectuation of
the Bally merger. Finally, I have concluded
that plaintiff has not demonstrated a
probability of ultimate success on her
theories of liability resting upon (a) an
alleged breach of a duty of care; (b) claims
that the timing and structure of the merger
evidence a lack of fair dealing or (c) that
the merger constitutes a manipulation of
corporate machinery for an inappropriate
purpose--the evasion of a legal duty, at
some future time, to redeem the preferred at
$20 per share.
Page 593
IV.
Initially I address two
preliminary although critical legal
questions: first, whether, in these
circumstances, defendants owe any fiduciary
duties to the preferred at all and, second,
what standard--entire fairness or business
judgment--is appropriate to assess the
probability of ultimate success.
A.
Issue on the merits of claims
alleged is first joined on the fundamental
question whether the directors of MGM Grand
owe any duty to the holders of the preferred
stock other than the duty to accord to such
holders the rights, powers and preferences
set out in the certificate designating and
defining the legal rights of the preferred.
As I understand plaintiff's principal
theories of liability each is premised upon
the existence of a supervening fiduciary
duty recognized in equity that requires
directors and controlling shareholders to
treat shareholders fairly. See, Weinberger
v. UOP, Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701
(1983); Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
93 A.2d 107 (1952); Guth v. Loft,
Inc., Del.Supr., 5 A.2d 503 (1939). If there
is no such duty insofar as preferred
stockholders are concerned plaintiff's
theories of liability would seem fatally
flawed.
Defendants contend there is no
broad duty of fidelity owed to preferred
stock if that duty is understood to extend
beyond the specific contractual terms
defining the special rights, preferences or
limitations of the preferred. In support of
its position on this point defendants cite
such cases as Rothschild International Corp.
v. Liggett Group, Inc., Del.Supr.,
474 A.2d 133 (1984); Wood v. Coastal States Gas
Corp., Del.Supr.,
401 A.2d 932 (1979) and
Dart v. Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 7366, Hartnett, V.C. (May
6, 1985). Broadly speaking these cases apply
the rule that "preferential rights are
contractual in nature and therefore are
governed by the express provisions of a
company's certificate of incorporation"
Rothschild, supra, 474 A.2d at 136.
Defendants restate this accepted principle
as meaning "all rights of preferred
shareholders are contractual in nature".
4 They then go on
to argue (analogizing to the wholly
contractual rights of bondholders--as to
which no "fiduciary" duties extend
5) that the only duties
directors have to preferred shareholders are
those necessary to accord the preferred
rights set out in their contract, i.e., the
document designating the rights,
preferences, etc., of their special stock.
The flaw in this argument lies in
a failure to distinguish between
"preferential" rights (and special
limitations) on the one hand and rights
associated with all stock on the other. At
common law and in the absence of an
agreement to the contrary all shares of
stock are equal.
Shanghai Power Co. v. Delaware Trust Co.,
Del. Ch.,
316 A.2d 589 (1974). Thus
preferences and limitations associated with
preferred stock exist only by virtue of an
express provision (contractual in nature)
creating such rights or limitations. But
absent negotiated provision conferring
rights on preference stock, it does not
follow that no right exists. The point may
be conclusively demonstrated by two
examples. If a certificate designating
rights, preferences, etc. of special stock
contains no provision dealing with voting
rights or no provision creating rights upon
liquidation, it is not the fact that such
stock has no voting rights or no rights upon
liquidation. Rather,
Page 594 in such circumstances, the preferred stock
has the same voting rights as common stock
(8 Del.C. § 212(a); Rice & Hutchins, Inc. v.
Triplex Shoe Co., Del.Ch., 147 A. 317 (1929)
aff'd., 152 A. 342 (1930)) or the same
rights to participate in the liquidation of
the corporation as has such stock (11 W.
Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private
Corporations § 5303 (rev. perm. ed. 1971);
Continental Insurance Company v. Reading
Company, 259 U.S. 156, 42 S.Ct. 540, 66
L.Ed. 71, 871 (1922)).
Thus, with respect to matters
relating to preferences or limitations that
distinguish preferred stock from common, the
duty of the corporation and its directors is
essentially contractual and the scope of the
duty is appropriately defined by reference
to the specific words evidencing that
contract; where however the right asserted
is not to a preference as against the common
stock but rather a right shared equally with
the common, the existence of such right and
the scope of the correlative duty may be
measured by equitable as well as legal
standards.
With this distinction in mind the
Delaware cases which frequently analyze
rights of and duties towards preferred stock
in legal (i.e., contractual) terminology
(e.g., Wood v. Coastal States Gas Corp.,
supra; Judah v. Delaware Trust Company,
Del.Supr.,
378 A.2d 624 (1977); Rothschild
International Corp. v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
supra ) may be made consistent with those
cases that apply fiduciary standards to
claims of preferred shareholders (e.g.,
David J. Greene & Co. v. Schenley
Industries, Inc., Del.Ch., 281 A.2d 30
(1971); Lewis v. Great Western United
Corporation, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 5397, Brown,
V.C. (September 15, 1977)).
Accordingly, without prejudging
the validity of any of plaintiff's liability
theories, I conclude that her claim (a) to a
"fair" allocation of the proceeds of the
merger; (b) to have the defendants exercise
appropriate care in negotiating the proposed
merger and (c) to be free of overreaching by
Mr. Kerkorian (as to the timing of the
merger for his benefit) fairly implicate
fiduciary duties and ought not be evaluated
wholly from the point of view of the
contractual terms of the preferred stock
designations.
6
B.
Assuming that plaintiff and the
other preferred shareholders have a "right"
recognized in equity to a fair apportionment
of the merger consideration (and such a
right to require directors to exercise
appropriate care) it becomes material to
know what legal standard is to be used to
assess the probability that a violation of
that right will ultimately be proven.
Plaintiff asserts that the appropriate test
is one of entire or intrinsic fairness. That
test is the familiar one employed when
fiduciaries elect to utilize their power
over the corporation to effectuate a
transaction in which they have an interest
that diverges from that of the corporation
or the minority shareholders. See,
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., supra; Gottlieb v.
Heyden Chemical Corp., Del.Supr.,
91 A.2d 57
(1952).
Our Supreme Court has made it
quite clear that the heightened judicial
scrutiny called for by the test of intrinsic
or entire fairness is not called forth
simply by a demonstration that a controlling
shareholder fixes the terms of a transaction
and, by exercise of voting power or by
domination of the board, compels its
effectuation. (The apparent situation
presented in this action.) It is in each
instance essential to show as well that the
fiduciary has an interest with respect to
the transaction that conflicts with the
interests of minority
Page 595 shareholders. Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805, 812 (1984). Speaking in the
context of a parent dealing with a
controlled but not wholly-owned subsidiary
our Supreme Court has said:
The basic situation for the
application of the rule [requiring a
fiduciary to assume the burden to show
intrinsic fairness] is the one in which the
parent has received a benefit to the
exclusion and at the expense of the
subsidiary.
* * *
* * *
A parent does indeed owe a
fiduciary duty to its subsidiary when there
are parent-subsidiary dealings. However,
this alone will not evoke the intrinsic
fairness standard. This standard will be
applied only when the fiduciary duty is
accompanied by self-dealing--the situation
when a parent is on both sides of a
transaction with its subsidiary.
Self-dealing occurs when the parent, by
virtue of its domination of the subsidiary,
causes the subsidiary to act in such a way
that the parent receives something from the
subsidiary to the exclusion of, and
detriment to, the minority stockholders of
the subsidiary.
Sinclair Oil Corporation v.
Levien, Del.Supr., 280 A.2d 717, 720 (1971).
As to what appears to be the
material element of the negotiation of the
Bally merger--the $440,000,000 cash
price--Mr. Kerkorian had no conflicting
interest of a kind that would support
invocation of the intrinsic fairness test.
With respect to total price, his interest
was to extract the maximum available price.
Moreover, as to the apportionment of the
merger consideration between the two classes
of the Company's stock, Mr. Kerkorian's
interest again appears to create no
significant bias on his part since his
ownership of each class is not only great
but substantially equal. Indeed, as
indicated, Kerkorian's ownership of the
preferred is proportionately somewhat
greater.
Thus, had Kerkorian apportioned
the merger consideration equally among
members of each class of the Company's
stockholders (as distinguished from equally
between classes of stock on a per share
basis), then the fact of his substantially
equivalent ownership of each class of stock
would have supported invocation of the legal
test known as the business judgment rule.
Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805
(1984). The fact that each class was treated
differently would not itself require
application of the intrinsic fairness test.
See, MacFarlane v. North American Cement
Corp., Del.Ch., 157 A. 396 (1928); Bodell v.
General Gas & Electric Corp., Del.Supr., 140
A. 264 (1927).
But Kerkorian directed the
apportionment of merger consideration in a
way that treated himself differently from
other holders of common stock. He accorded
to himself less cash per common share
($12.24) but, in the License Agreement,
arrogated to himself the right to use or
designate the use of the MGM Grand name and,
under the Price Adjustment Agreement, he is
to assume certain obligations and acquire
certain rights with respect to pending
property insurance claims of the Company.
In according to himself a
different form of consideration in the
merger, Mr. Kerkorian has created a
situation in which the fact of his
substantially equivalent ownership of each
class of stock does not itself negate the
existence of a conflicting interest on his
part in making the allocation decision. Do
these agreements create the possibility of a
substantial conflict that would mandate the
enhanced judicial scrutiny contemplated by
the intrinsic fairness test? As to the
License Agreement, for the reasons set forth
in the margin, I am persuaded the answer is
no.
7
Page 596
The Price Adjustment Agreement
deals with an asset of MGM Grand that was
doubtlessly difficult for Bally to
value--insurance claims arising from the
company's losses caused by the 1980 fire.
Those claims have been in litigation for
some time and apparently are complex. In the
Price Adjustment Agreement Kerkorian
(through Tracinda) removes the uncertainty
that such claims create, by (1) guaranteeing
that MGM Grand will recover $50 million on
the claims treated, (2) undertaking to
continue to supervise the litigation and (3)
agreeing to pay one-half of the first
$1,000,000 of legal fees incurred by MGM
Grand following the merger with respect to
the claims and all such costs in excess of
$1,000,000. In exchange for these
undertakings Kerkorian receives the right to
all amounts recovered by the Company on the
claims in excess of $59.5 million.
To assess the possible impact of
the Price Adjustment Agreement on the
negotiation and apportionment process, I
find it necessary to dilate on these claims
for a moment. The amount of the litigated
claims appears to be approximately
$55,000,000 plus pre-judgment interest. The
record contains no information concerning
whether pre-judgment interest is recoverable
on such a claim under the applicable law or,
if it is, in what amount. Assuming the full
claim is ultimately awarded and that
interest at a rate of, say 9%, is also
awarded, (interest, for the period from the
November, 1980 loss to the November, 1985
signing of the merger agreement, would thus
amount to $29,624,000) there would be a
total recovery of $84,624,000. On these not
unreasonable assumptions, the maximum value
of the contingent litigation rights (without
any discount for probability of success and
with no deduction for the actuarial value of
the $50,000,000 guaranty) would be
approximately $25,000,000 or approximately
80cents per share, when all shares, common
and preferred, are included. I do not regard
that amount as de minimis.
It cannot be said, in my view,
that the Price Adjustment Agreement
constitutes an independent deal unrelated to
the negotiation of the proposed merger. Just
as clearly, the opportunity to participate
in recoveries on the Company's property
claims is one that the deal fashioned by Mr.
Kerkorian denies to all other stockholders.
I conclude therefore that, in apportioning
that element of consideration wholly to his
own shares to the exclusion of others
Kerkorian was exercising power of a kind and
in circumstances justifying invocation of
the heightened standard of judicial review.
V.
I also conclude that, as to the
claim of the preferred to an equal or fair
share of the merger proceeds, the defendants
are likely to meet the burden thus imposed
upon them. It follows that plaintiff has
failed to demonstrate a reasonable
probability of success on this issue.
First, it seems elementary that
the preferred has no legal right to
equivalent consideration in the merger.
Neither the certificate of incorporation nor
the certificate of designation of the
preferred stock expressly creates such a
right. Nor does it appear that such a right
may be fairly implied from those documents
when read in the light of the terms of the
1982 Exchange Offer. Cf., Katz v. Oak
Industries, Inc., Del.Ch.,
508 A.2d 873
(1986). Nor do I perceive any basis to
recognize an equitable right to
mathematically equal consideration based
upon the conduct of Kerkorian as a
fiduciary. Some of what is said below (see,
e.g., pp. 598-599, infra ) supports this
conclusion.
As to a right of the preferred to
have the total consideration fairly (as
distinguished from equally) apportioned, the
Page 597 current record provides no persuasive basis
to conclude that the allocation contemplated
by the Bally merger is unfair.
Plaintiff's claim of unfairness
in an apportionment of $18 per share to the
common stockholders and $14 a share to the
preferred, in my opinion, involves a
fundamental defect: it rests upon an invalid
comparison. The pertinent comparison, if one
is treating a right to fair apportionment
among classes of stock, is between what
those classes receive in the merger, on a
per share basis, not between what the class
of preferred receive per share and what the
public holders of common stock are to
receive. As shown below, when the financial
value of the appropriate comparison is
developed (to the extent the current record
permits the development and evaluation of
that comparison) it does not appear very
great and certainly does not at this stage
appear unsustainable in light of the
differences in the rights of common and
preferred stockholders and the historical
treatment of both classes of stock by the
market.
8
The essential right plaintiff
asserts is the right of the preferred to be
treated as well as the common in the merger.
There are now outstanding 22,803,194 common
shares and 8,549,000 preferred. Thus, in
all, there are 31,352,194 shares of MGM
Grand stock. But when the total cash
consideration--$440 million--is divided by
the total number of shares, common and
preferred, outstanding the result is $14.03
per share.
But in addition to cash, some MGM
Grand common stockholders (i.e., Kerkorian)
will get other non-cash consideration that
ought to be considered in comparing the
financial treatment of the two classes of
stock in the merger. If for these purposes
we treat the value of the MGM Grand name as
worth $1.3 million (its appraised value) and
the value of contingent right to litigation
proceeds as worth approximately $25 million
(for the reasons described above) then it
appears that the total value of the merger
consideration is approximately $466.3
million. Dividing that number by 31,352,194
yields an average consideration per share
for all stockholders of $14.87. Thus, if
each preferred stockholder received the
average consideration per share that all
shareholders will receive, each preferred
share would receive, on the foregoing
assumption, not $14.00 but $14.87. In fact,
the common stock as a class will not receive
the $14.87 average for all shareholders but
will receive total consideration (on the
foregoing assumption) of $15.20 per share.
9
Given the fact that the preferred
has no prospect for a future increment in
dividends, no vote, and has historically
tended to trade at a discount from the
common (see, Jelenko Aff. and note 8, supra
), I cannot conclude that the $14 per share
Page 598 price (which represents a 6% discount from
the $14.87 per share average value for all
shares) is likely to be found not to be
entirely appropriate.
Plaintiff might fairly say that
the foregoing analysis does not meet the
real thrust of her contention. That is, she
would argue that the meaningful difference
in the preferred's consideration is not
between their $14 per share and the average
to be received by all shares ($14.87 on the
assumption set out above) but between $14
and $18 to be recovered by the public
holders of the common stock. This
difference--simply because it is materially
larger--would be more difficult to justify.
But it is this comparison that I
refer to as invalid. It is true that the
common as a class is not getting the average
of all shareholders--$14.87 on my assumption
concerning the value of the contingent
litigation rights--but is getting $15.20 per
share on that assumption. That difference
($.33 per share), if it is to be justified,
must be justified by reference to the
difference in the legal claims and economic
prospects of the two classes of stock. As
indicated above, I cannot conclude on the
present record that that justification is
unlikely to be demonstrated.
The further difference--between
$15.20 per share for the common as a class
and the $18 per share that the public
holders of common stock will receive need
not be so justified in my opinion; it is
clearly being funded entirely by Kerkorian
personally. That is, the amount of the total
increment to be received by the public
holders of common stock over the average per
share consideration to be received by the
common stock as a class (7,064,021 public
common shares X ($18.00 - $15.20) =
$19,779,259) is supplied by Kerkorian, who
has taken less for his common stock, even
when the non-cash consideration is
considered ($12.24 cash + 1.67 non-cash
10 = $13.91 per
share). Thus, the amount per share that
Kerkorian has given up ($15.20 - $13.91 =
$1.29 per share) when multiplied by his
total common stock holdings (15,739,173)
equals $20,303,533 and more than fully funds
the increment that the public common
stockholders will receive over the average
per share price to be received by common
stockholders as a class.
Thus, if plaintiff is correct
that Kerkorian sought to make sure the
public common stockholders got $18 per share
because he feared some potential liability
if they got less, the rejoinder is that, to
the extent the public holders of common are
to receive more than all common stock as a
class, Kerkorian paid for that benefit from
his own pocket.
Assuming for purposes of this
motion that plaintiff is correct in
asserting that $18 per share is an
unjustifiably generous price for the
publicly held common stock, plaintiff's
claim to equal treatment inescapably
involves an implied right to require
self-sacrifice from a fiduciary. While the
law requires that corporate fiduciaries
observe high standards of fidelity and, when
self-dealing is involved, places upon them
the burden of demonstrating the intrinsic
fairness of transactions they authorize, the
law does not require more than fairness.
Specifically, it does not, absent a showing
of culpability, require that directors or
controlling shareholders sacrifice their own
financial interest in the enterprise for the
sake of the corporation or its minority
shareholders. It follows that should a
controlling shareholder for whatever reason
(to avoid entanglement in litigation as
plaintiff suggests is here the case or for
other personal reasons) elect to sacrifice
some part of the value of his stock
holdings, the law will not direct him as to
how that amount is to be distributed and to
whom.
Accordingly, I conclude for
purposes of this motion that when the
appropriate comparisons are made, the
different treatment contemplated by the
Bally merger of the
Page 599 two outstanding classes of the Company stock
is unlikely--given the different legal
claims and economic prospects those classes
of stock possess--ultimately to be found to
constitute a breach of a duty the defendants
may have had in the circumstances to
apportion the merger proceeds fairly.
VI.
Nor do I find a likelihood that
other aspects of the initiation, negotiation
and approval of the proposed merger create a
reasonable prospect of plaintiff's ultimate
success in this action. Plaintiff weaves
together several strands to fashion an
argument that the process involved
constitutes a breach of duty by the
directors and Kerkorian. While articulated
by plaintiff as constituting a breach of
"entire fairness" (i.e., the duty of
loyalty) it is clear that plaintiff
intertwines claims of breach of care as
well.
The gist of these supporting
points is as follows: the timing of the
merger was at Kerkorian's behest and served
his personal interest; the minority
shareholders, common or preferred, had no
veto of the transaction; no independent
committee of the board was charged to
protect their interest in the apportionment;
no prior independent investment banking
opinion was received by the board before it
committed itself to the transaction; and the
board acted hurriedly and without due care.
As to the timing of the
transaction, it seems correct that a merger
transaction was pursued and authorized by
the MGM Grand board at this time because it
suited Kerkorian's plans and (so far as the
record shows) not because the board
determined that this was a particularly
propitious moment to sell the Company. The
timing of such a transaction, we have been
authoritatively reminded, may be such as to
constitute a breach of a fiduciary's duty to
deal fairly with minority shareholders. See
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983). But more must be shown, in my
view, than that a majority shareholder
controlled the timing of the transaction;
that will always be true with respect to a
transaction involving shareholder approval
since, minimally, such a shareholder may
veto such a transaction. The prototype
instance in which the timing of a merger
would itself likely constitute a breach of a
controlling shareholder's duty is when it
could be shown both (1) that the minority
was financially injured by the timing (i.e.,
from their point of view it was an
especially poor time to be required to
liquidate their investment) and (2) that the
controlling shareholder gained from the
timing of the transaction what the minority
lost. Compare, Sinclair Oil Corp. v. Levien,
Del.Supr.,
280 A.2d 717 (1971).
11 Neither element has been
shown here. Most importantly, there is no
persuasive indication on this preliminary
record that from the minority's point of
view this is a particularly poor time to
liquidate their investment. Accordingly, I
conclude that the timing of the proposed
Bally transaction, even though it is
assumedly in Kerkorian's personal interest,
does not suggest itself as a likely basis
for ultimate vindication of plaintiff's
claims.
As to the fact that the
transaction was not structured to accord
minority shareholders a veto, nor was an
independent board committee established to
negotiate the apportionment of merger
consideration on behalf of the minority,
these are pertinent factors in assessing
whether fairness was accorded to the
minority. The presence of such factors
typically constitute indicia of fairness;
their absence, however, does not itself
establish any breach of duty. Where the test
of the intrinsic fairness of a
self-interested transaction is employed, the
ultimate question is whether
Page 600 the terms of the transaction itself are
entirely or intrinsically fair. For the
reasons outlined above, I find no reasonable
probability on the present record that that
test will not ultimately be met in this
case. The existence of procedures of the
kind here treated would bolster that
conclusion, but their absence in these
circumstances does not itself affect my
assessment of plaintiff's probability of
success.
As to the strand of plaintiff's
argument asserting lack of due care, I am
unpersuaded--given Kerkorian's intense
interest in achieving the highest available
price, and given the apparently thorough
search conducted by Drexel Burnham of
alternative possibilities--that it is likely
that the director defendants will be found
to have failed in the circumstances to have
fulfilled their duty to exercise their
corporate power with due care.
VII.
The foregoing evaluation of the
probabilities of ultimate success forecloses
the necessity for an evaluation of
plaintiff's claim of irreparable injury.
However, in denying the pending motion, I am
sensitive to the interests of the public
common stockholder and of Bally to have the
proposed merger effectuated without judicial
interference. While the complaint in
conclusory language alleges that Bally
knowingly participated in a breach of
fiduciary duty, no specific facts are
alleged--nor so far as the present record
discloses have facts been uncovered in
discovery--that would support that
conclusion. In these circumstances, Bally's
contract rights--while not dispositive
12--present an
additional circumstance supporting the
denial of the pending motion.
For the foregoing reasons,
plaintiff's application for a preliminary
injunction shall be denied. IT IS SO
ORDERED.
1 Kerkorian's ownership of both the
preferred and MGM Grand's common stock was
increased as a result of an October 1, 1984,
cash tender offer for up to 5 million shares
of common stock and up to 2 million shares
of preferred stock at a price of $12 per
share. As earlier indicated, today Mr.
Kerkorian owns directly or indirectly
approximately 74% of the outstanding
preferred stock and approximately 69% of MGM
Grand's common stock.
2 Previously, in July, 1985, Bear Stearns
had approached Bally and suggested that
perhaps Bally might be interested in
purchasing MGM Grand common stock at a price
of $18 per share. Bally's Chief Financial
Officer, Donald Romans, did some
calculations and concluded that, "... the
price was too rich at 18 for the common to
be of interest to Bally." (Romans Dep. at
pp. 8-9; 17).
3 Specifically, should the merger be
effectuated, Kerkorian would receive a right
to any recovery from the property insurance
litigation, in excess of $59,500,000. His
company Tracinda, however, must guarantee
that MGM Grand will recover at least $50
million (plus interest) from those claims
and Kerkorian will reimburse MGM Grand
certain litigation expenses incurred by MGM
Grand following the merger.
4 Certain language in the cases restating
the principle quoted above would support
defendants' interpretation. For example, in
Judah v. Delaware Trust Company, Del.Supr.,
378 A.2d 624 (1977) it is said (at p. 628):
"Generally, the provisions of the
certificate of incorporation govern the
rights of preferred shareholders, the
certificate ... being interpreted in
accordance with the law of contracts, with
only those rights which are embodied in the
certificate granted to preferred
shareholders."
5 See, e.g., Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews &
Forbes, Inc., Del.Supr., 506 A.2d 173, 182
(1986); Katz v. Oak Industries, Inc., Del.Ch.,
508 A.2d 873 (1986).
6 The claim that the merger constitutes a
wrongful attempt to circumvent the $20
redemption provision of the preferred stock,
on the other hand, does, in my view, relate
to a negotiated preference and must be
evaluated strictly as a contract right. On
such basis it is clear that plaintiff has
demonstrated no reasonable probability of
ultimate success. See, Rothschild
International Corp. v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
supra; Dart v. Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts &
Co., supra.
7 The reasons are two. First, I regard
the subject matter of the license as of de
minimis value in these circumstances. It was
valued at $1.3 million by an independent
appraisal firm. In the context of a cash
price of $440 million for a company of which
Kerkorian owns roughly 70% that amount would
not appear to create a material conflict.
Secondly, it appears that the right to use
the MGM Grand name is being transferred to a
new company whose stock will be offered to
all current MGM Grand shareholders, both
common and preferred,--but only to such
persons--on the same basis as available to
Kerkorian. Thus, while under the merger
agreement Kerkorian has the power to dispose
of the MGM Grand name, in fact the
disposition he is making is such as to
negate the existence of a conflict with
respect to that asset.
8 Judging from the record now available,
it appears to be an exaggeration to state
that the market has historically accorded
equal value to MGM Grand's preferred and
common stock. It does appear that for most
of the months during the period from
issuance (5/82) through announcement of the
Tracinda offer (6/85) the common traded at a
price less than 130% of the market price of
the preferred. Typically, during that
period, the common did trade at a higher
price than did the preferred. Specifically,
it appears that during that 37-month period,
in 15 of 37 such months the closing high
price for MGM Grand's common stock during
the month was within 10% of its preferred
high closing price for the month (in 20 of
37 months its lowest closing price was 10%
of the lowest closing price of its
preferred). In 9 of 37 months, its highest
monthly closing price was between 10 and 20%
greater than the high price of the preferred
(in 10 of 37 months, its low price was
greater within that range) and in 13 of 37
months the price of common measured at its
high price was greater than 120% of the high
price of the preferred achieved during that
month (in 6 of 37 months, when low prices
are so compared). During 7 months in 1983
the price of common ranged from
approximately 135% of the price of the
preferred to approximately 175% of the
preferred when measured by monthly high
prices (and from 125% to 145% when measured
by the lowest prices to which both stocks
fell during each such month). See, Jelenko
Aff., Exh. II.
9 On those assumptions, they will receive
an average of $14.05 cash (i.e., $440
million - $119.7 million to be paid to
preferred = $320.3 million / 22,803,194
common shares = $14.05 cash per share) +
$1.15 non-cash (i.e., $25 million + $1.3 /
22,803,194 = $1.15) = $15.20.
10 That is, $25,000,000 value of
contingent recovery + $1,300,000 value of
MGM Grand name divided by 15,739,173 common
shares owned by Kerkorian.
11 Whether it would be enough to make out
a breach of entire fairness to show only
that it was a particularly poor time to
liquidate an investment, but that a
controlling shareholder nevertheless forced
a third party transaction for reasons
personal to his own situation, is a question
that may be left for another day.
12 Historically courts of equity have
accorded great deference to the rights of
bona fide purchasers from trustees who have
no notice of a breach of trust. Such persons
will ordinarily cut off the equitable title
of a cestui que trust. See, Ames, Purchaser
for Value without Notice, 1 Harv.L.Rev. 1
(1887). However, that doctrine has not
extended to contract vendees. See, Bogart,
Trusts and Trustees, § 885 (1982). This
limitation is apparently a specific
application of the more general principle
that "as between competing equitable
claimants [into which class a contract
vendee would fall], he that is prior in time
is stronger in law". Ames, supra, at p. 8. |